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The Daily Princetonian

Grad school alum wins Nobel Prize

James Heckman GS '71 was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics yesterday.Heckman and Daniel McFadden of the University of California at Berkeley received the award together, and will split the prize, which is worth $915,000 this year.Heckman, who has served as the Henry Schultz Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago since 1995, received his Ph.D.

NEWS | 10/11/2000

The Daily Princetonian

NJDOT to release environmental assessment of Millstone Bypass area

After months of waiting, supporters and opponents of the controversial Millstone Bypass are hopeful that the New Jersey Department of Transportation will soon release an environmental assessment of the Stony Brook-Millstone Watershed area.The assessment ? which has been in the works for nearly two years ? is the preliminary step toward approving construction of the Millstone Bypass, a road designed to mitigate traffic problems on U.S.

NEWS | 10/11/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Bush, Gore tackle foreign policy issues in second presidential debate

Presidential hopefuls Texas Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore sparred over several volatile foreign policy issues last night in their second nationally televised debate.In a 90-minute roundtable discussion at Wake Forest University, Bush set out to convince voters that he has the knowledge and maturity to be president, trying to appear especially statesmanlike during the opening segment on foreign policy.Meanwhile, Gore tried to tone down the attack-dog mentality he brought to the first debate.

NEWS | 10/11/2000

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The Daily Princetonian

Eliot Spitzer '81 takes aim at gun makers

Though the cubicle where Eliot Spitzer '81 crafted his senior thesis will soon be uprooted, his opinions about complicated political issues ? first planted in the Wilson School ? are growing and strong.Prior to giving a talk yesterday titled "Gun Control: The New York Experience" in Bowl 6 of Robertson Hall, Spitzer took a tour of the building and sought out the small space where he first developed his fiery style.As New York's 63rd Attorney General, Spitzer has become a leading voice against gun-manufacturing companies ? exhibiting a willingness to cause controversy that he also displayed as president of the USG."We caused some trouble," Spitzer recalled with a glint of mischievous pride in his eyes as he sat cross-legged on a couch during an exclusive interview with The Daily Princetonian before the talk.Spitzer's 1998 election "was widely seen as promising a new era in the office of the Attorney General," said faculty chair of the Woodrow Wilson School undergraduate program Stan Katz when introducing Spitzer yesterday.In a political atmosphere that Spitzer said has in recent years transferred federal power into states' hands, the Democrat has decided to harness this traditionally Republican-backed decentralization in his fight for gun control."We're gonna use those powers and have a good time doing it," he said.Despite powerful opposition from the National Rifle Association, Spitzer said he believes the government can sway litigation over gun control.

NEWS | 10/10/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Dickerson to re-examine role of fraternities in campus life

Vice President for Campus Life Janet Dickerson said yesterday that she is planning to engage leaders of campus fraternities in a dialogue during the coming months to discuss their role at the University."I'm acknowledging their presence on campus because I said I would like to talk with students from those groups," she said, adding, "I'm in the investigative period right now."Dickerson's announcement marks a departure from the administration's usual policy on fraternities, which the University has not officially recognized since the mid-19th century.But Dickerson said she believes University administrators should gain a better understanding of the fraternity system.

NEWS | 10/10/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Correction

The class year of Howard Husock, whose letter was published on yesterday's editorial page, was incorrectly stated.

NEWS | 10/10/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Alliance sponsors 10th annual LGBT Awareness Week celebration

Despite less-than-hospitable temperatures Monday night, students and supporters brave enough to venture into the chill were treated to a rousing arch sing organized by the Princeton Pride Alliance as a lively kickoff to this year's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Awareness Week.Blair Arch was alive with song well into the night as the voices of various student groups ? such as Shere Khan, The Roaring 20 and The Firehazards ? joined with those of the New Jersey Gay Men's Choir in celebration and anticipation of this week's events.The Pride Alliance, which began in 1972 as the Gay Alliance of Princeton and was later renamed the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Alliance, is now a large and widely influential group with the means to coordinate a multi-faceted week-long event.This year's Awareness Week ? the 10th of its kind at the University ? runs from Oct.

NEWS | 10/10/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Introducing the contenders: Borough campaigns simmer

Princeton Borough, though small in size, is proving to be the scene of an intense political battle in a race for two seats on the Borough Council.This year, Democratic incumbents Wendy Benchley and Margaret "Peggy" Karcher are defending their Council seats against Republican Rodney Fisk and Independent Dorothy Koehn.As part of her campaigning, Benchley said she spends much of her time focusing on alleviating Princeton's "intolerable" traffic situation.She also frequently speaks out in support of the variety of smalland large-scale merchants in downtown Princeton.Benchley ? who was elected to the Princeton Borough Council last year for a one-year term and is now running for a three-year term ? said she wants Princeton students to take advantage of all that the town has to offer, specifically area shops, restaurants and theaters.

NEWS | 10/09/2000

The Daily Princetonian

University sorts through mail system backlog, but some problems continue

University officials said yesterday the package delivery delays in the new Frist Campus Center have been remedied.To that end, all freshmen and sophomores will pick up their packages in Dod Hall instead of Frist for at least the remainder of the fall semester ? a switch made last week in response to the campus center's inability to handle the volume of incoming parcels ? according to Keith Sipple, manager of student financial services for the University and director of campus mail services.But despite these important strides, the mail system still has its problems, as Lisa Sotelo '01 learned firsthand.Yesterday, Sotelo arrived at the Frist mail room about 3:30 p.m., a package delivery notice in hand, expecting to pick up an important check.

NEWS | 10/09/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Korean high school students preview Princeton experience

Surrounded by classmates dressed in traditional Korean clothing, high school freshman Kwan Jin Rho sang a rendition of Eminem's "The Real Slim Shady" while walking through the University's campus.Rho visited Princeton with 83 schoolmates from the Korean Minjok Leadership Academy near Kangwon, South Korea ? one of the nation's top boarding schools.The academy's freshman class ? a total of 84 students ? is on a two-week tour of top universities in the United States.

NEWS | 10/09/2000

The Daily Princetonian

To prevent rape, students to learn self-defense skills

On the heels of recent sexual harassment incidents on campus, the University will offer female students, faculty and staff an intensive 15-hour Rape Aggression Defense course ? a non-martial arts program now taught in colleges across the country.Beginning Friday and open to 10 participants, the class ? sponsored by Public Safety and by Sexual Harassment/Assault Advising Resources and Education ? will be taught by newly certified RAD instructor and Public Safety Sgt.

NEWS | 10/09/2000

The Daily Princetonian

New computer simulation may solve questions about human brain function

Playfully leaning back in his chair while sitting in his modest, dimly lit office, molecular biology professor John Hopfield talks about his creation with all the enthusiasm of a proud parent.Hopfield's work area does not seem like the kind of place where the finishing touches would be made to an artificial organism, but that is exactly what he and Carlos Brody, a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Neural Science at New York University, have done.And last week, they introduced the world to their virtual creation ? the sand mouse, or mus silicium.For this project, Hopfield and Brody created a computer simulation of 660 artificial cells that behave exactly like real brain cells.

NEWS | 10/09/2000