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The Daily Princetonian

NYT Times' Revkin: Get real on global warming

People around the world need to be more proactive in respecting the environment, Andrew Revkin, prize-winning New York Times environment writer and author, said Thursday in a lecture titled ?The Hot Seat: Making Sense of Global Warming, from the North Pole to the White House.??We are modifying Earth in ways that are profound and permanent,? Revkin said to a crowd of around 40 community members, professors and students in the Frist Multipurpose Room.Revkin spoke about his experiences as an environmental journalist and writer and about

NEWS | 10/09/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Miller ’12 wins election for class presidency

After another delay, the results of the USG freshman class government elections were released Thursday night.In the runoff race, Ashton Miller ?12 won the position of president over contender Michael Yaroshefsky ?12, while Lindy Li ?12 won the position of vice president over opponent Sojung Yi ?12.Austin Hollimon ?12 will be class treasurer, despite receiving fewer votes than Bill Pang ?12.Pang, who received the most votes for treasurer, had his candidacy invalidated after an investigation determined that Pang had ?overspent the limit by buying an ad in the ?Prince,? ? senior elections manager Braeden Kepner-Kraus ?10 said.Runoff elections occurred for any position in which no candidate had a majority of the student votes in the first round.PJ Das ?12 was elected social chair in the first round after winning more than 50 percent of the votes.

NEWS | 10/09/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Seniors come and go at four-year colleges

Though the four-year residential college system is too new to produce any reliable trends, more members of the Class of 2009 switched out of the system for their senior year than chose to join it, statistics show.For the Class of 2009, the first class to experience two years of the four-year residential college program, 5.5 percent switched from four-year residential colleges to upperclass housing this year, while 2.5 percent of the class moved from upperclass housing to a four-year college, according to statistics from the housing department.Of this year?s seniors, 77 percent have chosen upperclass housing for both the 2007-08 and 2008-09 school years, while 15 percent remained in four-year colleges for both 2007-08 and 2008-09.Undergraduate Housing Manager Angela Hodgeman said in an e-mail that the net 3 percent decrease in the number of seniors housed in four-year colleges is a reflection of the number of spaces available to the Class of 2009 and not of students choosing to drop out of four-year colleges.Hodgeman said that the Housing Department is currently reviewing the number of bed spaces allocated to upperclass students in room draw.?A lot of students get closed out of the colleges due to the limited number of spaces available for upperclassmen,? Hodgeman said.

NEWS | 10/08/2008

The Daily Princetonian

University welcomes Ainslie as new VP for finance and treasurer

Carolyn Ainslie, the recently appointed vice president for finance and treasurer for the University, arrives in Princeton in the middle of a storm not too different from the one her predecessor saw in the 1970s.Christopher McCrudden, who began his career at the University in 1973 as assistant controller for budget and long-range planning, said in an interview this week, ?When I started in the early ?70s, we went through a period.

NEWS | 10/08/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Opportunities arise from fall of Bear Stearns

As former Bear Stearns employee Charles Diao ?79 begins his morning at his new private investment firm, Diao Capital Management LLC, he often thinks about the turn of events that led him to start his company.Six months ago, Diao was a group head for special situations credit with Bear, the investment bank that came to the brink of bankruptcy in March and was subsequently bought by JPMorgan Chase.

NEWS | 10/08/2008

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The Daily Princetonian

Wyss gives Harvard $125 million

Harvard has received $125 million from Swiss engineer, entrepreneur and philanthropist Hansjorg Wyss to fund the creation of the Hansjorg Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, the university announced in a statement Monday.Wyss, who received his MBA from Harvard Business School in 1965, is head of the Wyss Foundation, an environmental charity, according to The Harvard Crimson.

NEWS | 10/07/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Cell phone use skews surveys

The surge in cell phone usage, as well as absentee and early ballots, are handicapping the accuracy of polls for the 2008 presidential election, pollster Joe Lenski ?87 said in a panel discussion on voting behavior and the trustworthiness of polling in Dodds Auditorium on Tuesday.Lenski, who studied mechanical engineering at the University, was the third speaker on a panel composed of social scientists and pollsters.

NEWS | 10/07/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Tilghman to be trustee of new Saudi university

