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The Daily Princetonian

Tilghman's raise reflects nationwide salary trend

President Tilghman's salary, $533,057 for the 2002-2003 fiscal year including benefits, is in line with nationwide trends in college presidents' salaries and matches up with the pay of Ivy League presidents, a new report shows.Tilghman makes more than the presidents of Harvard, Brown and Dartmouth, and less than those at Columbia, Cornell, the University of Pennsylvania and Yale.Nationwide, salaries for college presidents have increased dramatically: 19.2 percent between 2002 and 2003.Tilghman's salary increased at a more moderate 9.5 percent from the $486,672 she earned in 2001-2002.

NEWS | 11/15/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Energy bill squeezes U. budget

The University's Priorities Committee met Monday night to discuss shortfalls in the University's operating budget during what Provost Christopher Eisgruber '83 called "constrained times."Due in part to high energy prices, Eisgruber said "the news on the budget front is a little gloomier" this year than it has been in past years.He specified that the committee, which makes recommendations to distribute discretionary funding, is looking at a $4 million dollar deficit in its operating budget.And because the administration is concerned about deficits in next year's budget as well, University community members will notice increased discipline on the "consumption side of the budget," Eisgruber said.If the University can't slow spending, it will have to decrease its renovation budget, Eisgruber said, adding that a 10 percent cut in renovation spending would "pull the budget back into balance." He noted that such cuts in renovation would be "hard, but easier than administrative cost cuts.""When times are good, the amount of money available can be a couple of million dollars," Eisgruber said.

NEWS | 11/15/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Professor, students attend Vienna diplomacy meeting

Five University students and Wolfgang Danspeckgruber, a Wilson School professor, participated in the Vienna Diplomacy Conference at the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna last week.Andrew Bruck '05, Zachary Goldstein '05, Kyle Jaros '05, a member of the 'Prince' editorial board, Natalie Lockwood '06 and Marc Grinberg '05 attended the event.Danspeckgruber chose the students from his Spring 2004 class, WWS 321: Theory and Practice of International Diplomacy, based on their performance in and outside of the classroom.In addition to the Princeton group, graduate students from Georgetown and Tufts universities and students from the Diplomatic Academy participated in the conference, which focused on challenges for journalists and diplomats in the 21st century.The conference featured a series of discussion sessions with guest participants, including an administrator from Time Magazine and the British Ambassador to Austria."I was really happy with [the conference]," Lockwood said.

NEWS | 11/15/2004

The Daily Princetonian

McGreevey officially resigns

Gov. James McGreevey submitted his official letter of resignation Monday, ending his tenure as governor three months after announcing his involvement in an extramarital affair.The one-sentence letter, signed by McGreevey, was filed with Secretary of State Regena Thomas and informed her that his resignation would be effective as of 11:59 p.m.

NEWS | 11/15/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Symposium highlights diversity, government's role in education

The Wilson School hosted its annual Students and Alumni of Color Symposium this weekend, examining "Rising through Education: Forging Paths to Leadership, Scholarship and Community Engagement."The opening address was given by Earl Kim GS '93, superintendent of Verona, N.J., public schools, who said he feared too much federal control over education and criticized President George W.

NEWS | 11/14/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Community House hosts Holiday Gift Bazaar

Princetonians and community members alike swarmed Prospect Avenue's Fields Center this weekend. White gift bags marked those coming from Community House's First Annual Holiday Gift Bazaar, an event to benefit the organization's summer computer camp.The Fields Center, where the event was hosted, was transformed into a holiday wonderland.

