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The Daily Princetonian

First lady Michelle Obama ’85 has rebuffed invitations from Princeton administration

Over the past seven years, as her husband rose to national prominence, University officials made at least six direct overtures to Obama to return to Princeton or speak at Princeton-affiliated events. In all but one case, Obama has rebuffed the University’s advances, often citing a busy schedule.The series of overtures, mostly conducted out of the public eye, sheds new light on the complicated — and perhaps changing — relationship between Obama and the University she has generally stayed away from since she graduated.

NEWS | 10/23/2012

The Daily Princetonian

USG passes election regulations in light of Ingram ’16 controversy

The USG passed new election rules in a 22-1 vote at its Senate meeting Sunday night in light of an attempt by a freshman to auction the Class of 2016 Facebook page’s cover photo to Freshman Class Council candidates earlier this month.Baxter Ingram ’16, the administrator of the Class of 2016 Facebook account, sought to sell the cover photo to the highest bidder of the 32 Freshman Class Council candidates during the first week of October. The USG distanced itself from the campaign tactic, though at the time the election handbook did not explicitly prohibit it.

NEWS | 10/21/2012

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The Daily Princetonian

National Review's Ponnuru ’95, Vanity Fair’s Purdum ’82 square off in election debate

Partisan politics may prevent legislative accomplishments no matter who wins the presidential election in November, despite the stark differences in ideology between President Barack Obama and former governor Mitt Romney.Todd Purdum ’82, the national editor of Vanity Fair, and Ramesh A. Ponnuru ’95, a senior editor at the National Review, agreed on this at least Saturday morning during a debate on the upcoming election as part of the Aspire Celebration.

NEWS | 10/21/2012

The Daily Princetonian

For online copyright violators, potential U. discipline awaits

By the time one student entered sophomore year, file-sharing had become a common personal practice. This student used BitTorrent — a file-sharing client with a reputation of being the fastest way to download large files — to download movies over a home wireless network. But using BitTorrent on the University’s Internet got the student caught.“I got an email a couple days later,” said the student, who was granted anonymity due to the nature of the incident. “It was my first time at Princeton [using BitTorrent] and pretty much my last time.”

NEWS | 10/21/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Q&A: Cornel West GS '80 admits he misses Princeton, muses on presidential debates

Last May, African American Studies professor and political activist Cornel West GS ’80 retired from Princeton to teach at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. The Daily Princetonian spoke with him about his latest academic research, public service projects and hip-hop collaborations, in addition to his thoughts on the 2012 presidential debates and University President Shirley Tilghman's legacy.

NEWS | 10/21/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Starting today, Firestone to require PUID scan

As of Monday morning, members of the University community will be required to use their University ID Card to enter Firestone Library.Previously, students and faculty had been asked to show their PUID to a security guard stationed at the front desk. The front entryway of the library is now equipped with a digital card sensor that can read students’ ID cards, similar to those on doors of residential halls.

NEWS | 10/20/2012

The Daily Princetonian

After deanship, Malkiel returns to classroom

When history professor and former dean of the college Nancy Malkiel, was hired in 1969, she was one of the first women at the University.The late Lawrence Stone, the chair of the history department at the time, told Malkiel her hiring was a novelty.“It’s not that we have a policy against hiring women,” Malkiel said the chair told her. “It’s just that nobody’s ever suggested it before.”The sentiment behind those words — the novelty of introducing women to the University community as students and scholars — has become the subject of her current research and teaching.

NEWS | 10/18/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Yale mulls grade deflation, looks at Princeton

Yale is examining its grading policy and will analyze Princeton’s controversial, pioneering grade deflation policy, making it the latest Ivy League institution to rethink how it grades in the wake of Princeton’s policy change in 2004.Yale has created an ad hoc committee to examine its grading policies, and while it is unlikely the committee will recommend a formal grade deflation policy, the committee is currently gathering data. This data gathering will include an analysis of Princeton’s policy, according to Yale economics professor and committee chair Ray Fair.

NEWS | 10/18/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Adm. Mike Mullen, former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, stresses global interdependence

Admiral Mike Mullen, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and a visiting professor at the Wilson School, walked through the major players in the current international scene and highlighted his concerns for the future of America, both at home and abroad, in a lecture Thursday.Mullen began by speaking about what he called “strategic ecology,” which he described as the interdependence of the world today, including trends ranging from the decline of rural economies to increasing joblessness to cyber dependence. He expressed his concerns over how people have had an increasingly difficult time looking at the bigger picture, saying that people need to have a broader worldview.

NEWS | 10/18/2012

The Daily Princetonian

U. defends Arts and Transit Neighborhood

University officials defended the planned Arts and Transit Neighborhood at a lengthy meeting of the Regional Planning Board on Thursday evening, presenting its development plans for an arts center in great detail.Design and engineering representatives from the University’s development team gave a series of presentations detailing the technical and practical details of the proposal. The hearing will be continued on Nov. 1 at a meeting where opponents of the University’s proposal will present testimony.

NEWS | 10/18/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Carl Icahn ’57: Wall Street guru

Carl Icahn ’57, one of the University’s wealthiest alumni and biggest donors, has made a fortune, but not always friends, during his ascent on Wall Street. Icahn is known to his enemies as a corporate raider and a bully but to his friends as a generous and successful man who stands as a shining example of how hard work and talent pays off.Icahn, who now has a net worth of $14.8 billion, is 21st on Forbes’ list of wealthiest Americans. He founded his own firm only 11 years after graduating from the University and went on to become a giant in American finance.

NEWS | 10/18/2012

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton stores student ID data without policy

Someone at the University is able to know when you last used your University ID card to go to the gym, eat late pizza at Frist, have a meal at any dining hall, access your dorm room, enter a building after hours and check out a book from a campus library. Every time a student uses a PUID, the student leaves a trail that is recorded by a number of University databases.And starting next year, the dorm room information will not only be recorded but will be securely streamed real-time over the campus Wi-Fi network. 

NEWS | 10/17/2012