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Don McCarthy '70 (Photo: Kris Hanning)
Don McCarthy '70 (Photo: Kris Hanning)
With clear skies, dry air, and relative isolation, the mountains of southern Arizona have been a draw for astronomers for decades. Don McCarthy ’70, a research astronomer at the University of Arizona’s Steward Observatory, first came to the area as a Ph.D. student in the early 1970s. And for the last 24 years, he has shared the region’s stargazing riches with young astronomers from around the world through Astronomy Camp, a weeklong program that he said provides “authentic experiences,” including observing time on large telescopes and group projects that investigate real research questions.
 
Astronomy Camp has earned high praise in its field: The American Astronomical Society honored McCarthy with its 2012 Education Prize for his efforts “to educate and involve more than 1,500 students, teachers, and adults in astronomy and the scientific method.” McCarthy takes pride in the individual stories of campers. Many come with a deep interest in astronomy but few opportunities to share it with others. “When they get here, though, they’re meeting people with common interests — and boy does that resonate,” he said. McCarthy also has worked with the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., training scout leaders who share what they’ve learned and encourage young girls to take an interest in the sciences.
 
Astronomy is an attractive subject, McCarthy said, because it captures the imagination and integrates science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in ways that students might not experience in a regular classroom setting. The holistic approach, he said, reflects “the way a real scientist works.”
 
As an undergraduate at Princeton, McCarthy majored in physics and completed his thesis under adviser David Wilkinson (namesake of the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe). He also competed on the track and field team, managed the Student Refreshment Agency, and participated in Army ROTC at a time when walking around campus in uniform sometimes drew ridicule from fellow students. Each of those experiences, he said, helped to shape his path as a researcher and educator.
 
McCarthy’s primary interest is infrared astronomy, which uses wavelengths of light that are longer than what the human eye can see. He is part of the team developing a near infrared camera for the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA’s successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.
 

Do you have a nominee for Tiger of the Week? Let us know. All alumni qualify. PAW’s Tiger of the Week is selected by our staff, with help from readers like you.

William H. Scheide ’36, pictured in 2002, when the University held a one-day display of the world’s first four printed Bibles, all from Scheide’s collection. (Photo: Denise Applewhite/Office of Communications)
William H. Scheide ’36, pictured in 2002, when the University held a one-day display of the world’s first four printed Bibles, all from the Scheide Library. (Photo: Denise Applewhite/Office of Communications)
Philanthropist, musician, and bibliophile William H. Scheide ’36 turned 99 years old earlier this month, and he plans to mark the occasion in style at a Jan. 18 concert in Richardson Auditorium that will feature works by Beethoven and Vivaldi. As with previous birthday concerts, this year’s event will benefit a local community organization (the Princeton Community Park Pool).  
 
Scheide continues to play the piano and organ and collect books for the Scheide Library, a privately owned collection housed within the University’s Department of Rare Books and Special Collections. The Library’s extraordinary holdings, acquired by Scheide in the last 60 years and before that by his father, John H. Scheide 1896, and his grandfather, William T. Scheide, include copies of the first four printed Bibles, books from the early years of European printing, and books and manuscripts from early voyages to the Americas. Paul Needham, the Scheide librarian, said that the three generations of Scheides, sharing the same areas of interest, have built a unique, world-famous collection.
 
Scheide also has added rare musical manuscripts by Bach, Beethoven, and others to the Library. The founder and longtime director of the Bach Aria Group, Scheide said in a 2004 PAW interview that his love of music was apparent even in early childhood, when he listened to a piano trio and cried after the music ended. When his parents asked why he was so upset, he answered, “Because they stopped playing.”
 
