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The Daily Princetonian

Professors try to do the write thing

Anthony Grafton leaves his wife sleeping at 5 a.m., pads into the kitchen to feed their cats and then slips into his study where he works until it is time to wake his wife at a quarter to seven.It is a process the history professor repeats nearly every morning, in part because of the massive number of requests he receives for student letters of recommendation.Grafton estimated that he sent close to 330 letters out last year to schools and scholarship committees ? though one student may account for as many as nine recommendations.During the fall ? a season swollen with internship and award deadlines ? he may spend up to an hour every morning working on recommendations.

NEWS | 10/25/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Beer-seeking intruder enters rooms

Two students reported finding an unidentified male in their dorm rooms late Sunday night and early Monday morning, police said.A female resident of 1939 Hall allegedly woke up to find a white, "college-age" male weighing approximately 200 pounds with a cast on his arm standing in her room, according to Public Safety Crime Prevention Specialist Barry Weiser.Weiser said the man asked the student if she had a beer.

NEWS | 10/25/2000

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The Daily Princetonian

University to create council, advising program to enrich campus religious life

Princeton soon may add its name to a growing list of well-known universities that have created councils designed to address religious concerns faced by college students.In a detailed proposal released earlier this fall, Associate Dean of Religious Life Sue Ann Steffey Morrow suggested two new initiatives ? slated to be introduced sometime near the end of this semester ? that she said could revolutionize the religious climate on campus.Morrow's first recommendation is the creation of what she calls a "religious life council."The council would be made up of one of the deans of religious life, one member of the Center for Jewish Life and other campus religious group leaders.The council's primary objective would be to support and communicate with other departments within the University that demonstrate, according to the proposal, "a similar religious commitment."The second component of the proposal would involve the creation of a religious life fellows program, Morrow said.She has suggested choosing 12 students from varying spiritual and ethnic backgrounds to act as liaisons between the student body and the religious life council.This fellowship program would differ substantially from the University's RA and MAA programs.

NEWS | 10/25/2000

The Daily Princetonian

BP, Ford award University $20 million for research

NEW YORK ? British Petroleum and Ford Motor Company officials announced yesterday a $20-million grant to the University to fund a project called the Carbon Mitigation Initiative.The grant ? which will finance a research project at the Princeton Environmental Institute to develop solutions to the greenhouse problem ? is the largest corporate grant the University has received in its more than 250-year history.BP is pledging $15 million and Ford Motor Company has earmarked $5 million for the project, which will develop and evaluate methods for keeping carbon dioxide emissions ? the main cause of global warming ? out of the atmosphere.To that end, PEI researchers will investigate carbon sequestration ? the process by which harmful carbon dioxide is stored safely within the Earth.Research will also focus on producing new non-polluting fuel options."The scope of this challenge demands the full participation of universities, corporations and governments," said President Shapiro of carbon-emissions reduction.

NEWS | 10/25/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Choice of a lifetime

When Phil Isles '03 ? then a senior in high school ? began writing what would become his first full-length novel, he had no idea how the project would end.The recent publication of his choose-your-own-adventure novel, "Polyverse," however, has fulfilled a childhood dream and brought his written work into the public eye.Isles' book ? published in August and marketed by buybooksontheweb.com ? will be sold in about two weeks on both amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com, though it is not available in bookstores.Isles said he has always known he wanted to be a writer.

NEWS | 10/24/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Researchers crack computer code meant to protect online music files

A team of researchers from Princeton, Rice University and Xerox yesterday defended their claim that they cracked four security measures being tested to prevent illegal users from listening to copyrighted music.The group of two University professors, three graduate students, two graduate school alumni and two colleagues at Rice responded to a challenge issued Sept.

NEWS | 10/24/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Decoding A Virus

University molecular biology professor Thomas Shenk and visiting research fellow Wade Bresnahan were separating viral DNA fragments on a gel when they noticed something odd.When DNA strands are separated on a gel, they normally separate into distinct bands ? but Shenk and Bresnahan saw something else, something they had never noticed before."When we were analyzing the DNA gel, we saw a smear at the bottom.

NEWS | 10/24/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Researchers find families with stepmothers spend less on children

Three studies under the direction of University economics professor Anne Case have found that children raised in families with stepmothers generally suffer from lower levels of health care, education and money spent on food than children raised by their biological mothers.The studies examined the resources parents said they gave to their children.

NEWS | 10/24/2000

The Daily Princetonian

University team shares grant from NASA for biosensor research

Two teams of local researchers ? from Princeton, Rutgers University and Drexel University in Philadelphia ? will receive during the next three years a combined $1.8 million from NASA for research applicable to space exploration.Princeton chemical engineering professors Ihan Aksay and Jeffrey Carbeck, Princeton graduate student Chris Martin, Jessica Jarvis '01 and two Drexel physicists compose one research team.

NEWS | 10/23/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Holt criticizes Arafat's role in peace talks

New Jersey Democratic Congressman Rush Holt criticized the actions of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as being damaging to the Middle East peace process during a speech to a crowd of about 20 in McCosh 46 last night."I must express concern about Arafat's unresponsiveness to the tremendous proposal put forth by [Israeli] Prime Minister [Ehud] Barak at Camp David," said Holt, who is seeking reelection in New Jersey's 12th District.

NEWS | 10/23/2000