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The Daily Princetonian

Princeton Prize Symposium in Race Relations honors 27 high school students

The eighth annual Princeton Prize Symposium in Race Relations honored 27 high school students representing 25 different regions across the United States. The students were flown into campus free of charge after winning the Princeton Prize in Race Relations, an award that recognizes and reinforces the commendable work of high school students who have promoted better race relations within their schools or communities.

NEWS | 04/27/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Graduate students to vote on divestment referendum this week

Less than a week after undergraduate students voted against a divestment referendum, graduate students will have the opportunity to vote on a similar referendum this week from Wednesday through Friday, May 8.The referendum calls upon the trustees of the University and the Princeton University Investment Company to “divest from multinational corporations that maintain the infrastructure of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, facilitate Israel’s and Egypt’s collective punishment of Palestinian civilians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, or facilitate state repression against Palestinians by Israeli, Egyptian, and Palestinian Authority security forces, until these corporations cease such activities.”Graduate Student Government president Akshay Mehra GS said that Kelly Roache GS first approached the GSG at the April 8 graduate student assembly proposing a divestment referendum for graduate students. Roache said it is important for graduate students to weigh in on meaningful issues of conscience."In one sense, [the GSG divestment referendum] was an act to ensure our full student community was included in the decision-making process," she said.Roache noted that the Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community has asked to see a consensus and sustained student interest regarding divestment.The results of the upcoming GSG divestment referendum will be used by University planners, mainly individuals on the Resources Committee, trustees and PRINCO, “to serve as a barometer for graduate student interest and opinions on divestment," Roache said.The referendum is nonbinding, Roache said, adding that it was never an option for the USG or GSG to bind the CPUC, PRINCO, or the trustees to act.

NEWS | 04/27/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Rolling Stone UVA story ‘was a collaborative failure,’ say authors of investigation at a lecture

The mistakes in the controversial Rolling Stone article, “A Rape on Campus,” were fundamental and avoidable, Sheila Coronel, an author of the investigative report on the article, said at a conversation with the report's co-author, Steve Coll, on Monday night. Coll is the Dean of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and Coronel is the Academic Affairs Dean. The November article by Sabrina Rudin Erdely described in what Coll called “molecular detail” the alleged gruesome gang rape of the pseudonymous “Jackie” at a University of Virginia fraternity house party.

NEWS | 04/27/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Faculty discuss changes to curriculum at meeting on Monday

Changes to the undergraduate and graduate curriculum were proposed at the faculty meeting on Monday. On behalf of the Faculty Committee on the Course of Study, Smith reported curriculum changes, in which some courses were added and others decommissioned, in the departments of Art and Archaeology, Astrophysical Sciences, Near Eastern Studies, Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Cultures, and Religion. Dean of the Graduate School Sanjeev Kulkarni reported new courses for the departments of Architecture and Quantitative and Computational Biologyon behalf of the Curriculum Subcommittee of the Faculty Committee on the Graduate School. The faculty also approved Misha Semenov '15 as the Class of 2015's valedictorian and Neil Hannan '15 as the salutatorian.

NEWS | 04/27/2015

The Daily Princetonian

TruckFest earns money for charity, attracts over 4,500 attendees

Approximately 4,500 students and community members attendedTruckFest this past weekend. While the organizing committee has not yet announced final numbers, at least $24,000 from ticket sales has been raised so far, according to Kate Gardner ’16, co-chair of the Community Service Interclub Council. Every dollar spent on tickets was a dollar donated directly to TruckFest’s cause, according to Stephanie Goldberg ’15, co-chair of CSICC and another key event organizer.

NEWS | 04/27/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Drexel accidentally sends admission emails to 495 students

Hundreds of students received false admission emails from Drexel University last week, according to the Associated Press. Four hundred ninety-five high school seniors who were originally denied admission from Drexel or had submitted incomplete applications received a follow-up congratulatory email from Drexel three weeks later. The email was to remind students of the reply deadline and was only supposed to be sent to admitted students, but was mistakenly sent to rejected students as well. Drexel sent out another email to the students seven hours later, apologizing for the error. Drexel made the same mistake in 1994, when it accidentally mailed admission letters to 25 students.