Do you have a nominee for Tiger of the Week? Let us know. All alumni qualify. PAW’s Tiger of the Week is selected by our staff, with help from readers like you.
wb_alumni.jpgSupreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor ’76 spoke about her upbringing in the Bronx with 60 Minutes in her first broadcast interview since joining the court. [CBS]
 
Homeland, the Showtime series created by Alex Gansa ’84 and Howard Gordon ’84, won the Golden Globe for best dramatic series. The show also won the best drama Emmy in September. [Los Angeles Times]
 
Bloomberg Businessweek explored whether CEO Meg Whitman ’77 can “reverse Hewlett Packard’s free fall.” [Bloomberg Businessweek]
 
Connecticut native and 2012 Olympian Donn Cabral ’12 signed autographs to raise money for the Newtown Memorial Fund. [NBC Connecticut]
Daniel T. Barry *80 leaves the shuttle Endeavor for a spacewalk in January 1996. (Photo: NASA)
Daniel T. Barry *80 leaves the shuttle Endeavor for a spacewalk in January 1996. (Photo: NASA)
Early on the morning of Jan. 11, 1996, the space shuttle Endeavor launched from Kennedy Space Center, carrying six astronauts, including first-time mission specialist Daniel T. Barry *80. The crew’s first goal was to capture and return a Japanese research spacecraft. The crew also tested equipment for the construction of the International Space Station – an exercise that included a six-hour spacewalk for Barry. He later found time to play Go, an ancient Asian board game, with Japanese colleague Koichi Wakata. Barry said at a post-flight press conference that the game “symbolized connections between past and present, and between Japan and the United States.”
 
Barry, who earned a Princeton Ph.D. in electrical engineering, joined the space program in 1992 and made three flights, the last coming in 2001. He later competed on TV’s Survivor and currently serves as the chairman of robotics and head of faculty at Singularity University in Mountain View, Calif.
 
Barry is one of four Princeton engineers who flew NASA missions. The list also includes the late Charles “Pete” Conrad ’53, who walked on the moon in 1969; Gerald Carr *62, the commander of Skylab 4; and Gregory Linteris ’79 *90, who flew two shuttle missions in 1997.
Kevin Westgarth ’07 (Photo: Kirby Lee/Image of Sport-USA TODAY Sports)
Kevin Westgarth ’07 (Photo: Kirby Lee/Image of Sport-USA TODAY Sports)
Earlier this week, players and owners in the National Hockey League settled a labor dispute that spanned five months and came precariously close to wiping out the entire season. Kevin Westgarth ’07, a former Princeton standout and right wing for the Los Angeles Kings, and fellow alum George Parros ’03 of the Florida Panthers were among the players who negotiated the new deal. “It felt like driving your car on the edge of a cliff,” Westgarth told The Los Angeles Times. “We could still get to where we had to go, but at any moment we could fall off the edge.”  
 
In December, The New York Times profiled Westgarth, an Ontario native who is the son of two veterinarians. Westgarth has played in just 90 games in three NHL seasons, but he earned a prominent role in the negotiations as his team’s representative. He told the Times that he has been balancing sports with more cerebral pursuits since childhood: “My parents said you can play hockey if you do well at school. I was lucky — it came relatively easy.”
 
At Princeton, Westgarth played alongside his older brother, Brett ’07, and majored in psychology. He was a strong and skilled forward who ranked among the Tigers’ top scorers in his junior and senior two seasons. As a professional, the 6-foot-4-inch Westgarth has become known as an enforcer — a physically imposing player who is willing to fight on the ice. He’ll return to that role later this month when the Kings begin their defense of the Stanley Cup.
 
Do you have a nominee for Tiger of the Week? Let us know. All alumni qualify. PAW’s Tiger of the Week is selected by our staff, with help from readers like you.

There was little doubt about the year’s top campus headline — PAW’s editors unanimously chose President Tilghman’s September announcement that she would step down at the end of the academic year, her 12th in Nassau Hall. But for the other four spots on our list, opinions varied. Read the consensus choices and share your picks below in the comments.

