|
|
They've arrived!
|
|

|
|
|
The first members of the Class
of 2004 arrived on campus Sept. 2 with their
belongings and family members in tow. Students
moving in on Labor Day weekend came a week early to
participate in the Outdoor Action and Urban Action
preorientation programs.
|
Their interests and talents are as diverse as the places
from which they hail. But what they now have in common will
forever change their lives.
They are the members of the Princeton University Class of
2004.
They come from towns like Sitka, Alaska; Yamhill, Ore.;
Selma, Calif.; Pinedale, Wyo.; Stromsberg, Neb.; Sebeka,
Minn.; Bettendorf, Iowa; Midway, Utah; Laredo, Texas;
Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Burgaw, N.C.; Holland, Ohio; Mars, Pa.;
and Winslow, Maine.
They also come from Tel Aviv, Israel; Curitiba, Brazil;
San Fernando, Trinidad and Tobago; Accra, Ghana; Tombeau
Bay, Mauritius; Jeddah, Saudi Arabia; Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia; Nelson, New Zealand; Changsha, China; Targu Mures,
Romania; Gaienhofen, Germany; Vesenaz, Switzerland;
Saskatchewan, Canada; and hundreds of other places, across
the United States and around the world.
The 1,160 members of the class come from 840 secondary
schools in 47 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico
and 37 other countries. They come from schools where the
senior class numbered as many as 1,000 or as few as 35.
They have milked cows and raced sprint cars. They have
performed professionally in the opera and made films. They
have achieved national recognition in chess, snow boarding,
debate and 4-H. They have led student governments, service
organizations, religious organizations and other groups at
the school, state and national levels. They have been
concertmasters and concertmistresses. They have won
international math and science Olympiads and been named
Presidential Scholars and All Americans.
"Like the rest of us, they probably have their faults,
but they are a cohort of very able, high-energy young men
and women, each of whom is the sort of person the others
came to college to meet, and each of whom we are happy
applied to Princeton in the first place and, once admitted,
chose to enroll," said Fred Hargadon, dean of admission.
The incoming class is just under 51 percent men and a
little over 49 percent women. Of the U.S. students, close to
30 percent are from minority backgrounds. International
students comprise almost 10 percent of the class, and nearly
13 percent are sons or daughters of Princeton graduates.
Give or take a year, most members of the Class of 2004 were
born in the year 1982.
|
|
|


September 10, 2000
Vol. 90, No. 1
previous
archives
next
Contents
They've
arrived!
Graduate
School enrolls largest new group in 100
years
Student's
stories show diversity
New
look debuts for Bulletin
By
the numbers: Frist Campus Center
Clinton
to speak
Job
postings available on Web
Spotlight
/ People
Many
work 'with one accord' to raise funds for
Princeton
Campaign
achieves records in giving, participation
Calendar
of events
Briefs
Chromosome
research may give cancer clues
Summer
is boom time for building
Obituaries
Rowers
go for the orange in Sydney
Swimmer
delays start of school to represent Peru in
Olympics
Research
Notes
Berry
keynotes two-day event
Mahlman
retirement marked with symposia
Noted
alumni return for centennial
Exhibit
reveals Stevenson's life
The Bulletin is published weekly during the academic year, except
during University breaks and exam weeks, by the Office of
Communications, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544. Permission
is given to adapt, reprint or excerpt material from the Bulletin for
use in other media.
Deadline. In general, the copy deadline for each issue is the
Friday 10 days in advance of the Monday cover date. The deadline for
the Bulletin that covers Sept. 25-Oct. 1 is Friday, Sept. 15. A
complete publication schedule is available at deadlines.
Subscriptions. The Bulletin is distributed free to faculty,
staff and students. Others may subscribe to the Bulletin for $24 for
the academic year (half price for current Princeton parents and
people over 65). Send a check to Office of Communications, Stanhope
Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544.
Editor: Ruth Stevens
Staff writer: Yvonne Chiu Hays
Calendar editor: Carolyn Geller
Contributing writers: Andrew Choi, Marilyn Marks, Steven Schultz
Photographer: Denise Applewhite
Design: Mahlon Lovett,
Laurel Masten Cantor
Web edition: Mahlon Lovett
|
|