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The Daily Princetonian

Falcon ’15 awarded David-Weill Scholarship

Eric Falcon ’15 became the first University student to be awarded the Michel David-WeillScholarship, and he will pursue a master’s degree in European affairs at Sciences Po in Paris after graduation. Every year, the Michel David-Weillaward provides one American student, studying at one of twenty Sciences Po partner institutions, with an $80,000 grant to attend Sciences Po and obtain a master’s degree.Named after Michel David-Weill, the former chairman of the investment bank Lazard Frères, the scholarship is directed by the Michel David-Weill Foundation. “I was very excited.

NEWS | 04/01/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: U. has third-lowest admissions rate among Ivy League schools

Only two Ivy League universities' admission rates were lower than that of the University's as of Tuesday night, although Harvard's admission rate had not yetbeen released, Business Insider reported. Columbia accepted only 6.1 percent of its applicants to the Class of 2019, and Yale accepted only 6.49 percent.

NEWS | 03/31/2015

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Big Sean to perform at Lawnparties

Grammy-nominated rapper Big Sean will headline spring Lawnparties, Undergraduate Student Government social committee chair Simon Wu ’17 announced in Frist Campus Center Food Gallery on Tuesday night. Hip-hop singer Luke Christopher and pop singer Alus from Montville, N.J., will provide the opening acts, he added. Big Sean’s most recent album, “Dark Sky Paradise,” topped the Billboard 200 chart earlier in March.He signed with Kanye West’s GOOD music in 2007 and has collaborated with multiple artists including Nicki Minaj, Lil Wayne and Justin Bieber.

NEWS | 03/31/2015

web_missamerica_GraceJeon_SeniorStaff

Miss America 2014 discusses personal journey, cultural standards

As the first Indian-American to win the Miss America crown in 2014, Nina Davuluri said at a lecture on Tuesday that the Miss America Organization is often misunderstood. “It felt so timely for this organization to finally reach out to a new demographic of young women that’s representative of what America is today," Davuluri said.

NEWS | 03/31/2015

The Daily Princetonian

U. office removes statement about safety of Wi-Fi radiation following activist pressure

The Office of Environmental Health and Safety removed a statement from its websiteabout the safety of radiation from Wi-Fi in June 2014 in response to activist pressure. The statement, which reflected the University’s position on the hazards of exposure to wireless radiation and authored in 2007, disappeared from the website after the University deemed it to be out of date. The move took place against a backdrop of activist concern about Wi-Fi safety in schools across the country and in Europe and was triggered by a series of emails from individuals outside the University who had viewed the University's statement on radiation safety. The process began with an email in February 2014 from a womanconcerned about Wi-Fi safety who had two young children, Sue Dupre, the University's Assistant Director of Environmental Health and Safety, said.The woman was not affiliated with the University. “She contacted us and everybody in our office, including more senior people in University management, expressing concern about our position statement and saying that there were other important, recent studies we needed to look at,” Dupre said.

NEWS | 03/31/2015

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The Daily Princetonian

U. offers admission to 6.99 percent of applicants for Class of 2019

The University has offered admission to 1,908 students, or 6.99 percent, of the 27,290 applicants for the Class of 2019. This makes it the most selective admission year the University has seen to date. The number of applicants for this year was also the largest, breaking the record number of 27,189 set by the Class of 2015. The increase in selectivity is partly because of the larger applicant pool, and partly because the University offered admission to more applicants from early action round than last year, Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye said. The Office of Admission's effort to reach out to prospective applicants might have influenced in the increase in applicant pool, Rapelye added. The University’s generous financial aid and the Office of Admission reaching out to more first-generation students earlier in their high school careers might have influenced more qualified first-generation college students to apply to the University, she explained, noting that her office is working with more than 300 programs and community-based organizations such as Leadership Enterprise for a Diverse America and QuestBridge. Of the 1,908 admitted students, 767 were admitted through the early action applications in December.

NEWS | 03/31/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Rutgers student charged with attempted murder after taking LSD

An unclothed Rutgers student was arrested on Saturday and charged with attempted murder and other offenses after allegedly stabbing a fellow student, NBC News reported. The two had both allegedly taken LSD. A witness reported to police that the accused student, 22-year-old Kevin Huang, at some point had become aggressive with the other student and removed his own clothing. Huang allegedly stabbed the 23-year-old male student in the neck.The victim, bleeding from the neck, escaped the apartment. Police found Huang naked and on the second floor of the apartment.A later search of the residence found 15 pounds of marijuana, a sizable amount of Xanax, cocaine and unidentified pills and a substantial amount of cash. The condition of the victim, who was not identified, was uncertain. Police also charged Huang with two weapons counts and several drug offenses.

