Celebrating Tech Leadership—and Education—Over the Years

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The Department of Computer Science marked its 30th anniversary this summer.

From the advent of artificial intelligence to the teaching of algorithms, Dartmouth has an enduring legacy of excellence in computing. 

Since the 1940s, faculty and students have not only revolutionized computer hardware and software design but also pioneered the diverse applications of computation across the arts and sciences.

Dartmouth was the site of the first demonstration of remote access to a computer in 1940. The field of artificial Intelligence was famously established by Dartmouth mathematician John McCarthy, at a national conference held at Dartmouth in 1956. 

In the 1960s, John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz invented the computer language BASIC. They also implemented the first (and eventually, largest) time-sharing system that made computers freely available to college students.

In the summer of 1994, the Department of Computer Science was launched, splitting away from the Department of Mathematics.

Over the years, Professor Emeritus of Computer Science Tom Cormen has seen his textbook Introduction to Algorithms sell over a million copies in multiple editions. And professors today continue to do groundbreaking work in such fields as robotics, visual computing, mobile health, creative computing, and machine learning.

It’s no wonder, then, that Dartmouth had much to celebrate when faculty and former students this summer gathered together on the occasion of the department’s 30th anniversary.

Photos
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Trenchard More; John McCarthy; Marvin Minsky; Oliver Selfridge; Ray Solomonoff
Five of the original participants in the 1956 conference on artificial intelligence at Dartmouth gather at the 50th anniversary in 2006. From left are Trenchard More, John McCarthy, Marvin Minsky, Oliver Selfridge, and Ray Solomonoff.  (Photo by Joseph Mehling)
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Donald Johnson and Ekaterina Pelekhov
Donald Johnson, first chair of the Department of Computer Science, and graduate student Ekaterina Pelekhov, Guarini ’01, in 1994.  (Photo by Joseph Mehling)
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A group of people around an old computer
At center, Samuel Rebelsky, then a visiting assistant professor of computer science, chats with, to his right, graduate students Charles Owen, Guarini ’98, now a professor at Michigan State, and Jamie Ford, Guarini ’00, ’03, seated. The person at right is unidentified.  
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Tom Cormen, Ekaterina Pelekhov, and Scott McElfresh
From left, graduate students Scott McElfresh, Guarini ’94, now a professor at Christopher Newport University, and Ekaterina Pelekhov, Guarini ’01, chat with Professor Tom Cormen soon after computer science became its own department and moved to Sudikoff Hall in 1994. (Photo by Joseph Mehling)
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Don Kreider and Scot Drysdale
Professors Donald Kreider, left, and Scot Drysdale, talk in Sudikoff Hall in September 1994. (Photo by Joseph Mehling)
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David Kotz, Panagiotis Metaxas, and Scot Drysdale
Provost David Kotz ’86, the Pat and John Rosenwald Professor in the Department of Computer Science; Wellesley College Professor of Computer Science Panagiotis Metaxas, Guarini ’92; and Scot Drysdale, now emeritus professor of computer science, cut a cake earlier this summer to celebrate the 30th anniversary in the south atrium of the Class of 1982 Engineering and Computer Science Center, where the department is now located. (Photo by Katie Lenhart)