January 24, 2001: Notebook

Faculty File: Hack and Crack

New professors named: Faculty promotions and reappointments announced

Orchestra and Jazz Ensemble play rarely performed Duke Ellington number

In Memoriam

Big dance for a big event: Graduate School celebrates its 100th birthday in the gym

Graduate enrollment and concerns

On view at Princeton

The Prince reborn: After 45 years, the student newspaper gets a new look, new content

Seniors win Rhodes, Marshall awards

Talks on Campus

Alumni Day awardees


Faculty File: Hack and Crack

Professor of computer science Edward Felten got his start in cracking computer security five years ago when he and two graduate students uncovered a number of flaws in the software system Java, which had been touted by its creator, Sun Microsystems, as offering an unprecendented level of security.

Today Felten is considered one of the world’s foremost experts on Internet and software security, and last year he testified in the Department of Justice’s antitrust case against Microsoft. In his testimony Felten showed that contrary to Microsoft’s claims, its Internet Explorer Web browser could be separated from its Windows operating systems. Thanks in part to Felten, the government won its case.

Last fall the Secure Digital Music Initiative -- a consortium of companies that aims to curb the pirating of digital music -- issued a public challenge to crack its six-tiered security system. Felten and a team of researchers from Princeton and other institutions answered the call.

“We analyzed the six technologies that SDMI put forward. The four most interesting had to do with watermarking [a technology that places a faint sound into the background of recorded music, marking the music as copyrighted]. The theory is that recording devices will listen for the watermark and if they hear the watermark, refuse to copy the music. For the technology to work, it has to be impossible for someone to erase the watermark.”

Felten’s team used advanced signal processing to pinpoint the watermarks and then removed them without ruining the quality of the music.

Felten, who earned his Ph.D. in 1993 at the University of Washington and joined Princeton that year, teaches a number of computer science courses, including Information Security.

By M.G.

For more about Felten go to www.cs.princeton.edu/sip/index.php3.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

New professors named:
Faculty promotions and reappointments announced

The Board of Trustees approved six new full professors at its November 17 meeting. They are Christopher Eisgruber ’83, Laurance S. Rockefeller ’32 professor of public affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School and the University Center for Human Values; Carol Greenhouse, professor of anthropology; Brian Kernighan *69, professor of computer science; Angel Loureiro, professor of Romance languages and literatures; Chiara Nappi, professor of physics; and Colin Palmer, Dodge professor of history.

Eisgruber comes from the New York University School of Law, where he has been on the faculty for 10 years. He earned a physics degree at Princeton, was a Rhodes scholar, and earned his law degree from the University of Chicago Law School.

Greenhouse, who earned her Ph.D. at Harvard, comes from Indiana University. Her primary anthropological interests are in the ethnography of the contemporary U.S. and the ethnology of law.

Kernighan earned his Ph.D. at Princeton in electrical engineering and has been for the last 20 years head of the computing structures research department at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey. His areas of specialty include software tools, application-oriented languages, programming methodology, and user interfaces.

Loureiro, who earned his Ph.D. in Spanish from the University of Pennsylvania, is a specialist in modern Spanish peninsula literature and culture.

Nappi, who was a research physicist at Princeton from 1983 to 1988, and a visiting professor in 1993, earned her Ph.D. in physics at the University of Naples in Italy. Her research interests include string theory and particle physics.

Palmer is interested in the African-American and African diaspora, colonial Latin America, and the Caribbean. He earned his Ph.D. in history at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Other promotions are Robert Shimer to associate professor of economics with continuing tenure and Kyungwon Hong to assistant professor for a three-year term. Reappointments are: Guy Nordenson, associate professor of architecture with continuing tenure; Alessandra Ponte, assistant professor of architecture with a one-year extension; Jeffrey Carbeck, assistant professor of chemical engineering with a one-year extension; and Jean Kehrès, assistant professor of Romance languages and literatures with a one-year extension.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Orchestra and Jazz Ensemble play rarely performed Duke Ellington number

On two nights in early December, the Princeton University Orchestra performed one of its most challenging and thought-provoking concert programs of recent date. The
enthusiastic audience was treated to a collection of 20th-century musical poems that spanned the globe.

Conductor Michael Pratt guided the orchestra through the debut performances of resident composer Dan Trueman’s “Roulette,” which evoked the sounds of traditional Norwegian instruments. Trueman, who waved from a balcony seat at the concert following the piece, is a graduate student in composition at Princeton, where he has worked with professors Paul Lansky and Steven Mackey.

