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The Daily Princetonian

USG debate takes personal turn

USG presidential candidate Grant Gittlin '08 addressed questions about his disciplinary record and relationship with the administration at last night's pre-election presidential forum.The candidates ? both USG veterans ? staked out their priorities if elected and reviewed their service records, with both emphasizing the risks and opportunities in transitioning to the four-year college system.In response to an audience member's question, Gittlin, the three-term Class of 2008 president, admitted that he received three violations from the Committee on Discipline and was subsequently asked to move off-campus, where he now lives.Audience member Ruben Pope '07 asked Gittlin if he thought his history with the administration might impair his work as president of the student government."It's sort of suspect how someone can live off campus and expect to work with administrators," Pope said in an interview after the event.

NEWS | 11/29/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Amid charge of bias, Rapelye stands firm

"Anything that seems unfair is under scrutiny," Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye told students yesterday in a rare roundtable discussion that ranged from allegations of discrimination to the implications of the University's elimination of Early Decision.Addressing the ongoing investigation into the University's admission policies for Asian-Americans, Rapelye told roughly 30 students in Frist 308 that "the numbers don't indicate [discrimination]," and "what we're doing is as fair as it can be."Last month, Yale freshman Jian Li filed a complaint with the Office of Civil Rights, claiming that the University discriminated against him because he is Asian.

NEWS | 11/29/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Sophomores applaud new financial aid policy

As sophomores pondered their future social options yesterday over Frist chicken fingers and looming homework assignments, most applauded the University's recent expansion of financial aid as a much-needed effort to make eating clubs more accessible to all students."There were some friends of mine who weren't even considering eating clubs because of the financial issues," Laurissa Yee '09 said.

NEWS | 11/29/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Behind victory, a break from the past

When all 10 eating clubs agreed in recent weeks to partnerships with the University, they confounded perceptions built up over more than a century of acrimony between Prospect Avenue and Nassau Hall.Though the individual agreements are largely being kept private, the University has pledged to make club membership more financially accessible ? providing students on financial aid with $2,000 more in annual grants ? and each club has agreed to allow some members to share their meals with a four-year college.Nassau Hall and the clubs are both claiming victory, celebrating the potential for increased diversity in club membership and the opportunity for a few dozen students to divide their meals between the clubs and the colleges.

NEWS | 11/29/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Frist '74 drops bid for GOP nomination in 2008

Retiring Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist '74 (R-Tenn.), who had been widely expected to seek the GOP presidential nomination in 2008, said yesterday that he is abandoning plans for a White House run to return to his medical work and spend more time with his family."In the Bible, God tells us for everything there is a season, and for me, for now, this season of being an elected official has come to a close," Frist said in a statement issued by his office.

NEWS | 11/29/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Dining Detailed

Option 1 Join an eating club What you get When you join a club, you receive membership benefits of 20 meals per week, members-only social events such as the annual Winter Formals and Houseparties and the option of living in upperclass housing. What it costs Each club's cost differs slightly, but the University set the average board rate of the clubs at $6,300, which does not include social fees. How things changed The University raised the board rate to $6,300, a $2,000 increase which financial aid students can use towards the cost of a club. Option 2 Stick with the dining hall What you get You can live in one of the four-year residential colleges, eat at least 95 meals a semester in the dining halls and enjoy all of the benefits of residential college life, such as social events and study breaks. What it costs To live in the residential colleges, you must purchase at least the minimum 95-meals-a-semester plan for $2,925 but you can buy the full meal plan for about $4,315. How things changed If you are on financial aid and choose to live in the residential colleges, you will have your meal plan covered and possibly extra funds since the set board rate is about $2,000 higher than the cost of a University meal plan. Option 3 Split the difference What you get If you choose the shared option, you get the benefits of being in an eating club, but split your meals between the club and the dining halls, with a minimum of 95 meals a semester in the residential colleges. What it costs By choosing this plan, you pay membership fees to the eating clubs, which include the stipend for a 95-meals-a-semester plan in the residential colleges. How things changed You will now have the opportunity to live in a residential college and join an eating club for the same price as eating all of your meals in the club. Option 4 Go independent What you get As an independent student, you receive the option of living in upperclass housing (some with kitchens), cooking or buying food for yourself, or joining one of the two co-ops on campus. What it costs Independents pay the cost of their own food or the cost of a co-op, which runs between $500 and $600 per semester. How things changed If you are on full financial aid and choose to be independent, you will now have $6,300 to use toward food.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