 

5. Rocking the house for Cornel West *80

The University never has bid goodbye to a departing professor quite the way it did May 16, when it rolled out a parade of rap stars, hip-hop artists, and funk music personalities at a retirement celebration at McCarter Theatre for West, a prominent African-American studies professor. READ MORE

Related story: West *80 to leave Princeton faculty

 

4. Cecilia Rouse named Wilson School dean

As economics and public affairs professor Cecilia Rouse takes over as the new dean of the Woodrow Wilson School, her first task is the implementation of major changes already under way at the school. Rouse, a well-known scholar of the economics of education and a faculty member for two decades, took over the post Sept. 1. READ MORE

Related story: Brown chooses Paxson as next president

 

3. Ban on freshman rush alters social life, spurs changes at Greek organizations

The Class of 2016 was the first to experience the ban on freshman rush of Greek organizations. The new policy led to changes on the part of the Greek organizations: Fraternities were considering ways to shorten their pledge process so that it ends before bicker, and both fraternities and sororities revamped their publicity campaigns to attract sophomores. READ MORE

Related story: Tilghman OKs penalties for violating Greek policy

 

2. At 7.9 percent, admission rate is Princeton’s lowest ever

The University offered admission to 2,095 students, or 7.9 percent of the near-record 26,664 applicants for the Class of 2016. Almost 35 percent of the admitted students applied through early action and were notified in December, while the rest learned of their acceptance March 29. READ MORE

Related story: Converting lounges into dorm rooms, Princeton squeezes in 53 extra frosh

 

1. Tilghman to step down as president

President Tilghman will step down in June, after 12 years at Princeton’s helm. Her decision was announced Sept. 22, a day after she informed University trustees who were meeting on campus. The news follows the conclusion of the Aspire fundraising campaign, which raised $1.88 billion over five years. READ MORE

Related story: Decision to leave helm ‘very easy,’ Tilghman says

Part two of our year in review looks at some of the year’s top alumni newsmakers, as selected by PAW’s editors. This post fills in for our Tiger of the Week segment, which is taking a brief hiatus and will return in January. Share your picks below in the comments.
 
Susan Cain ’89 (Photo: Aaron Fedor)
Susan Cain ’89 (Photo: Aaron Fedor)
5. (tie) Susan Cain ’89
Cain, a former corporate lawyer, made a splash with her first book, Quiet: The Power of Introverts In a World That Can’t Stop Talking, a best-seller that was featured on several best-of-2012 book lists.
 
5. (tie) Robert Caro ’57
The release of The Passage of Power, volume four in Caro’s biography of Lyndon Johnson, was accompanied by appreciative profiles of the author in The New York Times Magazine and Esquire, as well as a National Book Award nomination.
 
4. Laurence Pope *77
A month after Ambassador Christopher Stevens was killed in Benghazi, the U.S. State Department announced that Pope, a retired U.S. Foreign Service officer who had served 31 years and been U.S. Ambassador to Chad, had arrived in Tripoli as chargé d’affaires, the top U.S. diplomat in Libya.
 
Ted Cruz ’92 (Photo: Wikipedia)
Ted Cruz ’92 (Photo: Wikipedia)
3. Ted Cruz ’92
A former state solicitor general and Tea Party favorite in the race to replace retiring Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, Cruz scored an upset victory over Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst in the Republican primary runoff before winning convincingly in the general election. Media outlets are already speculating that Cruz could be a presidential candidate in 2016.
 
2. Lloyd Shapley *53
As a young graduate student interested in game theory, Shapley played board games with fellow mathematician John Nash *50. In October, Shapley was selected to receive the Nobel Prize for economics, in recognition of his work on the design of markets and matching theory, and joined Nash on the list of Princeton’s laureates.
Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80 (Photo: Denise Applewhite/Office of Communications)
Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80 (Photo: Denise Applewhite/ Office of Communications)
 
1. Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80
Slaughter, a former Woodrow Wilson School dean and U.S. State Department official who returned to the Princeton faculty last year, wrote a widely-debated Atlantic feature about balancing career and family life. (She also wrote one of PAW’s most-read stories of 2012, reviewing some of the feedback she’d received from alumni.)

PAW editors ranked the top five Princeton sports headlines in an eventful year that included three national championships, seven Olympic medals, and a memorable Saturday at Princeton Stadium. Share your picks and rankings below in the comments.

