Meredith October 31, 2001 Hi ERALD Volume X¥tt. IssueX ^ TvTTT New online student portal goes live Q Say goodbye to the CamTel. Access student information online with new portal. Chrbttna Holder Editor in Chief Technology Services launched a new online student portal on the Meredith website last week that will give stu dents access to a searchable student directory. The portal, available to Meredith students alone, will provide student information such as phone numbers, grade classification and campus and hometown addresses. Diane Davis, a web pro grammer in the Office of Techology Services and the head designer of the portal, said that as of Tuesday, 206 studentsiiad.[egt^ered. , To register for the portal, a student will enter her Meredith email address into the online registration form. Instantly, the system will email her a tempo rary numerical password. She then can log onto the portal, change her password and customize her homepage. “This gives students the option of putting as much or as lit tle informa tion as they want,” said Davis. Other portal features include "quick links." pre programmed URL address es that a stu dent may click upon and instantly view the page. Quick links offered on the portal include- -among many- -Campus E- News. the Learning Cen ter and -the undergraduate and graduate calendars. A student can also add up to five of her own favorite links to her personal homepage. The portal offers a form to add links Seniors Mary Frances Vassaur and Molly Jensen register for the new online student portal. beyond the Meredith interface. The portal was built as pan of a technolo gy intiative for use by Mered ith students alone accord ing to Davis who contends the portal is currently “hacker- proof.” Davis and other pro grammers in Technology Services test ed the portal "a full month before it went live,” she said. ••So if someone typed in some ambiguous name,” said Davis, “they wouldn’t get Access is also denied for Meredith stu dents who try to enter email addresses Staff Photo Bv Christina Holoed Other than Meredith addresses into the registration form However, Davis said whether a student is an active user of her Meredith email account does not affect her ability to register for the portal. "With the web-based inter face. if they [students] would register their Meredith email account, they can forward all other mail and never have to access the Meredith account again,” said Davis. Senior Mary Frances Vas saur, who registered for the portal diis week, said that it was an easy process. “You’re done in two min utes," said Vassaur The portal also appealed to Vassaur because she can access other students' phone numbers easily and quickly. ‘That and I can never find the CamTel,” she said of the hard copy all-campus directory whose 2001-02 edition has yet to -be distributed to students and staff. The portal, while new to Meredith, is a standard concept See PORTAL page two Black towel collages honor reading program Kristen Thompson stall Repoiter When you walk into die first floor of Cate, you cannot help but to look up at the hanging collages suspended from the ceiling. The individual collages were created by freshmen in connec tion with the Freshmen Sum mer Reading Program. This year’s selection. In the Time of the Butterflies, by Julia Alvarez, has provided fresh men with many events to express their views on the book. The collages, small group discussions and the movie pre miere of the book on Show time Oct. 21 have allowed freshmen to further enjoy their summer reading. All incoming freshmen are asked to read the same book the summer before they arrive at Meredith. In addition to reading the book, they receive a booklet with reflection questions and N THE INSIDE: supplemental information such as a timeline, a map pertaining to the setting, information about the author and informa tion about the related special projects and convocations that will be going on during the year When the freshmen arrive at Meredith, they discuss the book in small groups with vol unteer faculty facilitators and upper-class students. The program is based out of the Office of First Year Experi ence, but according to Chrissie Bumgardner, director of First Year Experience, “it takes many members from all over the community to put it togeth er” “Last year we had 36 faculty and staff to volunteer to serve as small group facilitators.” said Bumgarner. While Meredith faculty and staff meet regularly to choose the summer reading book and plan the events that take place throughout the year, this year they will be adding students to the cormnittee. Normally, every year there are special convocations relat ing to the book, but this year it happened that the movie In the Time of the Butterflies pre miered on Showtime, which allowed Bumgarner to play the movie in place of a convoca tion. •The Maribel sisters in the book In the Time of the Butter flies were brave young women who ended up giving their lives to instigate a revolution that See IN THE TIME page two ON DINNER; A health consultant to the Congo shared experiences at United Nations dinner on campus. ON STAGE: Eight plays in one weekend at the American College Theatre Festival. ON CORNHUSKIN’: Our regular rehei>rouser Joni Smith gets ready to shuck some com In her latest editorial.