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The Daily Princetonian

University to up budget funding in 2007-08

The University Board of Trustees approved an increase in endowment spending last week to provide more undergraduate financial aid, including funds earmarked for the dining costs of upperclassmen, the University announced yesterday.The trustees, who normally announce budget decisions in January, also expanded the target range for endowment spending in the future."They had to make some sort of adjustments now, particularly the ones related to financial aid that affect students' thinking about their eating arrangements in the next year," University Vice President and Secretary Bob Durkee '69 said.Juniors and seniors can expect to receive about $2,000 more in their aid package to cover the difference between dining hall board and the average eating club contract of $6,300, the University said in a press release.The additional endowment funds will also go toward reducing the school-year work obligations of aid recipients and building a dedicated staff to attract more corporate and foundation funding for faculty research.President Tilghman and University provost Christopher Eisgruber '83 recommended the "onetime infusion into the budget," Durkee said. Rising expendituresThe University's endowment rose to $13 billion dollars this year, buoyed by a 19.5 percent return on investments, the Princeton Investment Company (PRINCO) reported.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Tilghman, profs sign gay rights petition

President Tilghman and University professors Kwame Anthony Appiah, Cornel West GS '80 and Edmund White recently joined five Nobel Prize winners, six Academy Award winners, 10 Pulitzer Prize winners and hundreds of other individuals and organizations in a global campaign to decriminalize homosexuality.The campaign seeks a United Nations-mandated "universal abolition of the so-called 'crime of homosexuality', of all 'sodomy laws' and laws against so-called 'unnatural acts' in all countries where they exist." It was spearheaded by French academic Louis-Georges Tin, president and founder of the International Committee for the International Day Against Homophobia (IDAHO).White, a creative writing professor, became involved in the campaign against the criminalization of homosexuality after being approached by a friend who is a gay rights advocate in Israel.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Panel discusses self-segregation

The University has a limited role in combating self-segregation in the student body, a student panel concluded in a discussion yesterday evening.Moderated by Wilson School professor Stanley Katz, the discussion ranged over several stereotypically self-segregating groups, including athletes, eating club members and ethnic minorities.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Nassau Hall unveils new club financial aid plan

The University has taken a major step toward bolstering the four-year residential college system, announcing proposals yesterday to make club membership more financially accessible and allow upperclassmen to affiliate with both club and college.Nassau Hall said it will provide larger financial aid grants for all upperclass students and offer a number of shared meal plans ? the total number determined by individual clubs ? that will allow students to split their meals between the clubs and colleges.The moves are the culmination of more than a century of attempts to reform the eating club system, long considered divisive and damaging by administrators.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Annan urges immediate disarmament

"Mutually assured destruction has been replaced by mutually assured paralysis," outgoing United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said yesterday of the state of international debate over nuclear arms in a major policy address at Richardson Auditorium.Likening the international community to a pilot "asleep at the controls of a fast-moving aircraft," Annan criticized the lack of a unified, global strategy for disarmament and nonproliferation as the main reasons that nuclear weapons still threaten humanity.While he did not discount the importance of combating the spread of biological and chemical weapons, Annan said that he considers nuclear arms the greatest current danger, citing a crisis of confidence in the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and fears that terrorists may gain access to nuclear materials."Even a single bomb can destroy an entire city," he said.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Frist '74 abandons Republican bid for White House in 2008

Retiring Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist '74 (R-Tenn.), who had been widely expected to make a White House run in 2008, said in a surprise announcement this morning that he will not seek the office."In the Bible, God tells us for everything there is a season, and for me, for now, this season of being an elected official has come to a close," Frist said in a statement issued by his office.