 

5. Cabral ’12 leaps to victory in NCAA steeplechase

An exceptional year for the men’s track and field team ended with Donn Cabral ’12 doing what no Princeton runner had done in nearly eight decades: With his first-place finish in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the NCAA Championships June 9, he became the first Princeton runner to win an NCAA title since 1934. READ MORE

 

4. Football stuns Harvard with come-from-behind victory

During the Oct. 20 football game against Harvard, 10,823 Princeton fans learned how wide a range of emotions they could feel in a three-and-a-half-hour span. READ MORE

 

3. Princetonians excel at London Olympics

Seven Tiger athletes won medals, including repeat gold-medalist rower Caroline Lind ’06, and Russia men’s basketball coach David Blatt ’81 led his team to bronze. It was the best showing in Princeton’s long history at the summer games. READ MORE

 

2. Field hockey beats North Carolina to win first NCAA title

Before 2012, the field hockey team had a history of November heartbreak. Princeton had reached 11 quarterfinals, five semifinals and two championship games — but it had never won the big one, falling short in the 1996 and ’98 title games. All that changed on a Sunday afternoon in Norfolk, Va. READ MORE

 

1. Men’s squash defeats Trinity for national title

In front of a raucous crowd in a packed Jadwin Gym, the men’s squash team ended Trinity’s 13-year streak as national champions Feb. 19, winning its first national championship since 1993 with a 5–4 victory against No. 1-seeded Trinity. READ MORE

Teri Noel Towe '70 (Photo: Courtesy Teri Noel Towe)
Teri Noel Towe '70 (Photo: Courtesy Teri Noel Towe)
If you recognize Teri Noel Towe ’70 by sight, you may have watched him in the P-rade, riding down Elm Drive in full costume as Royal Governor Jonathan Belcher, Princeton’s Colonial-era benefactor.
 
If you recognize Towe by voice, chances are you are a fan of classical music. A self-proclaimed “Bach crazy” and radio devotee, he took an early interest in music and has been hosting classical programs off and on since his undergraduate days.
 
Next month, Towe will mark the 45th anniversary of his debut on WPRB by hosting a special edition of his current show, Towe on Thursday. (Since the date of the anniversary, Jan. 11, falls on a Friday, he’s billing it as “Towe on Thursday on Friday.”)
 
Towe’s radio career started at Princeton and continued during his law school days at the University of Virginia. When he arrived in New York City to practice law, he hosted a show on WBAI, adopting the pseudonym the “Laughing Cavalier,” a nod to both his law school alma mater and his Princeton degree in art history (it’s the title of a painting by the 17th-century Dutch artist Frans Hals).
 
The current incarnation of Towe’s show began in 2008 when he was asked to fill an open time slot on WPRB’s summer schedule. He joked that he sometimes feels “like a dinosaur at the end of the Cretaceous period,” carefully constructing the theme of each program using handwritten notes, just as he did 45 years ago. But he’s also embraced technology, promoting his show on Facebook and enjoying the wide reach that online streaming audio provides. He’s heard from listeners around the world — in Tokyo, Singapore, Berlin, Paris, London, and Leipzig, to name a few.
 
While the music is Towe’s first love, he also takes pleasure in the role of host, developing playful turns of phrase and alliterative introductions. “I find it immensely enjoyable,” he said.
 

Do you have a nominee for Tiger of the Week? Let us know. All alumni qualify. PAW’s Tiger of the Week is selected by our staff, with help from readers like you.

Bob Callahan ’77, pictured before a match against Yale in 2010. (Photo: Beverly Schaefer)
Bob Callahan ’77, pictured before a match against Yale in 2010. (Photo: Beverly Schaefer)
The men’s squash season at Princeton started in typical fashion, with the Tigers winning their first three matches. But for head coach Bob Callahan ’77, back on the bench for his 32nd season, this year has been anything but typical.
 
