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N A S S A U N O T E S
Lecture focuses on nuclear nonproliferation
The Challenge of Nuclear Non-proliferation After Sept.
11" is the title of a talk to be presented on Monday,
April 29. George Perkovich, senior associate at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, will speak at
4:30 p.m. in Bowl 1, Robertson Hall.
Perkovich joined Carnegie in
January after serving as deputy director for programs and
director of the Secure World Program of the W. Alton Jones
Foundation from 1990 to 2001. His expertise includes arms
control, nonproliferation of nuclear weapons, U.S. foreign
policy and national security, Asia and Iraq.
Perkovich is the author of "India's
Nuclear Bomb" (University of California Press 2001, updated
edition), which provides a comprehensive survey of how India
obtained its nuclear capability. His lecture is sponsored by
the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International
Affairs.
Italian film festival planned
Four Italian films will be shown Monday through Thursday,
April 29-May 2, in the Film and Performance Theatre
at the Frist Campus Center.
The films will be screened at 7:30
each evening, and all have English subtitles. They are
intended to represent the diversity of styles and motifs in
the new Italian cinema.
Here are the films and their
directors:
"Sun in the Eyes" by Andrea Porporati (2000), April
29;
"The Manuscript of the Prince" (2001) by Roberto
Andò, April 30; he will attend the screening and lead
a discussion following it;
"Jurij" (2000) by Stefano Gabrini, May 1; and
"Rentrée" (2001) by Franco Angeli, May 2.
The film festival is sponsored by
Italia Cinema, the Frist Campus Center, the Department of
French and Italian and the Film Studies Committee. For more
information, call 258-4502.
Goldston describes science of fusion
Robert Goldston, professor of astrophysical sciences and
director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, will
deliver this year's Plasma Science and Technology
Distinguished Speaker Lecture on Tuesday, April
30.
He will discuss "The
Cross-Disciplinary Science of Fusion Energy" at 7:30 p.m. in
105 Computer Science Building.
Goldston will describe several
fascinating puzzles in the science of fusion plasmas that
relate in fundamental ways to solar flares and
magnetospheric substorms, to energetic cosmic rays and the
very high temperature of the solar corona, and to accretion
disks that feed black holes and neutron stars.
The lecture is sponsored by the
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and the School and
Engineering and Applied Science.
Panelists to discuss media and war on terror
A panel of media representatives will discuss "The Media
and the 'War on Terror'" at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, April
30, in Dodds Auditorium, Robertson Hall.
The panel will address how various
publications are covering the U.S. campaign against
terrorism, explain principles that have driven the coverage
and survey the general media landscape since Sept. 11.
Participants will be: Steve Coll,
managing editor of The Washington Post; Richard Starr,
managing editor of The Weekly Standard; and Katrina vanden
Heuvel, editor of The Nation and a 1981 Princeton graduate.
The moderator will be Andrew Kohut, director of the Pew
Research Center for the People and the Press.
The panel is sponsored by the
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
and the Students for Informed Dialogue.
Genetic pioneer to give three talks
Sydney Brenner, one of the past century's leading
pioneers in genetics and molecular biology, will present
three lectures on campus Tuesday through Thursday, April
30-May 2.
Brenner, currently a distinguished
professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La
Jolla, Calif., will address the theme "Biology After the
Genome Project."
The specific lectures and their
titles will be: "From Data to Knowledge," April 30; "Does E.
Coli Understand Itself?," May 1; and "The Architecture of
Biological Complexity," May 2. All will begin at 8 p.m. in
McCosh 10.
Among his many notable discoveries,
Brenner established the existence of messenger RNA and
demonstrated how the order of amino acids in proteins is
determined. He also conducted pioneering work with the
roundworm, a model organism now widely used to study
genetics. His research with Caenorhabditis elegans, known to
developmental biologists and geneticists as "the worm,"
garnered insights into aging, nerve cell function and
controlled cell death. He and Genome Project scientists John
Sulston and Robert Waterston this spring were named winners
of a $1 million Dan David Prize in life sciences for their
work with the worm.