NEWS | 11/28/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Red Night Lights

Robertson Hall is illuminated with red lights Monday night as part of World AIDS Week. The week's events, which include a benefit concert, film screening and panel discussion, are intended to raise awareness and funds to combat the global HIV/AIDS crisis.

NEWS | 11/27/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Robertson arguments set to begin

More than four years after the Robertson family filed its lawsuit against Princeton, lawyers representing the University and the Robertsons will today deliver arguments on seven motions before the court.Though a trial date is likely months or years away, this week's arguments before Judge Neil Shuster in Mercer Country Superior Court are another step toward the resolution of the suit filed by the Robertsons in July 2002.Both sides seek to resolve outstanding issues about the case, asking the judge for "summary judgments" on their motions.The Robertsons have asked for judgment that the foundation was overcharged ? specifically, that the University took funds for non-authorized purposes ? and that Princeton violated its "fiduciary duty" to use foundation assets exclusively to advance the mission as stated by the donors.The University, in turn, seeks rulings on four motions, including whether Princeton remains the foundation's "sole beneficiary" and whether choosing to use the Princeton University Investment Corporation (PRINCO) as manager of the foundation's assets was a valid business decision.The Robertsons have also asked that Shuster invite a jury to make decisions on some of the arguments in the case because "Princeton was not the beneficiary of the gift ... it was a gift to the people of the United States," Robertson lawyer Seth Lapidow said in an interview.

NEWS | 11/27/2006

The Daily Princetonian

University will boost financial aid to cover club fees

Juniors and seniors in eating clubs will receive financial aid with "sufficient support to enable them to cover the cost of an average membership contract at the eating clubs," the University said this afternoon.Currently, students in eating clubs only receive financial aid to a maximum amount of the cost of a University dining plan, which is about $2,000 less than the cost of an average club membership.More to come.

NEWS | 11/27/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Annan to discuss nuclear disarmament today

Outgoing U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is set to deliver a major policy address on campus this afternoon, focusing on the dangers of nuclear proliferation and the need for decisive global nuclear disarmament.Annan, who will speak in Richardson Auditorium, ascended to the top position at the United Nations in 1997, when the Cold War had been over for nearly a decade but Soviet-era nuclear material was still not completely accounted for, about a year before India and Pakistan conducted nuclear tests."I think he has made [the issue of nuclear proliferation] a centerpiece of his tenure, and there have been several useful things that have happened at the [United Nations] because of that," said Laura Holgate '87, a vice president at the Nuclear Threat Initiative, an organization that works to prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction.Accordingly, Annan will focus his remarks on moves to restrict proliferation, reiterating that "the current paralysis ? with each side insisting that the other go first ? is fraught with danger for humanity," Edward Mortimer, director of communications for the Secretary-General, said in an email.

NEWS | 11/27/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Panel addresses North Korean nukes

North Korea's nuclear ambitions can only be deterred through united international pressure, a panel of experts said to a packed lecture room in Aaron Burr Hall on Monday night.The six-party talks concerning the North Korean nuclear program were halted in November 2005, following the country's test of a nuclear bomb in October, but could resume as early as the middle of December."We are now in a situation where the nuclear test has served to actually restart the momentum in nuclear negotiations," sociology professor Gilbert Rozman said.Thus far, the six-party talks have been unproductive.

NEWS | 11/27/2006

The Daily Princetonian

Uncontested races vex USG officials

USG elections managers expressed disappointment with the lack of candidates for executive committee positions yesterday as the official list of candidates for next week's elections was released.Since only eight people are running for six positions, candidates in four of the races are running unopposed."We would have preferred that each race have several excellent candidates, but unfortunately, this year was just an off year," USG elections manager and U-Council chair Liz Gough '07 said in an email.She added that USG elections seem to "go in cycles." While seven students ran for president last December, two ran in 2004 and six ran in 2003.Moreover, while there are few candidates for executive committee positions, the six senate spots up for grabs attracted 19 candidates: two for Class of 2008 senator, five for 2009 and 12 for 2010.

NEWS | 11/27/2006