President Tilghman will serve on the board of trustees of King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), a new research university in Saudi Arabia, Princeton announced Monday.?There is nothing comparable to [KAUST] right now in the Middle East,? Tilghman said, noting that she believes the opening of the nondenominational graduate-level research university will significantly increase opportunities for women.?One of the reasons I have agreed to join the board is because they have made a strong commitment to educate women along with men,? she said, adding that women at the university won?t have to wear hijabs, and non-Muslims will study alongside Muslims.While the opening of the university will not change the fact that women in Saudi Arabia live by very different rules from men, Tilghman said she sees it as ?a promising beginning.??I think you have to begin somewhere, and this is something that is important for those of us in the West who believe in women?s rights,? she said, noting that KAUST aims to have a gender-balanced student body.The new university, which will operate according to the American model, will be a unique institution in Saudi Arabian higher education.?One of the hallmarks of the new university is the commitment to [changing the status quo], and the university is supposed to be run on the same norms as American universities and other reputable foreign universities,? said Wilson School professor Daniel Kurtzer, who served as the United States? ambassador to Israel from 2001 to 2005.?[Saudi Arabia] is a place where there are still traditional values that preclude women from advancing in society to equal treatment,? he noted.He said he hopes that this university will begin to break down some of the obstacles that women face.?This clearly is different from anything else that is going on in Saudi Arabia ? a place in the Kingdom where there will not be barriers to women?s equal advancement and participation in academic progress,? Kurtzer said.Barbara Bodine, a lecturer in the Wilson School and former U.S.

NEWS | 10/07/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Borough to re-evaluate property tax values

At its weekly meeting Tuesday night, the Borough Council hired an assessor to re-evaluate all property in the Borough for tax purposes, marking the beginning of the first complete property tax revaluation since 1996.The council also discussed efforts to publicize the FreeB jitney service, debated ways to recover money owed to the Borough by the Township and passed an ordinance regulating the maintenance of construction sites.Council members said they worried that the property tax revaluation could upset Borough residents, some of whom may end up paying more taxes.?This makes people very nervous, and with reason,? Councilman David Goldfarb said.

NEWS | 10/07/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Study reveals impact of wealth on academic choice

Despite the University?s Major Choices initiative ? launched in 2004 to encourage students to choose their concentration based on their academic passions and not their future career aspirations ? students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds are more likely to take post-graduation employment opportunities into account in declaring their major, according to the recently released Committee on Background and Opportunity (COMBO) survey results.Though 30 percent of self-identified lower-class students said that ?expected financial prospects? was a significant factor when choosing a major, only 12 percent of upper-class students responded the same way.Moreover, nearly a third of all students in each socioeconomic category cited ?finding a job? as a significant factor for their selection of major, except for those who identified as upper class, of which only 22 percent said ?finding a job? significantly influenced their choice.On the whole, however, 80 percent of respondents across all socioeconomic backgrounds cited ?academic passion? and ?interesting classes? as reasons for choosing their major.Five-year data from the Career Survey Report, in which Career Services polled graduating classes from 2004 to 2008 about their post-graduation plans, show that the average starting salary for a computer-science graduate was $67,000, while the average comparative-literature graduate earned a salary of about $37,000.

NEWS | 10/06/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Felten finds NYT, YouTube site vulnerabilities

Until last week, The New York Times? website was susceptible to malicious outside attacks, potentially jeopardizing users? private information, according to a paper published last Monday by computer science professor Ed Felten and Bill Zeller GS.The site allowed attackers to ?recommend articles with commentary [and] they could capture e-mail addresses,? Felten said in an interview.Because the website keeps members logged in for longer than most websites, he explained, members remained susceptible to security breaches long after they had navigated away from the site.The vulnerability arises from the ?e-mail this? feature, which makes user e-mail addresses available to the attacker, according to the report.An attacker can remotely take advantage of the flaw by determining that a user has left the webpage without logging out and then returning to the page to access that account as if he were the user.?We take the security of our site and our users very seriously and act quickly to address any vulnerabilities,? a Times spokeswoman said in a statement to cnet.com, a technology news website.

NEWS | 10/06/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Microsoft research officer discusses future of computing

Use of technology in the classroom will only become more integral and transformative to education, Microsoft chief research and strategy officer Craig Mundie said on Monday to a crowd of about 70 undergraduate and graduate students in Dodds Auditorium.Mundie discussed how several recently developed technologies could be applied in educational contexts and, more generally, in improving the free flow of information.Someday walls and desks ?will essentially have computers built into them,? Mundie said, explaining that touch screens could ?take social computing processes and use them directly in the educational process? by connecting the user to content created by his or her classmates.Mundie presented a sheet of a flexible material called ?e-ink? that was only slightly thicker and wider than a sheet of paper.

NEWS | 10/06/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Gay conservatives say they're bridge-builders, not paradoxes

A gay Republican may seem like a contradiction in terms to some, but four public figures said that they have no trouble identifying with being both.They discussed their experiences as conservatives in a predominantly liberal gay community during a panel discussion sponsored by the LGBT Center in McCormick Hall on Monday.?We have been called selfish and self-hating,? said University of Minnesota law professor Dale Carpenter, who specializes in civil rights and civil liberties.

NEWS | 10/06/2008

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes | Oct. 6

Singh pleads guilty to Lewis Library briberyA sixth defendant, Tejinder ?Tony? Singh, has pleaded guilty to charges of bribery connected to construction of the Lewis Science Library, according to court documents.Singh, the chief executive of Fine Painting, pleaded guilty to one count of commercial bribery, The Times of Trenton reported.

NEWS | 10/05/2008