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June 2008 Archives

June 4, 2008

Reunions recap

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Reunions 2008 draws 20,000

With more than 20,000 alumni, family members, and friends attending Reunions Weekend, it may seem difficult for one person to stand out in the crowd. But Malcolm Warnock ’25, left, drew a remarkable amount of attention in Saturday’s P-rade.
malcolm-blog.jpgCarrying the Class of 1923 Cane as the oldest alumnus at Reunions (for the fourth time), Warnock rode through campus to waves of applause and cheers. He is 102 years old, set to turn 103 later this month, and the next-oldest alumni in the P-rade were nine years behind him in school. But Warnock did not see reason for all the fuss. “I have received today more completely unwarranted attention than I have ever received in my life,” he said.
The Class of 1983 led the P-rade as this year’s 25th reunion class, and its reunion was the first to be held at Whitman College. Co-chairman Steve Simcox ’83 summed up the new site in one word: “spectacular.” While bands played and class members danced in the Class of 1963 Courtyard, others found a spot for quiet conversations and coffee breaks a staircase away in the Chester Courtyard, where baristas were on duty from morning to midnight.
Photos by T. Kevin Birch

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Remembering 1968

Forty years ago this week, the normally festive Princeton Reunions took on a sober tone as visitors mourned the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy’s funeral train passed through Princeton Junction on Reunions Weekend, bringing the tragedy of the previous Tuesday evening even closer to the thoughts of alumni.
The University cancelled the annual alumni baseball game and rerouted the P-rade to keep festivities on campus, ending the procession at Blair Arch, where the Alumni Association held what William A.B. Paul, the secretary for the Class of 1918, called in his PAW Class Notes column a “dignified meeting” followed by “thoughtful discussions about the turbulent conditions today and those student agitators who are so hard for old Princetonians to underst0and.”
Duncan van Dusen ’58 wrote in PAW’s Class Notes that while Kennedy’s death caused a drop in Reunions attendance, there were some positive returns for those who came to campus. “The modified schedule of events provoked much discussion about the future of the United States, where we are going, and where we ought to be going,” he wrote. “Liberals, moderates, and reactionaries, all equally concerned, exchanged ideas without blows, often nearing agreement if not as to programs, at least as to the problems.”

Answers to the Reunions 2008
Princetoniana Challenge

Congratulations to Ashley Prescott ’06 and Jonathan Sapan ’04, who each scored a perfect 10-for-10 on the Princetoniana Challenge. Both winners received copies of The Best of PAW: 100 Years of the Princeton Alumni Weekly, edited by J.I. Merritt ’66. For readers who were stumped by the quiz, an annotated list of answers is printed below.

Where is…

1. A building that once served as the nation’s capitol for the Continental Congress?
Nassau Hall served as the headquarters of the Continental Congress from July-October 1783.
tigers_PC.jpg2. This display containing skeletons of a modern and a prehistoric tiger?
The skeletons of a modern Bengal tiger and of its evolutionary predecessor, a 28,000-year-old Smilodon or saber-tooth tiger, are on display at the Frist Campus Center, 100 level, by the windows at the rear.
3. The “Fountain of Freedom,” in the center of which is one of the largest bronze castings in the world?
The Fountain of Freedom was designed by James Fitzgerald in 1966 and rises from the Scudder Plaza pool in front of Robertson Hall.
4. The grave of Nathaniel FitzRandolph, donor of Princeton’s original campus?
It is under the eastern arch of Holder Hall and Rockefeller Hall, and there is a plaque explaining the significance of the site. FitzRandolph solicited donations of land and money and donated some of his own land as well. His family’s burial ground was here.
garage_PC.jpg5. This parking garage, which won a design award from the American Institute of Architects?
The parking garage is next to Bowen Hall at 70 Prospect Avenue (between Olden and Murray Place). Built in 1991 and designed by Machado Silvetti Associates (Boston), the garage won a design award in 1993 from the American Institute of Architects.
6. The statue of a dean who argued about the location of the Graduate School with a future president of the United States—and won the argument?
A statue of Andrew Fleming West (class of 1874), first dean of the Graduate School, is in the Thompson courtyard of the Old Graduate College. Although Woodrow Wilson, as president of Princeton, wanted to build the Graduate College in the main part of campus, West thought that it should have a separate location. West won the argument in 1910 when alumnus Isaac Wyman (Class of 1848) died, leaving a bequest that helped to fund West’s plan. “We’ve beaten the living,” said Wilson to his wife, Ellen, “but we can’t beat the dead.”
7. A building in the shape of an octagon?
The octagonal Chancellor Green building, designed by William A. Potter and dedicated in 1873 as Princeton’s first freestanding library, is now part of the Andlinger Center for the Humanities.
window_PC.jpg8. This stained-glass window, called the “Seven Liberal Arts Window”?
The Seven Liberal Arts Window, designed by William and Annie Lee Willet, is at the west end of Procter Hall at the Graduate College.
9. A flag from the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Princeton IV, which sank during a battle in 1944?
The flag is in the University Chapel. It came from the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Princeton IV, which was commissioned in 1942 and had one of the most distinguished service records among Navy ships during World War II until it was sunk in 1944 during the Second Battle in the Philippine Sea. James Forrestal, class of 1915, presented the ship’s flag to the University when he was Secretary of the Navy in 1944-45.
yes_PC.jpg10. This word carved into the pavement?
This inscription is on the path from the Dinky to the new Whitman College. It refers to the wording of the letter sent to accepted applicants during the 1988-2003 tenure of Dean of Admission Fred Hargadon. A dormitory at Whitman College is named in honor of Dean Hargadon.
Images courtesy of the Princetoniana Committee. Visit the Princetoniana section of the Princeton University Website for more Princeton lore.

