April 18, 2001: Notebook

Faculty File: Tectonic man

Princeton names new head of CIT: Betty Leydon leaves Duke to replace Fuchs

In Memoriam

Graduate School News: Adding graduate alumni to the Trustees Board to consider increasing graduate representation

Can't finish in five years? Graduate students ask for continued benefits

Make room for scholars:University provides more housing for grads

A physics Web site for all

Students pack Frist to watch NCAA game

In Brief

Alumni Day Awards


Faculty File: Tectonic man

W. Jason Morgan *64 has never taken a geology course. Yet his insights have revolutionized the way fellow geoscientists view Planet Earth. In 1967, Morgan proposed that the surface of the earth is formed of rigid plates whose motion is governed by rules now called plate tectonics — a concept central to understanding continental drift, oceanic and continental crusts, mountain formation, volcanoes, and earthquakes.

This, and other research into the evolution and dynamics of the earth’s mantle — the 1,800-mile-thick layer between earth’s crust and its core — have won Morgan numerous honors, most recently the prestigious Japan Prize in 1990 and Vetlesen Prize in 2000.

The route to his current position as Knox Taylor professor of geography and professor of geophysics in the Department of Geosciences was “atypical,” admits Morgan, who earned his Ph.D. in physics. A dissertation concerning “the rotation of the earth” drew him to geophysics, as he began to approach geoscientific phenomena “by examining the physics behind them.” His continuing effort to understand the mantle has led him recently from geophysics to geochemistry, partly because “the chemistry has the record of time and place to test mechanical models.”

Such ongoing research interests, says Morgan, ensure that “you never go stale as a teacher” — as if one could be blasé describing his courses Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Other Hazards and Active Geological Processes. Also important to teaching, Morgan believes, is experience as a faculty adviser (his was in Wilson College), which “should be required for every faculty member.”

The lack of geology courses in his background hasn’t bothered Morgan. “Over the years,” he says simply, “I’ve picked up a lot.”

By Caroline Moseley

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Princeton names new head of CIT
Betty Leydon leaves Duke to replace Fuchs

Betty Leydon, the top-ranking information technology administrator at Duke University, will become Princeton’s vice president for information technology in June. She replaces Ira Fuchs, who is now the vice president for research and information technology at the Andrew Mellon Foundation.

At Princeton, Leydon will focus on planning for the computing, networking, and telecommunications needs of academic and administrative offices.

In a statement, Leydon said, “I am looking forward to working with the faculty, the staff, and everyone in the Princeton community to find the best strategic direction for information technology. One of the biggest challenges is making sure that the technology does not become an end in itself. Having done graduate work and teaching, it helps me to see what the end user of technology needs.”

Leydon earned her bachelor’s degree at Bucknell in 1967 and master’s degree in English language and linguistics at the University of New Hampshire in 1981. Before joining Duke in 1994, she worked as a computer programmer, a systems engineer, a software developer, and as an administrator for computing and information services at the University of New Hampshire.

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War and child soldiers
Laws proliferate, enforcement lags, and paradoxes abound

Photography: Ricardo Barros

Jeffrey Herbst ’83, chair of Princeton’s politics department, recently completed a paper titled “International Laws of War and the African Child: Norms, Compliance and Sovereignty.” He sat with PAW to discuss his research and the tragedy of child soldiers.

How did you become involved in researching child soldiers?

I have long been interested in what are called the laws of war. This is paradoxical in some ways because war seems to be the most unregulated thing, but in fact there are lots of laws of war — how you should treat enemy prisoners, how you should treat noncombatants.

The basic problem is an increasing number of international conventions, treaties, meetings, and protocols on all types of issues, but lagging enforcement of those norms. The question is: Should the laws or norms get so far ahead of enforcement that people become cynical about things going on at the international level and, therefore, regulation should essentially slow down? Or is this just the nature of leadership, that people get ahead of where reality is and then try to pull reality in the direction they are trying to go?

What have you learned in your research?