Anthony Branker, a senior lecturer in music, guest-conducted a swinging rendition of Duke Ellington’s “A Tone Parallel in Harlem,” featuring the collaboration of the University Orchestra and Jazz Ensemble. The work was first performed by the Ellington Orchestra at New York’s Metropolitan Opera House as part of a fundraising concert for the national civil rights program, and was recorded in 1951 by Columbia Records. This performance was not the first time the Princeton Orchestra and Jazz Ensemble have worked together on an Ellington work. Last year, the two groups joined with the Gospel Ensemble to perform and record the ambitious and inspiring “Sacred Concert.”

The program concluded with a stirring interpretation of Ravel’s “La Valse,” a melodramatic and touching tribute to the Viennese waltz. Ravel described the piece in a 1922 letter: “Tragic, yes, it can be that, like any expression -- pleasure, happiness -- which is pushed to extremes. You should see in it only what comes from the music: a mounting volume of sound.”

By Joshua Sternfeld ’01

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

In Memoriam


William Lippincott ’41,
dean of students from 1954 to 1968 and executive director of the Alumni Council from 1968 to 1972, died after a six-month illness on November 22 in Northeast Harbor, Maine. He was 81.

Lippincott was known on campus for his sympathetic counseling of students. “His personal qualities of modesty, tact, and dignity have caused him to be liked and admired everywhere,” wrote PAW’s editor in a February 29, 1962, article about Lippincott. “Most important of his personal qualities, however, is the unfailing good judgment he showed in his job as dean of students.” For the complete article, which includes excerpts from Lippincott’s diary, see PAW’s Web site (www.princeton. edu/~paw).

Robert Axtmann, professor, emeritus, of chemical engineering, died November 16. He was 75.

A faculty member since 1959, Axtmann taught courses on nuclear engineering and fusion engineering. He served as chair of Princeton’s Program on Nuclear Studies from 1965 to 1968 and was named the first chair of the Council on Environmental Studies in 1970. He retired in 1989.

Axtmann was a visiting fellow at the Israel Atomic Energy Commission and the National Commission of Nuclear Energy in Mexico. He served as a visiting scientist to the Department of Science and Industrial Research in New Zealand and the Institute of Electrical Investigations in Mexico. A member of the New Jersey Commission for Radiation Protection, he also served on the U.S. Department of Energy Advisory Committee on Geothermal Energy and the Advisory Committee on Nuclear Safeguards to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

A graduate of Oberlin College, Axtmann earned his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University.

Charles P. Issawi, Bayard Dodge professor, emeritus, of Near Eastern studies, died of complications of pneumonia on December 8 at his home in Pennswood Village, Pennsylvania. He was 84.

Born in Cairo, he studied at Oxford, where he read philosophy, politics, and economics. After several years of work in the government sector, Issawi began teaching in 1943 at the American University in Beirut. In 1951 he joined Columbia University, and in 1975 he joined Princeton’s faculty. He retired in 1986 and was a visiting professor at New York University from 1987–91.

Issawi’s research involved contemporary Egypt, the economic history of the Middle East in the 19th and 20th centuries, and the politics and economics of the oil industry.
“Charles Issawi was both humanist and social scientist, and with his learning came other qualities -- wisdom, common sense, tolerance, and humor,” said Bernard Lewis, the Cleveland E. Dodge professor, emeritus, of Near Eastern studies. “Dealing with a difficult region at a difficult time, he managed magnificently to preserve an open mind and an objective approach. These were accompanied and, indeed, made possible by a quite special humor with which he lightened the cares and brightened the lives of all who had the good fortune to work with him.”

A memorial service will be held next month at the University Chapel.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Big dance for a big event: Graduate School celebrates its 100th birthday in the gym

t was a night to be merry rather than harried as more than 1,700 people gathered December 15 to celebrate the 100th birthday of the Graduate School.

Most of the gala guests were current graduate students or alumni, but many administrators and members of the faculty and staff also attended.

Jadwin Gym was transformed into a grand ballroom for the occasion. The centennial logo, bobbing on dozens of black and silver balloons, lined the entrance walkway. Inside, the building was dimly lit. Multicolor lights from above and well-placed spotlights on the floor added touches of glamour. The centennial logo, projected onto a large screen, shone brightly from a stage set up for the event, and the scoreboard flashed “100” for Princeton and for the Visitors. In recognition of the diverse backgrounds from which Princeton graduate students hail, international flags were hung around the room.

