Dear fellow Princetonians, On behalf of the Alumni Association of Princeton University, it is my great honor to welcome you back to Old Nassau and to Reunions 2015. In these pages, you will find a full weekend of programs and activities, from athletic contests and community service projects to class and departmental panels and receptions. Alumni-Faculty Forums will feature distinguished alumni speaking on a wide range of topics, including public education, pandemics, and the Voting Rights Act. If music is your passion, stop by the Reunions headquarters sites each evening for great entertainment, stroll over to the arches around campus to hear Princeton’s a cappella groups perform, spend Friday afternoon listening to groups from the past compete in the 8th annual Alumni Battle of the Bands, and be sure to attend the Princeton University Band’s Fred E. Fox ’39 Memorial Concert Saturday morning on Cannon Green — my favorite event. Finally, you won’t want to miss the one and only P-rade on Saturday afternoon and the spectacular lawn concert and fireworks on Saturday evening. Going Back is among the greatest and most longstanding of Princeton traditions. We hope that you will take this time to reconnect with old friends and meet new ones, engage your mind, enjoy the beautiful Princeton campus, and rediscover why Princeton really is “the best old place of all.” Have a wonderful weekend! Nancy J. Newman ’78 President Alumni Association of Princeton University Contents A Brief History.................. 2 Exhibits.......................... 38 Thursday Events............... 5 Campus Information...... 41 Friday Events.................... 8 Upcoming Events .......... 47 Saturday Events............. 26 Nightly Entertainment..... 48 Sunday Events............... 37 1 A Brief History of Princeton Reunions and the P-rade All colleges encourage their graduates to maintain and demonstrate loyalty to their alma mater through return visits. However, no other institution welcomes all of its alumni and their families back for reunions on a yearly basis with the style and fanfare that is uniquely Princeton. Here is a short history of this ever-evolving annual tradition. In the College of New Jersey’s early years, alumni regularly returned to campus to attend Commencement exercises. Its 100th Commencement in June 1847 drew an impressive 700 graduates for a formal dinner, escalating the tradition into a larger event. Until 1859, all alumni gathered together, but in that year, Alfred Woodhull, Class of 1856, organized the first “class” reunion, a triennial. He astutely surmised reasonable attendance could be expected, because in that era, anyone who returned to campus for Commencement three years after graduation qualified for an automatic master’s degree (a practice lasting until 1892). In 1861, a regiment bound for battle in the Civil War passing through Princeton captivated the College’s students with its “skyrocket” cheer, which imitated the sound of fireworks — “sis” for the zooming rocket; “boom” for the explosion; and “ahhhh” as the crowd expressed its pleasure for the resulting light show. At Princeton, the “sis, boom, ah” skyrocket cheer evolved into Princeton’s “locomotive,” where word repetition and increasing speed emulates the sound of a train pulling out from a station. “Tiger” was likely added to the cheer in the late 19th century, when athletic uniforms began consistently using orange and black. The P-rade officially began in the late 1890s but is actually the merged product of earlier traditions. Beginning in the Civil War era, alumni formally processed to Commencement Day dinner meetings. Then in 1888, Princeton and Yale University began scheduling one of their baseball games at Princeton on the Saturday before Commencement. Since this coincided with class dinners, alumni attendance was high and many classes formally marched to the game at University Field (located at the corner of Prospect Avenue and Olden Street). In October 1896, when the newly renamed Princeton University celebrated its sesquicentennial (150th anniversary), 800 Princeton undergraduates and 2,000 alumni took part in a mile-long procession through the campus and town; most carried an orange torch or lantern, and many classes wore coordinated costumes. Stimulated by the grandeur and organization of this parade, in 1897 all returning classes first joined to march in order to the baseball game. By 1906, a written description of the annual event said, “The Alumni Pee-rade on Saturday afternoon was quite as spectacular as usual; the bands, banners, transparencies, uniforms, and vaudeville features encircling University Field with color and noise.” 2 During early P-rades, the sole decoration worn by returning alumni was a small badge with class numerals on it. Gradually, classes began to distinguish themselves with creative hats, balloons, and parasols; before long, younger classes wore colorful costumes, carried humorous signs, and often performed comic stunts. In 1912, some of that year’s graduating class dressed in blue denim overalls and jackets to protect their regular clothes from spilled beer stains. One year later, the Class of 1913 adopted white beer jackets as their costume. By 1920, the jackets became a tradition with the addition of unique class logos. To this day, each graduating class designs its own class jacket, worn for the first time during Reunions weekend. Classes typically design new costumes for each “major” quinquennial reunion up until the 25th, when they receive a class blazer. The Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni introduced a Reunions Jacket in 2003 and all graduate alumni, regardless of graduation year, are unified in wearing this jacket each year. Reunions were cancelled in 1917 and 1918 for World War I, so the “Victory Commencement” of 1919 featured a throng of 5,000 alumni for the largest Reunions and P-rade yet. An even longer “Victory Reunion” P-rade in 1946 following World War II (and the cancelled Reunions of 1943, 1944, and 1945) brought back 7,300 alumni, with each class carrying service flags showing the number of classmates who served and were killed in the war. In 1947, the Class of 1922 held its 25th Reunion in Holder Hall Courtyard, becoming the first on-campus reunion site. (Previous reunions were held in private homes and rented spaces in town.) But it was not until 1952 that liquor was permitted to be served at the on-campus sites. Rain has put