USG releases survey results
The results of the third Committee on Background and Opportunity survey, which were delayed by over two months, will be released to the University community on Friday.
The results of the third Committee on Background and Opportunity survey, which were delayed by over two months, will be released to the University community on Friday.
Continuing its effort to expand its global presence, the University will host its inaugural Princeton-Fung Global Forum — “The Future of the City” — next month in Shanghai, China. The meeting, which will bring together policymakers, scholars, urban planners and journalists from around the world, is the first in a series of annual forums funded by a $10 million donation from trustee William Fung ’70, group chairman of Li & Fung.
In 1938, soon-to-be Dean of the College Francis Godolphin announced a new academic calendar which would place fall term exams immediately after the winter break. At the time, the University’s new schedule aligned more closely with its peer institutions in the Ivy League. Today, it’s the last of its kind.
This spring, the University’s Board of Trustees will choose the 20th leader of the 266-year-old institution. Beyond selecting a University president, the University is also selecting a vision and a set of priorities for the next decade. And as seen by the dialogue at the open forums and focus groups over the past month, opinions on the desired qualities of the next president differ.
In celebration of its 100th anniversary this year, Cloister Inn will be unveiling a “Hall of Honor” to honor Cloister war veterans and an “Olympian Banner” to celebrate alumni who have competed in past Olympic Games.
A student group that exists to make other student groups better, Leadership for Change has spent the past two years trying to bolster a campus-wide discussion on leadership between student groups.
Standing approximately 70 feet in height, the Norwegian spruce tree rooted in the green at the center of Palmer Square is currently dressed in 32,000 lights. Earlier in December, the evergreen tree made the annual transformation into the town’s Christmas tree.
Half a year since leaving her position as dean of the Wilson School to become president of Brown, Christina Paxson is still establishing her place at Brown but has thus far won favorable reviews from several student and faculty leaders.
When Supreme Court Associate Justice Antonin Scalia visits campus, controversy tends to follow. Scalia visited the University in 2001 and 2008 and faced pointed questions and protests about his Supreme Court decisions.
A column written by history concentrator Caroline Kitchener ’14 called “When sexual assault counseling in US colleges is not confidential” was published in The Guardian on Tuesday.
Dean for Research A.J. Stewart Smith will remain in his current post for an additional six months as the search committee for his replacement will be unable to name a successor by the Jan. 1 deadline.
Princetonpresident.com, a website created by visiting professor Mark Alexander and his American Studies seminar AMS 313: The Law of Democracy to gather suggestions regarding the presidential search process, now has an added voting component offering students the chance to choose from among five candidates identified by the class as the strongest and most popular choices to replace outgoing University president Shirley Tilghman.
With the lighting of 834 menorahs in the Princeton Airport on Tuesday evening, organizers from the Jewish Center of Princeton set a new Guinness World Record.
In the span of less than a day, Duncan Hosie ’16 — a San Francisco native interested in constitutional law — has attained international recognition for questioning Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia about his comparison of laws banning homosexuality to laws banning bestiality and murder.
After spending 29 years in the U.S. Foreign Service and serving as ambassador to Israel and Egypt, Wilson School professor Daniel Kurtzer joined the University faculty in 2005. On Tuesday, he will deliver a lecture on the latest bout of violence and turmoil in the Middle East. Before the lecture, The Daily Princetonian asked Kurtzer about his views on recent Middle East affairs.
On the heels of the announcement that the Supreme Court will hear two cases regarding gay marriage, Associate Justice Antonin Scalia defended some of his more controversial decisions concerning gay rights in a lecture Monday afternoon.
A USG hoc committee is examining ways to improve its election process and plans to make recommendations of revisions to the election handbook for USG Senate approval in January. The formation of the committee follows discussions within the student government about “invisible primaries” that lead to unopposed races.
As Career Services celebrates its 100th year, the agency, which faced questions regarding its focus on financial industry jobs, discussed changes to its strategy at a meeting of the Council of the Princeton University Community Monday afternoon.
The University is in the early stages of applying for reaccreditation by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, a process that — though unlikely to result in de-accreditation — offers the University a chance to reassess its institutional mission and priorities. The University will receive the results of the evaluation in June 2014.
A new website to be launched Monday exclusively for University students aims to serve as a platform for debate and as a hub for students to anonymously pose questions and answers.