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Volume 126, Number 25 March 29, 2006
Top Story

Music service will be free for ’06-’07
At the last Student Senate meeting held on Monday, even as the current Senate was getting ready for the transition that is going to take place with GM week elections, a lot was discussed. When Ruckus came to RPI, it offered students the ability to download an unlimited amount of songs for free and the only cost incurred was for the server, which this year was paid for by a grant, costing nothing to Rensselaer. It attracted the original limit of 3,000 students to sign up almost immediately, and Ruckus has maintained its membership on campus with 3,200 users currently signed up.

FULL STORY

 

News

Mid-term grading policy to be voted on by faculty

MSA hosts awareness week

Ed/Op

Staff Editorial
Institute authority should not duplicate punishment

Editorial Notebook
Archives share RPI history

Editorial Notebook
Improving leadership assists all

Top Hat
Students fight for greater assistance

Derby
Good leaders yield results

Interfraternity Council
Assist with GM Week philanthropic events

The Barstool
Greater injury awards gain more attention

Letter to the Editor
Trust women to make their own decision

Elephants Peanut Gallery
Prisoners’ rights may impede punishment

Features

Tyler Hinman defends his crossword crown

Dave Barry
Florida’s Everglades encompass alligators, houseboats

Icebreaker shatters usual RPI entertainment

Gaffigan cleanly jokes about food

Words to Eat By
Verdiles lacks flavor

Sports

Red Hawk pitching salvages weekend

Fourth period woes for RPI

Croxton’s career gets new chapter

RPI starts strong, stumbles in league

Track heads outdoors

Maine remains perfect at Pepsi

One-Timers
George Mason challenges status quo

Rensselaer in Brief

Nuclear Conference

The RPI chapter of the American Nuclear Society is hosting the organization’s national student conference this Thursday to Saturday on the Troy campus. Organizers have planned a series of lectures and discussions on topics ranging from future developments in nuclear energy technology to non-proliferation agreements and their place in international politics. Guest speakers will include Dr. John Gutteridge of the Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Science, Energy, and Technology and Commissioner Peter Lyons of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Also holding conferences on campus this weekend are the Society of Women Engineers and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. The SWE conference expects to draw over 200 students and professionals from around SWE’s region F. The AICHE conference will feature the regional qualifying event for the Chemical Engineer Car competition, along with discussions about graduate school and opportunities in the workforce. All three conferences will draw large crowds on a weekend which will also include graduate accepted students day.

Middle States Awaits

In the coming days, the visiting committee evaluating RPI’s compliance with regional academic standards will arrive for a weeklong visit. The Middle States Association of Schools and Colleges will complete its review of the Institute’s accreditation at the conclusion of the visit, which will be conducted by faculty and administrators from several colleges and universities in the area. The visiting committee is chaired by Dr. Jared Cohon, president of Carnegie Mellon University.

Faculty, staff, and students have spent the past two years preparing a self study report evaluating all aspects of RPI’s academic and support offerings, ranging from general education to Institute leadership and governance. Representatives of the process have generally commented that RPI is not in any real danger of losing its accreditation, but that the study serves an important purpose in evaluating the effectiveness of the Institute’s educational offerings. Professor Don Steiner has chaired the Self Study Steering Committee since its inception; Robert Conway, a senior staff member in the Provost’s Office, and Vice Provost Prabhat Hajela served as the committee’s liasons to Middle States and to the Rensselaer administration.

Boehlert No Re-election

Congressman Sherwood Boehlert, R-New Hartford, announced on March 17 that he would not seek re-election to the U.S. House of Representatives this November. Boehlert is currently chair of the House Science Committee and is one of the most senior members of the House. He has long been a staunch supporter of NASA and the U.S. space program, and this past summer he presided over the first Congressional hearing to include witnesses testifying from space.

On March 18, President Shirley Ann Jackson officially thanked Boehlert for being “a powerful voice for science in America.” RPI’s Director of Federal Relations, Deborah Altenberg, who is currently on maternity leave, formerly worked for Congressman Boehlert. Four Democrats have already announced their candidacy for the vacated seat. No Republicans have made any major announcements concerning running for Boehlert’s seat.

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