“This is wonderful,” said doctoral candidate Marie-Helene Koffi-Tessio, who is studying French. Like other graduate students, she appreciated the change of pace the extravagant affair provided. “They should do this several times a year.”

The reception was hosted under a couple of large orange-and-black tents, where cheese, crackers, and fruit whetted appetites. Dinner came as quickly as one could move through the buffet lines. To make the wait seem shorter, some took to dancing while in line.

Graduate students were offered free ballroom dancing lessons in the days leading up to the gala. Not everyone took the lessons, but most showed up in the dancing mood. The music, provided by Jerry Boyle Orchestra out of Philadelphia, ran the gamut from rock-and-roll to Motown, and from salsa to big band.

Ravi Pillarisetty, a doctoral electrical engineering student, was having such a good time, he tried to get others out of their seats as well. “We don’t get to do this every night,” he lamented after his efforts failed to rouse.

The dinner buffet included braised chicken, roast beef, spinach and ricotta lasagna, Yukon potatoes, and black bean salad. John Fleming *63, master of ceremonies and Louis W. Fairchild ’24 professor of English, told the graduate students they were welcome to seconds and thirds. But to keep from running out of dishes, he told them to keep using the same plate.

Each of the 150 tables was topped with goodies -- a chocolate centennial cake as well as picture frames, masks, bubble-makers, and a snow-globe flashlight that was a big hit on the dance floor.

Throughout the evening, prizes were given away. Mitsuya Goto *56, won the first prize for coming the longest distance to attend -- all the way from Japan.

The evening’s speechmakers wisely decided to throw out the scripts or shorten them considerably. President Shapiro had planned on delivering five pages of remarks, but in the end, he stilled the crowd just long enough to honor Dean of the Graduate School John Wilson for 40 years of service to Princeton.

By Yvonne Chiu Hayes

Yvonne Chiu Hayes is a reporter for the Princeton Weekly Bulletin.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Graduate enrollment and concerns

This year the Graduate School enrolled 1,884 students, including 792 international students, the largest percentage -- 42.0 percent -- in the school’s 100 years of existence. The ratio of females to males is 35.8 percent, not significantly different than in recent years.

With regard to area of study, most divisions see little change when looked at broadly. But when looked at by department over a 10-year period, the 88.9 percent increase in computer science enrollment (now with a total of 85 graduate students), and the 86.8 percent increase in electrical engineering (with 170 total graduate students) is notable. The departments that have shrunk noticeably over the past 10 years are astrophysics (with 41 concentrators, down from 50), atmospheric and oceanic sciences (with 9 concentrators, down from 16), geology (with 18 concentrators, down from 26), mechanical and aerospace engineering (with 72 concentrators, down from 87), molecular biology (with 90 concentrators, down from 109), physics (with 90 concentrators, down from 118), politics (with 55 concentrators, down from 67), and Romance languages (with 33 concentrators, down from 45). (For a complete chart of enrollment statistics, visit the registrar’s site: http://ntigger.princeton.edu/registrar/data/data.htm.)

Graduate concerns

On December 14, a group of graduate students protested in Firestone Plaza the lack of affordable housing. Carrying signs with such slogans as “Homeless preceptors grade angry,” the students were calling attention to the fact that stipends, ranging from $10,000 to $16,500, do not cover the cost of housing in Princeton, where many apartments rent for around $800 a month. Many graduate students are married and have children, making it especially difficult to find space large enough. According to university officials, the university does not guarantee housing for graduate students, but was able to provide it for approximately 75 percent of them this year, and there are plans to build as many as 150 units by the fall of 2002. In the meantime a committee is being formed to address the issue.

Another issue that worries graduate students is health care. At the December meeting of the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC), graduate student Karthick Ramakrishnan submitted a report that detailed the concerns of graduate students. Overall, the students rated the McCosh Health Center as “fair” to “good.” The report cites two major areas that need addressing: The university’s health insurance for graduate students, which does not cover vision care or offer a dental plan or prescription drug options, and the hours and availability of health care during the summer, when medical service is curtailed.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

On view at Princeton

Running through April 8 at Firestone Library is an exhibit titled “A Community of Scholars: Graduate Education at Princeton.” The exhibition includes more than 100 photographs and documents and artifacts that give a glimpse into graduate life at the university. Shown here is a photograph of the Graduate College during construction, which lasted from 1910 to 1913.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

The Prince reborn: After 45 years, the student newspaper gets a new look, new content

If you happened to pick up a copy of the Daily Princetonian during the past year, you can’t help but have noticed that the newspaper has changed a lot from the previous year, and indeed from the decades before. In addition to redesigning the layout, a new section has been added, called Page 3. And a new publication, the Prince Magazine, now accompanies Monday’s edition.