In March, weeks after his team won the national championship in a thrilling, come-from-behind match against Trinity, Callahan was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor. Surgery soon followed, along with radiation and chemotherapy.
 
Callahan is receiving treatment in a clinical trial and said that he feels good, though he gets tired more easily. A recent MRI brought some encouraging news, but Callahan also is realistic about the long-term survival rates for brain cancer. The illness, he said, “has certainly made me appreciate what it’s been like to be involved with Princeton squash all these years.”
 
Generations of Princetonians — and others in the squash community — are grateful for Callahan, who was honored with induction in the U.S. Squash Hall of Fame in October. Trinity coach Paul Assaiante introduced Callahan at the ceremony and told the Main Line Media News that the Princeton coach “teaches perfect balance between life and the sport of squash.”
 
The same balance is apparent in Callahan’s view of the University. In a recent conversation with PAW, he spoke excitedly about this year’s team, but he was just as enthusiastic about going to the entrepreneurship club’s recent elevator-pitch competition and reading about Princeton’s new partnerships with peer universities in Brazil, Germany, and Japan.
 
Callahan, who coached each of his five sons at Princeton, also was thrilled to talk about his first grandchild, a baby girl born last month. “Life is funny,” he said of the ups and downs of this year. “We feel very fortunate.”
 

Do you have a nominee for Tiger of the Week? Let us know. All alumni qualify. PAW’s Tiger of the Week is selected by our staff, with help from readers like you.

December 4, 2012

Mustachioed, for a cause

(Photo: John O'Neill ’13)
(Photo: John O'Neill ’13)

A group of Woodrow Wilson School graduate students participated in Movember, a month-long mustache-growing fundraiser that collected donations for men’s health issues, including research and prevention of prostate and testicular cancer. Pictured above are (top row, from left) Mayank Misra, Peter Blair, and Jared W. Duval; (bottom row, from left) Steven Kreeger, Phil Hannam, and Camilo Forero.

Jeff Kreisler '95 stirs up laughs as manager of The Final Edition, a humor website that launched in 2011. (Photo: Courtesy Jeff Kreisler)
Jeff Kreisler '95 stirs up laughs as managing editor of The Final Edition, a humor website that launched in 2011. (Photo: Courtesy Jeff Kreisler)

By Mark F. Bernstein ’83

Anyone who followed this year’s political campaigns could hardly know whether to laugh or cry. Those who wanted to laugh would have done well to log on to The Final Edition, an Internet humor site managed by Jeff Kreisler ’95 that bills itself as “satire with teeth.” Think of it as an edgier version of The Onion.

Items on the website don’t have to be political, although during the election season politics seemed to be a topic that kept on giving. Now that the votes have been counted, The Final Edition is again broadening its range, tackling anything that might be ripe for mockery. On a typical morning in mid-November, for example, the site’s “news feed” included the following stories: “New Second Avenue Subway Will Include Bike Lanes,” “From Here to iTernity: Apple Launches iTombs,” and a zombie advice column (showcasing “the increasingly fashionable ‘Z’ way of life”).

Kreisler is well known for his standup tours and his satirical book, Get Rich Cheating (and was profiled in PAW’s Jan. 19, 2011, humor issue). He joined The Final Edition as a writer in April 2011, shortly after it was founded by Tony Hendra, a former editor of Spy magazine. He was promoted to managing editor that fall.

Kreisler’s role on the website tends to be more administrative, choosing what goes online and where, although he also contributes some writing. He finds greater scope for his creative energies on its weekly podcast, The Final Edition Radio Hour (actually only 30 minutes long), which airs Thursday nights on the Progressive Radio Network. Kreisler co-hosts and introduces reports from the show’s far-flung correspondents. In a recent story, which he wrote and narrated, faux economists debated whether the best way to restart the economy after the collapse of the subprime mortgage bubble is ... to launch another bubble. In Kreisler’s hands this rather ludicrous idea slyly makes a sharper point about an economy in which “[i]rrational speculation and massive overreaching ... enriches everyone who matters.”  

 

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