Display paints vivid portrait of graduate life

    

Architect Ralph Adams Cram, the "high priest" of American Collegiate Gothic, applied his great skills to the design of the Graduate School. Construction began in the fall of 1910. Woodrow Wilson's successor, John Grier Hibben, dedicated the complex on Oct. 22, 1913, with many distinguished guests present.


 

The evolution of graduate studies at the University -- from a time when master's degrees were awarded for good citizenship to the diverse and competitive academic programs of today -- is chronicled in a new exhibition at the Firestone Memorial Library.

Entitled "A Community of Scholars: Graduate Education at Princeton," the exhibition opens Sunday, Nov. 19, and runs until April 8. It is part of the yearlong observance of the centennial of the Graduate School.

James Axtell, the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Humanities at the College of William and Mary, will inaugurate the exhibition with a public lecture Sunday, Nov. 19 (see related story on this page).

The exhibition includes more than 100 photographs, documents and artifacts, drawn primarily from the University Archives. Together, they present a vivid portrait of graduate life at Princeton, in both its intellectual and social aspects, as well as a cross-section of graduate students who have left an indelible mark on the world at large. The University's graduate alumni include no fewer than 12 Nobel laureates, the first president of South Korea, Syngman Rhee, five presidents of Princeton University, and such notables as Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Thornton Wilder, astronomer Henry Norris Russell and syndicated columnist George Will.

Brief biographies of distinguished alumni are accompanied wherever possible by their student photographs and items that symbolize their interests: an autographed baseball from Ted Williams in the case of George Will; a slide rule and a piece of an Iraqi SCUD missile in the case of Norman Augustine, father of the Pentagon's Patriot missile program; a first edition of "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" in the case of author Thornton Wilder; and an observation notebook in the case of Henry Norris Russell.

The exhibition also provides important insights into the genesis of the Graduate College, dedicated in 1913, and the struggle between Woodrow Wilson, Princeton's president, who wanted to build it in a central location, and Andrew Fleming West, the first dean of the Graduate School, who insisted on a secluded spot, far from the hubbub of undergraduate life. Wilson ultimately lost this battle, but went on to serve as governor of New Jersey and president of the United States.

Visitors will have an opportunity to study the layout of the Graduate College, in all its Gothic glory, and to examine photographs of its distinctive features, including the "Great West Window," with its beautiful stained glass; the 67-bell carillon in Cleveland Memorial Tower; and the whimsical carvings that adorn the beams high above Procter Hall, representing University trustees from the 1900s.

The exhibition also explores the changing traditions of the Graduate School, where students at the Graduate College were once expected to appear at dinner in academic gowns, as well as the changing face of its students. In 1961, a woman was admitted for the first time as a regular student, and in 1979, the Black Graduate Caucus was established, reflecting the growing diversity of the student body.

Other items of interest in the exhibition include the diploma of James Madison, Princeton's first graduate student and fourth president of the United States; letters from students during World War I, recounting their overseas experiences; and a photograph of Albert Einstein arriving in the United States in 1933.

"'A Community of Scholars' bears witness to the importance of graduate education at Princeton University and its role in human advancement in a wide range of disciplines, despite the challenges inherent in an exhibition of this kind," said lead curator Dan Linke, "In the same way that nuclear physicists define and detect sub-atomic particles through inference and indirect observation, we hope that this exhibit will allow an understanding of graduate education, even though much of what is accomplished there remains within the confines of the mind, and the remainder as words on paper."

"A Community of Scholars" is located in Firestone Library's main exhibition gallery and is open to the public without charge from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, noon to 5 p.m. weekends and until 8 p.m. Wednesdays. For additional information concerning the exhibition, contact the library at 258-6345.



November 13, 2000
Vol. 90, No. 9
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Contents

Big dreams makes a big difference : Project 55
Housing vouchers work, researchers report in study

UW drive kicks off
Mentoring program seeks women
Grant targets contemporary theology

Rewards of teaching inspire students
Educators to discuss the meaning of their work

Display paints vivid portrait of graduate life
Lecture launches exhibit and book

Calendar of events
Spotlight / People
Nassau notes


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Editor: Ruth Stevens
Staff writer: Yvonne Chiu Hays
Calendar editor: Carolyn Geller
Contributing writers: Karin Dienst, Marilyn Marks, Steven Schultz
Photographer: Denise Applewhite
Design: Mahlon Lovett,
Laurel Masten Cantor
Web edition: Mahlon Lovett


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