NEWS | 04/26/2015

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The Daily Princetonian

USG discusses support system for students taking leave

The USG senate approved an amendment to the Honor Committee constitution that would give the incoming Honor Committee chair more time for training at its weekly meeting on Sunday. Honor Committee chair-elect and U-councilor Dallas Nan ’16 noted that other changes to the constitution will require more time for review. “A concern that we need to pass as soon as possible is to make this chair transition time concrete,” Nan said.

NEWS | 04/26/2015

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8 students receive 2015 Spirit of Princeton Award

Eight students received the 2015Spirit of Princeton Award, including Joanna Anyanwu ’15, Christina Chica ’15, Azza Cohen ’16, Brandon Holt ’15, Joseph Laseter ’15, Janie Lee ’15, Hannah Rosenthal ’15 and Paul Riley ’15.The award is an effort of the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students to acknowledge achievements in different areas of campus life, including athletics, community service, the arts, student organizations and religious life.

NEWS | 04/26/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Divestment referendum fails to pass by slim margin

The divestment referendum did not pass, with 52.5 percent of students voting against divestment and 47.5 percent voting in favor of it. The referendum called on theUniversity to divest from companies“that maintain the infrastructure of the Israelioccupation of the West Bank, facilitate Israel’s and Egypt’s collective punishment of Palestinian civilians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, or facilitate state repression against Palestinians by Israeli, Egyptian, and Palestinian Authority security force.” Though 2,200 students participated in the election and voting process, only 2,032 students voted on the referendum. Princeton Committee on Palestine board member Katie Horvath ’15 explained that, although the movement for divestment had been significant, she was not surprised at the outcome of the referendum. “We knew from the outset that this was going to be an uphill battle, and we had done our research and looked at the previous divestment movements at Princeton,” Horvath said. She added that she was pleased to have lost by only 102 votes, because with more outreach and slightly increased support, the referendum would pass in a similar scenario.

NEWS | 04/24/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Princeton High School students stage walkout to support teachers' union

Hundreds of Princeton High School students supported teachers in a contract dispute by walking out of classon Thursday, according to the Times of Trenton. The contract dispute is between the local school board and the teachers' union Princeton Regional Education Association. Andrea Spalla, the school board president, said that the issues in dispute could not be publicly talked about and that progress has been made to address them. OnDecember 1, PREA members responded to the contract dispute by deciding to end voluntary participation in uncompensated extracurricular activities that extend beyond the school day. PHS student Harrison Bronfeld, who helped organize the walkout to support the teachers, said that the studentsdesired a resolution to the issue. “Discourse and respect for a diversity of opinions is valued in the PHS community,”PHS principal Gary Snyder said regarding students’ decision to participate in the walkout. The PREA and the school board are scheduled to meet onMay 4.

NEWS | 04/23/2015

The Daily Princetonian

McDermott discusses the changing nature of depictions of the Hindu goddess Durga

The changes in the face of the goddess Durga during the Bengali festival Durga Puja are reflective of changes in the broader face of Indian society, Rachel McDermott, professor of Asian and Middle Eastern cultures at Columbia,said at a lecture on Thursday. The Durga Puja is the Bengali version of Navratri, or the nine nights festival, in which the slaying of the demonMahishasuraby thegoddess Durga is celebrated, McDermott explained.

NEWS | 04/23/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton Medical Institute conducts clinical trial for drug to potentially treat Alzheimer’s disease

Researchers at the Princeton Medical Institute, as well as at other institutions, are investigating a novel drug to fight Alzheimer’s disease in a phase-II clinical trial called the NOBLE study.Alzheimer’s is a neurodegenerative illness that affects more than five million adults in the United States.

NEWS | 04/23/2015

The Daily Princetonian

TigerHub and ReCal take the spotlight during course selection

During the course selection period for fall classes, many University students have moved away from defunct course-scheduling applications like the Integrated Course Engine and easyPCE andhave started using newer applications like TigerHub andReCalinstead.As of Thursday, Polly Griffin, the University registrar, said that93.9 percent of active students had built a course plan on TigerHub, the University’s course-scheduling portal.

NEWS | 04/23/2015

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First class of neuroscience concentrators express excitement, concerns

The curriculum for the new neuroscience major is noticeably different from the curriculum for the certificate, students interviewed said.Those interviewed said they were excited about having the option for a neuroscience concentration but noted that it has been difficult to prepare for the concentration since they have only known about its existence for less than a year.Seventeen members of the Class of 2017 have decided to major in neuroscience this year, according to Co-Director of the Program in Neuroscience Asif Ghazanfar.

