Brokaw talks future of U.S.
Caleb KennedyLegendary broadcast journalist and author Tom Brokaw presented a lecture titled “The Time of Our Lives” about the American dream and how the United States should focus on service.
Legendary broadcast journalist and author Tom Brokaw presented a lecture titled “The Time of Our Lives” about the American dream and how the United States should focus on service.
According to a report released by The Chronicle of Higher Education, University President Shirley Tilghman was paid $910,626 in 2009, ranking 45th of all of the university presidents surveyed for the report.
Most Princeton students have heard of the Breakout Princeton Civic Action Trips organized by the Pace Center for Civic Engagement. Known on campus as Breakout Trips, the trips take place during fall and spring break, though planning for the trips start months earlier. Many Princeton students noted that, while the trips are good learning experiences, they are also a significant time commitment and are by no means a relaxing way to spend fall break — particularly for trip organizers.
Alex Gansa ’84, the executive producer and head writer of the current Showtime series “Homeland” and a writer/producer of “Entourage,” “24,” “The X-Files” and “Dawson’s Creek” spoke on Tuesday about his career path and the experience of working at both network and cable shows.
The University can now move forward with its plans to build its long-planned Arts and Transit Neighborhood. On Tuesday evening the Borough Council approved a zoning ordinance granting the University the right to build its $300 million developments, ending a contentious six-year process.
Nine days before the University announces its early-action admission decisions, Ivy League universities and experts are assessing the impact of Harvard and Princeton’s recent move to reinstate early-action programs.This year, Princeton received 3,547 early-action applications, and Harvard received 4,245. The shift by the two universities created a ripple effect across the Ivy League, admissions experts said, most notably at Yale and Columbia.
Starting on Monday, the Princeton Borough Police will be conducting additional patrols and checkpoints as part of the annual statewide “Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over” campaign.
Playwright and Artistic Director of McCarter Theatre Emily Mann has been named the 2011 Person of the Year by the National Theatre Conference.
Documentaries are a rich form of storytelling with the ability to mobilize the public and shape public policy, argued documentary filmmaker and editor Purcell Carson and TV producer and human rights law scholar Emily Holland ’01 in a panel Monday evening titled “The Role of Documentary in Shaping Public Policy.”
The University’s Facilities Organization has appointed Timothy Downs as the new director of Facilities Finance and Administrative Services, effective Nov. 1.
In a Monday evening panel discussion titled “The Art of Sustainability! Why We Need Art to Make Progress on Environment,” participants Fritz Haeg, Subhankar Banerjee and Jenny Price ’85 discussed how manipulating art can enact changes in environmental policies and practices.
A number of students are complaining that Undergraduate Housing has implemented a new University furniture policy without adequately informing undergraduates — or at least begun to enforce an older policy without notifying students of its existence.
Bruce Easop ‘13 has won the USG presidency in a runoff election against USG vice president Catherine Ettman ‘13, USG president Michael Yaroshefsky ‘12 announced in an email to the student body early Friday evening.Easop won by a vote of 1,064 to 982. Ettman won the majority of votes in every class, except for the Class of 2013.
According to University researchers, the elusive solution for storing energy in electric vehicles may have been discovered in an unlikely place: bubbles.Porous graphene membranes for lithium-air batteries have been found to store more energy than conventional graphene sheets, according to scientists at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Princeton.
While the men’s water polo team played at the NCAA Championships in California this weekend, four Princeton computer science majors took first place in an entirely different event just an hour away at Facebook’s headquarters in Palo Alto.
The Forbes Multipurpose Room was transformed into Kitchen Stadium on Sunday night as students waged a culinary battle for the title of Iron Chef: World. For Forbes’ first college-wide cooking competition, participants were divided into teams, with each team representing one regional cuisine, and given ingredients to create dishes from their respective regions. The event was planned by a team of Forbes residential college advisers.
Geosciences department chair Bess Ward will receive the 2012 Procter & Gamble Award in Applied and Environmental Microbiology, the University reported Wednesday.
Cannon Dial Elm Club welcomed 138 members on Saturday, out of a total of 189 students who bickered. The students will be the first class of new members to take their meals in the Cannon clubhouse since the club closed its doors after the 1972-1973 academic year. Cannon was in operation between 1990-98 in the former Elm Club, which now houses the Fields Center. At the time, it was known as Dial Elm Cannon.
Creating computational models that depict visualizations of distant galaxies and movements of single atoms will soon become much more feasible with the opening of the University’s High-Performance Computing Research Center, a 47,000-square-foot building located on Princeton’s Forrestal campus.
princeton township resident Bill Spadea has announced his candidacy for the 16th District Assembly seat, filling the position of Peter Biondi, who died two days after his re-election in November.