Most recently, Brenner has been
studying vertebrate gene and genome evolution. His work in
this area has uncovered new ways of analyzing gene
sequences, which has resulted in a new understanding of the
evolution of vertebrates.
Before joining the Salk Institute,
Brenner was director of research and president of the
Molecular Sciences Institute in Berkeley, Calif., and
director of the Unit of Molecular Genetics at the Medical
Research Council in Cambridge, England.
His talks are designated as Louis
Clark Vanuxem Lectures and are part of the University's
Public Lectures Series. They will be Webcast; for viewing
information, visit <www.princeton.edu/WebMedia/>.
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Senior thesis show
"Stephanie," a photograph from Ann Waddell's senior
thesis show, "College Girls," will be on display Tuesday
through Saturday, April 30-May 4, at the Lucas
Gallery, 185 Nassau St. Waddell is displaying her work in
the Program in Visual Arts along with videos by senior Jane
Han. The opening reception for the show will be from 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesday.
New book is topic of Novak lecture
Michael Novak will discuss his new book, "On Two Wings:
Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding," at
4:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 1, in 104 Computer Science
Building.
Novak is the George Frederick
Jewett Scholar in Religion, Philosophy and Public Policy at
the American Enterprise Institute, where he also is director
of social and political studies. His research interests
include religion, business, culture, politics, ethnicity and
sports.
Novak is the author, co-author and
editor of several books, including "On Cultivating Liberty:
Reflections on Moral Ecology" (1999) and "The Hemisphere of
Liberty: A Philosophy of the Americas" (1990).
The lecture is sponsored by the
James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions
through its Alpheus Mason Lectures in Political Thought and
Constitutional Governance.
Celebrate spring a Fristfest May 2
Members of the University community are invited to
celebrate spring at the second annual Fristfest beginning at
4 p.m. Thursday, May 2. Activities on the inside and
outside of the Frist Campus Center will feature food, live
entertainment, games, DJs, giveaways and many surprises.
Carnival concessions will be
available on the South Lawn from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. and from 8
p.m. to 1 a.m. with free cotton candy, popcorn, beverages
and $1 hot dogs. Dinner will be served on the North Lawn
from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. featuring beef and chicken fajitas,
sausage and peppers, vegetable and chicken stir-fry,
burgers, salads, cookies, soft pretzels and ice cream.
For more information on Fristfest,
including a complete schedule of entertainment and menus,
visit the Frist Campus Center Web site at
<www.princeton.edu/~frist/>.
'The Kids Concert' presented May 2
The Arts Council of Princeton and the Composers Ensemble
of Princeton University will present "The Kids Concert" at 7
p.m. Thursday, May 2, in Taplin Auditorium, Fine
Hall.
The free concert will include
original compositions targeted to children in grades K-8.
Audience participation is encouraged. For more information,
call 924-8777.
Leone to discuss role of progressives
Richard Leone, president of the Century Foundation, will
present a lecture titled "Shaping the Debate: Can
Progressives Get Back in the Game?" at 4:30 p.m. Thursday,
May 2, in Bowl 1, Robertson Hall.
Leone will begin his lecture with a
brief review of the political battleground over ideas since
the 1960s, with a special emphasis on the role of
conservative and liberal policy institutions. He will
discuss these institutions by looking at key policy areas,
such as Social Security and taxes.
The Century Foundation (formerly
the 20th Century Fund) is a public policy research
foundation dedicated to questioning the assumptions behind
sweeping policy claims on issues such as economic
inequality, population aging and the public's discontent
with government and politics.
Leone is a Princeton graduate
alumnus, having earned his master of public affairs in 1965
and his Ph.D. in 1969. He served as commissioner and then
chair of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey from
1988 to 1994.
The lecture is sponsored by the
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International
Affairs.
Conference set on post-Sept. 11 politics
A conference on "The New Era in World Politics After
Sept. 11" is planned for 12:30 to 5:30 p.m. Friday, May
3, in Dodds Auditorium, Robertson Hall.
The editors of World Politics, a
journal of international relations published by Princeton's
Center of International Studies, have invited five
distinguished scholars to discuss the potential consequences
of the events of last fall -- to identify the crucial
questions and issues that arise from the attacks and the
response. The speakers will begin to define the parameters
of a more extended debate on how world politics as a whole
may be altered by the Sept. 11 tragedy and its aftermath,
how those and similar events should be analyzed, and what
strategies might be followed in such scholarship.
