September 4, 2002
CAMPUS
The university will mark the beginning of the
academic year with Opening Exercises at 2 p.m. Wednesday,
September 11, in the University Chapel. The annual interfaith service
will include an address by President Shirley M. Tilghman. Classes
begin September 12.
After Sept. 11, an exhibition
that explores how the work of 12 regional artists has been influenced
by the tragic events of one year ago, will open Monday, September
9, at the Woodrow Wilson Schools Bernstein Gallery on the
lower level of Robertson Hall. The public is invited to an opening
reception from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, September 13. The exhibition
runs through December 1.
The sixth and final question in the San Francisco
Chronicles August 4 Chron Quiz: Why
is Princeton University looking bad?
A) F. Scott Fitzgerald never graduated like he claimed
B.) Sept. 11 terrorists used fake campus IDs
C). Tiger mascot described as mistreated by animal rightsers
D.) Admission officers hacked into Yales admit
files.
You know the answer.
Kate Bosworth, star of the summer movie
Blue Crush, has deferred her admission to Princeton
until 2003, reported the Boston Herald.
In honor of the passage of legislation establishing
the New Jersey Amistad Commission, a symposium on "The African
American Experience" took place on campus August 28. Following
the conference in Alexander Hall, an official signing ceremony for
the bill was held at the Newark Museum.
Ernst Jan Hogendoorn, a research
assistant in Princetons program on science and global security,
and two other experts have been appointed by U.N. Secretary-General
Kofi Annan to investigate violations of a widely ignored arms
embargo on Somalia, where guns are sold openly in markets and clan
warfare has divided the country, reported the Associated Press.
The panel of experts will be based in Nairobi, Kenya.
Alejandro Portes, a professor of sociology,
received the Distinguished Scholarly Publication Award for his book
Legacies: The Story of the Immigrant Second Generation, and Kieran
Healy *01 won the Dissertation Award for Exchange in Blood and Organs
from the American Sociological Association in August. For
a faculty file on Portes, click here.
Ten students at John Jay College of Criminal
Justice in New York City have been selected as the first recipients
of the Justice Scholarship, which was established by Princeton University
in February 2002 to honor the memory of the public service heroes
of the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center who received academic
training at John Jay College.
David Bradley 03 has been named
a finalist in Intel Corporation's Research Award Contest for Undergraduate
Students. As one of 17 finalists in the annual contest, Bradley
will receive a grant of as much as $2,000 to support his research
in the coming academic year and an opportunity to present his results
to Intel researchers this spring. Intel selected Bradley for his
research proposal titled "Creating Avatars From Faces in Video
in Real Time." Bradley, an electrical engineering major, plans
to develop techniques for detecting the profile view of faces in
pictures.
The Associated Press reported that Professor
of Economics Jose Scheinkman has joined Labor Fronts
Ciro Gomes campaign for president of Brazil.
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news about you, a classmate, or any Princetonian
UPCOMING LECTURES/EVENTS:
(Updated daily, Monday through Friday)
Click
here for Princeton University's web-based calendar of events
September 11, 4:30 p.m. Panel discussion "Legacies
of September 11: Priorities and Challenges". Speakers are:
Anne-Marie Slaughter '80, dean of the Woodrow Wilson School (moderator);
Aaron L. Friedberg, professor of politics and international affairs,
director of the Center of International Studies, and director of
the Research Program in International Security; Jeffrey Herbst
83, professor of politics and international affairs, and chair
of the Department of Politics; Frederick P. Hitz 61,
lecturer of public and international affairs, and director of the
Project on International Intelligence (CIS); Alan B. Krueger,
Bendheim Professor of Economics and Public Policy, professor of
economics and public affairs, director of the Survey Research Center,
and director of the Industrial Relations Section; Kathleen
McNamara, assistant professor of politics and international affairs.
Dodds Auditorium (P.U. ID only), Bowls 1, 2, and 016 Robertson Hall
(general admission for simulcast). Sponsored by the Woodrow Wilson
School.
COMMEMORATIVE ASSEMBLY
Wednesday, September 11, 2002
7:00 p.m. on Cannon Green
You are invited to attend a commemorative assembly to mark
the anniversary of the tragic events of September 11, 2001.
