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The Daily Princetonian

Two win Marshall Scholarship

University seniors Joshua Geltzer and Patrick Cunningham have won Marshall Scholarships, which provide funding for American college graduates to study at a British university for two years in any subject.Cunningham, an English major on the creative writing track, will study comedic writers from the late Victorian period at Oxford University.Geltzer, a Wilson School major, will likely study trans-Atlantic relations at either King's College London or Oxford University."It will be very useful to study that dialogue [between Britain and America] from the other perspective and to get to know British culture," Geltzer said.Geltzer said he learned he won the scholarship after receiving a phone call on Nov.

NEWS | 11/22/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Tea with royalty: Students meet princes

The University played host to royalty Friday as Hereditary Prince Alois and Prince Hans Adam II of Liechtenstein attended an advisory council meeting for the Liechtenstein Institute On Self-Determination.Along with the meeting, the princes attended tea at Forbes College and high tea ? a late afternoon tea ? at Prospect House.At the high tea, Prince Alois explained some of small states' policy concerns."As a small country you have to be quick and flexible," he said.

NEWS | 11/22/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Administrators visit Asia, seek to improve University profile

President Tilghman and three top University officials spent fall recess on a 10-day, four-city tour of cities in China, Korea and Japan designed to raise the University's profile in Asia.Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye, Dean of the Graduate School William Russel and Miguel Centeno, director of the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies (PIIRS) accompanied Tilghman.The tour, which included stops in Tokyo, Beijing, Hong Kong and Seoul, also reached out to University alumni living in those cities."We are at somewhat of a disadvantage relative to peer institutions like Stanford and Harvard because we don't have the very large professional schools," Tilghman said.

NEWS | 11/22/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Fair highlights U.'s efforts to promote smaller departments

The Majors Fair on Friday gave students the chance to either explore major options or find out more about their favorite department.Departments, especially small ones, tried to convince students to concentrate.Since last year, the administration has called attention to the fact that over half of students choose to concentrate in five departments ? English, politics, history, economics and the Wilson School.In an effort to inform students about the opportunities among small departments, the University released "Major Choices" ? a book of profiles of alumni from smaller departments ? earlier this semester.Professor Robert Phinney of the geosciences department, which had 17 junior and senior concentrators last year, said he believes smaller departments have to try harder to attract students. He explained his rationale in terms of the geology department"There's no AP course in geology, and it's not really taught in high school," Phinney said.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

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The Daily Princetonian

Burst pipe floods rooms in Forbes

A pipe in the Forbes Main Inn burst Friday at 10:30 p.m., flooding the building's second floor with hot water.A brass-plated fitting broke in a pipe causing water to drip through the ceiling.The flood most severely damaged two rooms on the second floor, but the dripping water dampened the carpet of two rooms on the first floor as well."The water came through the closet and also the bathroom . . . There were a couple of inches of water," said Teresa Velez '07, whose second floor room was most affected.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

MoMA opens after renovation, expansion

Daily life in New York City was ostensibly the same on Nov. 15. The Cup of Noodles advertisement in Times Square still smoked, and leering old men took drags from cigarettes on 7th Avenue.But there was one significant difference ? the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) was returning to midtown after three-and-a-half-years in Queens.Barely more than a hour away from the University, the museum has offered a major culture destination to many University students.The day marked the Opening Press Review at the MoMA ? the unveiling of its revamped 53rd Street location.The museum opened to the public on Saturday.The new MoMA building was designed to be more conducive to viewing art, with more spacious interiors and cascading natural light.The museum's glass, granite and aluminum architecture gives the building a futuristic feel.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton Project releases national security report

The Princeton Project on National Security released its first paper last Wednesday, "U.S. National Security Strategy: Lenses and Landmarks," by Richard Betts, the director of War and Peace Studies at Columbia University.The Wilson School unveiled The Princeton Project on National Security in May in an ambitious attempt to develop a longterm national security strategy for the United States."We have over 200 of the leading thinkers in foreign policy involved with the project," Wilson School Dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 said.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

USG discusses ban on smoking in dorm rooms

The USG discussed endorsing an Undergraduate Life Committee resolution to ban smoking in all residential areas during its Sunday meeting.Despite concerns of negative student responses, Undergraduate Life Committee Chair Juan Lessing '05 attempted to garner support for the resolution."Cigarette fires cause 30 percent of all fire deaths," Lessing said.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

E-Council presents awards to outstanding teachers

Students presented the Engineering Council "Excellence in Teaching" Awards on Friday to four professors and two graduate student teaching assistants to honor their dedication and enthusiasm in teaching undergraduates in spring 2004 classes."The E-Council Teaching Awards are the only entirely student-given teaching awards on campus," said Sarah Moore '06, chair of the Engineering Council Teaching Awards.The E-Council runs the nomination, voting and comments process in which undergraduate engineers can award top professors and teaching assistants, she said.Professor Alexander Smits of MAE 222/CEE 208: Mechanics of Fluid; professor Pablo Debenedetti of CHE 246: Thermodynamics; professor Hugo Simao of ORF 201: Computer Methods for Problem Solving; and professor Robert Dondero of COS 217: Introduction to Programming Systems won the award.The award was also given to graduate students Dries Darius and Steve Mwenifumbo for ORF 335/ECO 335: Introduction to Financial Engineering and CEE 364: Materials in Civil Engineering, respectively.For the first time, the awards were presented by students who had taken the classes and nominated the instructors.Bob Moore '06 and Chris Wynnyk '06 presented their award to Dondero."I feel like I just won the World Series.

NEWS | 11/21/2004

The Daily Princetonian

Robertson lawsuit most expensive in U. history

The Robertson Foundation lawsuit has cost the University and the Robertson family more than $7 million in total, making the case the most expensive in the University's history.University General Counsel Peter McDonough said in an interview that the University has spent "an excess of $2 million" on the 27-month-old case.The Robertsons have spent over $5 million, according to a review of the tax forms of the Banbury Fund, the Robertson family's $41 million private foundation that has footed the plaintiff's bill, and interviews with William Robertson '72, the chief plaintiff and president of the Fund.Since the plaintiffs ? Robertson, his sisters Katherine Ernst and Anne Meier and cousin Robert Halligan ? sued in July 2002 for control of the Wilson School's $600 million endowment, both sides have devoted an increasing number of hours and lawyers to the case."Given the amount at stake, the number of depositions and number of lawyers involved, the costs of the case don't surprise me," said Tom Cunniff '89, an attorney at the local firm Fox Rothschild.Prior to the suit, McDonough said the most the University spent on a single case was roughly half a million dollars on the 1990 negligence suit of B.J.

NEWS | 11/18/2004