the miscellany news

lxxxii

2.7.08

  • news
  • opinions
  • life
  • arts
  • sports
  • backpage

« January 2005 | Main | April 2005 »

February 04, 2005

Committee on College Life examines policies

Plans made to address discipline, underage drinking

Jen Dixon

Rules and regulations relating to conduct violations, in the eyes of the Committee, are not clear enough and may cause problems due to different possible interpretations.

Comments (0) | full article

Sanction policies unknown to students

College Administrators claim that Student and Community Fellows are well informed of the College’s policies regarding infractions and sanctioning. Several Student Fellows, however, disagree.

Comments (0) | full article

Another Angle | When to speak out against free speech?

Amanda Melillo

We seem so liberal that we’re beyond the Democrats and sometimes even the convention of clothing, and so PC as to prohibit any sort of discussion. However, certain events, particularly of this year, have called this image into question.

Comments (0) | full article

On the Fence | The danger of narrow-minded liberalism

Ian Saxine

I was recently informed of a certain conservative, off-campus website where students can register complaints about being “indoctrinated” by their liberal college professors, eerily reminiscent of 1950s anticommunism efforts.

Comments (0) | full article

Disapproval of frivolous '07 class gift

Jessica Gentile

Towards the end of winter break, Class of 2007 students received a letter informing them that a class gift of $12,500 would be spent on replacing the bell above Main building.

Comments (0) | full article

Letters to the Editor

The Miscellany News finds balance in new design, and an objection to Backpage wildlife mockery.

Comments (0) | full article

Matthew's Mug temporarily shuts down

Jamie Rosen

Matthew’s Mug was closed last Thursday, Jan. 27 through Saturday, Jan. 29 due to incidents of underage drinking and vandalism earlier in the week. The Mug staff met Friday to discuss ways to ensure that the Mug is run in accordance with New York’s state laws.

An unknown person plugged the drain in the men’s bathroom and turned on the sink at the Mug Saturday, Jan. 22. Once the resulting flood was stopped by unclogging the drain, the offender again clogged the drain and turned on the water, this time removing the faucet handles.

Comments (0) | full article

VSA plans for socially responsible investing

Fabian Arzuaga

Vassar Student Association Treasurer Andy Caselli ’05 is working with the Finance Office to consider changing a socially responsible mutual fund in which Vassar is currently invested.

Comments (0) | full article

ASA joins protest against crude tsunami song

Anita Varma

After the tsunami of Dec. 26, people worldwide offered condolences and monetary aid to the victims. However, WQHT 97.1 radio DJs decided to use the tsunami as material for a comedic morning show song.

Comments (0) | full article

Alumnae House reopens after extensive renovation

Hayley Tsukayama

The Vassar Alumnae House is once again open for business after extensive renovations to its 80 year-old structure.

Comments (0) | full article

News Briefs

Marijuana found in Terrace Apartments, student assaulted near Town Houses, jogger pursued by bikers on farm, and envelope found containing cash

Comments (0) | full article

Vassar grad has affair with U.K. Home Secretary

Scandal rocks British press, is compared to Lewinsky scandal in U.S.

Patrick Murray

Kimberly Solomon '82, now Kimberly Quinn, has become the center of one of Great Britain’s leading sex scandals, involving one of the most powerful members of Tony Blair’s cabinet.

Comments (0) | full article

Food writer Molly O'Neill reads from memoir

Former New York Times editor shares witty stories

Judy Jarvis

Maybe it was cute, maybe it was corny, but I asked famed former New York Times food editor Molly O’Neill to survey the All Campus Dining Center’s culinary offerings with me.

Comments (1) | full article

Sushi Village offers a cultural food experience

Jiemei Geng

The Japanese are quite correct in their philosophy of a meal being a reflection of both tradition and the aesthetic. Food should be not only exquisite in taste, but also pleasing to the eye.

Comments (0) | full article

Metcalf offers support, dispels policy rumors

Sarah DeFilippe

Sometimes life as a college student can become overwhelming. It is almost inevitable that, as students try to balance their schedules with classes, sports, extracurriculars, and relationships, problematic issues arise.

Comments (0) | full article

Composition professor works on first novel

Instructor pursues writing goals in Vassar environment

Claire Taylor

The term ‘sparsely decorated’ barely begins to cover Josh Harmon’s office. There is nothing to break up the white monotony of the walls save a window and two shelves loaded with books.