The program will be held on Wednesday, September 11, at
7:00 p.m. on Cannon Green (or in the Chapel in case of inclement
weather) and will include remarks by President Shirley Tilghman,
reflections by members of the Princeton University faculty,
musical selections, and readings. All members of the university
and surrounding communities are invited.
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September 13, 7:30 p.m. "Born Free 2002,"
an outdoor jazz concert on Cannon Green. An ensemble of international
musicians, and composers continue their cultural outreach tour in
the U.S. to celebrate the birthday of Jakarta.
September 17, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Khalil Shikaki,
Director of the Palestinian Center for Policy & Survey Research,
Professor of political science at Birzeit University: "Israel
Palestine Peace Process: What Went Wrong and Can It Be Righted?"
WWS Robertson Hall, Bowl 1 (Program in Near Eastern Studies)
September 19, 4:30 p.m. James Fleming, professor
of law at Fordham University: "The New Originalism". Friend
Center 008. (Alpheus T. Mason Lecture Series, James Madison Program
in American Ideals and Institutions)
September 19, 7 p.m. Sylvia Nasar, author of A
Beautiful Mind: A Biography of John Forbes Nash, Jr. Winner of the
Nobel Prize in Economics, 1994 and coeditor of The Essential
John Nash, appear at the U-Store.
September 19, 8 p.m. Indian classical dance concert
featuring Bala Deci Chandrashekar, senior disciple of the Bharata
Nrithyam expert Dr. Padma Subrahmanyam. Frist Theater, #301 Frist
Campus Center.
September 20, 5:30 p.m. Carl A. Fields Center dedication
ceremony.
September 26, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Kanan Makiya of Brandeis
University: "Imagining Jerusalem in the 7th Century".
McCosh 64 (Program in Near Eastern Studies)
September 25, 4:30 p.m. Dr. J. William Frost of Swarthmore
College: "Quakers and the Search for Political Realism in the
20th Century". Bowl 016, Robertson Hall. (Woodrow Wilson School
and Center for the Study of Religion)
September 25, 4:30 William F. Laurance of the Smithsonian
Tropical Research Institute: "Ecosystem Decay in Amazonian
Forest Fragments". 10 Guyot Hall. Sponsored by the Department
of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology.
September 26, 8 p.m. American String Quartet playing
Quartets of Haydn, Quintets and Sextets of Mozart and Brahms. Joseph
Kalichstein, piano, James Dunham, viola. Richardson Auditorium.
$26 and $33. For tickets, call 609-258-5000.
September 27, 4:30 p.m. Seamus Deane, University of
Notre Dame, "Newman and Joyce: Converting the Empire".
Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public.
(Fund for Irish Studies)
September 28, 8:00 p.m. Dance performance by guest
dance artist Ralph Lemon. Hagan Dance Studio, 185 Nassau Street.
Free and open to the public.
September 29, 4 p.m. Princeton Symphony Orchestra
- A Suite Afternoon. Bartok: Dance Suite. Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto
No.3. Stravinsky: Suite from The Firebird. Vladimir Ovchinnikov,
piano. Richardson Auditorium. $36,$32,$24,$10. For tickets call
609-497-0020.
September 30, 11:45 a.m. - 1 p.m. David J. Karoly,
professor of meteorology and head of the Department of Mathematics
and Statisticsat Monash University: "IPPC Climate Change Assessment:
Is It Science?" 300 Wallace Hall. ( Science, Technology, and
Environmental Policy, Program in "STEP") Lunch is provided.
September 30, 4:30 p.m. Public Presentation: HOUSE
[raw]: "Choreography, Ideas, & the Internet: The Web as
a Choreographic Tool." Hagan Dance Studio, 185 Nassau Street.
Free and open to the public.
September 30, 4:30 p.m. Dr. Shahab Ahmed, junior fellow
of the Harvard Society of Fellows:"The Contested Authenticity
of 'Early Muslim Tradition' and the Memory of the Prophet in Early
Islam." McCosh 64. (Program in Near Eastern Studies)
September 30, 4:30 p.m. Patrick Geary of the University
of California, Los Angeles: "Women at the Beginning: Gendered
Representations of Origins from Antiquity to the Middle Ages."
