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The Orient
will not be published over the summer. Look for our next issue in early
September.
-The Editors 2001-2002
Update
Grandfathering amendment on the table
JAMES FISHER, ORIENT STAFF
An amendment to plus/minus grading, introduced in Monday's
faculty meeting, will be put to a vote by the Faculty later this month.
[read the article]

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The oldest continuously published college weekly
in the United States
Volume CXXXI, Number 24
May 3, 2002
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Faculty considers GPA vote
BELINDA J. LOVETT, ORIENT STAFF
One month following the Faculty's decision to implement
a plus/minus grading system, the Faculty will once again be making a decision
regarding grading at Bowdoin. [read
the article]
Students seek grandfathered grade status
NICHOLAS J. LoVECCHIO, ORIENT STAFF
After
the Faculty voted 45 to 29 last month to implement a plus/minus grading
system, various groups of students, including Student Government, have waged
campaigns to encourage the Faculty to reconsider the issue. [read
the article]
Tour raises accessibility awareness
BELINDA J. LOVETT, ORIENT STAFF
Members
of the Bowdoin community toured the campus in wheelchairs and on crutches
Tuesday on a route designed to point out the inaccessibility of various
campus buildings to handicapped individuals. [read
the article]
Early decision will stay
JAMES FISHER, ORIENT STAFF
The College's admissions office has no plans to scrap the
early decision process after the University of North Carolina gained nationwide
attention by doing so last week. [read
the article]
Search for vacant positions continues
NICHOLAS J. LoVECCHIO, ORIENT STAFF
The searches for a new treasurer and a new assistant dean
of Student Affairs are nearing completion, while the search for a new
director of Facilities will begin soon. [read
the article]
Parking violations decrease
FE VIVAS, STAFF WRITER
Parking
statistics released by security last month reveal that parking violations
on Bowdoin's campus are down by 5.5 percent compared to last year's numbers.
[read the article]
News
briefs
32 Afghan prisoners arrive in Cuba...
Colby considers ban on smoking...
Bath Iron Works loses design contract...
Kentucky Derby this Saturday...
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Taxi experiment deemed a success
FE VIVAS, STAFF WRITER
The Bowdoin Student Government recently proclaimed Brunswick
Taxi's trial run as the new convenience shuttle system a success. [read
the article]
17 students receive EMT certification
ANN SMITH, CONTRIBUTOR
Hosted by the Bowdoin College EMS (BCEMS) club, the students
went through 120 hours of rigorous EMT-Basic training provided by the
Portland Fire Department Paramedics. [read
the article]

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Security's other side
Officer Logan and I head out in Security's
ubiquitous white Jeep. It is charged with a strong smell of beer-that
of an unregistered keg, I learn. [read
the article]
Military tribunals: are they fair?
What is important is not
just to see that justice is done, but that the world perceives
that justice is done. [read
the article]
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The Gala: a guide
In case we don't have enough to worry about already,
the Activities Board has given us one more thing to add to the
list. [read the article]
Focus attention on stereotypes, not racism
If the goal of these Asian-American students
is to educate, they are expending their energy on action that
does little to help Americans understand why the shirts are
offensive. [read the article]
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Menagerie
hits Pickard
The play promises to be as powerful on Bowdoin's
Pickard Theater stage as it was when it originally premiered in
Chicago in 1944. [read the article]
Ted previews hottest summer albums
Weezer, possibly the best band in rock, will release
their fourth album entitled Maladroit on May 14, almost
a year to the day after The Green Album. [read
the article]
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Don't count out these Bears
Bowdoin softball extended its win streak to five
games last weekend and heads to the NESCAC tournament at Williams
tomorrow. [read the article]
Ultimate hosts KBB
The men and women's ultimate teams combined forces
last Sunday to participate in the Kind Bud Bowl, a tournament
hosted by Bowdoin on the Farley Fields. [read
the article]
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Dog owners may find fewer
spots to walk their dogs in the near future, as Bowdoin considers
implementing restrictions on dog-walking on certain spots on-campus,
including the Farley athletic fields.
The possibility of enforcing restrictions, according to Director
of Facilities Bill Gardiner, follows increasing concern over people
not cleaning up after their dogs, and in some cases people actually
refusing to clean up their dogs after being asked to do so.
"I feel certain most dog owners and townspeople will readily
understand if the College must take such action," Gardiner
said. (Susan Sullivan, Bowdoin Orient)
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The College performed
a 'green' demolition of a campus house on South Street last Monday.
97 percent of the materials from the house will be recycled. (Courtesy
of James Marshall) |
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