the occasional damper on the P-rade but only once — in 1953 — did it force a cancellation. Even then, some classes insisted on marching anyway! Over time, P-rades and Reunions increasingly became a family affair, but it was not until the undergraduate body became coeducational in 1969 that women were officially welcome to participate in the P-rade. 3 From the early- to mid-20th century, the P-rade route began at Nassau Hall, moved across campus to 1879 Arch, then down Prospect Avenue and around University Field to pass the president in his reviewing box. Construction of the EQuad on the site of University Field in the late 1960s changed the end of the route to the new Clarke Field south of Ivy Lane. This era also marked the last Yale-Princeton Commencement baseball game (1966), so the P-rade ending changed to an Alumni Association meeting welcoming the graduating seniors into the alumni body. In the early 1990s, the route was altered again to keep the P-rade entirely on campus — beginning at FitzRandolph Gate, going around Nassau Hall and Cannon Green, then down Elm Drive to finish on Poe Field. Despite route changes, procession order remains traditional. At 2:00 PM on Reunions Saturday, the Nassau Hall bell tolls and the P-rade Grand Marshal and other dignitaries (including the University president) lead members of the 25th Reunion Class from front campus to Poe Field. The classes then process in descending class order, beginning with the “Old Guard” (classes beyond the 65th Reunion) who ride in golf carts or occasionally walk, always drawing the loudest cheers from spectators. In recognition of his commitment to Reunions, the eldest returning alumnus from the oldest returning class has the special privilege of carrying the Class of 1923 Cane — a black wooden staff topped by a leaping silver tiger. Beginning in 1975, graduate alumni were invited to march between the 24th and 26th reunion classes, a tradition that has continued to this day. Throughout, dedicated alumni known as Marshals maintain order in their distinctive orange “Da Vinci” hats and blue blazers. The P-rade ends when the senior class sprints onto Poe Field, charging past the Reviewing Stand. In 1996, in celebration of the University’s bicenquinquagenary (250th anniversary), a spectacular fireworks display was first held on Saturday night. The thousands of shells, custom soundtrack, and tailored choreography of the 25-minute display quickly became a highlight and annual tradition during Reunions. Increasing student body size and the inclusion of family members in the P-rade has swelled turnout and lively participation in the ever-more-colorful spectacle. Today, well over 20,000 alumni, family, and friends participate in this annual gathering, and no other university comes close to the pageantry, magnitude, and ceremony of Princeton Reunions. This summary was prepared by the Committee on Reunions and is adapted from the research and writings of Alexander Leitch ’24, William K. Selden ’34, Daniel N. White ’65, J. T. Miller ’70, and Liz Greenberg ’02. 4 THURSDAY Thursday, May 28, 2015 9:00 AM Princetoniana “Take It or Leave It” Tent To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University, the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana, and the Alumni Council Committee on Reunions. East Pyne, South Lawn Tent. 10:00 AM Annual Meeting, Auxiliary to the Isabella McCosh Infirmary: New Initiatives in Counseling and Psychological Services Calvin Chin, Director, Counseling and Psychological Services, Princeton University Health Services. To Noon. Sponsored by the Auxiliary to the Isabella McCosh Infirmary. McCosh Health Center, G20. Lesbian Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Center Open House To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University LGBT Center. Frist Campus Center, Room 246 (LGBT Center). Princeton University Art Museum Store Sales Event To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. Princeton University Art Museum Tent. 11:00 AM Introducing the New Center for Digital Humanities at Princeton Meredith Martin, Associate Professor of English, and Director, Center for Digital Humanities; Jean Bauer, Associate Director, Center for Digital Humanities; Clifford Wulfman, Coordinator of Library Digital Initiatives, Director of the Blue Mountain Project, and Consultant to the Center for Digital Humanities. To Noon. Sponsored by the Center for Digital Humanities. Green Hall, Center for Digital Humanities. Princeton Class Ring Sale To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Ring and Frame Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. TigerGear Sale To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by TigerGear Student Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. Yearbook Sale To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Yearbook Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. 11:30 AM Class Officers Lunch and Gathering To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Alumni Affairs. Chancellor Green Rotunda. 5 THURSDAY, May 28 Noon Princeton University Band Barbecue To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Band. Poe Field, 1912 Pavilion (Picnic Shelter). 1:00 PM Career & Life Vision Workshop Pulin Sanghvi, Executive Director, Career Services. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Career Services. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Rooms A, B, and C. Murray-Dodge Café: Cookies and Tea To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by Murray-Dodge Café. MurrayDodge Hall Café. 2:00 PM Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy Show! To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy. U-Store Courtyard Tent. 3:00 PM eXpressions Dance Company Reunions Performance To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by eXpressions Dance Company. 185 Nassau Street, Hagan Dance Studio. 4:00 PM Beer Tasting and Curator-Led Tours of the Princeton University Art Museum To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. Princeton University Art Museum Tent. Princeton’s Portrait: Reception and Self-Guided Tour To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Community and Regional Affairs. Historical Society of Princeton, Bainbridge House, 158 Nassau Street. PSC Presents: Complete Works of Shakespeare (Abridged) To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Shakespeare Company. East Pyne Courtyard. Social Media 101: Student Tutors Teaching Facebook and Twitter To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Council Committee on Alumni Relations and Communications. Friend Center, Room 007. 