Bridge Year sees steady expansion, opportunity for more growth
Bridge Year has expanded steadily since its inception in 2009, and administrators are looking to continue to expand the program.
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Bridge Year has expanded steadily since its inception in 2009, and administrators are looking to continue to expand the program.
The University has offered admission to 1,908 students, or 6.99 percent, of the 27,290 applicants for the Class of 2019.
Mayor Liz Lempert said she would recuse herself from a vote on a proposed 7-Eleven because of a conflict of interest,the Princeton Packetreported.
The online primary voting process for a Young Alumni Trustee for the class of 2015 will start on Tuesday, according to University spokesperson Martin Mbugua.
While the Lakeside Graduate Housing project is scheduled to open on June 1 after a year-long delay, some graduate students say that lack of communication, financial burden and less-than-optimal living conditions in temporary housing for the affected students have been problematic.
Politicians need to stop damaging women’s lives in their political games and instead design policies to support women’s rights and true gender equality, formerTexas state senator and former Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis said at a lecture on Wednesday.
Crunchbutton, a start-up that offers delivery service from restaurants that typically do not deliver, will launch its operations on campus on Feb. 26.
The town of Princeton is considering charging customers a fee of between 10 and 25 cents for disposable plastic or paper bags, The Times of Trenton reported.
Two Harvard students were expelled for sexual misconduct on Dec. 10, according to a Feb. 4 article inThe Harvard Crimson.
The Office of Information Technology will be gradually implementing changes in Blackboard Learn, the learning management system used by the University, in order to make it simpler to use, Associate Chief Information Officer and Director of Academic Technology Services Serge Goldstein said.
A team of researchers from the University and Dartmouth has discovered that Pseudomonas aeruginosa, one of the world’s most prolific bacteria, afflicts humans through the sense of touch.
Congressman and former Assistant Director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory Rush Holt will serve as CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science after his retirement from the House of Representatives, according to the AAAS’s press release on Tuesday. Holt will assume his new post in February.
The Center for Jewish Life maintains ties to the University, including a lucrative fundraising partnership, despite its official status as a separate nonprofit organization, a review of financial disclosure forms by The Daily Princetonian has found.
The pedestrian and bike path between the University campus and the temporary Princeton Station will close for work related to the completion of the new station starting next Monday, Administrative Captain of the Department of Public Safety Donald Reichling announced in an email to studentson Wednesday.
Several hundred people affiliated with Harvard were emailed a death threat on Oct. 3, according to TheHarvard Crimson.
When it comes to preparing course packets for their courses, professors generally have two options: ask the University library to upload electronic course reserves or prepare a hard-copy packet printed by Pequod Communications.
William Deresiewicz, author of the controversial column “Don’t Send Your Kids to the Ivy League,” argues in his latest book, “Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life,” that the current higher education system is facing a crisis. The Daily Princetonian spoke with Deresiewicz after a lecture in Whig Hall Senate Chamber about this crisis and what college students can do to change it.
William Deresiewicz, author of “Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite and The Way to a Meaningful Life” discussed the crisis of higher education at a lecture on Thursday.
Plans for the construction of a campus pub are on hiatus due to difficulties in finding an appropriate location, University Vice President and Secretary Robert Durkee ’69 said.
The service hours for Counseling and Psychological Services have been extended for Mondays and Wednesdays as of Sept. 8 in an effort to increase availability and access to students. Students will now be able to make an appointment with CPS until 7 p.m. on both days.