Follow us on Instagram
Try our free mini crossword
Listen to our podcast
Download the app

News

The Daily Princetonian

Stolen orgo tests prompt investigation

The University's main organic chemistry class suffered at least two incidences of cheating during the past semester, leading to an Honor Committee investigation, according to an email by the class' professor and several students.Professor Maitland Jones, who teaches CHM 301-301A: Organic Chemistry, said in an email to the class in early January that a student stole one student's second midterm and another student's third midterm.

NEWS | 02/02/2004

ADVERTISEMENT
The Daily Princetonian

Penn names Gutmann president

Provost Amy Gutmann, who has been President Tilghman's second-in-command for two-and-a-half years, will leave the University on June 30 to become the eighth president of the University of Pennsylvania, capping a 28-year Princeton career.Tilghman is scrambling to find a replacement to serve as her chief academic and budget officer as Gutmann finalizes her work here and makes plans for Penn.Gutmann's priorities for Penn include raising the profile of its undergraduate college and growing its endowment, which is a third the size of Princeton's despite Penn enrollment being five times as large, she said.Because of Penn's strong graduate schools, "the undergraduate college can tend to be overshadowed," Gutmann said the day the announcement was made in an interview at her Nassau Hall office.

NEWS | 02/01/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Tigers take on New Hampshire primary

MANCHESTER, N.H. ? While none of the seven contenders for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination hail from Princeton, University students and alumni are providing full-time support as wives, daughters, campaign staffers and volunteers determined to convince voters that their favorite will be the most likely to defeat President Bush in the general election this November.

NEWS | 02/01/2004

The Daily Princetonian

A glimpse within the new 'ellipse' Poe Field dorm

Sophomores or juniors awakened by jackhammers and cement mixers working on the "ellipse" dormitory next to Poe Field over the last two years might feel happier about the construction this spring, when the brand-new rooms become available for upperclass room draw.Though the 220-bed dorm will not be officially completed until September move-in, floor plans will be available online from the housing department before room draw, said George Olexa, assistant director of physical planning.Olexa gave The Daily Princetonian a tour of the $27 million building, which is on schedule and on budget, though still in need of extensive interior work.The ellipse dorm ? named for the shallow curve it forms, along with Scully and the Carl Icahn Laboratory, against Poe Field ? features 15 four-room, four-person suites as well as many single rooms and singles connected by a bathroom, as in Scully.But unlike Scully, the ground floor suites will be accessed by entryways like those in the Gothic dorms, the single rooms will be larger by an average of 30 square feet and all rooms will feature hardwood flooring.The architecture is more ornamented than in Scully."I love the roofline.

NEWS | 01/18/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Provost Gutmann named Penn president, eyes undergrads, endowment

January 22, 2004Provost Amy Gutmann, who has been President Tilghman's second-in-command for two-and-a-half years, will leave the University on June 30 to become the eighth president of the University of Pennsylvania, capping a 28-year Princeton career.Tilghman will scramble to find a replacement to serve as her chief academic and budget officer as Gutmann finalizes her work here and makes plans for Penn.Gutmann's priorities for Penn include raising the profile of its undergraduate college and growing its endowment, which is a third the size of Princeton's despite Penn enrollment being five times as large, she said.Because of Penn's strong graduate schools, "the undergraduate college can tend to be overshadowed," Gutmann said today in an interview in her Nassau Hall office.

NEWS | 01/18/2004