In Africa the number of civil wars has been significant, and one of the phenomena we’ve seen in the 1980s and 1990s is the appearance of the child soldier, generally defined as combatants under 15. The child soldier is one of those aspects of war the international community is trying to regulate, first with the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990, which was the most widely adopted human rights instrument in world history, and now with a new international protocol dealing specifically with child soldiers.

Enforcement of laws is certainly lagging well behind. It’s very hard to see that these international conventions and protocols, which the African countries are usually very quick to sign, have any effect on the ground. Here are all these conventions and laws being passed in New York and Geneva while the problem on the ground is, if anything, getting worse.

In fact, these rules represent some of the real paradoxes of international law today. African countries want their opponents’ practices to be regulated by international law. They want the law to say, for instance, these guerrillas we’re fighting can’t use child soldiers. But they don’t want guerrilla movements to have any kind of international legal personality. They don’t want them recognized in any way by the outside world because the governments’ official position is invariably that this is not a political opposition, these are criminals, thugs, etc.

Are there statistics on death and injury rates among children?

There are, and they’re all over the place. One statistic I think stands out is that the percentage of civilians among total casualties is going up and up. If you look at a classic war like World War I, the overwhelming number of deaths were among combatants — soldiers killing soldiers. Now it’s estimated in these African wars that 50 to 60, maybe 70 percent of deaths are among civilians.

The “civilianization” — for lack of another word — of casualties is one of the most striking trends of modern warfare. It means that women and children especially, who make up the majority of noncombatants, are at ever greater risk.
Are child soldiers a problem of economics, AIDS, or something else?
Child soldiers are connected to the AIDS epidemic in part because these children are sometimes AIDS orphans. They work for and live with armies because that’s the only group providing for them. The orphan crisis in Africa is very much related to the child soldier crisis and is also a reflection of even
more fundamental trends in social disintegration.

What can the U.S. do to address the problem?

It’s a larger problem of how you bring peace to these countries. You can’t address the child-soldiers issue independent of these larger questions. That’s one of the reasons why conventions and legal protocols have been of such limited use. The fundamental problem is not that people happen to be using child soldiers, the fundamental problem is that these countries have been at war so long that all their basic institutions and legal practices are grinding down.

By Fran Hulette

Fran Hulette is an occasional contributor to PAW. A longer interview with Herbst is on our Web site at www.princeton.edu/~paw.

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In Memoriam

Photography: Princeton Communications Office

Victor Preller ’53 *65, professor, emeritus, of religion, died of pneumonia January 19 at the Medical Center at Princeton. He was 69.

Preller served as master of the Graduate College from 1985 to 1990, and was noted for fostering a high level of intellectual discourse and a sense of community there. Many graduate alumni remember him as someone who fought tirelessly to protect their interests. He retired in 1995.

In the academic world, Preller is best known for his book Divine Science and the Science of God, a controversial interpretation of Thomas Aquinas. In seminars Preller attacked the scholastic assumption that the central concept in Aquinas’s ethics is that of natural law. In other courses Preller developed a novel account of religious language and its interpretation.

In addition to his Princeton degrees, he earned degrees at Oxford and the General Theological Seminary in New York. He began teaching at Princeton in 1960.
Preller was ordained as an Episcopal priest in 1956. He left the church in the late 1960s and returned to it in the 1980s. Until his death, he was active as a priest at All Saints’ Church in Princeton.

 

Photography: Princeton Communications Office

Wallace D. Hayes, an emeritus professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering who made fundamental contributions to the understanding of flight and supersonic aircraft design, died March 2 in Hightstown, New Jersey, after a long struggle with Parkin-son’s disease. He was 82.

In a series of publications beginning with his 1947 Ph.D. thesis at the California Institute of Technology he developed a theory of supersonic flow called the “supersonic area rule” which strongly influenced the design of high-speed aircraft. His work also provided the first understanding of the behavior of delta wing aircraft flying just above the speed of sound.

He followed his work in supersonic flow with groundbreaking studies in hypersonic flow. He developed the “Hayes similitude principle,” which enabled designers to take the results of one series of tests or calculations and apply them to the design of an entire family of similar configurations where neither tests nor detailed calculations are available.