4:30 PM Career Services Open House Reception and Student Art Exhibition To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Career Services. 36 University Place, Suite 200. Meditation with the Princeton Buddhist Student Group To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Buddhist Student Group (PBSG). Murray-Dodge Hall, Third Floor. 6 THURSDAY 5:00 PM Gary Walters ’67 Princeton Varsity Club Awards Banquet Contact the Princeton Varsity Club at [email protected] or 609-258-6695 for tickets. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Varsity Club. Graduate College Tent. United World Colleges (UWC) Reunion Picnic/Potluck To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the United World Colleges (UWC) Club. East Pyne, Room 127 (Class of 1949 Room). 7:00 PM Lobster Club Improv Comedy Reunions Show Tickets available at the door. To 8:30 PM. Sponsored by Lobster Club. Butler College, Amphitheater. 8:00 PM Princeton University Players Presents The Fantasticks Tickets available at the door. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Players. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theater, Room 301. Theatre Intime Presents How the Other Half Loves Tickets available at the door. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Players. Hamilton Murray Theatre. 10:00 PM Koleinu Alumni Arch Sing To Midnight. Sponsored by Koleinu. 1879 Arch. 11:00 PM Quipfire! Reunions Show Tickets available at the door. To Midnight. Sponsored by Quipfire! Improv Comedy. Hamilton Murray Theater. 7 FRIDAY, May 29 Friday, May 29, 2015 9:00 AM Alumni-Faculty Forum: Future of the City Moderator: Alison Isenberg, Professor of History, and Co-Director, Program in Urban Studies. Panelists: Ray Gastil *91, Director, Department of City Planning, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Peter Waldman ’65, William R. Kenan Professor of Architecture, University of Virginia; Ellen Dunham-Jones ’80 *83, Professor of Architecture and Urban Design, Georgia Institute of Technology; Chris Hand ’95, Chief of Staff, City of Jacksonville, Office of the Mayor; Waqas Jawaid ’10, Partner, Isometric Studio. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Architecture Building, Betts Auditorium. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Guns in America — How Did We Get Here? Moderator: Steven Strauss, Lecturer and John L. Weinberg/Goldman Sachs & Co. Visiting Professor, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Henry Kennedy Jr. ’70, United States District Judge (retired); John Chludzinski ’85, Real Estate Broker, Kuker & Kessler Real Estate; James Greer ’95, President & Founder, CounterPAC; Jonathan Gerber ’90, Appellate Judge, State of Florida. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Whig Hall, Senate Chamber. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Religion in America Today Moderator: Eric Gregory, Professor of Religion. Panelists: Obery Hendricks Jr. *95, Visiting Scholar, Department of Religion, Columbia University; Thomas B. Coburn ’65, President Emeritus, Naropa University, and Visiting Scholar, Brown University; James McDonald ’70, President, San Francisco Theological Seminary; Joshua Davidson ’90, Rabbi, Congregation Emanu-El of the City of New York; Hannah Clayson Smith ’95, Senior Counsel, The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Room 302. Alumni-Faculty Forum: The U.S. Approach to the Middle East Moderator: Jacob Shapiro, Associate Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Philip Seib ’70, Vice Dean and Professor, University of Southern California; Robert Silverman ’80, President and Chairman of the Board of Governors of the American Foreign Service Association; Jonathan Cohen ’85, Deputy Chief of Mission, U.S. Embassy Baghdad; Gabriel Legendy ’05, Former Captain, U.S. Army Special Forces; Sarah Mousa ’10, Consultant, The World Bank. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 50. 8 FRIDAY Pace Center for Civic Engagement Open House To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Pace Center for Civic Engagement. Frist Campus Center, Pace Center Lounge (Room 201A). Princetoniana “Take it or Leave it” Tent To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University, the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana, and the Alumni Council Committee on Reunions. East Pyne, South Lawn Tent. Voiceless: Human Trafficking in 2015 Moderator: Noy Thrupkaew, Lecturer and Ferris Professor of Journalism, The Council of the Humanities. Panelists: Lori Bishop *06, Senior Advisor, Human Rights, Resiliensea Group; Elaine Pearson *13, Australia Director, Human Rights Watch; Kay Warren *74, Tillinghast Professor of International Studies and Professor of Anthropology, Brown University; Jennifer Windsor *91, CEO, Women for Women International. To 10:15 AM. Sponsored by the Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni. Robertson Hall, Bowl 016. Whig-Clio Alumni Video Project: Share Your Memories To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the American Whig-Cliosophic Society. Whig Hall, James Madison Room. 9:30 AM Volunteer: Kids Against Hunger Meal Packaging Community Service Event To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1990. Dillon Gym, Main Floor. Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network (PEN): A Startup Odyssey Moderator: Mayra Ceja ’03, PEN President. Keynote: Andrew Geant ’05, CEO and Co-Founder of WyzAnt. To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network. Friend Center. 10:00 AM Art Museum Store Tent Sale To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. Art Museum Tent. Department of Classics Alumni Breakfast To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Department of Classics. East Pyne, Room 143 (Prentice Memorial Library). Feeding the Future and the Future of Food: Panel Discussion and Film Screening Panelists: Kelly Caylor, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Timothy Searchinger, Research Scholar, Program in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP), Woodrow Wilson School; R. Gordon Douglas M.D. ’55, Professor Emeritus, Weill Cornell Medical College; Craig Leon ’85, Director, Modern Nature. