Mayor Bloomberg selected to give Baccalaureate address
Michael Bloomberg, the third-term mayor of New York, will deliver the Baccalaureate address on May 29, Class of 2011 president Alex Rosen announced in an e-mail to seniors Jan. 14.
Michael Bloomberg, the third-term mayor of New York, will deliver the Baccalaureate address on May 29, Class of 2011 president Alex Rosen announced in an e-mail to seniors Jan. 14.
Undergraduate tuition and fees will increase by 1 percent next year, the University announced on Monday. The cost increase will be the lowest one in 45 years.
Anti-government protests that have caused over 100 deaths during the past week are posing a serious threat to the five Princeton students currently studying abroad in Egypt.
Molecular biology professor Bonnie Bassler will receive the Richard Lounsbery Award from the National Academy of Sciences.
The University received 27,115 applications this year for admission to the Class of 2015, it announced Wednesday, Jan. 19.
The total number of students placed into their first-choice eating club during the first round of sign-ins is almost 70 students higher than it was last year, according to data released to the club presidents by the Princeton Prospect Foundation on Saturday night. The significant increase is primarily the result of a dramatic rise in first-round sign-ins at Colonial Club. None of the clubs saw a drop in first-round interest, and a few saw modest increases.
Former eBay CEO and Princeton alumna Meg Whitman ’77 has joined Hewlett-Packard’s board of directors.
Leonard Milberg ’53 has contributed his third donation of prose written by Irish writers to the University. Milberg’s previous donations of poetry and theater materials were made in 1994 and 2006, respectively.
Every seat in the Garden Room of Prospect House was occupied Saturday afternoon as friends, family and members of the University community gathered to remember Bill Zeller GS, who passed away Jan. 5.
When Charles Ryskamp was appointed the director at New York City’s prestigious Pierpont Morgan Library in 1969, he did not leave his post as an English professor. When he then took over as director of the renowned Frick Collection art gallery in 1987, he continued to stay. So when he passed away last March, it was no surprise to those who knew him that Ryskamp included in his will a way to extend his 55-year affiliation with the University.
The former chief of the Princeton Township Police Department struck a deal with the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office to conduct 40 hours of community service and pay restitution instead of facing criminal prosecution for allegedly stealing a police-owned antique M-16 assault rifle, the prosecutor’s office announced Wednesday.
For 25 years, newly elected Borough Council president Kevin Wilkes ’83 stayed far away from politics. Watching his one-time supervisor, former state Sen. Harrison Williams, get convicted in 1981 for taking bribes in an FBI sting operation caused him to give up the field “like a young ideologue” suddenly disillusioned.
David Ascher ’99 needed to move quickly. Several academic departments had threatened to withdraw from the Honor Code because they believed students had been wrongfully exonerated of cheating accusations. And Ascher, then USG president, did not want this to become “the first blip” in the centuries-old agreement between the faculty and students.
Khristin Kyllo, a talented softball player known for her energetic and vivacious personality, died Thursday morning from natural causes. She was 18. Kyllo, a freshman from Vienna, Va., was found in her Forbes College dorm room by Public Safety officers, who responded to a call from a Forbes student around 8 a.m. Princeton Borough police and the Princeton First Aid and Rescue Squad also responded. Kyllo was found dead when Borough police arrived, police Capt. Nick Sutter said.
The Daily Princetonian covers the 2010 Dodge-Osborn Cup.
The Sabra hummus referendum that garnered international media attention over the past two years actually passed in last fall’s election, the USG election triumvirate announced late Tuesday night after an audit. A total of three students voted against the referendum, while 8,666 hungry students voted in favor.
Just a week after MTV’s announcement of “Jersey Shore: PrincetonU,” the University and USG have banded together to implement tight dress restrictions for undergraduates.
Starting spring semester, the burden of grade deflation will be lifted from professors and placed on students.
The University will undergo an “A-to-Z review of its policy on policies,” said Ellen Chances GS ’72, the secretary of the Committee on Committees, in announcing a Task Force on Task Forces on Tuesday afternoon.
The University announced on Tuesday that it would institute a quota limiting the parts per million (PPM) of carbon dioxide that could be released per student to 100 ppm per semester starting in the fall of 2012.