Guitar Hero
A contestant in the Mr. Engineering pageant shows his stuff in the talent section of the show. The pageant also included introductory, formal wear and question-and-answer sections.
A contestant in the Mr. Engineering pageant shows his stuff in the talent section of the show. The pageant also included introductory, formal wear and question-and-answer sections.
Two juniors recently won national scholarships to fund future work in science and public service.Electrical engineering major Andrew Saxe '08 learned last week that he had been named a Goldwater Scholar and Wilson School major Scott Moore '08 found out Tuesday that he is now a Truman Scholar.The Goldwater is awarded to rising juniors and seniors who stand out in fields related to math and science.
Like many Princetonians, Stephanie Anderson has a profile on facebook.com, replete with photo albums, groups and a lengthy list of interests.But Anderson isn't your typical Facebook user.
President Tilghman has asked Dean of the College Nancy Malkiel to examine the data on the performance of legacy students at the University.
Though the big acceptance envelopes and small rejection letters for the Class of 2011 won't be mailed until Friday, applicants will bombard an Admission Office website today at 5 p.m.
As students receive midterm grades this week, some juniors are beginning to plan for their final year of classes and to search for thesis advisers.But for students who want to find advisers who specialize in international relations (IR), the search will be tougher than usual.
Though it still holds the top spot in U.S. News & World Report's list of America's best colleges, the University is no longer parents' number-one choice for their children, a survey released yesterday by the college- and test-prep company The Princeton Review suggests.In the company's 2007 "College Hopes & Worries Survey," Princeton ranked second as the college parents would most like to see their child attend, down from the first-place position it took last year.
Correction appendedA dozen private colleges are protesting the popular U.S. News & World Report college ranking system for allegedly misrepresenting the schools to applicants.
Six hours, 20 people, 600 wristbands and 3,240 names. That's what it took for College Democrats outside the Frist Campus Center yesterday to commemorate the four-year anniversary of the war in Iraq and remind students of the American soldiers who have died so far."Our primary goal was to just remind students that it's been four years and we're still in Iraq," College Democrats president Julia Brower '08 said.
The University informed three students yesterday that the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) may file lawsuits against them for illegally downloading copyrighted music online.The University received notices from the RIAA on March 23, warning that it may file subpoenas to obtain the names attached to the IP addresses of three students who have engaged in illegal downloading, University communications director Lauren Robinson-Brown '85 confirmed.
"They're everywhere, you know, those Asians."The bold white words flashed on a screen in the Wilson Blackbox Theater last night, a provocative opening to a film intended to spark dialogue about the interplay and tension between Asian and American cultures.The movie ? titled "Those Asians" and written, produced and directed by Rudy Lee '09 ? made its Princeton premiere last night, followed by a discussion among the audience of almost 50 people.
The Wilson School's three-year-old Center for Globalization and Governance got a naming sponsor yesterday with the announcement of the Niehaus family's donation of a "substantial gift" to endow the center.Though the center was created in 2004, the gift from Robert Niehaus '77 and his wife Kate expands the center's offerings to include undergraduate policy task forces and a postdoctoral fellowship program for the study of international political economies, with a focus on the Middle East."Kate and I are thrilled to be able to support an initiative that is equally critical to Princeton students' international experience and Princeton's leadership in the forefront of global policy," Niehaus said in a statement.
Correction appendedFour years after invading Iraq, the United States faces dwindling chances for success in a mission that has been marked by mistakes, a former Bush administration adviser argued during a panel discussion yesterday."The problem was not so much a failure of planning but a failure of imagination," said Wilson School professor Aaron Friedberg, a former deputy assistant for national security affairs to Vice President Dick Cheney.
The Law School Admission Council (LSAC) recently altered the content and increased the security measures of the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) following extensive research, according to its website.Students and The Princeton Review said the changes will hardly modify scores or the test-taking experience, however."I can't imagine that the changes will substantially affect most students' scores," Princeton Pre-Law Society president Aaron Spolin '08 said.The writing and reading comprehension sections were adjusted.
Former chief United Nations weapons inspector Hans Blix spoke about the "inconvenient truths" of disarmament to a standing-room-only crowd in Dodds Auditorium yesterday."Without the right diagnosis, how can you apply the right therapy?
The University's recent $800,000 reimbursement to the Robertson Foundation prompted a spate of media coverage in papers statewide, with news releases from both sides.
Posters encouraging students to "Be a friend, not a bystander" are being plastered across campus bathroom walls this week as part of a campaign to educate students about sexual harassment at Princeton.The posters, created by SpeakOut, aim to draw attention to the issue of campus rape and contain both national and Princeton-specific information, including details of whom to contact in the event of assault, how to react if assaulted, national statistics regarding assaults and tips to avoid assault on campus."We're trying to raise awareness among students," SpeakOut president Sarah Erickson '07 said.
Jodi Picoult '87 has lived with an Amish family, visited death row, learned Lakota Sioux and gone on ghost hunts with paranormal researchers; all for the sake of the story.Picoult, author of 14 popular novels, including several bestsellers, described her development as a writer and her research methods yesterday before a small crowd of University and community members in the James Stewart '32 Theater at 185 Nassau St."I've been waiting a long time to be asked to come back to Princeton," said Picoult.As an undergraduate in the creative writing department, Picoult attributed much of her success to travel writer and former creative writing professor Mary Morris.
Campus fans of Maureen Dowd, David Brooks, Nicholas Kristof and other New York Times columnists now have free access to the columns and the other previously for-pay content from the paper's TimesSelect service.The new policy, which went into effect on March 13, is available to any user whose email address ends in ".edu." The university membership is identical to that of a paid TimesSelect user, providing access to more than 20 oped and news columnists ? including Dowd, Brooks and Wilson School professor Paul Krugman ? as well access to the Times' online archives, special Select-only features and previews of the Times magazine.The move to provide free content to university users stems from a desire "to encourage readership and open dialogue with our columnists," Times spokeswoman Diane McNulty said.