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The Daily Princetonian

Student demand prompts renewal of Swahili course

Reversing a decision that drew heated criticism, the University has reinstated an introductory Swahili course that it had previously announced would not be offered again in the fall.The disclosure by Associate Dean of the College Hank Dobin in an interview yesterday that the class would make an encore appearance next year follows weeks of protest by outraged students against the University's initial decision to stop offering the class.Dobin previously cited lack of funding as the reason for canceling the course, which was offered for the first time this year.

NEWS | 05/07/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Sketching a comfort zone

While daylight hours at the 'Street' see men and women enjoying meals together and females increasingly filling leadership roles, the atmosphere of mutual respect between genders fades on Prospect Avenue with the setting of the sun, some students say."There have always been reports of harassment at the 'Street,' " Ivy Club vice president Liz Baker '01 said.

NEWS | 05/04/2000

The Daily Princetonian

'ILOVEYOU' virus barely bites University

The "ILOVEYOU" bug bit hundreds of thousands of e-mail users around the world yesterday, wreaking havoc on business and government computer systems and prompting a campus-wide e-mail filter to keep infected messages from reaching Princeton users.After learning of the new virus this morning, CIT sent warnings to administrators advising them not to open e-mails with "ILOVEYOU" subject lines.

NEWS | 05/04/2000

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The Daily Princetonian

A matter of fact: University scientists account for universe's missing matter

Ordinary matter ? the same stuff that makes up a bag of Doritos, your English preceptor or a galaxy ? is not always easy to see.Until only a few weeks ago, scientists could view only half of the universe's ordinary ? or baryonic ? matter.Baryonic matter, which is made up of protons, neutrons and electrons, accounts for 10 percent of the universe's mass.

NEWS | 05/04/2000

The Daily Princetonian

University retains A+ but decreases impact on GPA

The rare A+ that dots a Princeton student's transcript is no longer an endangered species.The University faculty decided Monday to retain the grade of A+, which West College administrators this fall argued should be replaced with an A*.Though it originally proposed the grade change, the Committee on Examinations and Standing is recommending that the faculty retain the A+, Dean of the College Nancy Malkiel said yesterday.Two other changes proposed by the committee were approved, according to USG academics chair Jeff Gelfand '01.

NEWS | 05/04/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Graduate student leaders raise intensity of student-life efforts

Tired of what they deem to be their second-class status at the University, graduate student leaders have re-energized their efforts this year to improve graduate student life.Though they mostly worked to prevent the Graduate College from becoming a residential college and to fight restrictive D-Bar policies, graduate student leaders ? among them Graduate Student Government president Eszter Hargittai, activist Karthick Ramakrishnan and U-Councilor Jason Brownlee ? have been tackling a proactive agenda as well.In the past, the GSG ? formerly called the Graduate Student Union ? met once a month and had little interaction with the USG.

NEWS | 05/02/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Parlez-Vous eBay?

On a warm day in July 1998, Fabrice Grinda '96 walked out of the New York office of the consulting firm McKinsey & Co. He was 23 years old and held a coveted position of associate business analyst.

NEWS | 05/02/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Administrators, minority students meet to address Public Safety policy

In the wake of accusations that minority students have been treated unfairly by proctors, a small group of student leaders met with University administrators yesterday to discuss the role of Public Safety on campus.Andria Boateng '02, chair of the Third World Center, said the meeting was organized to address the minority community's concerns about Public Safety.

NEWS | 05/02/2000

The Daily Princetonian

Curtain will rise in fall on newly renovated Theatre-Intime

When the lights go up at Theatre-Intime in September, audience members surely will be wowed ? but not necessarily by the actors.An organization run entirely by students, Theatre-Intime is embarking on a $1-million renovation project funded by Friends of Theatre-Intime ? an alumni group founded 15 years ago to support the theater ? and by the University, according to Intime president Adam Friedman '01."It's been brewing in the Friends of Theatre-Intime for a number of years," Friedman said.

NEWS | 05/02/2000

The Daily Princetonian

When a professor decides to take the helm of a residential college, it isn't an easy choice

Maria DiBattista was afraid of the silences. The professor of English and comparative literature was pondering the possibility last year of becoming a master of Rockefeller College ? and the new kind of relationship with students it would entail.She thought about the pauses and embarrassed smiles that would come when she sat down at a table and tried to begin a discussion with a stranger decades younger.

NEWS | 04/30/2000