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Environmental Institute, Program in Environmental Studies, and Princeton Studies Food. McCosh Hall, Room 46. 9 FRIDAY, May 29 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Center Open House To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University LGBT Center. Frist Campus Center, Room 246 (LGBT Center). Tour the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory No open-toed or high-heeled shoes. Children ages 12 and over, please. A government ID is required. Take Tiger Transit shuttle available via Forrestal/PPPL line. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. PPPL, 100 Stellarator Road, Forrestal Campus, Plainsboro. 10:30 AM Alumni-Faculty Forum: Evolving Immigration Policy Moderator: John Batchelor ’70, Author/Broadcaster and Host of John Batchelor Show. Panelists: Douglas Massey *78, Henry G. Bryant Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs; Denny Chin ’75, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Circuit; Jo Chen ’00, Board of Directors Member, Immigration Equality, and Head Trading Counsel, Bain Capital; Alissa Escarce ’10, Communications Coordinator, Centro de los Derechos del Migrante. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Whig Hall, Senate Chamber. Alumni-Faculty Forum: The Crisis in American Public Education Moderator: Christopher Campisano, Director, Program in Teacher Preparation. Panelists: Alan Safran ’80, President and Chair of the Board, SAGA Innovations; Anne Herr ’85, Director of School Quality, Friends of Choice in Urban Schools; Jason Kamras ’95, Chief of Human Capital, District of Columbia Public Schools; Dan Lips ’00, Vice President for Policy, Goldwater Institute; Matt Westmoreland ’10, Member, Atlanta Board of Education. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 10. Alumni-Faculty Forum: What China Stands For in the New World Order Moderator: Rory Truex ’07, Assistant Professor, Politics and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Ira Kasoff *82, Senior Counselor, APCO Worldwide; Owen D. Nee Jr. ’65, Senior Counsel, Greenbert Traurig LLP; William Fung ’70, Group Chairman of Li & Fung Limited, and Chairman of Global Brands Group Holding Limited; Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80, President and CEO, New America Foundation; Peter Winn ’90, Founder and CEO, Talent Education Group. To 11:30AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 50. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Whistle Blowers — Tattletales or Heroes Moderator: Brandice Canes-Wrone ’93, Donald E. Stokes Professor of Public and International Affairs, and Professor of Politics and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Mark Biros ’70, Partner, Proskauer Rose LLP; Jason B. Meyer ’80, Certified Compliance and Ethics Professional and CEO, LeadGood, LLC; Norm Champ 10 FRIDAY ’85, Visiting Scholar, Harvard Law School. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Room 302. Presidential Politics: The Road to 2016 Moderator: Joel Achenbach ’82, Reporter, The Washington Post, and Ferris Professor, 2002-03. Panelists: Nancy Cordes *99, Congressional Correspondent, CBS News; Marc Fisher ’80, Senior Editor, The Washington Post, and Ferris Professor, 2004-05; Richard Just ’01, Editor, National Journal, and Ferris Professor, 2014-15; Kathy Kiely ’77, Washington News Director, Bloomberg Politics, and Ferris Professor, 2008-09; Sandra Sobieraj Westfall ’89, Washington Bureau Chief, People; Joe Stephens, Reporter, The Washington Post, and Ferris Professor in Residence, 2014-19; Marilyn Thompson, Deputy Editor, Politico, and Ferris Professor, 2003-04. To Noon. Sponsored by the Princeton Alumni Weekly and the Council of the Humanities’ Ferris Journalism Seminars. McCosh Hall, Room 28. Medusa’s Head: The Rise and Survival of Joseph Fouché, Inventor of the Modern Police State Rand Mirante ’70 h55. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Class of 1970. East Pyne, Room 010. The Famous Walking Tour of Princeton, America’s Campus Barksdale Maynard ’88, author of Princeton: America’s Campus. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Class of 1965 and the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana. Nassau Hall Steps. The Library of the Future Now at Princeton: Tour of the High-Density, Automated Remote Storage Library of the Research Collections and Preservation Consortium Michael Gibbons, ReCap Facility Supervisor. Take Tiger Transit shuttle available via Forrestal/PPPL line. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Friends of the Princeton University Library. Forrestal Campus, 400 Forrestal Road. Unmanned: A Conversation on the Future of Commercial Drones in America Edward W. Felten, Robert E. Kahn Professor of Computer Science and Public Affairs, Director, Center for Information Technology Policy, and Associate Director, Program in Technology and Society; Michael Huerta *80, Administrator, Federal Aviation Administration. To 11:45 AM. Sponsored by the Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni. Robertson Hall, Bowl 016. 11:00 AM 18th Annual Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network (PEN) Startup Showcase and Competition To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network. Friend Center. A Short History of Rome’s Pantheon: Rebuilt in Antiquity, Reused in the Middle Ages, Rediscovered in the Renaissance Panelists: Beatrice Kitzinger, Art and Archaeology; Michael Koortbojian, M. Taylor Pyne Professor of Art and 11 FRIDAY, May 29 Archaeology and Chair, Department of Art and Archaeology; Carolyn Yerkes, Assistant Professor of Art and Archaeology. To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Art and Archaeology. McCormick Hall, Room 106. All-Service Military Alumni Cookout and Reunion Lunch tickets available at the tent. To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni & Friends of Princeton ROTC. Whig Hall, Tent. eXpressions Dance Company Open Workshop To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by eXpressions Dance Company. Wilcox Hall, Dance Studio. ObamaCare: Can It be Fixed or Should It be Repealed? Uwe Reinhardt, James Madison Professor of Political Economy and Professor of Economics and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School; Avik Roy, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute, and Opinion Editor, Forbes. To Noon. Sponsored by the Griswold Center for Economic Policy Studies and the Center for Health and Wellbeing. Robertson Hall, Dodds Auditorium. Princeton Class Ring Sale To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Ring and Frame Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. TigerGear Sale To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by TigerGear Student Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. Versailles on Paper Exhibition Tour To Noon. Sponsored by Rare Books and Special Collections and the Friends of the Princeton University Library. Firestone Library, Main Exhibition Gallery. Yearbook Sale To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Yearbook Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. 