48 McCosh Hall. ( Program in Medieval Studies)
October 1, 4:30 p.m. Sculptor Chakaia Booker, Room
219, 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Program in Visual
Arts)
October 2, 7 p.m., Anthony Lane, film and literary critic
for The New Yorker magazine, author of Nobody's Perfect: Selected
Writings from The New Yorker, appearing at the U-Store.
October 4, 4:30 p.m. Poet Tom Paulin reads from his
work. Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the
public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
October 5-9, Documentary Film Festival, sponsored by the
Spanish and Portuguese department. for more information:
http://www.princeton.edu/~spo/
October 8, 8 p.m. Ariel Dorfman, a professor of Literature
and Latin American Studies, Duke University, Who are the real
barbarians: A Latin-American Perspective. Location TBA
October 9, 8 p.m. Jared Diamond, a professor of physiology,
School of Medicine, UCLA, Collapses of Ancient Societies and
their Lessons for Today. Location TBA
October 10, 7 p.m., Nell Irvin Painter, distinguished American
Historian, Edwards Professor of American History at Princeton, author
of Southern History Across the Color Line, appearing at the
U-Store.
October 11, 4:30 p.m. Novelist Joseph O'Neill reads
from his work. Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open
to the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
October 15, 4:30 p.m. Filmmaker Abby Child, Film Theater,
185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Program in Visual Arts)
October 16, 7 p.m., James McPherson, eminent Civil War
Historian, George Henry Davis '86 Professor of History at Princeton,
author of Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam 1862, appearing
at the U-Store.
October 18, 4:30 p.m. Tom Devine, University of Aberdeen,
"Contrasting Migration to the USA: Irish Catholics and Scots
in the 19th & Early 20th Centuries". Stewart Film Theater
at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
October 23, 4:30 p.m. "Juan Carlos Onetti: El
soñador discreto" delivered by Juan José Saer
at the Joseph Henry House. (Spanish and Portuguese department)
October 24, 4:30 p.m. Poetry reading by Juan José
Saer at Maclean House (Spanish and Portuguese department)
October 24, 7 p.m., Victor Brombert, Princeton Scholar,
Henry Putnam University Professor of Romance and Comparative Literature
emeritus at Princeton, author of Trains of Thought: Memories
of a Stateless Youth, appearing at the U-Store.
October 27, 3 p.m., David Allen Sibley, famous naturalist,
birder, and artist, author of Sibley's Birding Basics, appearing
at the U-Store.
November 8, 4:30 p.m. Lucy McDiarmid, Villanova University,
"Anger, Apologies, Statues: The Form of Cultural Controversy".
Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public.
(Fund for Irish Studies)
November 12, 4:30 p.m. Abstract painter Juan Usle,
Room 219, 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Program in
Visual Arts)
November 14-17 & 21-23 Melancholy Play,
written by Sarah Ruhl and directed by Davis McCallum; Matthews Acting
Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
November 16, 8:00 p.m. Daniel Gwirtzman Dance Company.
Performance and discussion. Hagan Dance Studio, 185 Nassau Street.
Free and open to the public.
November 21-23Instituting Hispanismo (Spanish and
Portuguese department)
November 22, 4:30 p.m. Dramatist Tom Kilroy, "Contemporary
Irish Theatre". Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free
and open to the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
December 4, 8 pm Vincent Courtillot, Université
Paris 7, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris, et Institut Universitaire
de France, Mass extinctions in the Phanerozoic: a single cause
and if yes which? Location TBA
December 9, 4:30 p.m. "Argentina Today"
deliverd by Carlos Altamirano at McCormick Hall. (Spanish and Portuguese
department)
December 11, 8:00 p.m. Student dance performance.
Guest choreographer Jessica Lange and guest choreographer Stephen
Welsh, Hagan Dance Studio, 185 Nassau Street.
December 11, 8:00 p.m. Dance performance. End of
semester showings of student work, Hagan Dance Studio, 185 Nassau
Street. Free and open to the public
January 9-12, 2003 Apollinaire's the Breasts of
Tiresias, senior thesis production, directed by Matthieu Boyd
03. Matthews Acting Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check
here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
February 7, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Nancy Curtin, Fordham
University, "The Reinvention of Irish Masculinity in the 18th
century. Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to
the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
February 12-13, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Jonathan Glover, a
professor of medical law and ethics at King's College London, Interpretation
in Psychiatry and the Person and the Illness. Location TBA
February 13-16 & 20-22, 2003 Shakespeare's Measure
for Measure, senior thesis production, directed by Chris Wendell
03 . Matthews Acting Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check
here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
February 14, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Irish studies at Princeton.Panel
I: The Backwards Look with Brendan Kane, Natasha Tessone, and Abby
Bender. Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to
the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
February 14-15 2003, 8:00 p.m. Student dance performance.
