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The Daily Princetonian

Robertsons launch site to shape public opinion

Continuing a tit-for-tat feud that has played out in the courts and in the press for the last four years, the Robertson family today launched a website to publicize its arguments in its multi-million dollar lawsuit against the University.The site, robertsonvprinceton.org, is intended to give voice to the Robertsons' point of view, counterbalancing the information on the case published on the University website, as well as news articles and commentaries on the case, a family representative said."There's a critical mass of information about [the case] out there, but none of it is coming directly from the Robertsons," family spokesman Herb Berkowitz said yesterday.The site will include background on the case, the Robertson Foundation and the Robertson family, as well as a question-and-answer section and links to legal documents and news articles published in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, among other papers.

NEWS | 11/12/2006

The Daily Princetonian

USG scrutinizes calendar options

The USG discussed at length but failed to reach any consensus on the University's recent proposals for overhauling the academic calendar in a meeting Sunday night.The meeting comes less than a week after The Daily Princetonian published drafts of two new calendars that Dean of the College Nancy Malkiel proposed last month to academic department chairs and program directors.The first plan, called Calendar B, includes a midterm week free of classes, Fall Break integrated into Thanksgiving and Dean's Date in the middle of exam week instead of before it.

NEWS | 11/12/2006

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The Daily Princetonian

Ladies in red

Triangle Club members kicked off the dress rehearsal of their new show, "Heist Almighty," which opens today at McCarter.

NEWS | 11/09/2006

The Daily Princetonian

New studio shines TV spotlight on faculty experts

When Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 appeared on "Anderson Cooper 360" recently, speaking about the dangers of a nuclear North Korea, she spoke not from CNN's studios in New York but from the basement of Robertson Hall.There, in room 032, is a new, fully functional, $20,000 television studio, a space that will allow networks to conduct remote live or prerecorded interviews with Princeton academic experts and, the University hopes, will shine the national media spotlight on Old Nassau."It's quite a trek for faculty to go to New York or down to Washington for an interview, and the networks are hesitant to send a crew to campus," Steven Barnes, Wilson School assistant dean for external affairs, said of the studio, which went live Oct.

NEWS | 11/09/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Death penalty foe stresses activism

Author and activist Sister Helen Prejean shared stories from her 25-year crusade against the death penalty last night, urging the audience to be proactive in bringing an end to the "inhumane" practice."You have a chance to be the first state to abolish the death penalty," Prejean said, noting that New Jersey has placed a temporary moratorium on the practice and that legislators are considering a bill that would replace the death penalty with life without parole."You must be an active participant in shaping social policy that does not give the government the right to kill people."Prejean, who rose to fame after writing "Dead Man Walking" in 1993, handed out protest literature at the end of the lecture, asking the 150 students and community members in McCosh 10 to sign the sheets and send them to Gov.

NEWS | 11/09/2006

The Daily Princetonian

November?

Sunny skies and temperatures well into the 60s gave English preceptor Nadia Ellis the chance to hold precepts outside.

NEWS | 11/09/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Rumsfeld resigns

Donald Rumsfeld '54 himself became a casualty of the war in Iraq yesterday, forced to resign his post as secretary of defense after he and President Bush concluded that a "fresh perspective" is required to guide the military.The announcement came just one day after the Republicans took what the president described as a "thumping" in Tuesday's midterm elections.

NEWS | 11/08/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Planning event lures with cheese, eclairs

Nearly 900 students, faculty, staff and local residents bustled through the usually hushed Chancellor Green Rotunda yesterday, getting a comprehensive view of the University's plans for campus development over the next decade.The event, called "Planning in Progress," featured eye-catching visual displays detailing the various aspects of campus development that have been identified and evaluated over the past year by the consulting firm Beyer Blinder Belle Architects & Planners LLP. A detailed displayProminently displayed in the center of the rotunda was a large three-dimensional campus model, with planned buildings, athletic field improvements, landscape projects and reforestation areas marked out in various colors.Each niche on both levels of the octogonal rotunda was dedicated to specific themes, including transportation, landscape and campus neighborhoods, such as natural sciences or athletics.Posters spanning the walls of the rotunda succinctly summarized the project and challenges and issues pertaining to each theme, while University officials, consultants, architects and engineers from the various firms responded to the comments and questions of community members."This is a chance for the on-campus and town community to see how we're working on these issues," Vice President and Secretary Bob Durkee '69 said.One issue that each of the displays dealt with was the effort to achieve a more environmentally friendly campus.

NEWS | 11/08/2006

The Daily Princetonian

With race, sex, religion jokes, comedian Silverman gets a loud laugh

"I just want to be able to look at me and see me ... as white."So said Sarah Silverman, stand-up comedian, actress and writer, in her performance on Wednesday night at Richardson Auditorium, a show that students described as "relatively entertaining," "just so funny" and "excellent."Typical for her comic acts, Silverman was unafraid to touch on the personal, like her relationship with Jimmy Kimmel, host of late night talk show "Jimmy Kimmel Live," or the controversial, such as racism, abortion, rape, death and stereotypes of Jewish-Americans.Among her most memorable punch lines were, "I tell my niece every time she loses at tag, an angel gets AIDS," "[The difference between killing six million Jews and 60 million Jews is that] 60 million would be unforgivable," and "I don't give money to [starving toddlers in Africa] because I don't want them to spend it on drugs."Silverman, ironically, said at a reception following her routine that she was very sensitive about discrimination during her childhood, recalling one incident in third grade when a boy threw change at her and then yelled, "Pick it up, Jew!" Since then, however, she has learned to see the humor in situations that could otherwise be construed as insulting."I guess if you don't think it's funny, it's probably going to be offensive," Silverman said.

NEWS | 11/08/2006

The Daily Princetonian

University gains cartoon trove

The family of renowned cartoonist and illustrator Whitney Darrow, Jr. '31 recently donated more than 1,000 of his original cartoons to the University Library, adding breadth and depth to a collection already noted for its holdings in comic and satiric art.The gift to the graphic arts collection in Firestone's rare books department, includes 325 drawings originally published in The New Yorker and 746 illustrations from Darrow's 18 books.The donation is "in so many ways, a tremendous resource," graphic arts curator Julie Melby said.

NEWS | 11/07/2006