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(09/26/13 8:50pm)
Post-revolution turmoil in the Middle East is a natural effect of creating new democracies, not a sign that the Arab Spring was unsuccessful, Tunisian president Moncef Marzouki argued in a lecture about the challenges facing his country’s new democracy on Thursday afternoon.
(09/26/13 8:10pm)
Before delivering a public lecture on Thursday afternoon, Tunisian president Moncef Marzouki spoke briefly with The Daily Princetonian about the challenges he faces as president and the reasons for his visit.
(09/24/13 9:55pm)
Gail Collins, a New York Times columnist and the first female editor of that paper’s editorial page, spoke on campus Tuesday about women’s rights from the 1960s to the present.
(09/24/13 8:50pm)
Before speaking on campus Tuesday, BuzzFeed COO and president Jon Steinberg ’99 sat down with The Daily Princetonian to discuss his memories from Princeton, his position at the helm of one of the Internet’s most popular media companies and advice for current Princetonians.
(09/24/13 8:38pm)
The birth control pill, the economy of the 1970s and the civil rights movement were the three factors that made the boom of women’s rights between 1964 and 1972 possible, New York Times columnist and former editor of the Times’ editorial page Gail Collins said in a lecture on Tuesday.
(09/24/13 7:40pm)
While Gov. Chris Christie and New Jersey State Sen. Barbara Buono seek to emphasize their differences in the run-up to the Nov. 5 gubernatorial election, they have at least one thing in common: Both are closely connected to the Princeton area, and, in Christie’s case, to the University.
(09/24/13 2:38pm)
Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick endorsed Newark Mayor Cory Booker’s senatorial campaign at the American Whig-Cliosophic Society on Tuesday, saying he’d vouch for Booker even “if [he] was running for dogcatcher.”
(09/24/13 9:23am)
“If someone says they don’t like the cute animals on BuzzFeed, you should turn to them and ask if they are a robot,” Jon Steinberg ’99, the president and COO of BuzzFeed, said jokingly during a lecture he delivered on Tuesday night.
(09/23/13 9:10pm)
Researchers from two think tanks faced off in a debate on Monday over whether the United States should intervene in the ongoing Syrian civil war. The discussion included audience voting to gauge members' progressing reactions. While 43 percent of the audience initially voted against intervention, this number increased to 61 percent by the end of the debate, all while the number of undecided votes decreased.
(09/23/13 8:45pm)
Gmail, the email service offered by Google that also hosts the University's @princeton.edu addresses for students, experienced technical difficulties on Monday.
(09/22/13 6:02pm)
The National Association for College Admission Counseling approved a new set of guidelines under which U.S. colleges may pay recruiters of international students, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported on Saturday.
(09/22/13 5:47pm)
Columbia University professor Prabhjot Singh was assaulted Saturday night, Reuters reported. The New York Police Department is investigating the attack as a possible hate crime, The Huffington Post reported.
(09/20/13 10:03am)
Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick will speak at the American Whig-Cliosophic Society at12 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 24, Whig-Clio announced in a press releaseFridaymorning.
The visit will be part of Patrick's speaking tour throughout New Jersey to support Newark mayor Cory Booker's campaign for the U.S. Senate. Patrick, a Democrat, is the first African-American governor of Massachusetts.
(09/18/13 2:27pm)
A Princeton town council subcommittee is in the process of developing a plan that would clarify local law enforcement’s role — or lack thereof — in the enforcement of federal immigration laws.
(09/17/13 7:20pm)
The government has the ability to easily keep track of every citizen’s online activity, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Barton Gellman ’82 said in a lecture at the Wilson School Tuesday.
(09/17/13 7:05pm)
Economics professor Alan Krueger served as the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers from November 2011 until August 2013 after being appointed by President Obama. He previously served as the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy and the Chief Economist of the Department of Labor.
(09/15/13 12:11pm)
Newark Mayor Cory Booker, the Democratic candidate in the Oct. 16 special election for the New Jersey Senate seat formerly held by Frank Lautenberg, made a campaign stop with Rep. Rush Holt in Princeton on Saturday afternoon.
(09/15/13 12:02pm)
Following Secretary of State John Kerry’s Saturday announcement that the United States and Russia reached an agreement for the international control of Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal, The Daily Princetonian spoke briefly by phone to U.S. Representative Rush Holt, a former arms control expert for the State Department, to discuss his position on the viability of the agreement. Holt explained that while it was still too early to tell whether the involved parties would stick to the agreement, the possibility of a diplomatic solution was far preferable to previous arguments for U.S.-led military strikes on the war-torn country.
(09/15/13 9:30am)
Cara McCollum, who competed as Miss New Jersey, was eliminated from the Miss America national competition on Sunday night when the top 15 semifinalists were revealed at the beginning of the evening’s programming. An English major formerly a member of the Class of 2014, McCollum is currently taking a year of leave from the University to fulfill her duties as Miss New Jersey.
(09/15/13 8:57am)
Late last week The Daily Princetonian spoke to Steve Lonegan, who is running as the Republican candidate for the late Senator Frank Lautenberg’s seat. He will face off against Newark Mayor Cory Booker in the special election scheduled for Oct. 16. Lonegan spoke about his agenda and expressed confidence in his campaign’s momentum.