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The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Huntington News

The independent student newspaper of Northeastern University

The Huntington News

City

MBTA’s GM contest wraps up

January 27, 2011
The winner of the ‘General Manager for a Day’ contest, announced last week on the MBTA website, will spend the day touring and observing the repair shops and control systems used for the T, commuter rails and buses around the city.

Students respond to lewd half-time show

January 27, 2011
Students, parents, and fans had mixed reactions to The Boston Blazers lacrosse team apology released Jan. 19 for their controversial halftime show Jan. 15.

Libraries soon to shut down in Boston

January 20, 2011
The state has given $350,000 has to keep four branches of the Boston Public Library open for an additional three months. This news comes after Mayor Thomas M. Menino proposed to close the branches as a “cost-saving plan” in a recent interview.

Anthony Bourdain gets a taste of Southie

January 13, 2011
Celebrity Chef Anthony Bourdain has graced Boston with his presence.  Bourdain traveled to South Boston last week to film an episode of No Reservations, hitting several local favorites and sticking to small, locally-owned bars.

Students unruffled by Hill shootings

January 13, 2011
The shooting took place around 6:45 p.m. outside Fuentes Market on 680 Parker St. The victim was a 20-year-old male, shot in the leg. He was treated for injuries at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The Boston Police Department declined to comment any further due to the investigation still being open, but according to the website SpotCrime.com, there was no information on the shooter, and witnesses were uncooperative.

Cleaning up Mission Hill

December 9, 2010
Since Halloween, the Mission Hill Breakfast Club has met on Sunday mornings to help clean up the community. The club is a new student group that is run through the Off–Campus Student Services and organized by the campus ambassadors, and is intended as a means to ease tensions between the Northeastern and Mission Hill communities.

Patick, NU to build center

December 9, 2010
Eager to establish its presence on the forefront of technological innovation, Northeastern University has teamed up with the Patrick-Murray Administration, the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission, The City of Holyoke, private partners EMC and Cisco and a group of colleges known as the University Consortium to launch a new high-speed computing center in Holyoke.

Free-for-all faith

December 6, 2010
Jason Chrisos has perfect posture. Sitting upright with his hands folded in his lap, he prepares for a contemplative dialogue within the confines of his mind. Usually, this is called prayer, but now, his head is not bowed. It hasn’t been in four years, since he first traded rigid pew benches for plush meditation cushions and a stretched-flesh Crucifix for a big-bellied master. Holding a copy of “Mindfulness in Plain English” in the hands that once held the Bible, Chrisos exhales as he proceeds to start his mid-week reflection as a “Christian-rooted Buddhist.”

Letter: NU students should be more respectful

November 18, 2010
My fellow Northeastern classmates should pay attention to new policy guidelines for off campus students currently being drafted by City Council President Mike Ross. It is difficult to get college students interested in the workings of the Boston City Council, especially if their closest brush with politics was jumping in the reflecting pool in celebration after Barack Obama won in 2008.

Hard to get off campus

November 18, 2010
For students seeking to escape the restrictions of on-campus housing, off campus might soon no longer be an option.

Lunch on Wheels: Food truck vendors could soon be a reality on campus

November 11, 2010
After a late night out, Akash Sharma and his friends only had one thing on their minds: food. They arrived at Cappy’s Pizza and Subs, one of the latest closing eateries near campus, at around 2:45 a.m. to find a dark store with a sign on the door that said “closed”. With all of Northeastern’s food services shut for the night, Sharma and his friends were out of luck and walked home with heads hung low and stomachs growling.

MBTA, BPD crack down on subway vandals

November 4, 2010
In a recent push to eradicate graffiti on the T, Boston Police have cracked down on vandals on most T lines. Sentences for vandals have become more harsh than the usual slap on the wrist. They now include more severe punishments like jail time, probation and thousands of dollars worth of fines.