September 25, 2008

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Digital info boss added to top brass by

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Construction on Few going

Nasher goes gold

as planned Crews working longer

Julia Love

THE CHRONICLE

shifts to keep

The University is responding to the challenge of organizing, digitizing and preserving the intellectual output of students and faculty by creating a new top administrative position—director of digital information strategy. The task of devising this strategy will fall to Paolo Mangiafico, who signed a contract to serve as director of digital information strategy Wednesday. His apbe pointment will funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, as will a parallel post at Dartmouth College. “There has been an explosion of digital assets around the University, and there’s also an opportunity to make use of educational assets that have not yet been digitized,” Provost Peter Lange said. “We need a broad strategy ofhow best to use and preserve these assets.” The role will require Mangiafico—who is currently digital projects manager for Duke University Libraries—to meet with a committee appointed by the provost to evaluate how digital information is currendy

by

Students relive the Golden Age ofSpain to eat, dance and enjoy art Wednesday night at La Gaia de Oro at the Nasher Museum of Art. The event featured Spanish-themed entertainmentand food.

SEE DIGITAL ON PAGE 5

Some college papers cut production by

Meredith Shiner THE CHRONICLE

If you were to take a Wednesday day trip to the University of California at Berkeley—one of the nation’s most renowned and politically active college campuses—something would be con-

spicuously missing. Actually, make that 10,000 somethings. The Daily Californian, UC-Berkeley’s 137-year-old independent newspaper, announced Aug. 25 that it would no longer produce a print edition on XTn 4- t“/S Wednesdays in an effort to break even in the 2008-2009 academic year. P]T 111 / In a time ofeconomic crisis and widespread p , 0 newsroom cuts, even college publications are

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feel the financial heat. Bryan

Thomas, editor ofThe Daily Californian, said the paper’s reduction from five print editions per week to four was a necessity in light of a sharp decline in national revenue. “We had to move quickly because as an independent paper, we’re acting without a safety net,” Thomas said. “We made all the cuts that we could before coming to this choice. At the end of the

day, too much of our overhead was tied up into the production of the newspaper.” Thomas said he and the publication board for The Daily Californian hope this year can serve as a “one-year buffer zone” as they try to structure a long-term plan for the paper’s organization and financial model to support daily production as soon as possible. “The reaction was one of sadness on campus,” Thomas said of his paper’s August announcement. “I don’t think a huge number of students were surprised because they knew about trends in national and local papers. But the first question people ask is, ‘When’s it coming back?”’ The changing reality of college journalism Twenty-eight thousand miles away and a mere three days later, editors at The Daily Orange, the independent newspaper at Syracuse University, fell in line with their Californian counterparts by announcing they would publish four print editions and run a full online-only paper on Fridays. Stephen Dockery, editor of The Daily Orange, said Fridays SEE PRODUCTION ON PAGE 6

up pace

Ally Helmers THE CHRONICLE

Thanks to a crew of nearly 300 drilling after dark, Few Quadrangle is still on schedule to re-open at the beginning of the Spring semester. “If you were to walk through the building, you may wonder how in the world it will all come together,” said Eddie Hull, dean ofresidence life and executive director of housing services. “There’s so many different pieces.” Construction workers at the site said they are working upwards of 12 hours a day, ending their shifts at around 9 p.m. At the current rate of work, the building is expected to be ready for students returning from study abroad programs to move in, Hull said. He added that construction on Few’s exterior, however, may take longer. “The most important thing is to make sure the living environment is squared away,” Hull said. Joe Gonzalez, associate dean for residential life, said longer work days and weekend work have kept the project on schedule. Few has traditionally been home to three fraternities—Alpha Epsilon Pi, Kappa Alpha Order and Phi Delta Theta—and two selective living groups—Prism and Round Table. Although the groups were moved to various quads around campus this semester, they have all been offered the opportunity to return to Few in Fall 2009, Gonzalez said. He added, however, that the groups SEE FEW ON PAGE 5

Renovations to Few Quadrangle are on schedule to be completed by early 2009 due to longer workdays.


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