11:30 AM Battle of the Alumni Bands To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. U-Store Courtyard Tent. Princeton Tigressions Alumnae Brunch To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by Tigressions. Bloomberg Hall, Room 059 (Tigressions Room). Program in Teacher Preparation Reception Remarks by Christopher Campisano, Director, Program in Teacher Preparation. To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Program in Teacher Preparation. 1972 Plaza in front of McCosh 10. William C. Campbell ’45 and Betty Donovan Alumni Golf Tournament RSVP to Coach Will Green at [email protected] or 609-306-8966. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Golf. Springdale Golf Club. 12 FRIDAY Noon Men’s Basketball: Coaches Conversation To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Men’s Basketball. Robertson Hall, Bowl 002. Princeton Football Alumni Game To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Football Association. Princeton Stadium, Powers Field. Princeton Sailing Team Alumni Barbecue To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Sailing Team. Lockwood-Pirie ’27 Boathouse. Princeton University Orchestra Reunion and Open Rehearsal To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Orchestra. Woolworth Music Center, Front Lawn. Triangle Oral History Project: Share Your Memories To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Triangle Club. McCarter Theatre Center, Matthews Theatre. 12:30 PM AlumniCorps Picnic To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton AlumniCorps. Chancellor Green Rotunda. 1:00 PM How Chocolate Is Made: From Bean to Bar with the Institute for Chocolate Studies To 2:00 PM. Sponsored by the Institute for Chocolate Studies. McCosh Hall, Room 10. Lobster Club Improv Comedy Open Workshop Tickets available at the door. To 2:30 PM. Sponsored by Lobster Club. Butler College, Amphitheater. Learning About Lyme: Challenges of Diagnosis and Treatment Moderator: Hugh Hamilton ’85. Panelists: Jeff Rosalsky ’85, Executive Director, Pocono Environmental Education Center, and Member, Pike County Tick Borne Diseases Task Force, Dingmans Ferry, PA; Christienne F. Coates ’89, Ophthalmologist and Oculoplastic Surgeon, Ridgefield Ophthalmology; Doug Fearn, President, Lyme Disease Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania, Inc. To 2:45 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1985. Robertson Hall, Bowl 002. Murray-Dodge Café: Cookies and Tea To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by Murray-Dodge Café. MurrayDodge Hall Café. Muslim Friday Prayers and Reunion To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Muslim Life Program. Murray-Dodge Hall, East Room. 13 FRIDAY, May 29 1:30 PM Giving for Change: How to Measure the Good of a Gift Moderator: Nancy Easton ’88. Panelists: Paul Haaga ’70; Wendy McWeeny ’92; Rahsaan Harris ’95. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton AlumniCorps and Princeton Internships in Civic Service. Chancellor Green Rotunda. Humanistic Studies Reunion Talk Esther Schor, Professor of English and Inaugural Behrman Professor in the Council of the Humanities. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Council of the Humanities. East Pyne, Room 010. 1:30 PM Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network (PEN) Networking Reception To 2:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Entrepreneurs’ Network and the Keller Center. Friend Center. Tour the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory No open-toed or high-heeled shoes. Children ages 12 and over, please. A government ID is required. Take Tiger Transit shuttle available via Forrestal/PPPL line. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. PPPL, 100 Stellarator Road, Forrestal Campus, Plainsboro. 2:00 PM A Bird’s Eye View of the Arts and Transit Project Ron McCoy *80, University Architect, and Jane Curry, Senior Project Manager, Office of Design and Construction. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of the University Architect. New South, 7th Floor Training Room. Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment Project Tour Sam Rozycki, Senior Project Manager. First come, first served, limit of 20 participants. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Design and Construction. Bowen Hall Front Entrance. Annual Meeting of the Rugby Endowment Board To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Rugby. The Tiger Inn, 1971 Library. Chemical and Biological Engineering Alumni and Family Ice Cream Social To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering (formerly Chemical Engineering). Engineering Quadrangle, Room A203. Chemistry Faculty Talk To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Chemistry. Frick Chemistry Laboratory, Taylor Auditorium. Civil and Environmental Engineering Alumni Happy Hour To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering. Engineering Quadrangle, Room E406. 14 FRIDAY Community House Reception To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by Community House and the Pace Center for Civic Engagement. Carl A. Fields Center, 3rd Floor. Department of Religion Reception To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Religion. Class of 1879 Hall, Religion Department Lounge. diSiac Dance Company Reunions Show Tickets available at the door. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by diSiac Dance Company. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theatre, Room 301. Exhibit and Library Tour: Suits, Soldiers, and Hippies: The Vietnam War Abroad and at Princeton To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library. Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Wiess Lounge. Mathematics Department Alumni Open House To 3:30 P.M. Sponsored by the Department of Mathematics. Fine Hall, 3rd Floor Common Room. McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning Undergraduate and Graduate Alumni Reunion To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning. Frist Campus Center, Room 330. Music of Mozart: An Afternoon of Arias with the Princeton Opera Company To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Opera Company. Fine Hall, Taplin Auditorium. Navigating the College Admission Process Featuring Logan Powell, Director, Undergraduate Admission, and Susan Katzmann Horner ’86, Chair of the Alumni Council Princeton Schools Committee. Open to students in 9th through 11th grades and their families. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Council Princeton Schools Committee. Architecture Building, Betts Auditorium. ORFE Reception To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Operations Research and Financial Engineering (ORFE). Sherrerd Hall, Atrium. Our Musical Journeys and Partnership: Songs and Conversation Featuring Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program; and Michael Smith, McCosh Professor of Philosophy, and Chair of the Department of Philosophy. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. Friend Center, Room 101. Panel of Military Alumni: Perspectives on What’s Next for the U.S. Military To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni & Friends of Princeton ROTC. McCosh Hall, Room 46. 15 FRIDAY, May 29 Princeton Entrepreneurship Club Reunion To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Entrepreneurship Club. Computer Science, Banana Gallery. Princeton University Wind Ensemble Alumni Concert To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Wind Ensemble. Class of 1879 Hall Lawn. Task Force on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Briefing David Lee, Provost; Cynthia Cherrey, Vice President for Campus Life; Michele Minter, Vice Provost for Institutional Equity and Diversity. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of the Provost. Carl A. Fields Center, Room 105. Wildcats Alumni Reception To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Wildcats. Mathey College, Common Room. Writing Artists’ Lives: A Conversation with Pulitzer Prize-Winning Authors Steven Naifeh ’74; Mark Stevens ’73; Annalyn Swan ’73. To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. McCormick Hall, Room 101. 2:30 PM Alumni-Faculty Forum: Future Directions in Neuroscience Moderator: Carlos Brody, Professor of Molecular Biology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute. Panelists: Donna Armentano *86, Senior Scientific Director, Genzyme Corporation; Sanders Williams ’70, President, Gladstone Institutes; Charles Cobbs ’85, Director, Ben and Catherine Ivy Center for Advanced Brain Tumor Treatment, Swedish Neuroscience Institute; Nouhad Husseini ’00, Senior Director, Business Development, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals; James Jeanne ’05, Postdoctoral Fellow, Harvard Medical School. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Room A32. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Scandals in Politics, Sports, and Big Business — Do They Matter Anymore? Moderator: Joe Stephens, Ferris Professor in Residence. Panelists: Charles Gibson ’65, Former ABC television Broadcast Anchor/Journalist; Stuart Taylor Jr. ’70, Nonresident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institute and freelance Journalist/Author; Peter Elkind ’80, Editor at Large, Fortune; Camille Hackney ’90, EVP of Brand Partnerships/Commercial Licensing, Atlantic Records, and Head of Global Brand Partnerships Council, Warner Music Group; Danielle Ivory ’05, Reporter, The New York Times. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McDonnell Hall, Room A02. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Science Under Attack! Moderator: Susan Fiske, Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology and Professor of Psychology and Public Affairs. Panelists: Seth Shostak ’65, Senior Astronomer and Director of the Center for SETI Research, SETI Institute; Peter Brown ’70, Editorial and Website Consultant, and 16 FRIDAY Former Editor in Chief of The Sciences and Natural History magazines; Debra Meloy Elmegreen ’75, Maria Mitchell Professor of Astronomy, Vassar College; Kaiser Fung ’95, Author and Former Head of Data, Vimeo and Sirius XM Radio; Zackory Burns ’10, Hellman Fellow in Science and Technology Policy, American Academy of Arts and Sciences. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McDonnell Hall, Room A01. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Wealth Imbalance — What Does It Mean? Moderator: Patricia Fernandez-Kelly, Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Research Associate, Office of Population Research. Panelists: Edward Golding *82, Senior Advisor, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; William Janeway ’65, Managing Director and Senior Advisor, Warburg Pincus, and Visiting Lecturer, Bendheim Center for Finance; Jerome Powell ’75, Member, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; N. Gregory Mankiw ’80, Professor of Economics, Harvard University; Sean Zielenbach ’90, President, SZ Consulting. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Room 302. Outdoor Action Tree Tour of the Princeton Campus Led by Glenn Morris ’72. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by Outdoor Action. Whig Hall Steps. The Library of the Future Now at Princeton: Forum on Scholarly Communications, Digital Humanities, and Planning Library Space of the Future Moderator: Karin Trainer, University Librarian. Panelists: Anne Langley, Head Librarian, Science and Technology Libraries, and Director of Scholarly Communications; James Wallace, Senior Project Manager, Design and Construction; Clifford Wulfman, Library Digital Initiatives Coordinator. To 3:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of the Princeton University Library. McCosh Hall, Room 62. 3:00 PM Annual Giving Volunteer Reception To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Annual Giving. Prospect House, Drawing Room and Patio. Campus Green Tour To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Sustainability. Frist Campus Center, South Lawn Tent. Career & Life Vision Workshop Pulin Sanghvi, Executive Director, Career Services. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Career Services and the Alumni Council Careers Committee. