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The Daily Princetonian

Students plan late-night burrito shop

If all goes as planned, University students will soon be able to cap their late-night forays to the Street with the ultimate midnight snack ? a burrito. USG Vice President Jesse Creed '07 and U-Councilor John Brunger '05 are currently working on a proposal to convert the Carl Fields Center into a burrito stand Thursday and Saturday nights from 10 p.m.

NEWS | 04/10/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Carnegie Corporation awards profs Rosen, Jamal grants for Islamic studies

The Carnegie Corporation of New York has named University professors Lawrence Rosen and Amaney Jamal Carnegie Scholars, with an award up to $100,000 for each to pursue work in Islamic studies over the next two years.Rosen, an anthropologist, and Jamal, a political scientist, were among 16 winners chosen from a field of about 175 scholars nominated by their universities.Rosen will use the grant to support two book projects, with his first book attempting to show that "ordinary" people can lead intellectually significant lives by examining the experience of four individuals in the Middle East."It's not their biographies, but their ideas," Rosen said.

NEWS | 04/10/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Israel needs good press, speaker says

Former Israeli Defense Force (IDF) spokesperson Jacob Dallal discussed Israel's attempts to avoid negative foreign press during a lecture at the University's Center for Jewish Life Thursday afternoon.Dallal, who previously worked for the Jerusalem Post from 1995 through 2000 and was a captain in the Israeli army, also discussed how the recent death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and the upcoming Israeli withdrawal from Gaza might affect future media and policy developments.The IDF has grown more media-savvy in the last few years, Dallal said to a group of about 20 students."At the start of [2002], the IDF was insufficiently prepared to deal with the press," he said.

NEWS | 04/07/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Petition on USG to be discussed

A day after a group of students submitted a petition to the USG calling for action against on-campus discrimination ? specifically by ROTC ? others formed a coalition in a show of support for ROTC's presence.Meanwhile, USG Vice President Jesse Creed '07 scrapped the original agenda for Sunday's USG Senate meeting to set aside 40 minutes to discuss discrimination and the ROTC."We really encourage anyone from the student body to come out to the meeting and take part in the discussion ? for or against ROTC," Creed said.The newly created pro-ROTC group, Supporting Princetonians in the Nation's Service, hopes to emphasize the military's positive role on campus, founder Powell Fraser '06 said."This is not about politics, not about personal agendas," said Fraser, a former ROTC cadet who is also a 'Prince' columnist.

NEWS | 04/07/2005

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The Daily Princetonian

Students design independent majors

Dan Powell '00 never expected his independent concentration in Bioethics to be a subject of conversation with Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens.When Powell interviewed for the clerk position he currently holds, Justice Stevens kept turning the conversation back to Powell's hybrid concentration in molecular biology and the humanities.Powell belongs to a small group of students who choose to abandon the preset curriculum of a department and design their own personalized course of study instead.The Independent Concentration Program is available only to students who cannot fit their desired curriculum into one of the University's 34 different concentrations, Director of the Independent Concentration Program Hank Dobin said.Currently two University juniors are pursuing independent concentrations, both in bioethics.This number is substantially lower than at many of Princeton's peer institutions.

NEWS | 04/07/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Nonprofit founder speaks on success

Greg Forbes Siegman, philanthropist and Internet entrepreneur, spoke at Frist Campus Center Thursday afternoon about The First Thirty, a recently-published inspirational book by Jillip Paxson that recounts the story of a Princeton-reject turned social entrepreneur.Seigman runs the 11-10-02 foundation, a nonprofit that raises scholarships for students from working-class Chicago neighborhoods by selling milkshakes for $10,000 each.

NEWS | 04/07/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Referendum sought on Army ROTC

A group of students is petitioning the USG to hold a referendum on a nondiscrimination amendment to the student government constitution.The proposed amendment requires the USG to urge Nassau Hall to eliminate support for employers that violate the University's nondiscrimination policy ? including support for military recruiters and the ROTC.The Defense Department's "don't ask, don't tell" policy prohibits anyone who is openly gay from serving in the armed forces.

NEWS | 04/06/2005

The Daily Princetonian

PJP brief to honor former adviser

The Princeton Justice Project (PJP) will submit a brief to the state Supreme Court this fall supporting the legalization of same-sex marriage in honor of a former adviser and University preceptor who died earlier this month.Linda Colligan, a Rutgers University graduate student who advised the group and served as a preceptor for the politics department, committed suicide on March 12 in Chadds Ford, Pa.

NEWS | 04/06/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Philosophy rebuilds after recent losses

Despite the recent loss of several prominent professors in the philosophy department, University students and faculty ? as well as professors at other institutions ? agree that the department remains strong.In the past few years, senior professors David Lewis and Richard Jeffrey GS '57 passed away and Harry Frankfurt retired.

NEWS | 04/06/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Movers and shakers

On an average weekday, Leslie-Bernard Joseph '06 gets at least 100 emails.He starts reading for classes at 3 a.m., tries to nap for a few hours before going to meetings from 9:30 to 11 in the morning, and then goes to lecture, where he often falls asleep.

NEWS | 04/05/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Students pick new majors

A week before midterms last October, as he crammed for exams on neuroscience and viruses, Matt Samberg '06 came to a realization: majoring in molecular biology was not the best way for him to understand the inner workings of the mind.Samberg's interest lies in memory, cognition and the other mysteries of the brain, which led him to pursue a certificate in neuroscience.

NEWS | 04/05/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Motlagh looks to dispel negative image of clubs

Hunched over a keyboard typing out emails, Jamal Motlagh '06 looks like any other Princeton student stealing a few moments to catch up with his friends.Not too many students, though, send messages to "smt@princeton.edu" ? that's President Tilghman's address ? and not too many have to simultaneously deal with questions about a "Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle" study break shouted from the other side of the room as they type.As president of both the Quadrangle Club and the Inter-Club Council (ICC), Motlagh must balance a commitment to the life of the Street with a responsibility to the entire University community."He understands the ways in which the clubs and the University interact," said Dean of Undergraduate Student Life Maria Flores-Mills, who has worked extensively with Motlagh over the past weeks.Motlagh is the primary "liaison for voicing concerns and facilitating interaction" between the eating clubs and the University, Flores-Mills said.The basic responsibilities of the ICC president include organizing a weekly meeting of the 11 club presidents and keeping in touch with various administrators about happenings on the Street.Katie Daviau '06, ICC vice-president and Colonial Club's president, said she trusts Montagh's leadership."He understands the importance of the eating clubs to the social fabric of Princeton," she said.Motlagh, though, has a greater vision: he hopes to reshape the eating clubs' image and improve their relationship with the University."I hope that people will look at the Street and the eating clubs as an open and friendly place, not a bunch of wild and exclusive institutions," Motlagh said. First Weeks in OfficeMotlagh said that his first few weeks in office have been "hectic but very rewarding.""It's been fun seeing what opportunities are open to me and thinking of ways in which I can help the Street and the University," he said.Motlagh was well acquainted with the role of ICC president before starting his term.

NEWS | 04/05/2005

The Daily Princetonian

Borough considers additional positions on police force

Princeton's Borough Council discussed a proposal presented by the Public Safety Committee Tuesday that would call for the Borough Police to make a fourth administrative position, a third lieutenant, in the Borough police department.Anthony Federico, the chief of Borough Police, has asked that the council approve this additional administrative position which would be filled by a current sergeant in the department.

NEWS | 04/05/2005