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

French Club Prospects

Work on the headquarters of the French Club, which is to be situated in the eastern wing of the Brokaw Memorial Building, is progressing rapidly, and it is announced that the room will be ready for the reception of furniture by March 1.

NEWS | 02/22/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Preller, a life of selflessness

Throughout his lifetime, professor emeritus Victor Preller '53 delighted in sharing his academic wisdom and spiritual guidance with others.In 1959, when Preller was a graduate student in religion at the University, the department's founder described him in a recommendation letter as "willing to spend any amount of time with a man who needs help."During his tenure as master of the graduate college, Preller invited his graduate students to the master's suite for one-on-one discussions accompanied by several pots of tea and a selection of classical music.Later in his life, even while battling cancer and emphysema, Preller continued to serve as a spiritual adviser and friend to his parishioners at All Saints' Church in Princeton, where he served as an Episcopal minister."He viewed everyone with remarkable tolerance and was extremely understanding," said history professor Peter Brown, who attended Preller's Eucharist services at All Saints' Church.

NEWS | 02/21/2001

The Daily Princetonian

University of California president gives SAT a failing grade

University of California president Richard Atkinson made a speech Sunday in which he proposed to end the use of SAT scores as admission criteria for the state university system he oversees.Atkinson's proposal must be approved by the faculty senate and the university system's governing board of regents before it could be implemented.If the proposal passes, it may have a far-reaching impact, as UC is one of the largest and most prestigious state university systems in the country.Contending that overemphasis on the SAT is compromising America's educational system, Atkinson recommended an alternative practice under which admissions would be based primarily on students' course work and tests that relate more concretely to the subject matter studied, such as the SAT II subject tests."In America, students should be judged on what they have accomplished during four years of high school, taking into account their opportunities," Atkinson said in his speech.

NEWS | 02/21/2001

The Daily Princetonian

Students evaluate 4-year residential college proposal

Independent students, often lost in the shuffle of Spelman and Two Dickinson room draw, may soon have alternative housing and dining options.Though its effect on eating club membership is uncertain, the proposed four-year residential college ? which will not likely be implemented for several years ? will provide independents with the opportunity for a residential college living experience during their upper-class years.Some students greet the proposal as a needed change to the current two-year college system.

NEWS | 02/21/2001

ADVERTISEMENT
The Daily Princetonian

PPPL launches new educational Website

The Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory ? a government-funded University research effort to turn particle fusion into a harnessable source of energy ? has created a Website to explain plasma physics in laymen's terms.The site, called the Internet Plasma Physics Education eXperience, is geared toward the general public, according to PPPL Science Education Program lead scientist Andrew Zwicker.Designed to be comprehensible to students at the middle school level, teh Website has been used by college students and even physicists for research purposes.The site was created by a team that includes University physicists.

NEWS | 02/21/2001

The Daily Princetonian

McCurry '76 speaks on politics, Internet

While journalists and reporters crammed the White House briefing room, firing questions and scribbling notes, Michael McCurry '76 stood behind the podium "facing about a billion cameras the day the Lewinsky story broke," he said.On the receiving end of the fusillade of clamoring media, this was only one day, though undoubtedly one of the most memorable, in McCurry's three-year tenure as President Clinton's press secretary from 1995-98."Scandals were easy," McCurry candidly said, recalling the Lewinsky events via e-mail.

NEWS | 02/20/2001