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The Daily Princetonian

Nixon's grandson aims for House

After graduating with a law degree from New York University and co-founding an international consulting firm — OC Global Partners, LLC — Christopher Cox ’01 has set his sights on a different career: congressman.The grandson of former president Richard Nixon, Cox is running in the Republican primary this September and hopes to represent New York’s first congressional district, on eastern Long Island.

NEWS | 05/06/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Change through a former president's eyes: Harold Shapiro GS '64

Nine years after clearing out his office at 1 Nassau Hall, University president emeritus Harold Shapiro GS ’64 isn’t thinking about retirement just yet.“It had always been my stated objective that I did not want to retire as president; I wanted to retire as a faculty member,” Shapiro said in an interview at his only slightly smaller office in Wallace Hall, which he occupies as a Wilson School professor. “When I turned 65, I thought to myself, ‘You better get on with it.’ In my judgment, the University was in good shape at the time, so I thought it was the right moment to go back to teaching.”

NEWS | 05/06/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Outdoor Action moves to campus

After more than a decade operating on the outskirts of campus, Outdoor Action has moved its offices to a more central location at Dillon Court West. OA will also move administratively under the purview of the Office of the Vice President for Campus Life, leaving the Princeton Blairstown Center after 14 years.

NEWS | 05/06/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Eating clubs wary of task force recommendations

Eating club officials expressed mixed feelings about the report released this week by the Task Force on Relationships between the University and the Eating Clubs. The report praised the clubs as distinctive and integral parts of students’ social lives at the University, but also offered suggestions ranging from the mundane, such as joint purchasing for waste removal, to a proposal to establish an eating club match system that would replace current Bicker and sign-in processes.

NEWS | 05/06/2010

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The Daily Princetonian

Nov. 10, 1980: Fear and loathing in Brooklyn

This piece, authored by Elena Kagan ’81 during her tenure at The Daily Princetonian, was published on Nov. 10, 1980. Where I grew up — on Manhattan’s Upper West Side — nobody ever admitted to voting Republican. The real contests for Congress and the state legislatures occurred in early September, when the Democratic primary was held. And the people who won those races and who then took the November elections with some 80 per cent of the vote were real Democrats — not the closet Republicans that one sees so often these days but men and women committed to liberal principles and motivated by the ideal of an affirmative and compassionate government.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Over protest, U. to demolish historic 86 Olden St.

On the corner of Olden and Prospect streets sits a building constructed in 1892. But if everything goes as planned, the former home of the Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding won’t be there much longer. Despite objections by some prominent alumni, the University Board of Trustees approved plans to demolish the building at 86 Olden St. during a meeting in March.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Feb. 12, 1980: Rally at noon

The following is an unsigned editorial published by The Daily Princetonian on Feb. 12, 1980, during the tenure of Elena Kagan ’81 as editorial chairman. An anti-registration, anti-draft, anti-war movement again sweeping the country? Not quite, unfortunately. The only “movement” we can see today is in the other direction — toward an era in which myopic and over-sensitive “national pride” precludes the thoughtful search for alternatives to an unnecessary draft registration. At today’s noon rally, however, Princeton students can demonstrate that they view registration as a dangerous and unacceptable method of settling our current problems.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Feb. 4, 1980: Bicker: A damaging tradition

The following is an unsigned editorial published by The Daily Princetonian on Feb. 4, 1980, during the tenure of Elena Kagan ’81 as editorial chairman. Throughout the coming week, Princeton’s most lingering tradition — Bicker — will once again make its presence felt throughout the university community. This year, 551 sophomores registered to bicker, approximately 45 percent more than did last February. We find this increase extremely dismaying.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Backing the Bayou State

As a freshman, Ravi Sangisetty ’03 did not strike friends as a natural candidate for Congress. Now he has tossed his hat into the ring as the sole Democrat in the race for Louisiana’s third congressional district and one of a handful of alumni running for Congress as first-time politicians.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Sally ’12 elected social chair

Jake Sally ’12 was elected USG social chair and Peter Favoloro narrowly defeated incumbent Austin Hollimon for Class of 2012 treasurer in runoff elections, USG elections manager Tony Xiao ’12 announced in an e-mail to the student body on Saturday. Stefan Kende and Kevin Mantel will face each other in a run-off for Class of 2013 vice president after garnering 113 and 70 votes, respectively, in a re-vote.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Reserved passion: Kagan ’81

Elena Kagan ’81 got drunk on election night in 1980. Standing in the Brooklyn Academy of Music with her vodka and tonic, she watched Walter Cronkite usher in the news that Democratic candidate Elizabeth Holtzman had lost the race for one of New York’s Senate seats. And then she sat down and wept. Three decades later, Kagan is the first female solicitor general of the United States and one of the leading candidates for President Barack Obama’s nomination to fill the seat of U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, who is due to retire when the court’s term ends this summer.

NEWS | 05/02/2010

The Daily Princetonian

Teaching outside the classroom

Markus Brunnermeier had seen this game play out before. The intense trading, the pronouncements of indefinitely rising prices, the herd mentality — everything about the real estate markets seemed reminiscent of of the dot-com bubble that had popped not so long ago.

NEWS | 04/29/2010