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The Daily Princetonian

Dining halls to keep Gothic feel

Responding to complaints raised by students last spring, University officials have scrapped renovation plans for Rockefeller and Mathey colleges' dining halls that would have replaced long tables with a more modern setup of round tables and booths.While the current plans still call for an overhaul of the food serving area, the renovated dining spaces will retain their traditional Gothic look when students return next year.Administrators went back to the drawing board after initial plans met with strong opposition from students who felt that the changes would detract from the halls' distinctly Gothic feel.

NEWS | 01/11/2007

The Daily Princetonian

With partnerships, University Channel bolsters service

Just over a year after the launch of the University Channel, program officials say they are pleased with its growing popularity and announced that Princeton will partner with three other colleges to bolster the service, benefiting public policy and foreign affairs aficionados who can watch the school's lectures and other content online.The "channel," started by the Wilson School in 2005, is hosted online and provides the public with a downloadable wealth of video and audio feeds of lectures and panels by distinguished speakers from universities around the world.

NEWS | 01/11/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Kagan '81 makes Harvard shortlist

Only one of the five women with close ties to Princeton who had been considered to replace interim chief Derek Bok as the next president of Harvard is still in the running, according to a report by the school's student newspaper.Early last month, President Tilghman; Harvard Law School Dean Elena Kagan '81; former vice provost Ruth Simmons, now president of Brown; and former provost Amy Gutmann, currently president of Penn, were listed among the 30 potential candidates for Harvard's top job.Among these names, a recent Crimson article listed Kagan as one of the remaining presidential candidates.

NEWS | 01/09/2007

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The Daily Princetonian

Yale decides to retain Early Action policy

Yale has opted to stick with its Early Action admission policy despite recent decisions by rivals Princeton and Harvard to discontinue their own early admission programs, the school announced last week.The announcement comes as a blow to the college's fellow members of the Big Three, both of which had hoped that their decisions to scrap their versions of the controversial program last fall would open the door to widespread abolishment of early admission.But in defending its move, Yale rejected the argument put forth by the presidents of Harvard and Princeton that early admission "advantages the advantaged," boosting the prospects of applicants from more privileged backgrounds who don't have to weigh financial aid packages in their decisions."We don't believe that eliminating early admissions would change the socioeconomic diversity of the class," Yale president Richard Levin said in an interview with Yale Alumni Magazine.

NEWS | 01/09/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Report rethinks tenure

Parents and pundits have long scrutinized the way colleges admit their students. In a report last month, the Modern Language Association (MLA) suggests ways in which universities should rethink how they "admit" professors and later decide on their tenure.The report, written by the MLA Task Force on Evaluating Scholarship for Tenure and Promotion, recommends reducing the stress tenure committees place on publishing monographs, ensuring that departments know how to evaluate scholarship done in "new media," making tenure expectations more clear and rethinking the way outside letter-writers are used in the reviewing process."The creation of the task force was prompted by major changes in the way scholarship is published, as well as increased requirements for tenure that many colleagues reported at their institutions," Rosemary Feal, executive director of the MLA, said.

NEWS | 01/09/2007

The Daily Princetonian

'He was the Prince'

Larry DuPraz, the beloved flat-topped, cigar-chomping curmudgeon whose critical eye refined six decades of journalism at The Daily Princetonian, died the morning of Christmas Eve at a rehabilitation center in Beverly, Mass.

NEWS | 01/09/2007

The Daily Princetonian

University grant policy promotes diversity

Since the implementation of the University's no-loan financial aid policy, the percentage of students who receive aid has increased by almost 20 percent, leading to a shift in demographics that has helped debunk the University's reputation as a haven for country club elites.Enacted in 2001, the no-loan policy was meant "to allow students to attend college without incurring large amounts of debt to repay," explained Betty Ashwood, associate director of undergraduate financial aid.

NEWS | 12/14/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Dean lays out foreign policy vision

Wilson School Dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 outlined her vision for the future of U.S. foreign policy yesterday, arguing that the current methods for addressing global issues are outdated and need to be adapted to the new millennium."We're stuck in this 20th century mentality where you create an institution, ratify a treaty and enforce rules," she said to the crowd gathered at Whig Hall to see her accept the Whig-Clio Distinguished Service Award.

NEWS | 12/14/2006

The Daily Princetonian

'Twas the Frist Noel

Will2k6: it will forever be remembered as the year man went to five blades and never looked back.Let's not forget about the twin moisturizing strips and the single blade on the back, important advances in their own right.Also, don't forget the Mobile Leprechaun Infestation of 2006, which made all of us look deep within ourselves and ask, where da gold at?Where da cold at?

NEWS | 12/14/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Friends, family lay Dupraz to rest

Family, friends, firefighters and alumni of The Daily Princetonian gathered Friday to bid a final farewell to Larry Dupraz, the longtime 'Prince' production supervisor and volunteer fireman.Dupraz, who endeared himself to generations of 'Prince' writers and editors through his constant pursuit of perfection, died Christmas Eve morning at a rehabilitation center in Beverly, Mass.

NEWS | 12/14/2006