Firestone security may be updated with renovations
When one former University student found herself in need of a non-circulating book from Firestone Library that was pivotal to her senior thesis, her decision was difficult but obvious: steal it.
When one former University student found herself in need of a non-circulating book from Firestone Library that was pivotal to her senior thesis, her decision was difficult but obvious: steal it.
A panel of experts on the American perception of Islam spoke in Frist Campus Center on Thursday afternoon to address the congressional hearings currently being run by Rep. Peter King concerning the threat of radicalization within the American Muslim community.
Due to a salary freeze and a voluntary contribution from the University, the Township’s proposed 2011 municipal budget, introduced Monday, contains no tax increase. The Township held off a tax increase in part due to the University’s contribution of $500,000 to its operating budget and by accepting a salary freeze for all non-union employees for the second year in a row.
The University has accepted 8.39 percent of applicants for the Class of 2015, a slight increase of 0.21 percent over the initial admit rate last year. Out of a record-high 27,189 applications, 2,282 were accepted and an additional 1,248 were placed on a wait list.
Alexia Kelley, the deputy director and senior policy adviser of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, spoke on government support of community organizations in a lecture in Robertson Hall on Wednesday night.
One month after the USG released a list of five projects it hoped to complete, several of the initiatives have seen progress, while others have not.
Jeremy Waldron delivered his final lecture, “The Sources of Order: Why Natural Law is Not Enough,” in the “A Religious View of the Foundations of International Law” series in Lewis Library on Wednesday.
The University has accepted 8.39 percent of applicants for the Class of 2015, a slight increase of 0.21 percent over the initial admit rate last year. Out of a record-high 27,189 applications, 2,282 were accepted and an additional 1,248 were placed on a wait list.“In many ways, the pool is as deep and as broad as we’ve seen it in past years,” Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye said in an interview.
Major League Baseball chief financial officer and executive vice president Jonathan Mariner focused on the troubles facing labor agreements in the sports industry in a lecture in Marx Hall on Tuesday night.
Speaking to an audience that nearly filled McCosh 50 on Monday afternoon, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation chairman Sheila Bair reflected on the tensest moments of the financial crisis that began in 2008 and argued in support of recently announced regulations on the financial sector.
Acceptance numbers for the Princeton in Spain and Princeton in Bermuda summer programs were released this week.
At Tuesday’s Borough Council meeting, the Council reviewed its proposed 2011 capital budget and a councilmember announced his support for an editorial requesting that the University publicly state that the Arts and Transit zoning ordinance decision will not affect its annual voluntary contribution to the Borough.The editorial, “Eliminate PILOT Doubts,” published in The Princeton Packet on Thursday, advises that the University “issue a statement that the payments in lieu of taxes are not tied to the zoning changes and that they will continue at the current amount or more well into the future.”
Rapper Wiz Khalifa will be performing at the USG-sponsored concert at Lawnparties on May 1.
U.S. Rep. Donald Payne of New Jersey and actress and humanitarian Mia Farrow opened the International Relations Council's Distinguished Speaker's Series last Saturday with their talk titled "What Lies Ahead: Prospects for Peace in Sudan."
Jeremy Waldron, a New York University law professor and a professor of social and political theory at Oxford, delivered a lecture on “Sovereigns, Borders and Responsibility for the World” in Lewis Library on Monday.
Over 25 panelists from universities, nonprofit organizations and departments of the federal government gathered for “A Round Table on Deportations and National Security” on Monday in the Friend Center’s Convocation Room.
In light of Public Safety’s new policy of notifying the Princeton Borough Police of every alcohol-related transport request made on Prospect Avenue, eating club presidents have begun advising members on how to handle situations in which intoxicated students need assistance. While many clubs say they will still call for help if the situation demands it, they have strongly advised members to remember that the officers on duty should be the first line of help.
Kavita Ramdas GS ’88 spoke about gender justice in the global community before a largely female audience in Dodds Auditorium on Monday afternoon.
Registrar Polly Griffin said the University is working to make teaching evaluations accessible directly from the Course Offerings website starting in fall 2011 at the Council of the Princeton University Community meeting on Monday. Griffin added that students may be able to ask course-specific questions directed toward individual department representatives in the near future.
Earlier this month, anti-abortion literature circulating at Princeton Theological Seminary sparked a controversy after several students found the flyers, with slogans such as “Black Genocide in the 21st Century,” to be racially offensive.