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June 11, 2008

Classics on the Rocks

A musical mix of old and new

Pianist Andy Luse ’02 founded a concert series, Classics on the Rocks, two years ago to attract young adults to classical music performances. Luse and his colleagues have been drawing in younger crowds by spicing up the traditional classical music experience. Presented cabaret-style in small venues like restaurant lounges and clubs in the Washington, D.C., area, the concerts mix jazz, pop, and other styles with classical compositions.
The next performance will take Classics on the Rocks outdoors July 9 at Strathmore, an arts center in North Bethesda, Md. The concert will feature the Dvorak Piano Quintet and a flute-marimba combo with percussionist Paul Fadoul. For more information, visit www.classicsontherocks.com. By Katherine Federici Greenwood

More at PAW Online

PAW’s Web Exclusives for the June 11 issue include:
Songs from Rackett, the rock band that features professors Nigel Smith and Paul Muldoon. Click here to listen and here to read an interview with Smith.
A profile of alumna Lauren (Holuba) Nelson ’04, who received the Shield of Sparta: Heroine of the Infantry, the highest honor given to a military spouse by the National Infantry Association. Click here to read more
The story of the Fred Almgren ’55 Memorial Relay, an annual competition in which mathematicians from Princeton and Rutgers run from Fine Hall to New Brunswick. Click here to read more
Gregg Lange ’70’s Rally ’Round the Cannon column, covering an important transition in the history of Prospect Avenue. Click here to read more

Names in the news

Sports Illustrated featured Oregon State basketball coach Craig Robinson ’83 in a June 3 story that covered the challenges of his new job and life on the campaign trail with his sister, Michelle Obama ’85, and her famous husband. … In other Obama news, Princeton astrophysics professor J. Richard Gott III *73 and a colleague have deduced, using statistical analysis of polls, that if the general election had been held in late May, the presumptive Democratic nominee would have lost to John McCain, while McCain would have lost to Hillary Clinton. … The Sacramento Bee profiled minor league baseball star Will Venable ’05 and his father, Max, the hitting coach for Will’s team, the Portland Beavers. … An eye-popping final ride in the freestyle kayak event propelled Dustin Urban ’07 to a first-place finish at the Teva Mountain Games in Vail, Colo., June 7. Among the winning moves, according to the Vail Daily: an air wheel, 360-loops in both directions, and a McNasty followed by a monster loop.

Farewell for the summer

This edition of The Weekly Blog is the last of the academic year. The final print edition of PAW, featuring coverage of Reunions and Commencement, will be published July 16. The Weekly Blog will return Sept. 17.
Visit the PAW Web site for Reunions videos, slide shows, and breaking summer news.

June 25, 2008

Olympic hopefuls

Tigers at the trials

Follow Princeton alumni and students at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene, Ore., June 27-July 6, and the U.S. Olympic Swimming Trials in Omaha, Neb., June 29-July 6.

tracktrials.pngIn track and field, NCAA All-American Cack Ferrell ’06 will run the women’s 5,000 meters (semifinals - June 30, 8:50 p.m.; finals - July 4, 8:55 p.m.), and Tora Harris ’02, a 2004 Olympic team member and 2006 USA outdoor champion, will compete in the men’s high jump (qualifying - July 3, 7:25 p.m.; final - July 5, 12:55 p.m.).

swimtrials.jpgThe swimming trials will feature eight current or future Tigers, led by multi-talented star Alicia Aemisegger ’10, a qualifier in six events (100-meter butterfly, 200-meter freestyle, 200-meter butterfly, 200-meter breaststroke, 800-meter freestyle, and 200-meter individual medley). Other athletes slated to compete: Courtney Kilkuts ’10, 200-meter individual medley; Meredith Monroe ’11, 100- and 200-meter backstroke; Jillian Altenburger ’12, 200-meter individual medley; Will Schaffer ’09, 200-meter individual medley; Mike Carter ’09, 100-meter freestyle; Dan Eckel ’09, 200-meter butterfly; and Colin Hanna ’11, 200-meter individual medley.

June 27, 2008

Olympic hopefuls, part 2

Alumni rowers earn tickets to Beijing

Five Princeton alumni were named to US Rowing’s 2008 Olympic roster June 27. Paul Teti ’01 will row in his third consecutive Olympics, this time with the men’s four. Lia Pernell ’03 will compete with the women’s quadruple sculls. Caroline Lind ’06 will be a member of the women’s eight, and classmate Steven Coppola ’06 will join the men’s eight. Simon Carcagno ’98 was selected as an alternate on the men’s team.
Alumnus Sam Loch ’06 was chosen for the Australian men’s eight earlier this year, and Olympic veteran Andreanne Morin ’06 is a candidate for the Canadian women’s eight. Olympic rowing events will begin August 9 at the Shunyi Olympic Rowing-Canoeing Park in the Shunyi district of Beijing.