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The Daily Princetonian

Correction

If George Bush has never made a mistake, then neither have we.But in case we did: sorry, we're drunk.Now, onto our regularly scheduled corrections....the 'Prince' regrets several things: We regret that time we up hooked up with our Geosciences preceptorWe regret "the no snooze, no booze" rule.

NEWS | 01/11/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Blowed Up: Nye to teach frosh science sequence

In a move designed to boost science enrollment, the University has announced that Bill Nye will teach the interdisciplinary "Science Sequence" beginning next year.Nye, the science guy, is known for his bowtiesHe was chosen for his ability to teach across subjects in the natural sciences, and for his ability to blow things up in a way that is totally safe for your own home, said Dean of the Faculty David Dobkin."When I saw the episode where he explains the volcanism using vinegar and baking soda, I knew he was the right choice for the University community," Dobkin said.

NEWS | 01/11/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Cottage, LGBT broker backroom agreement

In a joint press conference held yesterday, officers of Cottage Club and the LGBT announced they had struck a deal to foster inclusivity and, some suspect, better Bicker numbers."This is something we've been considering for a long time," Cottage president Turnbull Smythe said.LGBT chair Lymon Marcus was equally enthused."We're all about diversity, and in recent years our members have tended to stick to only a few clubs," she said.

NEWS | 01/11/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Engineering school forges bond with Smith

The University announced the creation of a student engineering exchange program with all-female Smith College on Wednesday.The program, slated to start in 2006, will afford both male and female students the opportunity to study at the other college for a semester.The program has been in development since last year when University professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering Barrie Royce became the interim dean of graduate affairs for the engineering school.During his yearlong tenure, Royce said he wanted to start a project that would encourage women to pursue graduate engineering degrees because men outnumber women in the field.Royce chose Smith College as the partner for the exchange program because he had colleagues who had recently launched an engineering program there.Maria Klawe, dean of Princeton's School of Engineering and Applied Science, said she believes the program will encourage women to try engineering by giving them a chance to experience a different academic environment in which they will be in the gender majority."The percentage of women in engineering is overall only 15 to 20 percent," she said.

NEWS | 01/09/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Science world celebrates centennial of Einstein theory

Albert Einstein was well known in Princeton for his generosity. But Jack Rosenberg remembers the time Einstein's colleagues asked him to turn the tables and help give the famous scientist a gift."The look of pleasure on his face was a sight I will never forget," said Rosenberg, then a young engineer, who installed a personal recording studio in Einstein's home for his 70th birthday in 1949."I have never witnessed a more authentic surprise," Rosenberg recalled in a recent newsletter of the Institute for Advanced Study.Yet the gifts Einstein was known to give were not just personal; his remarkable contributions to Princeton and scientific progress are known throughout the world.

NEWS | 01/09/2005

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The Daily Princetonian

University community develops new traditions as old fade

"The Keeper of Princetoniana," Fred Fox '39, described Princeton traditions as a "river.""Although the course stays the same, the water is always new," Fox said.Fox believed that "traditions have to keep growing, and they have to keep fresh." In keeping with this, many Princeton traditions have evolved over the years.Canespree is one tradition that is now quite different from its original character.Dating back to the 1870s, Canespree began as a freshman-sophomore fight over the right to walk around campus with canes, something forbidden to freshmen at the time.Sandi Maxwell '39 remembers how violent Canespree was when he was a student.He said that freshmen would rush up a hill that the sophomores were standing on and fight each other until one side was defeated."Everyone's clothes got torn off their back," Maxwell added.After the Second World War, the Department of Athletics took over the event and turned it into a more organized, athletic competition between the two classes.With that change, Canespree's traditional importance appears to have slowly faded away.While members of the Class of 1970, such as Edward Labowitz, still brag about winning Canespree two years in a row, present students lack enthusiasm for the event."Many students are unaware of the event's history," said Liz Greenberg '02, who wrote her senior thesis on Princeton traditions.Greenberg said she believes that if the University were to help students understand the event's history, Canespree would resume its position as a beloved tradition on campus.Another tradition that has changed over the years is the step sing.Bud Wynne '39 remembers how seniors would frequently gather after dinner on Nassau Hall's steps and sing together."Step sings used to be a random event," Greenberg said.With the growth of a cappella and other musical groups on campus, these impromptu step sings have stopped.However, seniors still take part in the traditional step sing during graduation weekend.And as Princetonians did many years ago, seniors still finish with a traditional singing of "Old Nassau."While these two traditions have evolved, other traditions have been lost ? or stopped ? completely.Since 1864, students used to try to steal the bell clapper from Nassau Hall.

NEWS | 01/09/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Physicists celebrate centennial of Einstein's theories

Albert Einstein was well known in Princeton for his generosity. But Jack Rosenberg remembers the time Einstein's colleagues asked him to turn the tables and help give the famous scientist a gift."The look of pleasure on his face was a sight I will never forget," said Rosenberg, then a young engineer, who had installed a personal recording studio in Einstein's home for his 70th birthday in 1949."I have never witnessed a more authentic surprise," Rosenberg recalled in a recent newsletter of the Institute for Advanced Study.Yet the gifts Einstein was known to give were not just personal; his remarkable contributions to Princeton and scientific progress are known throughout the world.

NEWS | 01/06/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Borough police chief to join Public Safety

Borough Chief of Police Charles Davall will soon make the change from town to gown. On Feb. 7 he will assume a completely different set of responsibilities as the Department of Public Safety's (DPS) new deputy director of operations."He has a very keen understanding of the community ? both the University community and obviously the larger community that he's worked in for the last 20-plus years," DPS Director Steven Healy said, praising the 25-year veteran of the Borough police force.

NEWS | 01/06/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Grad School to pay government fee for international students

The University's Graduate School will reimburse incoming graduate students for the new federal $100 SEVIS fee, Graduate School Dean William Russel announced last month.SEVIS ? the Student Exchange Visitor Information System ? is a government program that operates under the auspices of the Department of Homeland Security and tracks international exchange students in the United States.

NEWS | 01/04/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Campus reacts to tsunami crisis

Tom Yeung '08's first trip home since starting Princeton was like few others. Though he encountered nothing unusual when he first arrived in Bangkok, Thailand, he was home when tsunamis demolished parts of Asia and claimed thousands of lives on Dec.

NEWS | 01/04/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Masonry workers restore historic buildings on campus

Before most students are awake, Jennifer LaFreda and Bill Miller are already up and working, busy restoring the eighty-year-old Boilerhouse ? soon to be 200 Elm Drive ? just north of MacMillan Building to its original 1924 state.On a typical day, these masonry workers are scaling multiple floors and repairing the existing masonry of the future Public Safety building before 8:00 a.m.With nothing but simple metal tools, these specially-trained craftsmen are able to completely transform the appearance of a building.Though work on the Boilerhouse has yet to be completed, the difference between the original building and the restored sections is blatantly clear.

NEWS | 12/09/2004