Guest choreographer Jessica Lange and guest choreographer Stephen
Welsh. Richardson Auditorium
February 14-15, 2003, 8:00 p.m. Spring Dance Festival,
Richardson Auditorium.
February 21, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Irish studies at Princeton.
Panel II: Into Modernity with Howard Keeley, Barry McCrea, and Kimberly
Bohman. Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to
the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
February 28, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Joep Leerssen, Harvard
University, "How Time Passes in Joyce's Dublin". Stewart
Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Fund
for Irish Studies)
March 6-9, & 12-14, 2003 Stoppard's Travesties,
senior thesis production with Ben Beckley 02, Jeff Kitrosser
03, and Micah Baskir 03, directed by Sujan Trivedi 03.
Matthews Acting Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
March 7, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Len Graham and Padraigin
ni Uallachain will introduce and sing "Songs from a Hidden
Ulster". Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open
to the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
March 27-30, 2003 PETER MORRIS' MARGE. senior thesis
production with Ashley Frankson 03, directed by Sarah Rodriguez
03 . Matthews Acting Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check
here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
March 28, 2003, 4:30 p.m. LAWRENCE TAYLOR, National
University of Ireland at Maynooth, "Irish Braids: The Africanisation
of Moore Street". Stewart Film Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free
and open to the public. (Fund for Irish Studies)
April 4, 2003, 4:30 p.m. Playwright Marina Carr, Reading
from her work and in conversation with Michael Cadden. Stewart Film
Theater at 185 Nassau St. Free and open to the public. (Fund for
Irish Studies)
April 17-20 & 24-26, 2003 LACHIUSA'S THE WILD
PARTY, senior thesis production, directed by Natasha Badillo 03.
Matthews Acting Studio at 8:00 p.m., 185 Nassau. Check here
for updates. Advance tickets for all productions may be purchased
at the Frist
Ticket Office, or at the door on performance nights.
Princeton Art Museum
Princeton area events
New York metropolitan area
events
Washington DC events
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Princeton area events
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map
Princeton
Art Museum
Public tours, Saturdays, 2 p.m.
Exhibits on campus
Main
Gallery at Firestone Library
Woodrow
Wilson at Princeton: The Path to the Presidency
May 5, 2002 - October 27, 2002
Milberg
Gallery for the Graphic Arts at Firestone Library
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Charles Risdon Day,
after the painting by Frederic Edwin Church
"Niagara (The Great Fall, Niagara)" (Chromolithograph,
published in London by Day & Son)
1857; Graphic Arts Division
Gift of Leonard L. Milberg, Class of 1953 |
Heroic Pastorals: Images of the American Landscape. Through
October 6.
K.K. Merker: Master Printer. An exhibit celebrating the life
of Kim Merker, founder of the Stone Wall Press, the Windover Press,
and the Univesity of Iowa Center for the Book. Through October 6.
Seeley
G. Mudd Manuscript Library
Take a Walk Along Nassau Street: Celebrating the Classes of 1942,
1952, 1962, 1977, and 1982
Paix
et Liberté: Posters That Go BANG! Contentious political
posters are common to many nations, but few are more explosive than
a selection of French affiches on view at Mudd through February
1. The collection can be viewed in its entirety on the Web: http://infoshare1.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/mudd/online_ex/paix/
The exhibition showcases the work of the French anti-Communist
organization Paix et Liberté (Peace and Liberty), which endeavored
to combat what it regarded as lies contained in Communist posters.
Founded by French politician Jean-Paul David in 1950 against the
backdrop of a successful poster campaign by the French Communist
Party, Paix et Liberté fought fire with fire by exploiting
the themes, language, and symbols of its opponents' posters.
