Colleges create scholarship funds for terrorist attack victims
In the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, thousands of citizens have donated their time, their assistance and pints of blood to show their support for their nation.
In the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, thousands of citizens have donated their time, their assistance and pints of blood to show their support for their nation.
The grass was still wet from the dew so they all brought mats to sit on ? scraps of carpet, old car floor mats, pieces of compressed house insulation, bathmats and folded towels.Fourteen people lined up in neat rows in a small park behind the Princeton Shopping Center parking lot, the lot almost empty at 7 a.m.
In an apparent crackdown on Princeton Borough code violations, Borough Police officers have handed out 36 citations to University students on Prospect Avenue since Sept.
Mechanical and aerospace engineering professors Garry Brown and Richard Miles have received a federal grant of $600,000 for research on their new concept for a facility capable of testing hypersonic flight vehicles and their propulsion systems."We've come up with a new concept," Brown said, explaining that most scientists believe it is not possible to test a hypersonic aircraft in a conventional wind tunnel because the temperature of the stored air could be as hot as the temperature of the sun."This research project has been going on for a number of years, and recently a lot of progress has been made," Brown said in an e-mail.Their results show that the concept may be a practical way to achieve such high speed flight conditions.
The University community responded to President George W. Bush's congressional address Thursday evening in a chorus of dissonant voices, some fervently supportive of the nation's new campaign against terrorism and others denouncing the president's plan as brash and overly aggressive.Touching on issues from racism against Muslims to the creation of a new Cabinet-level post devoted to domestic security, Bush vowed that the United States would avenge the Sept.
After calling off Lawnparties earlier this month because of the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, the eating clubs have rescheduled the annual celebration for the afternoon of Sunday, Sept.
President Tilghman addressed last night's USG Senate meeting ? the first of the academic year ? expressing her views on issues including the upcoming 500-student increase, faculty tenure, the role of athletics in University life, the possible alcohol ordinance and the University's response to the recent attacks on New York and Washington.Tilghman, after introducing herself, described her wishes to get to know and listen to student concerns in her first year."I have restricted all travel.
Earlier this month, leadership of the American Civil Liberties Union changed hands, as Anthony Romero '87 took over the position of executive director from Ira Glasser, who is retiring after 23 years as the organization's chief.Romero is both the first Latino and the first gay man to head the ACLU."It's just fantastic," Romero, 36, said of his new position as the chief executive officer of the nation's best-known civil rights advocacy group.
Roger Berlind '52 knows what a good theater looks like. A Triangle Club and Theatre-Intime alumnus, he has spent much of his time after Princeton producing Broadway giants such as "Kiss Me Kate" and "Guys and Dolls." Yesterday, he returned to the University to give students their own piece of Broadway.The 12 Tony Award-winning producer of musicals and plays is the chief benefactor of the Roger S.
Marking a major change in the Borough's approach to curbing underage drinking at the 'Street,' Borough officials have shifted the focus of their enforcement efforts from the consumption of alcohol by minors to its distribution, Mayor Marvin Reed said.The angle now is to enhance enforcement of laws already on the books rather than adopting a new ordinance, Borough Council members said.
The Princeton University College Democrats and College Republicans will jointly sponsor a panel discussion on terrorism Sunday evening in an effort to help students better understand last week's tragic events.This bipartisan event is the first that the University's Democrat and Republican student organizations have ever co-sponsored.
Eighteen-year-old Chris Hirata walks into the room looking like any ordinary teenager. Wearing a gray shirt and glasses, he is laid back and friendly, yet humbly quiet and slightly shy.His demeanor, however, belies the fact that he is a teenage prodigy.
Sustained Dialogue ? a program that joins together multi-racial groups of students, faculty and administrators to discuss race relations on campus ? will begin its third year with a "Kick-Off Retreat" this weekend in the Frist Multipurpose Room.David Tukey '02, the group's leader, said the goals of the program include improving race relations and increasing awareness of racism in the University community.This year, Sustained Dialogue has ambitious plans for expansion.
Over the summer, a great deal of luck ? in the form of a generous and kind professor ? helped me wind up in Kenya, studying archaeology and paleontology.I spent about two months in the country ? in Nairobi, near Mt.
Shopping at the Princeton U-Store has always been an experience unique to Princeton, from large stocks of orange and black baseball hats to countless shelves of tiger apparel.
As images of the Sept. 11 attack flash across television screens, many Americans wonder if the country's economy will continue to lie among the rubble in lower Manhattan.Top scholars in the University's economics department will gather to discuss that question in a panel titled "The Economic and Financial Aftermath of the Terrorist Attack on America" today in McCosh 50.Economics professor Alan Blinder, who founded the Center for Economic Policy Studies, said he will moderate the discussion and will be speaking on "the likely or possible impact of this tragedy on the U.S.
With the installation of University politics professor Amy Gutmann as provost this summer, politics professor Stephen Macedo GS '87 took over as director of the University Center for Human Values earlier this month.A tall and friendly man, Macedo was energetic and eager to respond to inquiries, going into detail and depth about his plans for the center.When asked if he had a particular vision, Macedo described his job as simply "carrying on the terrific work that's been done and maintaining the work of the institution."That could be a task in itself ? in the 10 years since Gutmann founded the center, it has established itself as an important and vibrant part of the University's intellectual community.
They were a set of towers, a challenge against the forces of nature and feat of human ingenuity."It was a brilliant engineering design," University structural engineering professor David Billington said yesterday of the World Trade Center complex.As the country reevaluates and strengthens its safety and security measures, one question that begs answering is how the horrifying attack and subsequent building collapses might have been prevented.
In 1945, at the end of World War II, the American soldiers returning to the country were welcomed as heroes.
On Monday morning Savraj Dhanjal '03 stood in front of his dresser mirror, carefully winding a long strip of fabric around his head into a turban.He wrapped a folded length of black cloth around his head once, twice, then carefully placed a long royal blue ribbon along the side of his turban, wrapping the turban once more and adding a white ribbon.