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Cybertherapy: The next trend in psychology?

The treatment of psychological ailments like post−traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has moved beyond the therapist's office and into the digital realm, allowing patients to face their fears from behind a computer screen.


The Setonian
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CJ Saraceno | Ban Together

My favorite scene in "Forrest Gump" (1994) is during Forest's impromptu running campaign, when a group of reporters chases after him to find out why he's running. "Are you doing this for world peace? The environment?" They ask. Innocent Forrest's motives were much simpler: He "just felt like running."


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Hillel members sell latkes for charity during Hanukkah

Junior Matt Davis and sophomore Liz McGarry prepared latkes at Tufts Hillel last night. They will sell the latkes in the Mayer Campus Center today to benefit Solar Electric Light Fund, a nonprofit organization that provides solar power technology to developing countries.



The Setonian
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The evolution and definition of the hipster

Hipster — a word vague enough to be discouraged from use in the New York Times by the paper's standards editor but sufficiently offensive to be insulting when hurled at disheveled, bespectacled English majors who don flannel shirts and tightly clinging jeans.


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ResLife: $100 fee for remaining over break

Students remaining on campus over the 10-day period after the end of finals on Dec. 22 will this year be charged a $100 winter housing fee, the Office of Residential Life and Learning (ResLife) announced in a Nov. 15 e-mail to international students.




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Online courses play growing role in higher education

Imagine waking up two mornings a week and, instead of walking to Cohen Auditorium for your Biology 13 class, opening your laptop and watching the lecture from the comfort of your room. This might sound like an unlikely scenario on the Hill, but streamed lectures are becoming more and more of a reality at private and public colleges alike.



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TUPD officers join students for game night in Metcalf Hall

Metcalf Hall on Thursday night hosted a game night with members of the Tufts University Police Department (TUPD) to promote bicycle and laptop registration as well as enhance relations between students and members of the police force.


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WMFO marks 40 years in operation

WMFO Tufts Freeform Radio on Friday celebrated its 40th anniversary, showcasing its newly updated facilities at an open house event in its Curtis Hall studios.


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Group suggests racist role in security alert

In response to Thursday's false alarm regarding a report of an armed man on campus, a group of students, outraged by what they perceived to be racial undertones prompting the incident, organized a poster campaign.


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Psychologist, students: Meditation an effective path to stress-relief

    College students turn to a long list of activities to relax and blow off steam — working out, socializing, playing sports — the list goes on. But Christopher Willard, staff psychologist at Counseling and Mental Health Service (CMHS) and member of the board of directors at Boston's Institute for Meditation and Psychotherapy, recommends they add another, more exotic activity to that list: meditation.



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MHS credits high graduation rate to diversity

    As the new documentary "Waiting for ‘Superman'" — which argues for the need for public school reform in the United States — continues to draw national attention, Medford High School (MHS) seems to be bucking the national trend of student dropouts.


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University professors give Wikipedia a facelift

The legitimacy of Wikipedia, the popular online user-edited encyclopedia, as an academic resource has long been doubted; citing information from the website on a research paper would likely result in derision by one's professor, if not a flat-out F.


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Former Guantanamo Bay interrogator visits the Hill, addresses torture issues

Matthew Alexander, a former senior interrogator and U.S. Air Force officer, delivered a lecture yesterday evening in Braker 001. Alexander is the author of ‘How to Break a Terrorist: The U.S. Interrogators Who Used Brains, not Brawn, to Take Down the Deadliest Man in Iraq' (2008) and an upcoming book, ‘Kill or Capture.' Amnesty International at Tufts sponsored the event.



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Anna Christian | The College Survival Guide

For some reason, it has become acceptable — even commonplace — for the typical college student to go out during the week. Tufts does Tuesday and Thursday, my friends' schools do Wednesday and some schools even do Sunday and Monday. Generally speaking, this behavior is neither healthy nor acceptable, but the concern doesn't seem to deter many students come nine o'clock. It's a way to break up the week; nothing seems further away from Monday morning than Friday night, and who really wants to wait that long anyway? However, going out and going to class the next day has students paying the price — it's amazing how so many of us schedule our week around a class-free Friday just to avoid this cost.