Online
exhibits at the Library
Bernstein
Gallery, lower level, Robertson Hall "After
September 11," an exhibition that explores how the work of
12 regional artists has been influenced by the events surrounding
September 11. The show ends December 1, 2002.
Photo Exhibit: Ancient Greek ruins, from September 16-25. This
exhibit by Emry Guzelsu, features the archaeological discoveries
at Trachia, Greece. The ruins date back to the rule of Alexander
the Great's father. Frist Campus Center, 100 level.
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New York area events:
Being Claudine, a comedy directed by I-Fan Quirk 91.
Claudine Bloomberg, a young aspiring actess who has been terribly
unlucky in her pursuit of love, fame, and fortune, is at the center
of this urban tale of human relations. Showing at the Screening
Room, 54 Varick Street, New York, NY. For more information, phone
Wellington Love at 212-366-4992.
New York Networking Nights Needs Space
New York Networking Nights offers an opportunity for New York area
Princeton alumni to learn about career issues and build their own
career networks. We meet monthly, usually Monday, and draw between
50 and 70
Tigers of all fields and career stages. We need to find Manhattan
spaces that can hold our large group. Ideal
spaces are:
-theatres
-art galleries
-offices with large conference areas
If you are willing to donate space for a night please get in touch
with Kelly Perl *93 at kperl@alumni.princeton.edu.
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Washington DC area events
Nothing is listed at the moment.
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Other regions
Los Angeles events:
Nothing is listed at the moment.
San Francisco events:
Nothing is listed at the moment.
Send
us news about your events.
ALUMNI
Robert H. Waterston 65, a leader
of the Human Genome Project, announced in July that he would step
down as chair of the Washington Universitys Department of
Genetics and plans to take over the leadership of the Department
of Genome Sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle, reported
the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Waterston founded Washington Universitys
Genome Sequencing Center a decade ago.
The SEED Public Charter School, a public boarding
school in Washington, D.C., founded by Raj Vinakota 93
and Eric Adler, was featured recently on PBSs Life 360 show
"Leaving Home," that aired on August 29. Oprah also talked
about the school on her "Million Dollar Extravaganza"
episode that aired on September 2.
At Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) 18th
annual Awards of Excellence black-tie gala on September 14 in Chicago,
Queen Noor (formerly known as Lisa Halaby 73 ) will
be honored for her contributions to improve the lives of children.
She will be recognized as a humanitarian activist for programs in
Jordan, the Middle East, and worldwide that improve the quality
of life for mothers and their children, especially in the areas
of health care, education, environmental quality, and peace building.
Richard Greenberg 80s Take
Me Out, a play about the great American pastime that
touches on issues of sexuality and racism, according to the
Associated Press, had a successful run in London this summer and
opens in New York at the Papp Theater on September 5. The play tells
a complex narrative of friendship and betrayal that even manages
to say something substantial about American democracy.
Composer David Rakowski *96 (Ph.D.
in music) was a runner-up for a Pulitzer Prize in the Letters, Drama,
and Music category.
Artist Christopher Janney 73 created "Maritime Sound:
An Urban Musical Instrument" in a New Haven parking garage.
The interactive artwork blends sounds and lights. It consists
of two blue aluminum cases hanging in front of the elevators in
the 555 Long Wharf Drive parking garage in New Haven, Connecticut.
Seven motion sensors are placed equidistant on each unit. Waving
a hand in front of a sensor sets off a series of sounds, including
crickets, seagulls and instrumental music, reported the Hartford
Courant.
Former Newark Alliance Executive Director
Dale G. Caldwell 82 has been named assistant commissioner
at the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs.
Donald J. Sutherland 53, the
founder and chief executive of one of the first leveraged buyout
firms, Quincy Partners of Glen Head, New York, died August 11, reported
the New York Times. He was 71.
An attorney and law professor, Jim Marshall
72 is running against Chuck Byrd, Joe Lester, and Sig
Dayan in the Democratic primary for the U.S. House of Representatives
in Georgia's third district.
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SPORTS
Mens basketball 6-1 on tour of
Spain
An end of summer trip to Spain proved bountiful for the mens
basketball team, which only lost once during its seven-game, 12-day
tour of the country. Princeton took the court against seven local
teams and played by the local rules, including utilizing a 24-second
clock and playing three periods.
