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Men’s swimming and diving head coach Skip Kenney, far left, stands with his team in March 2005. Kenney confessed yesterday to intentionally erasing the records of some of his former swimmers.
Coach deletes stats
Men’s swimming and diving coach admits removing former athletes’ records from media guides, athletic director promises ‘appropriate corrective and punitive steps’
NEWS|
Men’s swimming head coach Skip Kenney intentionally removed the times of five swimmers from the team’s media-guide record books, the University confirmed yesterday, following an investigation by The Daily. Several of the swimmers expressed in interviews their belief that the omissions were purposeful and vindictive — an effort to get back at swimmers who left the program on bad terms.
Journalist delves into Iraq debate
NEWS|
Thom Shanker, Pentagon and foreign policy correspondent for The New York Times, spoke about the Iraq war and the future of the American military presence in the Middle East during a speech in Tresidder Union’s Oak Lounge last night.
HPV vaccine promoted
NEWS|
Stanford Students for Choice (SSFC), Vaden Health Center and the Public Health Initiative have combined forces to educate the University community about the newly-approved vaccine for Human Papillomavirus (HPV), culminating in this week’s HPV Vaccine Awareness Campaign.
Raagapella makes semifinals
NEWS|
Raagapella, Stanford’s newest a cappella group, has advanced to the semifinals of the International Championship of Collegiate a Cappella (ICCA), which will take place tomorrow in San Rafael at the Marin Center for Performing Arts.
Energy group picks director
NEWS|
Sally Benson, former deputy director of operations at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, began her duties as executive director of Stanford’s Global Climate and Energy Project (GCEP) last Thursday.
Police Blotter
NEWS|
This report covers a selection of crimes from Feb. 28 to Mar. 7, as recorded in the Stanford Police Department Public Bulletin.
Stolen Cal Nobel Prize is recovered
NEWS|
The axe is safe, but an even more valuable object went missing from a UC-Berkeley display case: its first Nobel Prize.
What's on your iPod?
NEWS|
The second installment of the musical preferences of students, faculty and administrators.
The World this Week: 3/9/07
NEWS|
The talks between the Bush administration and the regime of dictator Kim Jong Il, which President Bush assigned to the “axis of evil” in his first term, represent a major shift in U.S.

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