The Dartmouth newspaper 7/31/15

Page 1

VOL. CLXXII NO.100

FRIDAY, JULY 31, 2015

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE

Dino Koff is new financial aid director

SUNNY HIGH 82 LOW 57

By brandon apoo The Dartmouth

Courtesy of Eli Burakian

MIRROR

DUCK SYNDROME AT DARTMOUTH PAGE M2

TYPES OF TYPE A

OPINION

HARARY: IMPROVING AFRICAN AID PAGE 4

ARTS

HOP 2015-2016 PREVIEW PAGE 7

Former Geisel financial aid director Dino Koff will succeed Virginia Hazen as the College’s director of financial aid.

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TWITTER @thedartmouth COPYRIGHT © 2015 THE DARTMOUTH, INC.

SEE AID PAGE 5

College will promote gap years to new students

B y jennifer joo The Dartmouth

Beginning with the Class of 2020, the College will encourage students who are interested in taking a gap year to look into paid opportunities through the Aspen Institute’s Franklin Project clearinghouse — a project that encourages students to do a year of service in between high school and college. T h i s initiative comes in the wake of the “Moving Dartmouth Forward”

policy initiative, which announced the College’s partnership with the project. The Franklin Project seeks a future where a year of service is a cultural expectation and civic rite of passage for every young American, according to its website. The project started with a conversation between former Commander of U.S. Forces in Afghanistan Gen. Stanley McChrystal and retired news anchor Bob Schieffer at the Aspen Ideas Festival in 2012.

The College is among a handful of colleges and universities to partner with the Franklin Project. Other partner institutions include Tufts University, Tulane University, College of William and Mary, the University of Pennsylvania and the University of California Hastings School of Law. Part of the Franklin Project’s ideology is that if a generation of Americans devote one year to service, it will unleash a reservoir of human capital to tackle press-

ing social challenges, unite diverse Americans in common purpose and cultivate the next generation of leaders, according to its website. The new partnership with the Franklin Project offers another resource for students who plan to take a gap year, dean of admissions and financial aid Maria Laskaris said. Laskaris said that her team is working closely with the Center for Professional Development to ensure SEE GAP PAGE 2

Lodge construction may begin as early as fall 2016 B y priya ramaiah The Dartmouth Staff

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On August 1, Dino Koff will become the College’s new financial aid director. He succeeds Virginia Hazen, who will retire this summer after 45 years of at the College, 25 of which were spent as financial aid director. The final decision for the position was made by Maria Laskaris, the dean of admissions and financial aid. Koff served as the financial aid director for the Geisel School of Medicine since 2008. Since 2013, Koff has lead various aspects of Geisel as associate dean and direc-

Since it opened in 1938, the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge has been a source of fond memories for students at the College. Now, after a 10-year planning process, replacement designs and architectural sketches have been released for the plan to rebuild the Lodge. Director of Outdoor Programs Dan Nelson said that the Moosilauke Advisory Committee, which includes alumni as well as student

leadership of the Dartmouth Outing Club, has been discussing the need for a new or renovated Lodge for more than a decade. He cited the larger student body and larger freshman outdoor trips program as one of two main reasons for the renovation plans. The other impetus for a new Lodge was the deteriorating condition of the building, Nelson said. “The Lodge was never anticipated to last for more than 40 to 45 years due to its log construction,” Nelson said. “Now it’s almost 80

years old.” Rotted logs in the Lodge building have been replaced as needed for years, he added. The new Lodge building design calls for an insulated timber structure instead of logs, which will be more energy-efficient and longlasting, Nelson said. “I think the building will combine the kind of warm feeling and history of wood logs that we so love and appreciate about the current Lodge,” he said. According to the office of plan-

ning, design and construction’s website, the decision to rebuild rather than renovate the Lodge was made after a feasibility study conducted by the College concluded that a renovation to meet all necessary safety and building codes would reduce the usable space of the Lodge by 30 percent, an unreasonable restriction given the facility’s programming needs. While the architectural plans, completed by Vermont-based Maclay Architects, have been completSEE LODGE PAGE 3


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