These changes occurred under the leadership of Richard Just ’01, the Daily Princetonian’s 124th editor-in-chief, who aimed not only to improve the newspaper’s journalistic quality, but also to broaden its scope and revamp its format. Indeed, the Prince’s layout had not been changed for 45 years, “which even in 1999 made it look like a college newspaper from the ’60s,” said Just. In order to bring the Daily Princetonian up to the award-winning standards of other college papers like the Daily Pennsylvanian or the Harvard Crimson, the Prince staff decided to increase the presence of graphics, to vary the use of photos, and to change the fonts, most significantly the headline font.

Along with the new layout came Page 3, which covers higher education on Mondays, “Princetonians Beyond the Gate” on Tuesdays, science and technology on Wednesdays, “Living It Up” (modeled after the New York Times’s “Lifestyles”) on Thursdays, and “Campus Notebook” (a humorous wrap-up of the week’s events) on Fridays.

According to Just, Page 3 gave the Prince an opportunity to step back from the daily routine and look at broader trends. It also allowed the paper to cover Princeton-related issues that did not necessarily qualify as front-page headliners, like the day-to-day research being conducted by a physics professor or the humanitarian work being done by lesser-known alumni.

Perhaps the most extensive change that occurred under Just’s leadership was the advent of the Prince Magazine. As much as the introduction of Page 3 opened up a space for longer, feature-like pieces, members of the Prince staff -- particularly Greg Mancini ’01, the magazine’s first editor -- were still concerned that there was no venue on campus for full-length, in-depth feature stories. “So the Prince Magazine was created as a forum for longer, reflective pieces,” said Just. “It’s a way to bridge the intellectual divide between students and professors.” Just also stressed the added benefit of giving talented student writers another outlet for sharpening their skills, a place where they could write something other than just straight news. “After all,” he explained, “the Prince really has two missions: to put out a good magazine and to serve as Princeton’s journalism school.”

In addition to changing the physical newspaper, the Prince staff has also revamped its online version (www.dailyprincetonian.com). By Andrew Shtulman ’01

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Seniors win Rhodes, Marshall awards


Two Princeton seniors this year received Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships for two to three years of study in the United Kingdom.

Brandon Miller ’01, of Mohrsville, Pennsylvania, is one of 32 American students selected for a Rhodes Scholarship. Seth Green ’01, of Boca Raton, Florida, is one of 40 American students chosen for a Marshall Scholarship.

Miller, a comparative literature major who also studies German and Chinese, will complete an M.Phil. in Chinese studies at the University of Oxford. Among his many campus activities, Miller has acted, been a journalist, tutored, and played the oboe. During the summers he has worked as a research assistant for the London Business School, as an intern at a personal consulting firm in Frankfurt, Germany, and as a translator for a German office of the Chinese government. Miller told the Daily Princetonian that he hoped eventually to become a university president.

Green plans to enroll at the University of London in the world’s only child-focused master’s program in community disability studies in developing countries. A politics major, he is interested in improving the care of special needs children in the developing world.

On campus Green is involved with the Whig-Cliosophic Society, the Center for Jewish Life, and the Community Based Learning Initiative. During the summers he has worked as a legislative policy intern for the public policy think tank Taxpayers for Common Sense.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Talks on Campus

A number of notables spoke on campus before winter break, including U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg, who reflected on his senate career; Harvard professor Lizabeth Cohen ’73, who talked about the rise of consumerism; and the author Scott Turow, who read from his work.

Chinese dissident Harry Wu spoke December 7 about human rights abuses in China and questioned the U.S.’s foreign policy toward China. Wu spent 19 years in a Chinese labor camp and in 1985, six years after he was released, came to the U.S., where he was named visiting professor of geology at the University of California, Berkeley. Wu is now executive director of the Laogai Research Foundation, which spreads awareness of Chinese labor camps.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

Alumni Day awardees

J. Stapleton Roy ’56, a career diplomat, and N. Lloyd Axworthy *72, until last fall Canada’s minister of foreign affairs, will receive the university’s highest awards for alumni and deliver speeches on Alumni Day, February 24.