NEWS | 03/30/2015

The Daily Princetonian

Environmentalists express concerns over pipeline construction

Environmentalists and other local community members have expressed concerns over the Williams Transcontinental pipeline that will run through parts of Princeton and Montgomery. When the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission found in December that the proposed pipeline would not significantly impact the surrounding community, it permitted Transco to move forward with the project. The project would include 30 miles of a new natural gas pipeline loop through Mercer, Somerset and Hunterdon counties in New Jersey and in Monroe and Luzerne counties in Pennsylvania.

NEWS | 03/30/2015

The Daily Princetonian

DPS seeking accreditation

The Department of Public Safety is awaiting word from theCommission on the Accreditation of Law Enforcement Agencies on whether it will receive accreditation from that organization. CALEA is a national organization that prescribes standards for law enforcement agencies and recognizes agencies that meet its standards by awarding them accreditation.

NEWS | 03/30/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Yale Spanish and Portuguese department faces anonymous allegations of discrimination

Yale’s Department of Spanish and Portuguese is under administrative review following anonymous allegations about the department’s academic and social environment, the Yale Daily News reported. An anonymous letter was distributed to members of the department and university administrators on March 6.

NEWS | 03/29/2015

The Daily Princetonian

USG senate addresses accessibility of campus recreation, new referenda

The Undergraduate Student Government senate discussed making campus recreation more accessible and the Bicker referendum during its weekly meeting on March 29. USG has been working with Senior Associate Director of Athletics/Campus Recreation David Leach ’88 to provide more convenient access to the fitness center by adding a side door, chief designer William Aung ’18 said. “We broached the subject of having other entries to Stephens Fitness Center, and after talking to him, he didn’t really seem to be in support of it now, because of the way that it’s constructed,” Aung explained.

NEWS | 03/29/2015

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Former Triangle Club accountant pleads guilty to theft

Thomas Muza, former Triangle Club accountant and McCarter Theatre general manager, pleaded guilty on Friday to embezzling more than $240,000 from the club between January 2008 and February 2013.The specific charge was second-degree theft by unlawful taking.Muza declined to comment.Triangle’s Board of Trustees was originally unhappy with Muza because he was not doing responsible financial reporting, Marc Segan ’77, chairman of the board, said.“We found it not easy to deal with him because we wanted to get clear financial information, and I guess that was because he had things to hide,” he said.Muza was Triangle’s accountant between 1993 and 2013, and received an annual salary from Triangle of $4,000.

NEWS | 03/29/2015

The Daily Princetonian

U. advertises sexual misconduct survey heavily in hopes of high response rate

The University has been advertising heavily for students to take its survey about the climate for sexual misconduct on campus because it wants to conduct the survey in future years, Daniel Day, the University’s acting director of communications, said. A high response rate this year would give the University a good baseline for later comparison, he explained. “We’ve had a good initial response,” he said.

NEWS | 03/29/2015

The Daily Princetonian

FERC commissioner discusses duty to supply electricity to public

Utilities employees who operate an electrical grid and the regulators who oversee the grid have a duty to the public to make sure that the electricity comes onif the light switch is flipped, Tony Clark, Commissioner of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, said at a lecture onSaturday.“Job number one, almost invariably, is reliability,” he said of the FERC’s priorities.Energy reliability has evolved a lot in the last decade, Clark noted.

NEWS | 03/29/2015

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: Dartmouth fraternity investigated for branding pledges

Dartmouth is currently investigating the Alpha Delta fraternity chapter, which inspired the 1978film “Animal House,”for allegedly branding pledges’ skin, TIME Magazine reported. A group of pledges asserted that they voluntarily agreed to be branded as a form ofself-expression. A lawyer for the chapter, George Ostler, said that the brands are a form of self-expression, similar to tattoos. “The facts are that no hazing occurred,” he said."No one has been injured by this activity." In the last two years, Alpha Delta has apologized for hosting a ‘Crips and Blood’ party andfor urinating on a woman from the balcony of the fraternity house, and it hasbeen fined for serving alcohol to minors. In response to these and similar incidents, president of Dartmouth Philip Hanlon banned hard liquor in January.

NEWS | 03/26/2015

The Daily Princetonian

SPEAR relaunches campaign against admissions inquiries into criminal history

Students for Prison Education and Reform has relaunched a campaign to persuade the University and the Common Application to eliminate questions about applicants’ criminal history.Known as the Admissions Opportunity Campaign, co-president Daniel Teehan ’17 saidthe project aims to eliminate some of the more common obstacles that bar such students from pursuing a college degree.

NEWS | 03/26/2015