The
conference program is as follows:
12:30 p.m. -- "Sept. 11 and U.S.-Russian
Relations," Jack Matlock, the John Weinberg/Goldman Sachs
and Co. Visiting Professor of Public and International
Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School.
1:30 p.m. -- "The Trump Card: Osama bin Laden's Use
of Palestine in Historical Perspective," Michael Doran,
assistant professor of Near Eastern studies at
Princeton.
2:30 p.m. -- "Sept. 11 and the Resurgence of Religion
in International Affairs," Daniel Philpott, assistant
professor of government and international studies at the
University of Notre Dame.
3:30 p.m. -- "American Asian Policy and the New Era
in World Politics," Lowell Dittmer, professor of political
science at the University of California-Berkeley.
4:30 p.m. -- "Islam and Authoritarianism," Steven
Fish, associate professor of political science at the
University of California-Berkeley.
The conference is open to the public and sponsored by the
Center of International Studies, the Woodrow Wilson School
of Public and International Affairs and the Council on
Regional Studies.
Lecture inaugurates Wilson exhibition
What would Woodrow Wilson have thought of Princeton
today?
James Axtell, the William Kenan Jr.
Professor of Humanities at the College of William and Mary,
will try to answer that question in a lecture titled "The
Dream Realized: President Wilson on Princeton Today" at 3:30
p.m. Sunday, May 5, in Betts Auditorium, School of
Architecture.
The lecture will inaugurate an
exhibition at Firestone Library, "Woodrow Wilson at
Princeton: The Path to the Presidency" (see related story on
this page). It will be followed at 4:30 p.m. by an opening
reception in the library's Exhibition Gallery.
Axtell's interests include the
history of American higher education. He was commissioned to
help update the authoritative history of the Graduate
School, "The Princeton Graduate School: A History," during
the school's centennial two year ago. He currently is
working on a history of Princeton in the 20th century.
The event is sponsored by the
Friends of the Princeton University Library.
McCarter Theatre
Laura Kenny (from left) plays "Mathurine," Adam Stein
plays "Don Juan" and Mary Bacon plays "Charlotte" in
McCarter Theatre's world premiere production of "Don Juan"
by Moliere, translated, adapted and directed by Stephen
Wadsworth. This once-banned classic runs April 30 through
May 19. For more information or to purchase tickets,
contact the McCarter box office at 258-2787 or http://www.mccarter.org.
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April 29, 2002
Vol. 91, No. 25
previous
archives
next
Contents
Page one
Princeton biologists
track down central cause of lupus
Q&A Breidenthal:
Reflection should be part of college life
Inside
Stan Allen selected
as dean of School of Architecture
Forum encourages
frank talk about difficult ethical
issues
Exhibition
chronicles Wilson from student to professor to
president
Sections
People
By the
numbers
Nassau
Notes
Calendar
of events
The Bulletin is published weekly during the academic year, except
during University breaks and exam weeks, by the Office of
Communications. Second class postage paid at Princeton. Permission is
given to adapt, reprint or excerpt material from the Bulletin for use
in other media.
Subscriptions. The Bulletin is distributed free to faculty,
staff and students. Others may subscribe to the Bulletin for $14 for
the spring term (half price for current Princeton parents and people
over 65). Send a check to Office of Communications, Stanhope Hall,
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544.
Deadline. In general, the copy deadline for
each issue is the Friday 10 days in advance of the Monday cover date.
The deadline for the Bulletin that covers May 20&endash;June 2 is
Friday, May 10. A complete publication schedule is available
at deadlines
or by calling (609) 258-3601.
Editor: Ruth Stevens
Calendar editor: Carolyn Geller
Staff writers: Jennifer Greenstein Altmann, Steven Schultz
Contributing writers: Marilyn Marks, Evelyn Tu
Photographer: Denise Applewhite
Design: Mahlon Lovett, Laurel Masten Cantor, Megan
Peterson
Web edition: Mahlon Lovett
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