The tour marked the comeback of Andre Logan 04, who missed
much of last season because of a knee injury, and Spencer Gloger
04, who had not played for the Tigers since the 1999-00 season
after transferring to UCLA and then back to Princeton.
Gloger started strong, scoring 23 points in the second game of the
tour, which the Tigers won 113-102 against Rayet Guadalajara in
Siguenza, Spain. According to the athletics department, Princeton
has not scored more than 100 points in a regular season game since
the 1970-71 season against Yale.
Logan scored a basket late in the sixth game of the tour to give
the Tigers a 65-63 win over Cornella. Sophomores Will Venable, who
led the Tigers scoring in two games, and Judson Wallace, and Ray
Robins 03 also played key roles in Princetons victories,
which saw contributions from most of the 11 players who made the
trip. Freshmen guards Scott Greenman and Michael Kawalek did not
travel with the team.
We have guys that can make plays whether theyre in for
40 minutes or 40 seconds, said Tiger coach John Thompson 88
after the tours finale. "I have confidence in the guys
that are in the game. I think that this group has a lot of confidence
in each other and understands how they must play.
In the only loss, Princeton fell behind 33-9 in the opening period
to C.B. Tarragona, which went on to win 86-63. Practice begins October
15, and the season starts November 22-23 at the Sooner Invitational
at Oklahoma as the Tigers open with UC-Irvine.
WBUD AM 1260 new radio home for Tigers
Its a new frequency for Tiger sports.
Beginning with the September 21 football game at Lehigh, WBUD AM
1260 takes over as Princeton athletics flagship radio outlet. The
move comes after the company that owns the schools former
flagship station WHWH began a realignment of its stations, according
to the athletics department.
WBUD will be home to all of Princeton's football and men's lacrosse
games and the primary outlet for men's basketball. Ed Benkin will
be the play-by-play voice for Tiger football and men's lacrosse,
while Tom McCarthy will do the play-by-play for men's basketball.
Jerry Price, Princetons director of athletic communications,
will serve as color commentator for all three sports.
All broadcasts can also be heard on the athletics department web
page (www.goprincetontigers.com).
Athletics department announces bus trips to select
road games
The Princeton Varsity Club is organizing two bus trips this fall
to away football games.
The first trip is to Lehigh for Princeton's first game of the season
on September 21. The second trip is to Yale on November 16. Buses
will depart and return to Jadwin Gym that same day.
The cost is $40 per seat for Princeton Football Association or Princeton
Varsity Club members and $50 per seat for everyone else. The price
includes round trip transportation and a ticket to the game.
Final details and departure times are being worked out and will
be passed along two weeks prior to the first trip. Seats are available
on a first come basis. If you have any questions or would like to
reserve your seat by phone, call Brie Galicinao 02 in the
Office of Athletic Development at 609-258-6696. You may also reserve
your seat by sending a check to (please include a phone number and
trip you want to reserve):
Office of Athletic Development
Princeton University
P.O. Box 71
Jadwin Gymnasium
Princeton, NJ 08544
Ross Tucker 01 to start for NFLs
Redskins
Former Tiger offensive linemen Ross Tucker 01 generated plenty
of ink this summer at the Washington Redskins training camp. The
only steady performer on the offensive line this summer, Tucker
ended up earning the starting left guard position just a year after
he went undrafted by 31 NFL teams.
Tucker played in his first NFL on December 2, 2001, against the
Dallas Cowboys and contributed to the Redskins special teams and
as a reserve lineman last season. He is listed at 64
and 316 lbs. on the teams roster.
Tucker and the Redskins open their season at home against the Arizona
Cardinals on Sunday, September 8.
Mike Bois 97 joins men's hockey coaching
staff
Mike Bois '97, a member of the 1995 Princeton men's hockey team
that reached the ECAC finals, will be back behind the bench this
season as an assistant coach with his former squad.
Bois returns to Princeton after taking a year off from coaching.
He had served on head coach Len Quesnelle 88's staff from
1999-2001. Bois, who studied economics, won Princeton's Hobey Baker
Award in 1994 as the team's top freshman. In 95 career games, Boise
scored 64 points (26 goals, 38 assists).
The Tigers open the season against the US under-18 national team
on October 26. The regular begins on November 1, when North Dakota
visits Princeton.
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