The Bowdoin Orient

Volume CXXXVII, Number 24
 May 2, 2008


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Deans plan advising reforms for Class of '12

By STEVE KOLOWICH, ORIENT STAFF

A year and a half after a reaccreditation team identified academic advising one of Bowdoin's weak spots, the College will report its plans to improve pre-major academic advising to the Board of Trustees next weekend. The report will mark the culmination of an initiative that began last September and has involved a number of meetings with students and faculty as well as an advising survey of current first years.

?Breach? investigation continues

By JOSHUA MILLER, ORIENT STAFF

Three weeks after Bowdoin acknowledged a "possible breach of data security" in which student Social Security numbers, health insurance information, and internal employee reviews were left accessible to anyone with a Bowdoin username, the College remains mum on what happened. "The lawyers are advising us that until we know everything, the information we give out isn't necessarily the truth and so, what we're going to do is?and we promise we'll release everything?to finish the investigation, because it's not done yet," Chief Information Officer (CIO) Mitch Davis said.

Pemper departs for Div. I Naval Academy

By MARY HELEN MILLER, ORIENT STAFF

After an extraordinarily successful 10 years at Bowdoin, Associate Athletic Director and Head Women's Basketball Coach Stefanie Pemper announced on Tuesday that she will leave Bowdoin for the position of Head Women's Basketball Coach at the U.S. Naval Academy. Assistant Coach Julie Veilleux will accompany Pemper to coach the Division I program in Annapolis, Maryland. Pemper said that she expects to move sometime in the next two weeks.

Registration bumps some from first-choice courses

By ANNE RILEY, ORIENT STAFF

In past semesters, most classes with fewer than five enrolled students have been canceled for not having met minimum enrollment requirements. However, instead of canceling low enrollment courses this year, the College has aimed to fill those courses during Phase I by pulling students out of their first-choice courses?even if those classes are not yet full?and placing them in their low-enrollment, second-choice courses. According to Dean of Academic Affairs Cristle Collins Judd, some 20 students were affected by this minimum enrollment policy during this week's course registration process.


FEATURES

The year in review: policy changes, town disputes

By GEMMA LEGHORN, ORIENT STAFF

Bowdoin's 208th academic year rang in a series of new policies, new buildings, and new conflicts. While much of the construction that was prominent on campus during the 2006-2007 year came to an end this year, campus events continued to revolve at a fast pace. The following is a chronology of the Orient's most important stories that have shaped the Bowdoin community over the last nine months.


SPORTS

Men?s tennis upsets twice to win NESCAC

By GREG TABAK, STAFF WRITER

With the NESCAC final deadlocked at 4-4, the Bowdoin men's tennis team knew that it had a championship riding on the shoulders of Tyler Anderson '10. Fortunately for the Polar Bears, Anderson did not waver, triumphing over his Middlebury opponent in three sets to earn the men's tennis team its first NESCAC championship in program history. The Polar Bears, who were ranked No. 4 in the NESCAC going into the tournament, were looking to upset No. 2 Middlebury last Sunday at the Panthers' home court.


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