Comments (0) | full article

QCVC brings Alix Olson's slam poetry to campus

Jessica McLachlan

She is a woman, a poet, an activist, a radical, and a feminist among other things. It seems virtually impossible to place Alix Olson into any category without excluding some of her great qualities.

Comments (0) | full article

Summer programs start application process early

Internships at Vassar and beyond prepare students for real life

Abby Loomis

After being spontaneously called up to the podium to speak about her participation in Vassar’s Community Fellows summer program, Lulu Caruso ’07 immediately launched into an energetic and enthusiastic speech on why her experience was so valuable.

Comments (0) | full article

Women's basketball breaks losing streak

Carole Beitcher

Stuck in a bit of a slump, the women’s basketball team has found itself behind a 1-4 league record and a 5-11 overall record, tied with Skidmore for sixth place in the competitive Liberty league.

Comments (0) | full article

Novelist packs Students' Building

John Palmer

Michael Chabon, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, visited the second floor of the Students’ Building on Feb. 1 as part of the Alex Krieger ’95 Memorial Lecture Series.

Comments (0) | full article

VassarChat open as tool to communicate and procrastinate

John Palmer

Vassarchat.com exists for students and alumni to explore a number of different communication avenues and discuss all sorts of different interests, from academics to culture to a risqué “In the Bedroom” forum.

Comments (0) | full article

Vassar College Bookstore welcomes author of book on twentysomethings

Janine Parziale

Afraid of facing the harsh reality of a drab corporate building and a 60-hour workweek? Writer Colleen Kinder describes how to stave off these horrors in her newly-released book entitled Delaying the Real World: A Twentysomething’s Guide to Seeking Adventure.

Comments (0) | full article

Oscar nominations omit several Vassar favorites

Scorsese and Eastwood duke it out in the Academy's ring

Margaret Files

Nominations for the 77th Annual Academy Awards were announced on Tuesday, Jan. 25, featuring as always a few surprising snubs and inclusions in an otherwise predictable race.

Comments (0) | full article

Fashion shows present new looks for spring season

Marcella Venizale

The first month of 2005 has already proved eventful for the fashion world.

Comments (0) | full article

Bright Eyes evokes Dylan

Freddy Deknatel

After playing the song “Lua” during his Friday night show at Town Hall in New York City, Bright Eyes’s Conor Oberst may or may not have seen Lou Reed, the notorious and vastly influential former frontman of the Velvet Underground, seated in the fourth row, nodding his head approvingly.

Comments (1) | full article

Vintage alternative venue brings big names, future stars to Hudson Valley

Deborah Temkin

In an alleyway just off Main street, one of the most famous concert venues in the country hosts names as big as Joan Osborne, The Wallflowers, Hoobastank, and more.

Comments (0) | full article

What's to do? Hudson Valley Edition

Gehry-designed center hosts classics, Rhinebeck welcomes Art to the stage, and the entertainment calendar for Friday, Feb. 4 and Saturday Feb. 5.

Comments (0) | full article

Women's lacrosse season preview

Catherine Twardy

Despite the heavy recent snowfall, the women’s lacrosse team is already gearing up for an exciting Spring 2005 season.

Comments (0) | full article

Sports Briefs

The men's and women's fencing teams lose matches to Rutgers and Yale and men's basketball recruit Lawrence Avitabile '08 continues to impress.

Comments (0) | full article

Sports Calendar

Game schedule for the week of Feb. 3 to 11.

Comments (0) | full article

Women's swimming team races to victory

Yoana Kuzmova

Avid competition was the name of the game during the Seven Sisters Swimming and Diving championship that took place on blizzard-struck Vassar campus last weekend.

Comments (0) | full article

Men's volleyball optimistic despite early losses

Jessica Chong

On the weekend of Saturday, Jan. 22, the Vassar Men’s Volleyball team defeated the University of New Haven to finish fifth out of six colleges in the two-day Vassar Invitational Volleyball Tournament.

Comments (0) | full article

Out of Bounds | Most important match-ups of Super Bowl XXXIX

Gabe Mosca

When the Patriots won the Super Bowl in the winter of 2002, the Out of Bounds staff thought it was just a pleasant coincidence that a team with such a moniker was victorious just a few short months after Sept. 11.

Comments (0) | full article

A fitness fantasia on national themes

In the spirit of the New Year, the Backpage invited Fitness and Life Expert David Le as part of our communal resolution to eat right, feel good, and look even better (if that’s possible).

Comments (0) | full article

Backpage Calendar

The events calendar for the week of Feb. 4 to 10, plus an amusing encounter with a Kansas choir.

Comments (0) | full article