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Volume 126, Number 13 November 16, 2005
Top Story

Senate debates nominees

Last Thursday, during the Student Senate meeting, several judicial appointees were confirmed. While almost all nominees were confirmed, one was not, and the Senate may reconsider the appointment at this week’s meeting.

FULL STORY

 

News

College presidents’ salaries rise

Student opinions on Ruckus vary

elephants and donkeys

Ed/Op

Staff Editorial
Priority should be placed

Editorial Notebook
H&SS needs improvement

Editorial Notebook
Rethink desire for independence

Undergraduate Council
UC keeps busy with

Derby
Football succeeds

Top Hat
Remember your blessings

The Soap Box
Commons’ issues never get solved

Letter to the Editor
Alito claims unwarranted

Letter to the Editor
Black Friday delights alum

Letter to the Editor
A few points on fight song

Go Be Red carnival suffers from over-booked weekend

Features

Players create amusement through murders

Dave Barry
Handy tips facilitate do-it-yourself building

Words to Eat By
Fresno’s service lags behind food

Engineering Your Health
Boost metabolism

A cappella group earns full credit

The Soap Box
Unique brews worth long drive

Sports

Union steals Shoes, title in shootout

Engineers tame conference Cats

RPI rallies for ECAC crown

Red Hawks drown Brewers

Welcome back, Juneau

Seven seniors prepare for greater roles

Freshmen set pace at NCAA Regionals

Women sweep D-III foes

Conquest sign Cole for 2006

Rensselaer in Brief
i2hub closes
On Monday, i2hub, the service that utilized RPI’s Internet2 link for chat and file sharing, closed its doors over fears of impending lawsuits from the Recording Industry Association of America. The site now contains a picture of the “Remember i2hub” sign that was hung on a window of the CII last spring and links to articles written at the service’s beginning and end. According to the Associated Press, this year, 635 users at colleges across the country have been sued as a result of their usage of i2hub.

Several months ago, the Supreme Court ruled against the P2P sharing program Grokster, overturning a previous ruling indemnifying makers of a technology from possible illicit uses. This case was finally settled on Monday, and Grokster agreed to pay $50 million and cease operation of its peer-to-peer network.

Busses for break
his year’s academic breaks were recently announced. Busses will be running for Thanksgiving break to and from the airport and the bus and train stations.

On Tuesday, November 22, a bus will leave the armory at 6 am for Albany Airport. At 7 am, there will be transportation to the airport, Amtrak rail, and Greyhound bus stations. The schedule will continue until 7 pm going to Amtrak and Greyhound on odd hours and the airport on even hours. The last trip at 7 pm will service the airport, Greyhound, and Amtrak. The service will run in the same way on Wednesday, but will end at noon.

On Sunday, November 27, buses will run from noon to 10 pm. Even hour trips will depart from Albany Airport and all odd hour buses will leave from Amtrak and Greyhound. The last trip at 10 pm will service Amtrak, Greyhound, and the airport.

Research grant awarded
Professor Brian Benicewicz and his team have received a three-year, $900,000 grant from the Department of Energy to research high-temperature fuel cell polymer membranes—one of the core technologies necessary in creating fuel cells. This research is part of an overall $64 million research plan by the DOE that seeks to make hydrogen fuel cell vehicles and refilling stations practical by 2020.

The polymer membrane being developed at RPI makes hydrogen purification, separation, and storage possible at high temperatures—capabilities which are key to optimizing hydrogen fuel cells for practicality and efficiency. This marks the second major grant RPI has received for fuel cell research, as the National Science Foundation awarded the Institute a $3.2 million grant last June.

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