NEWS | 04/23/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Wilson School sees big drop in sophomore concentrators, economics receives most in social sciences

Three hundred sixty-three sophomores declared concentrations in the social sciences as of Wednesday, compared to 393 at the same time last year. The most dramatic change was the decline in Woodrow Wilson School enrollment, from 155 last year to 109 this year. Wilson School departmental representative David Wilcove deferred comment to undergraduate program administrator Jan Burch, who declined to comment. Charles Kanoff ’17, who is concentrating in the Wilson School, was also considering ecology and evolutionary biology, A.B.

NEWS | 04/22/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton Board of Health raises minimum age to purchase tobacco to 21

The Princeton Board of Health adopted an ordinance on Tuesdayraising the minimum age to purchase tobacco and other smoking products to 21. Princeton is the seventh town in New Jersey and the first in Mercer Countyto have implemented such an ordinance.The statewide minimum age to purchase tobacco in New Jersey is 19. The adoption of the ordinance follows arecommendation by the Board of Health last month by approving the introduction of the ordinance. Mayor Liz Lempert said she supported the new ordinance. “The longer you can put off someone taking their first puff the more likely it will be that they’ll never start,” Lempert said. The feedback Lempert has received on the anti-smoking measure has been highly positive, Lempert said. “I think it’s more that we’ve tried to be practical in Princeton and a leader in the state when it comes to creating a smoke-free environment in our parks and outside of our municipal buildings,” Lempert said. In 2013, the town of Princeton enacted a ban on outdoor smoking on municipal property, including municipal buildings, parks, pools and town-owned recreation areas, becoming the first town in Mercer County to do so.

NEWS | 04/22/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Neuroscience has 17 concentrators in inaugural year, other sciences largely unaffected

Seventeen sophomores signed in to the new neuroscience concentration this year, according to Asif Ghazanfar, co-director of the Program in Neuroscience. It was hard to have any expectations for enrollment because sophomores did not have the chance to plan how they were going to fulfill the concentration’s prerequisites in their freshman year, Ghazanfar said. “[The sophomores] I met with, basically, were very, very thankful, because they were trying to figure out some other kind of route to pursue their neuroscience interest,” Ghazanfar said. The Program in Neuroscience asked incoming sophomores which department they would have joined.

NEWS | 04/22/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Schneider ’17, Jayanti ’17, Schneider GS to represent U. at international computing competition

Eric Schneider ’17, Siddhartha Jayanti ’17 and Jon Schneider GS will represent the University at the upcoming Association for Computing Machinery International Collegiate Programming Contest in Marrakech, Morocco this May. ACM is an educational and scientific computing society comprised of computing educators, professionals and students. The contest allows hundreds of teams, each consisting of three students, to work together and solve a series of problems with mathematical algorithms. A total of 2,534 universities and 38,160 contestants from101 countries participated in the regionals-level competition.

NEWS | 04/22/2015

The Daily Princetonian

More sophomore enrollment in language concentrations, humanities remain dominated by history concentrators

The Spanish and Portuguese department experienced a significant increase with 16 new concentrators this year compared to three sign-ins last year, according to Spanish and Portuguese department representative Germán Labrador Méndez said. He said that this year’s increase in Spanish and Portuguese majors could be explained by the ongoing internationalization of the University campus, noting that many of the concentrators the department received this year speak multiple languages or have international backgrounds. He also explained that the increase in enrollment reflects the growing importance of the Spanish language in the United States. “Spanish is really getting important in the States,” Méndez said,"especially in real life and in future jobs in the field of medicine, in the field of law, in the field of international relations or in the field of business." The department’s interdisciplinary nature suits many students, whether they are interested in the sciences, humanities, arts or politics,Méndez added. Mary Hui ’17, an aspiring foreign correspondent, explained that the Spanish and Portuguese department’s small size and flexibility, as well as her love for Spanish language, convinced her to join. “Originally, I was thinking about [being a] politics major with a Spanish certificate, but I realized it wouldn’t be enough [for me to master the language],” Hui said.

NEWS | 04/22/2015