Hayes was educated in California and began work in the aircraft industry in 1939. From 1952 to 1954 he was with the Office of Naval Research in London. In 1954, he came to Princeton, where he taught until 1989.

A memorial service is planned for April 22 at the University Chapel.

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Graduate School News: Adding graduate alumni to the Trustees Board to consider increasing graduate representation

Increasing graduate alumni representation to the university’s Board of Trustees appears to be an idea whose time has come, but how many and how to choose these new members has not been decided.

The Graduate U-Council proposed adding two recent graduate alumni to the board at the February meeting of the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC). The proposal suggests direct election by current graduate students and recent alumni, and staggering replacements every two years, a plan similar to the policy for young undergraduate alumni.

Currently the board is required to have only one graduate school alumnus among its 40 members, but two are serving, President Harold T. Shapiro *64 (one of two ex-officio members) and Barry Munitz *68. Four undergraduate alumni have seats, elected to the board for four-year terms each spring by juniors, seniors, and members of the two most recent graduating classes. The Graduate U-Council proposes that the new graduate alumni seats be filled by students who have graduated within the last five years.

“The Graduate School scene has changed dramatically in the last 10 years, so we feel strongly that someone who has graduated recently and is more connected to the institution will help the board,” says Karthick Ramakrishnan GS, who coauthored the proposal with Graduate School Government Chair Lauren Hale and David Linsenmeier GS. “This is not an issue of representing graduate student interests, however,” Ramakrishnan added. “It’s about caring for the institution as a whole. Our belief is that the institution will get stronger if these voices are added.”

While increasing graduate alumni representation for the trustees has support, questions about selection and eligibility are still being debated. “There are a number of people, including those in the Graduate School, who feel we should get the strongest possible person for the trustees, whether they are young or old,” says university Vice President and Secretary Thomas Wright ’62. Adds Provost Jeremiah Ostriker, “I’m very enthusiastic about increasing the representation of graduate alumni on the board. But the best process for choosing members is up to the board. They know the mode of selecting people best suited to join them, whether elected or appointed.”

According to Wright, the trustees will most likely consider adding graduate alumni representation at their meeting this month.

By Maria LoBiondo


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Can’t finish in five years?
Graduate students ask for continued benefits

How the Graduate School deals with the limbo students face when their student status ends but their dissertations aren’t completed is a major focus of the recent Graduate Student Life Initiative report.

Post-enrollment status, contends the report written by the Graduate Student Government and Graduate U-Council, hampers a majority of Ph.D. candidates at Princeton, adding financial burdens mainly stemming from the loss of student status. These include undergraduate student loans coming due; loss of subsidized student housing for many, but if university housing is available, being charged an additional 19 percent for this rent; not being automatically included in Princeton’s Student Health Plan; and loss of community privileges such as student identification cards, sports and gym facility access, and library carrels. Addition-ally, international students may have visa difficulties.

“We are not asking that the university extend the stipend privilege, but rather that they do what other universities do — allow people actively pursuing their Ph.D. to retain their student status even if it extends beyond the length of the program, since most students don’t finish during this time,” said Lauren Hale, chair of the Graduate Student Government.

According to Graduate School Associate Dean David Redman, Princeton makes clear the length of enrollment, usually five years, from the student’s first contract. After that period, students are considered “enrollment terminated, degree candidacy continued.”
While certain benefits cease, the ability to purchase health insurance, retain library borrowing privileges, maintain e-mail and computer accounts, and apply for a year’s visa extension is possible, he said. “The Graduate School has long been aware of some of the difficulties, and has worked out some extensions of benefits, particularly those most crucial for a Ph.D. student finishing,” Redman said.

However, the graduate student report suggests that friction between students and the administration has been brewing for some time. In its concluding statement on post-enrollment status, the report states its primary goals are “openness and freedom of information, and willingness to admit a severe problem exists. Many deny the size
and scope of the post-enrollment problem, yet solving it requires that we acknowledge it and commit to finding a solution.”

