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The Daily Princetonian

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Joan Jett to perform at 2007 Dean's Date concertRockers Joan Jett and the Blackhearts will headline the USG's spring concert on Dean's Date, bringing rock 'n' roll to campus just as students have handed in their final papers and problem sets.Jett will perform on Tuesday, May 15, at 5:15 p.m.

NEWS | 05/08/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Protesters orchestrate bloody display

Correction appendedEleven undergraduates stripped down to their undergarments, smeared themselves with stage blood and pretended to be pieces of packaged meat in a demonstration co-organized by the Princeton Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) on the Frist Campus Center South Lawn yesterday."We wanted to force people to make the connection between the animal on their plate and the animal that it was before ? with bones and blood, just like people," PAWS president Jenny Palmer '09 said.The human meat tray display was intended "to create an image people can't look away from," PETA senior vice president Dan Mathews said in an interview.

NEWS | 05/08/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Anonymous art donor comes forth

Art history professor John Wilmerding came forward Friday as the previously anonymous donor of a large collection of pop art to the University Art Museum in 2004.The collection's nearly 50 paintings, sculptures and works on paper include many rare pieces by 1960s American artists such as Robert Indiana, Alex Katz, Roy Lichtenstein and Tom Wesselmann.Wilmerding's disclosure, which came at a reception and dinner in honor of his retirement Friday evening, has stimulated philanthropic responses in his honor.

NEWS | 05/08/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Naked organizer advocates shock tactics

Sensational tactics are necessary to promote animal rights, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) senior vice president Dan Mathews told an audience of more than 50 students in Frist 302 last night.Mathews, who has been arrested over 20 times for his involvement in animal rights-related demonstrations and protests, chronicled his experiences as an animal-rights activist in a lecture called "How a Fish Turned Me from a Bruised Fruit into a Proud Vegetable." The lecture was sponsored by Princeton Animal Welfare Society (PAWS).Mathews is best known for having launched PETA's "Rather Go Naked than Wear Fur" advertising campaign, in which supermodels appeared naked in posters and on TV to express their opposition to fur."Cable TV molded a society more hungry for sensation than education," he said.

NEWS | 05/08/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Journalist says life is in danger

Chinese investigative journalists must contend with a much harsher environment than their western colleagues, journalist and professor Wang Keqin said during a lecture in Frist Campus Center yesterday afternoon.Reporters in China fight "tigers," Wang said, referring to difficulties coming from both the government and private interests, while western reporters face mere "wolves."Speaking through an interpreter, Wang ? who holds the record for having the highest bounty ever placed on the head of a single person by the Chinese mob ? described the difficulties of working as an investigative journalist in China.Wang experienced those dangers firsthand in 2002, when he investigated the securities market in the province of Lanzhou.

NEWS | 05/08/2007

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The Daily Princetonian

Female Ivy League presidents convene in Cambridge

While half the schools in the Ivy League will soon be helmed by women, there is no single "female leadership style" for them to model their presidencies after, President Tilghman and four other future, current or former female Ivy presidents agreed during a panel discussion in Boston last Thursday.Convened to discuss the changing role of women in higher education, the panel brought together Tilghman, Harvard president-elect Drew Gilpin Faust, Brown president and former Princeton associate provost Ruth Simmons, Penn president and former Princeton provost Amy Gutmann and former Penn president Judith Rodin.During the discussion, the women recalled challenges they faced before rising to become Ivy League presidents, noting incidents of gender bias that they experienced.Simmons not only had to endure gender discrimination, she said, but also racial inequality.

NEWS | 05/06/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Mayoral candidate Pimley reaches out to students

In the race for Princeton Borough mayor, challenger Kim Pimley has begun courting University students for votes in her primary bid to unseat incumbent Mildred Trotman.As the June 5 election date nears, Steve Marcus '10 has been hired by Pimley's campaign to coordinate activities on campus, from posting facebook.com flyers to organizing dinners with the candidate."I don't really have a job title ? I've been doing campaign research, helping plan events on campus, registering students to vote and developing campaign strategies," Marcus said in an email.Marcus, who is from St.

NEWS | 05/06/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Ahoy Mait-eys!

Students in pirate garb urge retiring chemistry professor Maitland Jones to walk the plank into the Wilson School fountain Friday.

NEWS | 05/06/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Professors named to top honor societies

Ten University professors were elected to two prestigious academic honor societies, the University announced last week.Five professors were elected to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), while another five current and emeritus professors were tapped to join the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS).Astrophysics professor Bruce Draine, ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) professor Peter Grant, psychology professor Philip Johnson-Laird, EEB professor Stephen Pacala and astrophysics professor and department chair David Spergel '82 were elected to NAS.Three current and two emeritus professors were chosen to join AAAS: molecular biology professor Bonnie Bassler, history professor emeritus Nell Painter, politics professor emeritus John Waterbury '61 and sociology professors Bruce Western and Viviana Zelizer.The newly selected AAAS members join 222 other recently admitted leaders in their fields.

NEWS | 05/06/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Helping hands

Ten dollars bought a manicure from professionals in Whig Hall yesterday during the 'Manicure for the Cure' event, which raised money for breast cancer research.

NEWS | 05/03/2007

The Daily Princetonian

Prof says executive power will grow

Executive power has expanded significantly in the modern era, and little can be done to slow the trend, politics professor David Lewis said in a dinner discussion yesterday in Frist Campus Center.The Constitution, Lewis said, does not specify the limits of presidential power, leaving much open to debate.

NEWS | 05/03/2007