Roy will receive the Woodrow Wilson Award, given to an undergraduate alumnus or alumna who exemplifies “Princeton in the Nation’s Service.” Axworthy will be given the Madison Medal, which recognizes an outstanding alumnus of the Graduate School.
Roy, who was born in Nanjing, China, of missionary parents, joined the Foreign Service after he graduated. Over the years he has served the U.S. in Bangkok, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Moscow, and has served as ambassador to China, Indonesia, and Singapore. Roy made national news last month when he resigned from the State Department a month earlier than anticipated in protest over the firing of his aide by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.

Axworthy, who earned a Ph.D. in political science, was elected to the Manitoba legislature in 1973 and to the Canadian parliament in 1979. The next year he became a cabinet minister, but after 1984, his party, the Liberals, lost power, and Axworthy then served in several opposition positions. During the early 1990s, he served as minister in various departments, and in 1996 he was appointed foreign minister. Axworthy is known as the architect of the Ottawa Convention, which outlaws landmines, and he has pushed for a permanent International Criminal Court, which would try people accused of committing crimes against humanity. Last fall he stepped down as foreign minister and is currently director of the Liu Center for Global Issues at the University of British Columbia.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS

In Brief


Former Princeton president William Bowen *58 and Derek Bok, former president of Harvard, received the University of Louisville’s Grawemeyer Award for their book The Shape of the River: Long-Term Consequences on Considering Race in College and University Admissions (1998). The prize was given in recognition of Bowen and Bok’s “unprecedented study” in the area of race-sensitive admissions policies and for their “statistics and analysis that eliminate emotion and provide a factual basis for policy decision in this area.” The award comes with a $200,000 emolument, which the authors are donating to charity.

Toni Morrison, professor of humanities and prize-winning author, received the National Humanities Medal on December 20 from President Clinton in Washington, D.C. Given in recognition of her contributions to American cultural life and thought, the award, said President Shapiro, “pays tribute to Toni Morrison’s extraordinary impact not only on the world of literature, but on the world of thought, on the lives of her many readers, and on human society in this country and around the world.” Among her many other honors, Morrison won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1993 and the Pulitzer Prize in 1988.

On the Monday before the holiday break, rock star Bruce Springsteen, who grew up in New Jersey and maintains a residence in the state, dropped by the Frist Campus Center to sit in on a class that was discussing Alan Ginsberg’s poem “Wichita Vortex Sutra.” The poem was part of the assigned reading for the course Prophecy and the American Voice, taught by Greil Marcus, a lecturer in the American Studies program. The class was one that Springsteen had hoped to audit this semester, but according to the Daily Princetonian did not, because of concern over keeping a low profile on campus.

The Office of the Provost announced in December that the university would probably increase its endowment spending for fiscal year 2001. A Board of Trustees meeting in late January was to decide the percentage, which typically runs about 5 percent. A fuller story about the university’s endowment will appear in an upcoming issue.

Another book in the news of late was brought to light by Princeton English professor Elaine Showalter. In the early 1990s, Showalter, while shopping in Paris at a used-book stall, found an Old West romance, described by the New York Times as “replete with whorehouses, lesbian affairs and attempted rapes, written by an author whose name was all too familiar to academics in the humanities.” It was a novel written by Lynne Cheney, former chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities and wife of Vice President Dick Cheney. The book, called Sisters, was printed in 1981 in a Signet Canadian paperback, said Showalter. Showalter’s review of Sisters appeared in the Chronicle of Higher Education this fall and prompted a news story in the Times.

Karim Adrian Branford ’04 was arrested at the U-Store on December 12 for shoplifting. He had allegedly stolen a video game and lightbulbs. He was released by Princeton Borough police on his own recognizance.

Log on to www.be-a-friend.com and you can see the Web site that Ted Cai, a second-year graduate student in the chemical engineering department, designed along with David Attis *00. At the site, which functions as a clearinghouse for homeless dogs and cats in the Princeton and Trenton areas, viewers can look at pictures of animals that need homes, and through a series of links find out other ways to help. Cai was happy to work on the site. “I’ve always had a passion for pets,” he said. “I would love to help them, especially the homeless ones.” After receiving his master’s degree this summer, he will join IBM in its global services division as an information technology consultant, focusing on e-commerce applications.

Return to Notebook Main Menu
HOME   TABLE OF CONTENTS