Combined assets of clubs reached $17.2M in June 2008
The combined net assets of all 10 clubs on the Street reached a record $17.2 million in June 2008. Ivy was the wealthiest, with $4.5 million in net assets, followed by TI, with $2.2 million.
The combined net assets of all 10 clubs on the Street reached a record $17.2 million in June 2008. Ivy was the wealthiest, with $4.5 million in net assets, followed by TI, with $2.2 million.
The applications arriving at West College this month are part of the third admission cycle since the elimination of Early Decision at the University in 2006, announced a week after Harvard eliminated its own early application program. Administrators said the move balances the potential risks with a desire to allow low-income students to compare financial aid packages, while at the same time maintaining the quality and size of the applicant pool. Administrators also hoped other schools would follow suit.
What if someone died? It’s the nightmare scenario, one that, as President Tilghman writes on today’s Opinion page, keeps her up at night: a Princeton undergraduate who dies from alcohol poisoning.
The University received a record 26,166 applications for the Class of 2014. That figure represents a 19 percent increase from last year.
Though President Tilghman recently convened the Steering Committee on Undergraduate Women’s Leadership at Princeton to examine the low number of women heading student organizations, the greatest gender discrepancies may be hidden behind closed doors.
Hundreds of members of the Princeton community gathered Thursday night at the University Chapel to show support for the people of Haiti,the scene of a catastrophic earthquake on Tuesday. Speakers at the non-denominational vigil prayed for safety, solace, rescue and restoration for all those affected by the natural disaster.
The faculty voted 156-84 at its Tuesday faculty meeting to eliminate the A grade.
The University received an astonishingly low 10,943 applications for the Class of 2014, representing a 50 percent drop from last year.
In a recent change of heart that is good news for many Princeton students, President Tilghman has reversed her original decision not to begin a chastity center on campus.
A leading member of The Tribe has been exiled this week after allegedly hooking up with a non-legacy, non-athlete University student and breaking the most sacred rule of the exclusive group.
The University will require all undergrads to buy a full meal plan and live in a four-year residential college for their entire college career.
Roughly 10 to 20 people were involved in a “large fight” Tuesday evening at a post-Dean’s Date hoedown hosted by the Princeton Southern Society at Cottage Club, Deputy Chief of Public Safety Charles Davall said in an e-mail to The Daily Princetonian.
President Tilghman announced Tuesday the creation of the University’s first Task Force on Toilet Paper.
It’s not every day that Princeton employees are called to Drumthwacket. Yet for Michael Christensen, an engineer at the University’s utility plant, busting into the New Jersey governor’s mansion clad in a reflective vest, metal air tank and fireproof pants was all in a day’s work.
The USG will give $25 for food and non-alcoholic beverages to the first 20 people who register parties with the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students (ODUS).
The University instituted a pilot program to deactivate the prox access system over winter break for students who were not on campus. Students who planned to remain on campus were required to submit a request to activate their prox card online.
Students studying abroad expressed concern that Princeton’s unique academic schedule will have a negative impact on their spring semesters, especially as they adjust to living and studying in a new environment.
Sociology professor Thomas Espenshade GS ’72 said he believes a massive scientific effort, on the scale of the Manhattan Project, is needed to understand and close the educational achievement gap in the United States.
Connor Diemand-Yauman ’10 believes he has accomplished what he set out to do. As he approaches the end of his term as USG President, Diemand-Yauman said that he has very few regrets.“I’m lucky to be able to say that we addressed nearly all of our major agenda items,” he said.
The USG formally recommended Thursday that Public Safety officers remain unarmed.