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The Daily Princetonian

Upholding school motto, organizers plan volunteer projects

From Akwaaba to Yavneh House, nearly 50 student organizations are preparing for Princeton in the Nation's Service (PINS), a month of volunteer projects to benefit the local community and Hurricane Katrina victims.Organizers moved the start of PINS from October to the beginning of the school year due to the devastation in the Gulf."There is no better way to be in the nation's service than to efficiently and effectively aid Katrina victims," PINS student coordinator Carol Wang '07 said.Scenes of hurricane damage convinced USG president Leslie-Bernard Joseph '06 to scale down plans for what he described as a "flashy" PINS kickoff celebration featuring prominent speakers."Katrina definitely put a lot of things in perspective.

NEWS | 09/20/2005

The Daily Princetonian

30 years of finches

They met in 1960 at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. More than 45 years later, Peter and Rosemary Grant were married ? and back in Vancouver for a conference in their honor ? when they received word that one million Swiss francs would be coming their way.The Grants, who both teach in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, had been jointly awarded a Balzan Prize ? worth about $800,000 ? for their 30 years of cumulative research on the evolution of Darwin's finches on the Galápagos Islands."It was a complete surprise," said Rosemary Grant, a Senior Research Biologist in the department.

NEWS | 09/19/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Rice to speak Sept. 30

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will deliver the keynote address for the Sept. 30 kickoff of the Wilson School's 75th anniversary celebrations, University officials confirmed Monday evening."I cannot imagine a better person to launch our 75th anniversary celebrations," Dean of the Wilson School Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 said in a statement.Rice exemplifies the values the Wilson School hopes to instill in its students, according to Slaughter, and she "is currently shaping policy on many of the most important issues of our time."President Tilghman also offered words of praise for the secretary of state."Secretary Rice left the position of provost at one of our peer institutions to serve our government at the highest levels," Tilghman said, referring to Rice's prior service at Stanford, "and this visit will give our students and others an opportunity to engage her in conversation about some of the major issues for which she has responsibility."A lottery for student, faculty and staff tickets will begin Wednesday at 9 a.m.

NEWS | 09/19/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Holt criticizes Bush on science

Rep. Rush Holt (D?N.J.) began his speech to the joint meeting of the American Chemical Society and the American Institute of Chemical Engineers Monday by apologizing for being late."This sounds like namedropping," he said, "but I was in a meeting in Washington with Jimmy Carter and Jim Baker."Holt, whose talk was titled "Standing Up for Science," voiced his "disappointment in the way that the administration has politicized" scientific issues from the teaching of evolution to stem cell research.Holt, who worked as the assistant director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory for nine years, said there was a "growing crisis" in the country's understanding and appreciation of science, characterizing the lack of appreciation for research as "disturbing."He said he was "appalled" by President Bush's recent endorsement of the teaching of the theory of intelligent design ? which posits that the existence of a higher being, rather than natural selection, is responsible for biological diversity ? in public schools alongside the Darwinian theory of evolution."Public school science classes are not the place to be teaching things that cannot be tested empirically and verifiably," he said.

NEWS | 09/19/2005

The Daily Princetonian

New grading policy halfway toward goal

Less than a year and a half after faculty members approved an initiative to combat grade inflation, the University is halfway toward its goal, Dean of the College Nancy Malkiel announced at a faculty meeting Monday.The number of A-range grades handed out by University professors during the 2004-05 school year decreased to 40.9 percent from 46 percent the previous year, a pace that will enable the University to reach its target if it is maintained this year, Malkiel said.

NEWS | 09/19/2005

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The Daily Princetonian

No method to madness

On Sunday, The Daily Princetonian caught up with one of Jurassic 5's four MCs, Chali 2na, on the basketball court of the Quadrangle Club.Jurassic 5, a hip-hop group from Los Angeles, headlined a series of concerts, jointly sponsored by USG and the Quadrangle Club, to raise money for victims of Hurricane Katrina.The Daily Princetonian: Jurassic 5 have been performing for a long time ? what have been the best venues?Chali 2na: We have been performing all over the place.

NEWS | 09/18/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Tulane students adjust to campus

Days after the unexpected disaster of Hurricane Katrina left hundreds of students without a school, Tulane freshman Christina Montrois received a call of hope.Picking up the phone, Montrois' father heard, "Hi, this is President Tilghman, the president of Princeton University.""No, you're not!" he responded.That morning, as the extent of Hurricane Katrina's damage became undeniable, Montrois had faxed her academic information to Princeton ? one of several colleges that had offered to host displaced students for a semester.But it was hard to believe that President Tilghman was already calling to welcome Montrois to Princeton and express her sympathy for the disaster in New Orleans.Saturday, August 27, was move-in day and orientation for Tulane freshmen.

NEWS | 09/18/2005

The Daily Princetonian

CEE professor Smith saw threat to New Orleans

When the muddy waters of Lake Pontchartrain filled the streets of New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Princeton professor James Smith was not surprised.Smith, a flood expert in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, has told his students for years that the lower Mississippi River ? and New Orleans in particular ? were vulnerable to catastrophic flooding."We teach a course on 'Rivers and the Regional Environment,' and we always give two lectures on the lower Mississippi, which is one of the most controlled rivers in the world," said Smith, who co-teaches CEE 263 with Professor David Billington.

NEWS | 09/18/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Donations approach $10,000

A series of benefit concerts and other fundraising activities organized by students last week raised about $9,500 for Hurricane Katrina relief efforts, student leaders said Sunday.T-shirts sold at Sunday's performance by hip-hop group Jurassic 5 raised $2,500, while USG donation tables in Frist Campus Center collected about $1,000.

NEWS | 09/18/2005

The Daily Princetonian

UMCP selects architects

The University Medical Center at Princeton (UMCP) has announced the selection of architects and consultants to work on creating a facility on the new site.Six months after deciding to move from its Witherspoon Street site to a location off Route 1, UMCP has hired healthcare architectural firm Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum and West Windsor firm Hillier Architecture to design a medical center that will incorporate current technology and allow for future innovations, the Princeton Packet reported."Technological advances occur so rapidly that it is difficult to project what technology will exist when the new hospital opens in five years," hospital spokesman Chris Johnson said.

NEWS | 09/18/2005

The Daily Princetonian

P-Unit battles Yale rappers

When Nate Domingue '06 and Robert Moore '06 heard the Yale student rap group 108 Tongues, the two Princeton hip-hop artists decided they were, according to Moore, "garbage.""[Their raps] were pretty weak, homemade, just very amaturely done," Domingue said.

NEWS | 09/15/2005

The Daily Princetonian

LGBT center to relocate to Frist

The LGBT center is scheduled to move in January from Dillon Court East to a more spacious three-room office in Frist Campus Center, an expansion that supporters say will help increase visibility for and give much-needed space to Princeton's LGBT community.Until this year, the office of LGBT Student Services Coordinator Debbie Bazarsky was located in West College, an environment that both students and administrators found cramped."With the arrival of Debbie Bazarsky as Director a few years ago, the LGBT center has flourished," President Tilghman said in an email.

NEWS | 09/15/2005