(07/12/07 4:00am)
While it didn't contain the massive line-up that Woodstock touted, the Monterey Pop Festival of 1967 was the event where two of the greatest images to define rock history would occur: The Who obliterating their equipment and Jimi Hendrix setting his guitar ablaze during "Wild Thing." As they say, a picture is worth a thousand words.\nThanks to The Criterion Collection, this documentary shot by D.A. Pennebaker is available today. Whether it be Otis Redding's wildly entertaining soul set or the hypnosis-inducing sitar wizardry of Ravi Shankar, every passing minute captures something uniquely exciting that no festival nowadays possesses: the birth of music that would change a nation and shape a generation.\nJanis Joplin, Jefferson Airplane, Simon & Garfunkel and plenty more are showcased here. Sure you could purchase the DVDs individually, but if you call yourself a rock fan and don't own the three-disc set, you're certainly committing blasphemy.
(02/27/07 5:00am)
HANOVER, N.H. – Colleges and universities brought in a record $28 billion through charitable donations in 2006 – a 9.4 percent increase from 2005. Alumni giving, which accounts for about a third of such donations, grew by over 18 percent compared to last year, according to statistics released last week by the Council for Aid to Education.\nStanford University led the pack with $911 million in donations, collecting the most ever by a single university, while Dartmouth College, which saw a 51 percent increase in donations from last year, raked in $160.3 million.\nFive of the top 10 fundraisers were Ivy League schools. Dartmouth ranked seventh in the Ivy League, directly behind Princeton University and ahead of Brown University.\n“We have a very loyal and generous alumni body – most people who go to Dartmouth have a terrific experience, so they want to give back,” said vice president for development Carolyn Pelzel, who attributed the disparity in total donations between Dartmouth and its peers to the smaller number of alumni.\nGiven that the largest gift from a single donor was $5.9 million, the vast majority of money raised for the college came from a large number of donors. Pelzel said the average alumni gift was $2,629.\nIn contrast, among the schools higher up on the list, most of the money comes from a small number of large gifts. Stanford credited approximately 40 percent of its total fundraising to 10 donations, including a $100 million gift from alumnus and real estate developer John Arrillaga.\nAbout 60 percent of the college’s donations are from alumni, a figure that’s twice the national average of 30 percent.\n“When you look at giving per alumnus, Dartmouth is typically in the top four,” Pelzel said. \nAccording to Pelzel, the college’s newest academic and residential buildings create a visible testimony that helps garner financial support from alumni and parents of current students.\n“It’s a source of pride for people,” Pelkel said. “It really helps to build confidence in our constituency.”\nCAE survey director Ann \nKaplan said that colleges “are making a good case for support.”\n“The level at which they can receive contributions will have something to do with the economy, but they have to be out there asking for it,” Kaplan said.\nStanford’s total for 2006 was boosted by two separate official campaigns for donations during the year. With 300 full-time employees asking for donations, the campaigns helped to create a total that is approximately 50 percent higher than the previous year.\nLike Stanford, Dartmouth also experienced an increase due to campaigning, Pelzel said. As of February 2007, the Campaign for the Dartmouth Experience has collected $809.6 million of its $1.3 billion goal. The campaign ends in December 2009.