Graduate School Dean John Wilson is preparing an official response to the report, particularly the section on post-enrollment status, for a future meeting of the Council of the Princeton University Community.

By Maria LoBiondo

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Make room for scholars
University provides more housing for grads

With the improved financial aid offered to graduate students beginning this fall, the life of graduate students appears to be improving. However, one source of difficulty has been housing. The university does not guarantee housing for all graduate students — no university does — but Princeton does provide 75 percent of graduate students with a place to live. This year some 100 students had to make outside living arrangements, which put them up against a tight housing market in Princeton, where the average rent is $1,000 monthly for one-bedroom apartments.

University administrators, in order to ease the problem for next year’s anticipated class of 2,010 students, have approved several short-term measures.

This fall, Lockhart Hall, an undergraduate dormitory slated for renovation, will be removed from the renewal list and given over to graduate students. Additionally, Wyman House at the Graduate College, three vacant university-owned houses, and vacant faculty/staff housing will be pressed into service; selected rooms in the Graduate College will be converted to doubles, and, if needed, the university will rent apartments in the community to sublet to graduate students. In all, the university anticipates providing 1,507 students with housing, about 75 percent.

“If the number of graduate students increases, which may well happen given that Princeton has made financial aid more enticing, then housing will be more of a problem,” said Lauren Hale, chair of the Graduate Student Government. “While it’s nice to see the university recognizes this, it’s not clear what the solution is.” Said Associate Provost Joann Mitchell, who chaired the ad-hoc committee, “We’ve worked as hard as we can to pursue actively those options that will make sure students covered under current university policy will be housed.” She added that next year’s student numbers are estimated guesses until mid-April’s housing application deadline. A long-term graduate housing committee is pursuing further options.

By Maria LoBiondo
Maria LoBiondo is a frequent contributor to PAW.

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A physics Web site for all

IPPEX offers browsers four interactive physics modules--one on each matter, electricity and magnetism, energy, and fusion.

IPPEX, a Web site created by the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, was recently featured in an episode of NASA Connect, a television show devoted to science education, and is becoming a favorite destination among students and educators.

Originally launched in 1997, IPPEX (the Internet Plasma Physics Education eXperience) was created by a collaboration of Princeton physicists, computer scientists, and science education experts as an interactive way of introducing the general public to the challenges of physics, as well as to the workings of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.

IPPEX offers browsers four interactive physics modules — one each on matter, electricity and magnetism, energy, and fusion — as well as a virtual fusion reactor in which users can operate their own fusion experiments. There is also a data analysis page, where users can manipulate data from the real fusion test reactor at PPPL. “We make data from our research projects available at more or less the same time as our own physicists are seeing it,” said Project Manager Andrew Post-Zwicker.

Because IPPEX is so advanced, even professional physicists have been known to use the Web site. “I know a few Ph.D.s who like to play with the interactive simulators, though there are some 16-year-olds out there who’ve gotten better scores,” said Post-Zwicker.

Over the years, traffic to IPPEX has increased, and along with the increase in popularity has come an increase in recognition. “We’ve won, to use the scientifically accurate term, a kazillion awards,” said Post-Zwicker.

By Andrew Shtulman ’01

To visit IPPEX and all its interactive components, log onto http://ippex.pppl.gov/ippex/

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Students pack Frist to watch NCAA game

On Friday, March 16, more than 1,200 students, faculty, staff, and alumni gathered in front of big-screen televisions and video projection screens at Frist Campus Center to cheer on the men’s basketball team as the Tigers competed against the University of North Carolina in the first round of the NCAA tournament in New Orleans.

While most people sat downstairs in the cavernous multipurpose room, others clustered around the first-floor television set, in the theater, or in the classrooms. Each of the viewing areas was decorated with orange and black balloons, and members of the Frist staff provided students with free pizza and subs throughout the evening. In total, 80 pizzas and 10 six-foot subs were consumed, along with plenty of orange drink.

