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| About us | A publication of the Newspeak Association | History and Records |
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About The Towers
The Towers Association Formed in 1909, The Towers (formerly the Technews Association and Newspeak Associations) is the second-oldest recognized student group on campus, excluding fraternities. The group is comprised entirely of students who volunteer their time each week to tend to the daily operations of publishing the WPI student newspaper. Approximately 1/3 of the association's annual operating and publication budget comes from the WPI Student Activities Fee, while the remaining 2/3 is generated by the staff through advertising revenues. Location
The first newspaper office was in the Magnetics Laboratory (now Skull Tomb). Throughout the years, the paper has been published from various locations around campus, such as the Green Room in Alden Hall and the basement of Sanford Riley Hall(in what is now The Little Theater), just to the left of what was then Gompei's and Riley Commons. In January of 2001, the association moved to its current location on the second floor of the Campus Center. The office is located at the end of the corridor behind the main desk, across from the student affairs office. The History of the Newspaper The paper was first published on September 15, 1909 under the name "Tech News" and continues to appear weekly on Tuesdays during the academic year. An Excerpt from "Seventy Years of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute" (227) describes the organization's beginnings as: " One of the most stimulating innovations of this period...." A group of 1911 men originated the idea, and submitted it to the Board of Trustees in the spring of 1909. Publication began the following September, most of the staff being members of the class of 1911, with Stanley P. Stewart as editor-in-chief. This weekly paper was well edited from the start, and became popular immediately. The following year, the Tech News staff was given permission to use the magnetic laboratory as its headquarters. The paper suspended publication for a brief period in 1912, but resumed in the fall and continued without a break thereafter, except during the war period in 1918. On February 27, 1973, the name of the publication was changed to "WPI Newspeak", in an effort to produce a more student-centered paper that was a voice for the campus. In 1998, the paper (still called "Newspeak") joined U-Wire, a free collegiate wire service in order to provide its readers with relevant news from other colleges and universities. Additionally, the paper began printing articles from the L.A. Times / Washington Post News Service. This was replaced in 1999 by the Associated Press, provided by Newsfinder. Newspeak's first Full-Color edition was also published that year as a supplement about the construction of the WPI Campus Center. In April of 2000, the Association published its annual "April Fools Edition", which has long been known as a humorous prank played on the campus community. The spoof involved a hoax in which a secret society known as "Scapulus" took-over the newspaper and moved it back to its original headquarters in the magnetics laboratory, where they began to publish under the original name of Tech News. After the issue arrived, the staff liked the look of the traditional name and began exploring the idea of changing it back permanently. Their original thoughts were to bring back a piece of lost WPI history. In July of 2000, after much constructive commentary and debate between students, faculty, and the Newspeak Association staff, it was determined that the newspaper would indeed return to its former name. The first paper was published on August 26, 2000, beginning with Volume 65, Issue #1 -- the exact sequence where the original "Tech News" left off. The group continues to call themselves "The Newspeak Association" as a tribute to the paper that served the campus so well for nearly thirty years. Starting at the beginning of the 2007-08 academic year, the organization underwent one final name change. The new name, The Towers, came after much deliberation once again. The change arose for many reasons, the greatest of which was that it was a general consensus that Tech News was no longer able to accurately depict the whole student body and the institution as a whole. The new name is a reference to the two towers of WPI and the founding tenets that Boynton and Washburn believed were most fundamental to education: theory and practice. The name also incorporates the overall direction of the college. It is not directly connected to one vein of study (aka no direct reference to technology). The Towers represents the past, present and future of Worcester Polytechnic Institute as it travels beyond just a “tech” school. |