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Toni Morrison papers to reside in Firestone Library

The papers of Nobel laureate and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Toni Morrison, who is also a former creative writing professor at the University, will now be housed permanently in Firestone Library. The papers, which document decades of her work, will be permanently stored in Firestone in climate-controlled units as part of the Rare Books and Special Collections Department.An exhibit of a few of Morrison’s papers will be available for public viewing in the Main Gallery of Firestone from Oct.

NEWS | 11/03/2014

The Daily Princetonian

USG, Garden Theatre discuss earlier showings for USG-sponsored movies

The Undergraduate Student Government has approached the Garden Theatre to try to schedule earlier screenings of their sponsored movie nights, according to USG movies committee chairJack Mazzulo '16. The initiative, however, has been met with some resistance on the part of the newadministration of the movie theater, which started its duties this summer.According to Mazzulo, students have told him that the regular 11:45 p.m.

NEWS | 11/02/2014

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The Daily Princetonian

Midterm elections accompanied by vote on bail requirement

In addition to casting votes for congressional candidates in the midterm elections on Tuesday, New Jersey voters will be confronted with a public question to amend the state constitution’s bail requirement. The ballot question specifically asks voters whether they approve of a measure that would allow courts to order the pre-trial detention of defendants. This addresses the implementation of a bail reform measure,an act passed by the state legislature and signed into law by New Jersey Gov.

NEWS | 11/02/2014

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Amid protests, Dalai Lama maintains jovial atmosphere

The Dalai Lama spoke about compassion, forgiveness and the oneness of humanity, and even told a few jokes at a lecture co-sponsored by the Office of Religious Life and The Kalmyk Three Jewels Foundation in Jadwin Gymnasium on Tuesday morning, as protests over allegations of discrimination against small Buddhist sects took place outside. Around two hundred members of a group known as the International Shugden Community held a demonstration to the east of Jadwin.

NEWS | 10/28/2014

The Daily Princetonian

Tenured professorships in decline nationwide, U. defies trend

Tenure is declining in higher education across the country: while over 78.3 percent of faculty held tenure-track or tenured positions nationally in 1969, only 33.5 percent did so by 2009, according to a reportpublished by the Association of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges. The University, however, is not following the national trend.

NEWS | 10/23/2014

The Daily Princetonian

News & Note: Rutgers School of Law report claims Hurricane Sandy voting measures illegal

A report released on Thursday by the Rutgers School of Law-Newark concluded the stop-gap measures intended to allow people to vote in the days after Hurricane Sandy violated state law, according to NJ Advance Media. Those measures included allowing people to cast ballots by email and led to mass confusion, according to the report. “Emergency measures such as Internet and fax voting not only violated New Jersey law, but also left votes vulnerable to online hacking,” the report said.

NEWS | 10/23/2014

The Daily Princetonian

News & Notes: In ongoing case of academic fraud, UNC Chapel Hill administrators fired

Two administrators perpetuated widespread academic fraud at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill within an academic department consisting of various athletic teams, according to a report published on Wednesday. The report details how students –many of them athletes –in the University’s African and Afro-American studies department were able to take no-show courses and earn passing grades for doing little to no work, ensuring their eligibility to compete. UNC Chapel Hill hired former federal prosecutor Kenneth Wainstein, now a partner at the law firm of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft, to investigate the matter. The two administrators in question, former department chairman Julius Nyang’oro and retired administrator Deborah Crowder, decided to cooperate with Wainstein to produce the most detailed examination yet after criminal charges were dropped against them earlier this year. So far, nine employees have been dismissed or disciplined in connection to the investigation, which started years ago.

NEWS | 10/23/2014

The Daily Princetonian

Theft charge against professor dismissed in exchange for community service

A Princeton municipal court judge dismissed on Monday a charge of theft against operations research and financial engineering professor John Mulvey on the condition that Mulvey perform 120 hours of community service. Mulvey was accused of removing lawn signs belonging to Princeton Computer Tutor and Repairsfrom private properties over the course of about a year. The allegedly stolen signs were listed as valued at $470.82. Ted Horodynsky, president of Princeton Computer Tutor and Repairs, set up several cameras and filmed Mulvey taking the signs twice in July.

NEWS | 10/21/2014

The Daily Princetonian

U. creates new position to market research amid lawsuit over tax exemption

The announcement that the University’s Office of Technology Licensingestablishedthe position of executive in residence to help commercialize its research comes in the midst of alawsuitagainst the University regarding its tax-exempt status. Local plaintiffs, who filed the suit in 2011, cite the University’s commercialized research revenue as a reason to increase its tax duties, leading some community members to interpret the creation of the new position as a recognition of the University’s corporate priorities. Although the University does not pay taxes on most of its property, it spends about$10 million a yearon taxes for nonexempt properties and voluntarily pays taxes on some graduate student housing, making it the largest tax contributor in town. “They’re being sued in a nationally renowned lawsuit over abusing tax-exempt privileges,” the plaintiffs’ representative and Princeton-based lawyer Bruce Afran said of the University.

NEWS | 10/21/2014