For most students, Frist was more than just an appealing place to watch the game; it was the only place. The university had made special arrangements to air CBS Philadelphia, since CBS New York, the station carried by the dorm cable package, was not going to show Princeton vs. UNC. This lack of alternative venues led to the enormous turnout. And even though Princeton trailed UNC the entire game, the crowd never dissipated. Rather, they continued to cheer to the bitter end: Princeton 48, UNC 70.

By Andrew Shtulman ’01

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In Brief


When Princeton announced in January its increased stipends for graduate students, beginning this fall, the move reverberated in the academic world. In the Chronicle of Higher Education, in an article titled “Is Princeton Acting Like a Church or a Car Dealer?” Gordon Winston, a professor at Williams College, noted that Princeton’s new policy “turns up the heat a bit.” He added, “For decades, Princeton and other elite institutions have been competing for the best and brightest graduate students by remitting tuition and offering handsome stipends.”

Williams elsewhere noted that the “graduate stipends are so directly an increase in the bidding for talent that they’ll certainly be matched by the other good graduate programs — or those programs will get less talented students.”

And Princeton is not wrong for doing so, said Ronald Ehrenberg, a professor at Cornell University. Unlike undergraduate aid, which is generally need-based, graduate aid has nothing to do with need, he said. “Princeton wants to attract the best possible students and to the extent that some people choose where to study based about aid offers, more aid makes Princeton a more desirable place for students to attend.”

John Wilson, dean of Princeton’s Graduate School, agreed that Princeton has “upped the ante” with the new policy. He added that at a recent conference held at Princeton, where graduate school administrators met to talk about critical issues facing doctoral programs, he and Sandra Mawhinney, associate dean of the Graduate School, heard from several counterparts at other universities that they were going to have to respond in some way to Princeton’s new policy if they wanted to continue to attract the top students.

Wilson also pointed out that the escalation began several years ago after Stanford took a “bold lead” by offering greater support to attract graduate students.

Garrison Keillor, best known for his radio show, A Prairie Home Companion, will be this year’s Baccalaureate speaker on June 3 at the University Chapel. Keillor, who was born in Anoka, Minnesota, started the radio program as a musical variety show, and in 1980 it went national. He also writes a column for the online magazine Salon and has published numerous essays, articles, and books. The Baccalaureate service is limited to students and members of the university community.

An article in the April issue of the Atlantic Monthly describes the Princeton students of today, likening them in attitude to people who lived in the Edwardian age a hundred years ago. David Brooks, the writer of the article, which was more analytical than critical, referred to Princeton students as the “organization kids.”

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Alumni Day Awards

The Woodrow Wilson Award, bestowed on an alumnus who exemplifies “Princeton in the nation’s service,” was awarded to J. Stapleton Roy ’56, a career diplomat.
The Madison Medal, given to a distinguished alumnus from the Graduate School, was conferred on N. Lloyd Axworthy *72, former Canadian minister of foreign affairs.

The Moses Taylor Pyne Prize, the university’s highest general award for undergraduates, went to Adam Friedman ’01, right, a molecular biology major.
The Class of 1926 Trophy went to the Class of 1970, which set a 30th-reunion Annual Giving record of $4,220,205.

The Porter Ogden Jacobus Fellowship went to Kristine Haugen *00 (below, left) and Yueh-Lin Loo *98 (below, right) for highest scholarly excellence in the Graduate School.

The S. Barksdale Penick, Jr. ’25 Award, given to outstanding Alumni Schools Committees, went to the Princeton Club of Hampton Roads, the PC of Chattanooga, the Princeton Alumni Association of Knoxville and Eastern Tennessee, the PAA of Memphis, and the PAA of Nashville and Middle Tennessee.

The Alumni Council Award for Community Service went to the Princeton Club of San Diego.

The Harold H. Helm ’20 Award, a prize that recognizes exemplary and sustained service to Annual Giving, was awarded to F. Tremaine “Josh” Billings, Jr. ’33 of Nashville.

The Jerry Horton Award, presented to an outstanding regional Annual Giving committee, was given to the regional committee from Philadelphia, chaired by Robert A. Lukens ’62 and John P. Lavelle, Jr. ’85.

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