Lydia and Bill Addy 82 gift will name residence hall in Perelman College dailyprincetonian.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailyprincetonian.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Following the Money in Dallas City Council Campaigns
You can learn a lot from campaign finance reports.
By
Alex Macon and Matt Goodman
Published in
FrontBurner
April 14, 2021
12:24 pm
Earlier this month, over 50 candidates in 14 contested Dallas City Council races had to file their latest campaign finance reports, documenting their fundraising and spending over the last several months.
The Dallas Morning News has hit on some of the bigger takeaways from these records. Almost $900,000 has been pumped into contests that will determine the makeup of the city council, with Mayor Eric Johnson spared from having to run for re-election until 2023. Big-name donors who have previously backed the mayor are now supporting challenges to three incumbent city council members who voted against Johnson last fall in a battle over police overtime funding a sign that public safety concerns (and the mayor’s strained relationships with many of his colleagues) are driving forces this election
Lydia and Bill Addy ’82 make gift to support undergraduate student expansion
by the Office of Advancement
April 7, 2021 noon
Photo by Jake Dean
Lydia B. and William M. Addy ’82 have made a major gift to support Princeton University’s strategic goal of undergraduate student expansion by naming Addy Hall, a dormitory in one of the new residential colleges being built on campus.
“Bill and Lydia Addy embrace service and philanthropy, both in their local community and at Princeton,” said President Christopher L. Eisgruber ’83. “The University has been fortunate to have them as partners who understand the importance of our residential college system as well as the transformational role a Princeton education provides for our students. We are deeply grateful to Bill and Lydia for their support and its impact on generations of students who will live in Addy Hall.”