Follow us on Instagram
Try our daily mini crossword
Play our latest news quiz
Download our new app on iOS/Android!

News

The Daily Princetonian

Abt '04 to run for Borough Council

In a move to put pressure on the Princeton Borough government and increase the influence of students in Borough politics, Steven Abt '04 has decided to run for a seat on the Borough Council.When several members of the USG approached Abt last year in the midst of the debate over the proposed alcohol ordinance with the idea of putting a University student on the council, Abt thought he might be the right man for the job."I have never really considered politics but it was always something that was in the back of my mind," Abt said.Now he will be one of four candidates for three Borough Council seats on the line in this year's election.Council members serve for three-year terms, and each year two seats are up for election.

NEWS | 09/18/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Annual Giving campaign raises record-breaking $37 million

The University's 2000-01 annual giving campaign was a record-breaking one. From July 1, 2000, to June 30, 2001, the University received almost $37 million in gifts to the annual giving fund from alumni, parents and friends.Almost two thirds of the University's undergraduate alumni participated in the 2000-01 campaign, a number that Director of Annual Giving Bill Hardt '63 said is "the top figure among major research universities."Hardt said in an e-mail that "only a handful of colleges and universities have rates of participation that regularly exceed 50 percent."Yearly donations to Annual Giving are crucial to addressing the needs of the University because they constitute unrestricted funds.

NEWS | 09/17/2001

ADVERTISEMENT
The Daily Princetonian

University Community unites for Memorial Service

While campus events mirrored the world's breach in normalcy this past weekend, members of the University community struggled to interpret Tuesday's events and articulate the steps necessary for Princetonians to overcome the attack."In the days and weeks ahead," President Tilghman said to a somber crowd on Cannon Green at yesterday's memorial service, "we have the responsibility to recognize the distinctness of each person's experience and the humanity that unites us all."There was a pervading sense of tranquility ? the powerful eloquence of professors and poets, the biblical passages and verses of song spoken and sung from a podium, interrupted only by the voices of a choir standing atop steps beneath white marble columns.But the service was conducted as the weekend came to a close ? an end to a long week leaving people searching for a way to hope.

NEWS | 09/16/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Three more alumni deaths confirmed

In the wake of Tuesday's terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, three Princeton alumni have been confirmed dead and at least one has been reported missing, in addition to Chris Mello '98 who was aboard American Airlines Flight 11 that crashed into the World Trade Center.Robert McIlvaine '97 and Karen Klitzman '84 were killed in the WTC and Catherine MacRae '00 is still missing.William Caswell GS '75 was aboard American Airlines Flight 77, which departed Washington's Dulles airport en route to Los Angeles, but veered off course and struck the Pentagon, Jean Caswell, wife of the deceased, said yesterday.Caswell ? who graduated with a doctoral degree in particle theory from the physics department ? was a resident of Silver Spring, Md., where he worked as a scientist with the Navy.An avid folk dancer, who enjoyed reading and playing pool, Caswell "cared a lot about truth and wouldn't let anybody get away with half truths," Jean Caswell said.

NEWS | 09/16/2001

The Daily Princetonian

University community rallies in aftermath of terrorist strikes

Following the initial shock of the terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, members of the University community have begun reaching out to help survivors and others devastated by the attacks.The McCosh Counseling Center has been open 24 hours a day since Tuesday to provide support for students upset by the terrorist attacks, said director Marvin Geller.The first students trickled into McCosh for counseling at 10:30 a.m.

NEWS | 09/13/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Rafferty '76 assembles list of possible Princetonian victims

As Americans unite in solace on this day of national mourning, Princeton and Princetonians, like the nation that continues to search anxiously for relatives and friends, continue their search for members of the University community.Alumni and the University are reaching out across the loyal networks of Princetonians to contact members of the community who were possibly in New York or Washington on Tuesday."It's striking how much Princetonians care about each other and how quickly Princetonians will band together," associate director of the Alumni Council Adrienne Rubin said, "We show our colors every time there is any tragedy."Several efforts have been made on both an official basis and on a personal level to contact Princetonians.Scott Rafferty '76 has used TigerNet, the online alumni network, to compile a running list of alumni who worked in either the World Trade Center or the Pentagon.

NEWS | 09/13/2001