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The Daily Princetonian

From Pearl Harbor to Oklahoma City: Professors respond to attack

In the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks against the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C., several University professors called the attacks monumental both in scope and emotional impact.Wilson School professor Frederick Hitz said, "This may be our generation's wake up call," calling the attacks unprecedented in their order of preparation and magnitude.

NEWS | 09/11/2001

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The Daily Princetonian

Administration responds to tragedy, offers counseling, assistance to students

In response to the horrific attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, University administrators spent Tuesday organizing relief efforts for students, faculty and staff.Though local universities such as the University of Pennsylvania and Rutgers University have canceled classes and closed offices, Princeton University remained open Tuesday."We made the decision that we would continue to operate the University on a normal schedule, for the very simple reason that the express purpose of terrorism is to disrupt people's lives.

NEWS | 09/11/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton offers students a wide array of electronic resources

Welcome to the world of advanced electronic resources.While your parents are still struggling to program the DVD player, at Princeton you will be able to research your term paper, send email to your friends or tour a museum in Paris ? all from the comfort of your own dorm room.All you need is a computer and a network connection to tap into the University's Dormnet system.So instead of becoming a "have-not" on an information-driven campus, overcome your computational phobias and learn about the electronic resources available to you as soon as you arrive at Princeton.

NEWS | 07/15/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Impractical? Perhaps, but the liberal arts curriculum is illuminating

If you thought you came to college to learn something practical, forget it. Princeton is one of the last bastions of the high-minded, esoteric and abstruse ? the liberal arts education.Come September, when you arrive at this small liberal arts university in central New Jersey, it will be time to begin your new life as an A.B., a candidate for Princeton's Bachelor of Arts degree.Ignore your calculator-toting roommates when they casually mention their course load of "Electromagnetic Field Theory and Optics" or "Mechanics of Solids and Fluids," ad nauseam.

NEWS | 07/15/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Shirley Tilghman named 19th University president

Shirley Tilghman was named the 19th president of Princeton University by the board of trustees in a special meeting held May 5 in Nassau Hall.Tilghman is the first woman to hold the University's highest office and the first president not to hold a degree from Princeton in more than a century."It is a deep honor and privilege to be able to serve the University I love so much," Tilghman said during a press conference following the annoucement in the Nassau Hall Faculty Room, where she was elected by acclamation less than an hour earlier.

NEWS | 07/15/2001

The Daily Princetonian

University revises writing program for Class of 2005

Kerry Walk jokes that her new favorite color is orange. Walk, former assistant director of the writing program at Harvard University, is surrounded by it since she took her new post as director of Princeton's writing program last semester.Beginning this fall, freshmen ? and sophomores who have not yet completed the existing writing requirement ? will be required to take one course through the new writing program, which Walk will head, to fulfill the University's new writing requirement.

NEWS | 07/15/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Wisdom wielders

Princeton boasts a large and high-powered faculty worthy of its reputation as one of the best in the nation.These famous scholars, unlike their research-oriented counterparts at other Ivy League schools, often teach undergraduate courses ? maybe even yours. Nobel PrizesIn the past few years, Princeton has consistently produced Nobel Prize winners in various departments.Electrical Engineering professor Daniel Tsui won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1999 for his discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect.Molecular biology professor Eric Wieschaus shared the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1995 with two other researchers for their work on fruit fly genetics.In 1994, senior research mathematician John Nash shared the Nobel Prize for Economics with two research teammates for their work on game theory.Creative writing professor Toni Morrison, physics professor Joseph Taylor and researcher Russell Hulse, who works at the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, all won Nobels in 1993.Morrison, who also won the Pulitzer Prize for her novel "Beloved," coordinates the Princeton Atelier, a program that gives undergraduates the chance to collaborate with famous professionals in the creative world such as Gabriel Garcia Marquez.Physics professor Val Fitch won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1980 for his discoveries about high-energy subatomic particles.

NEWS | 07/15/2001