NEWS | 11/14/2004

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The Daily Princetonian

USG pushes for 22-hour study space

The USG is continuing its efforts to create a late-night study space in Chancellor Green, but the prospects for this project remain uncertain.In response to student demand for a 24-hour study area, USG President Matt Margolin '05 and Chair of the U-Council Amy Saltzman '05 suggested the idea last spring."Although there are computer clusters in some residential dorms available 24 hours a day, a lot of students want more common space available 24 hours," Saltzman said.The USG's renewed its efforts in October, when Margolin and Saltzman met with Mark Burstein, the new vice president for administration."[Burstein] wanted us to inform him about issues that needed addressing," Saltzman said, so she and Margolin took the opportunity to discuss the 24-hour study space.Margolin said he "hope[s] that Mr. Burstein will be able to change internal opinions [within the University administration] and extend students' options" now that he has been informed of students' desires for the study space.Burstein said he is still considering whether the plan ? which currently allows for a 22-hour rather than 24-hour study space ? is necessary."I think the administration is supportive of making sure students have adequate study space," he said.

NEWS | 11/14/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Rushdie discusses impact of urban life on literature

Award-winning writer Salman Rushdie drew a capacity audience in McCosh Hall Thursday afternoon for a lecture titled "The Novel and the City," part of the Shelby Cullom Davis Center for Historical Studies' Urban Reflections Lecture Series.Rushdie spoke for an-hour-and-a-half, discussing his native Bombay and its influence on his writing.The author of eight novels, Rushdie attracted worldwide attention in 1989 when Iran's Ayatollah Khomeni condemned his novel "The Satanic Verses" as sacrilegious and issued a fatwa ? a legal Islamic opinion on matters of religious belief ? against him.However, at the beginning of his talk, Rushdie cast the episode in a wryly humorous light.

NEWS | 11/11/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Frosh offered second chance to eat at clubs

Next week, the members of the Class of 2008 will be given another chance to sample dining at the eating clubs through "A Second Taste of Prospect," an event organized by the Inter-Club Council (ICC).The 351 spots offered to freshmen were filled up less than two hours after an email was sent, said Grant Gittlin '08, president of the freshman class.The popularity of "A Taste of Prospect," which occurred on Sept.

NEWS | 11/11/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Malkiel outlines plan for small departments

The University is now making clear the steps it plans to take to combat the trend of a large number of students concentrating in a small number of majors.Last spring, Dean of the College Nancy Malkiel began implementing a program to diversify undergraduates' choices of majors.Politics, history, economics, English and the Wilson School consistently rank as the five most popular departments.

NEWS | 11/11/2004

The Daily Princetonian

McNamara criticizes nuclear policy

Robert McNamara, secretary of defense during the Cuban Missile Crisis and the escalation of the Vietnam War, condemned the nuclear policies of the United States and NATO in a Thursday lecture in Dodds Auditorium."What is shocking is that today, 15 years after the end of the Cold War, basic U.S.

NEWS | 11/11/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Clarke speaks on Bush's foreign policy

Richard Clarke, a former adviser to President George W. Bush's National Security Council who made headlines with his staunch criticism of the administration's foreign policy, continued to impugn the country's foreign policy course at a lecture on campus Wednesday.Dodds Auditorium was filled to capacity and the event was simulcast in two locations within Robertson Hall.Clarke critiqued the current administration's policy in Iraq and called for a renewed focus on reconstruction.Dean of the Wilson School Anne-Marie Slaughter GS '80 introduced Clarke with an emphasis on his contribution to current political thought."If you don't know who Richard Clarke is . . . you obviously haven't read anything for the past six months," Slaughter said.Clarke said there is a difference between the War on Terror and the War in Iraq.

NEWS | 11/10/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Student gamers ecstatic over release of 'Halo 2'

Campus video game enthusiasts were thrilled by Tuesday's release of Xbox's "Halo 2" ? the sequel to the bestselling Xbox first-person shooter "Halo," which has sold an estimated $149 million in copies since November 2001, according to the Associated Press."I was waiting for [Tuesday's] release for almost a year," Arjun Reddy '08 said.Microsoft estimated first day sales of "Halo 2" at 2.4 million copies, which places the game among the bestselling ever over a one-day period, according to the AP."'Halo' is a video game that takes over one's life.

NEWS | 11/10/2004