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The Dartmouth
May 16, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

DarTalk added to room fee

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Monthly phone service fees will be incorporated into the overall cost of room and board starting in the Fall term, but all students living on campus will be required to pay for service under the new system. The Board of Trustees at its meeting made the decision, which enables financial aid to cover the service fees, at its meeting last weekend. "I think it's a good decision.


News

Public printers now in place in River Cluster

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The Office of Residential Life installed a public printer station in McLane residence hall study lounge Tuesday for students who live in the River Cluster. ORL conceived the idea for this project about a year ago, and began construction before Christmas in order to give students who live in the River Cluster easier access to printers, Director of Residential Operations Woody Eckels said. Computing Services has agreed to supply the printer, the toner, the paper and the maintenance, while ORL built the print window in the McLane study lounge and staffs it with students. Computing Services bought the new printer for the River Cluster with the idea that it would "cut back on the usage of the other public printers," therefore being "a good investment," Eckels said. The printer cluster is open from 10 p.m.




News

DMS ranks eighth in U.S. News report

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For the first time in recent history, Dartmouth Medical School is listed in the top 10 of U.S. News and World Report's ranking of primary care medical schools released today. DMS was excluded from the top 50 medical schools last year, but this year, the school came in eighth. The Amos Tuck School of Business ranked eighth again in U.S.




News

In two years, Mock Trial works to make practice perfect

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Did the celebrity newscaster, in the prime of her career, murder her cocaine-addicted son or did she shoot him in self-defense? The Dartmouth College Mock Trial Society, in only its second year of existence, will send two teams to Manchester Community College in Hartford, Conn., this weekend to argue this case at a regional mock trial tournament. If the Dartmouth team matches last year's top-four finish, it will travel to Des Moines, Iowa, in April to compete in the American Mock Trial Association's National Championship Tournament. Last year's team took the "Best New School Award" at the 1997 National Competition. "Our performance last year put Dartmouth on the mock trial map," said co-Captain and Mock Trial Attorney Dave Gacioch '00. This year's "student-founded, -led and -directed" team consists of 16 undergraduates who collaborate to prepare testimony, arguments and witness examinations for a fabricated case they will argue against other colleges at tournaments, he said. The Mock Trial Society will argue the case four times during this weekend's two-day competition, and each trial can last for up to three hours, co-Captain and Mock Trial Attorney Rosanna Taormina '99 said. She said members will compete against 20 teams from schools including Brown, Yale, Cornell and Howard Universities. "We will have almost every top team at the Manchester tournament," Taormina said. "Powerhouse" mock trial teams generally have an attorney coach, and some schools, such as University of Maryland, even offer Mock Trial Competition as a yearlong course.


News

August Wilson describes origins of his 'Joe Turner'

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This term's Montgomery Fellow August Wilson spoke about his play which will be performed at the College this weekend, "Joe Turner's Come and Gone," and his beginnings as a writer to about 20 students yesterday in the Mid-Fayerweather residence hall basement. He explained the history of "Joe Turner's Come and Gone," which begins tonight in the Hopkins Center.



News

Technology expert sees into future

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Information technology expert George Gilder said portable digital phones and Java will be omnipresent in the future in an interview with The Dartmouth yesterday. Gilder said the most common personal computer in the future is likely to be a digital cellular phone. "It will be as mobile as a watch, as personal as a wallet, and will recognize speech, navigate streets, collect your paycheck and read your e-mail," he said. He predicted the cellular phone would also have the capability to connect to large displays in airports and cars so that consumers would not have to read from a postage-stamp size display on the "smart phone" itself. He also said that the phones would not run any Microsoft operating system such as Windows 95, but would have the capability of running programs written in Java -- a computer language which allows programs to be run under any operating system. What advice did Gilder have for students who are interested in the rapidly developing digital communications technology industry? "Learn Java," he said. Gilder said he thought the Moore's Law -- the concept that microprocessor technology doubles every 18 months -- would not only continue into the next century, but would accelerate. He added global digital communications power would soon triple every year, an idea he called "Gilder's Law"


News

Gilder says TV will not last

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Information technology expert and Gilder Technology Group, Inc. President George Gilder told an audience of approximately 100 people about the problems of the information age in the Hinman Forum at Rockefeller Center last night. "Television is going to die," Gilder said.




News

Two students spend Carnival time in jail

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Winter Carnival was unusually calm this year, according to the Hanover Police. Only two students were taken into police custody over the weekend. According to Hanover Police Chief Nick Giaccone, this year's Carnival "was absolutely the slowest ever." Last year's Carnival was also described as "quiet," but a dozen people were still taken into custody -- an average number for the weekend. The Hanover Police brought both students -- a male from another college and a female from Dartmouth --to the police station early Saturday morning for intoxication. Although there will be no police action against the student from another college, the Dartmouth student will be charged with resisting arrest, and will have a court case at a later date. Giaccone would not release her name Tuesday.


News

Financial aid will stay the same: Unlike Princeton, Dartmouth's aid is considered case-by-case

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Dartmouth will not be revamping its financial aid policies despite recent changes Princeton and Yale Universities have made to their policies to ease the tuition burden on middle-income families. Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg commended Dartmouth's current financial aid policies and added that Princeton and Yale's recent policy changes reflect policies which Dartmouth has been practicing on an individual student need basis all along. Princeton's new policy will not consider home equity as an asset for families with incomes below $90,000.



News

Speech classes are in high demand

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The speech office, once a large department and now Dartmouth's smallest academic division, is now located in just one room of the Asian Studies Department in Bartlett Hall. Five highly popular courses are taught every year by a senior lecturer, Jim Kuypers. In the late 1970s, Kuypers said, the speech department was abolished under the condition that the College should keep eight to 10 public speaking courses. The speech office, founded in 1980, then comprised from three to five people before faculty slots were cut four years ago due to lack of funding, Kuypers explained.


News

Town may build $5.1 mil. project

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On May 12, Hanover residents will be asked to approve a $5.1 million project that would include a 300-space parking garage as well as 48,000 square feet of office and retail space. The project, if approved, will be a joint venture with the College that will increase downtown parking by 228 spaces and build a retail and office space that Dartmouth would own and operate.