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Rooms B and C. Celebrating Jewish Life at Princeton with Abby Klionsky ’14 Abby Klionsky ’14, author of Jews in the Tiger’s Lair. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. 17 FRIDAY, May 29 Chemistry Alumni Reception To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Chemistry. Frick Chemistry Laboratory, Taylor Commons. Chocolate Sampling Table To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Institute for Chocolate Studies. 48 University Place, Courtyard. Department of Geosciences Alumni Reception To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Geosciences. Guyot Hall, Great Hall. Driverless Car Demonstration To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Autonomous Vehicle Engineering Team. 1972 Plaza in front of McCosh 10. Effective Activism at Princeton: A Conversation with Student Activists of the Present and Past To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton College Democrats. Robertson Hall, Bowl 002. Electrical Engineering Alumni Reception To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Electrical Engineering. Engineering Quadrangle, Room F110. Engaged in the Service of All Nations: Sustainable Development and Creating a Lasting Impact Moderator: Forrest Meggers, Assistant Professor in Architecture and the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment. Panelists: Adrienne Clermont ’09, Research Associate, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health; Rebecca Kaufman ’11, Partnership Associate, Echoing Green; Kelly Smolar, Senior Project Manager, Tishman Construction; Gregory van der Vink, Visiting Lecturer in Geosciences. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by Engineers Without Borders. Robertson Hall, Bowl 016. Faith and Ethics in the Executive Suite: A Conversation with Marc Allen Marc Allen ’95, President, Boeing Capital Corporation; David Miller, Director, Faith & Work Initiative, Center for the Study of Religion. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Faith & Work Initiative. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Room A. Global Health Program Reception To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Program in Global Health and Health Policy (GHP). Wallace Hall, Room 300. Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Reception To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering. Engineering Quadrangle, Room J223 (MAE Faculty Lounge). Bacteria Living In and On the Human Body: An Unexpected First Line of Defense Mohamed Donia, Assistant Professor of Molecular Biology. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Molecular Biology. Schultz Lab, Room 107. 18 FRIDAY Open House in Honor of Professor Alan Mann’s Retirement To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Anthropology. Aaron Burr Hall, 1st Floor Lobby. PICS Alumni and Supporters Reception To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Internships in Civic Service. Chancellor Green, Lower Hyphen. Princeton Football Alumni Reception To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Football Association. Princeton Stadium, Powers Field. Race Relations and Diversity: Then and Now Moderators: N.L. Akili Buchanan ’76 and Melanie Lawson ’76. Speakers: Stacey Sinclair, Associate Professor of Psychology and African American Studies; Marta Tienda, Maurice P. During Professor in Demographic Studies, Professor of Sociology and Public Affairs, and Director, Program in Latino Studies; Henry Von Kohorn ’66, Founder of Princeton Prize in Race Relations. Panelists: Evora Thomas ’74; Larry Adams ’74; Marcia Gonzales-Kimbrough ’75; Julio Rivera ’76; Michelle Jacobs ’77; Larry Nez ’77; Jeremy Borjon ’10; Dana McKinney ’11; Blair Storie-Johnson ’13; Ethan Leman ’13; Estela Diaz ’14; Brandon Holt ’15. Diversity Exercise Leader: Roberto Gil Jr., Program Director, Blairstown Campus. To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Asian American Alumni Association, Asian American Students Association, Association of Black Princeton Alumni, Association of Latino Princeton Alumni, Black Graduate Caucus, Black Men’s Awareness Group, Black Student Union, Carl A. Fields Center, Center for African American Studies, Graduate Women of Color Caucus, Princeton African Students Association, Princeton Association of Black Women, Princeton Blairstown Center (PBC), Princeton Caribbean Connection, Princeton Latinos y Amigos, Program in Latino Studies, The Latino Graduate Student Association, The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Center. Carl A. Fields Center, Large Multipurpose Room. University Campus Ministry in 2015 Rev. Dr. Craig Barnes, President and Professor of Pastoral Ministry, Princeton Theological Seminary. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Presbyterian On-Campus Chaplaincy. McCosh Hall, Room 28. Where Are They Now? Panel with Alums from PIIRS Global Seminars and OIP Study Abroad Programs Moderator: Mitchell Duneier, Maurice P. During Professor of Sociology. To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies and the Office of International Programs. Aaron Burr Hall, Room 219. Woodrow Wilson School Reception To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Robertson Hall, Shultz Dining Room. 19 FRIDAY, May 29 3:30 PM 40th Annual Dante Reunion Robert Hollander ’55, Professor of European Literature and French and Italian, Emeritus. Texts to be discussed: Purgatorio 19-22. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. East Pyne, Room 010. Alumni Schools Committee Reception Join fellow committee members and celebrate this year’s alumni interviewing success and honor the 2015 winner of the Spencer J. Reynolds ’61 Award, Maureen Kelly Scott ’75 S75. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Council Princeton Schools Committee. Architecture Building, Lobby. A Welcome Gathering: Persian Food Tasting and Lecture with Najmieh Batmanglij Najmieh Batmanglij, award-winning cookbook author. To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Iran and Persian Gulf Studies. Green Hall, Room 2-C-18. American Whig-Cliosophic Society and PDP Reunions Debate and Reception To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the American Whig-Cliosophic Society and the Princeton Debate Panel. Whig Hall, Senate Chamber. Friends of Princeton Men’s Basketball Picnic To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Men’s Basketball. Jadwin Gym, Hodes Plaza Tent. Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy 35th Reunion Show To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1980 and Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy. Scully Courtyard. Leadership in Action: Insights from Alumni and Students Moderator: Rick Curtis ’79, Director, Outdoor Action. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by Outdoor Action. Robertson Hall, Bowl 001. LGBT Civil Rights: Making History Now Panelists: Robert Falk ’85, General Counsel, Human Rights Campaign; Hayley Gorenberg ’87, National Deputy Legal Director, Lambda Legal; Clyde Wadsworth ’80, Attorney, Alston Hunt Floyd & Ing; Brady Walkinshaw ’06, Washington State House of Representatives. To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by FFR/Princeton BTGALA. Robertson Hall, Dodds Auditorium. Princeton Arts Alumni Reunions Reception To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Lewis Center for the Arts. Lewis Center for the Arts, Lucas Art Gallery (185 Nassau Street). Pro-Life Pro-Family Reception Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Professor of Politics; Maria E. Moreyra Garlock, Associate Professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; William Happer, Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics; Daniel Mark ’03 *13, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Villanova University; Michael A. Reynolds, Associate Professor of Near Eastern Studies; Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe, James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Civil and Environmental 20 FRIDAY Engineering; Salvatore Torquato, Professor of Chemistry. To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Anscombe Society, Princeton Pro-Life, and Christian Union. Butler College, Class of 1915 Room. Reunions Organ Recital in Memory of Dean Ernest Gordon h70, Robert F. Goheen ’40 h70, and William H. Scheide ’36 h70 Eric Plutz, University Organist. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Office of Religious Life, the University Chapel, and the Class of 1970. University Chapel. The Library of the Future Now at Princeton: Tour of Firestone Library Under Renovation Jeffrey Rowlands, Director of Library Finance and Administration. To 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of the Princeton University Library. Firestone Library Lobby. 3:45 PM Around the World in ’80 Ways: Stories of Globalization in the Age of Digitization Moderator: Jason B. Meyer ’80, CEO, LeadGood, LLC. Panelists: Stephen Hughes ’80, Owner and General Manager, Onda Positiva, S.L.; Sharon Keld ’80, returned Peace Corps volunteer and Board Member, National Peace Corps Association; Jeffrey H. Levenson ’80, Founder and President, Levenson Eye Associates and Lead Physician, Surgical Eye Expeditions, International; Robert Silverman ’80, President and Chairman of the Board of Governors, American Foreign Service Association; Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80, President and CEO, New America Foundation. To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1980. McCosh Hall, Room 50. 4:00 PM Learning Service at Princeton Kimberly de los Santos, Executive Director, Pace Center for Civic Engagement; Trisha Thorme, Director, CommunityBased Learning Initiative (CBLI). To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Pace Center for Civic Engagement and CommunityBased Learning Initiative (CBLI). McCormick Hall, Room 106. Physics Demonstrations: What Could Go Wrong? To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Physics. McDonnell Hall, Room A02. PIIRS Global Seminars and OIP Study Abroad Programs Reception To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies and the Office of International Programs. Aaron Burr Hall, 2nd Floor Gallery. Princeton Tennis Social Happy Hour To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Tennis. Lenz Tennis Center, Cordish Family Pavilion. Princeton Women Happy Hour: She Roars! To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Council Committee on Alumnae Initiatives. Frist Campus Center, South Lawn Tent. 21 FRIDAY, May 29 PSC Presents: Complete Works of Shakespeare (Abridged) To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Shakespeare Company. East Pyne Courtyard. School of Engineering and Applied Science Tent Reception H. Vincent Poor *77, Dean, School of Engineering and Applied Science and Michael Henry Strater University Professor of Electrical Engineering. With the Katzenjammers. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the School of Engineering and Applied Science. Friend Center, South Lawn Tent. Specks of Dust Documentary Film Screening Directed by Shaina Watrous ’14, Azza Cohen ’16. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Bridge Year Program and the Pace Center for Civic Engagement. Lewis Library, Bowl 138. Wrestling Reunion To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Wrestling. The Tiger Inn. 4:30 PM Glee Club Reunion Sing (‘Spem in Alium’) and ’65 European Tour Reunion To 5:15 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Glee Club. Alexander Hall, Richardson Auditorium. Meditation with the Princeton Buddhist Student Group To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Buddhist Student Group (PBSG). Murray-Dodge Hall, Third Floor. Newbies! (An Inaugural Improv Show) To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Graduate Improv Club. Rocky-Mathey Theatre. Outdoor Action: The Annapurna Sanctuary — Heart of the Himalayas Rick Curtis ’79, Director, Outdoor Action. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by Outdoor Action. Robertson Hall, Bowl 001. Petey Greene Program Update and Tutor Volunteers Reunion Jim Farrin ’58, Executive Director, Petey Greene Prisoner Assistance Program; Walter Fortson, PR and Special Projects Manager, Petey Greene Prisoner Assistance Program; Joe Barrett ’14, Regional Field Manager, Petey Greene Prisoner Assistance Program. To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1958. McCosh Hall, Room 62. Princeton Debate Panel Alumni Reception To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Debate Panel. Whig Hall, Oakes Lounge. Princeton in Latin America Reception To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton in Latin America. Aaron Burr Hall, 3rd Floor. Princeton South Asian Theatrics Variety Show To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton South Asian Theatrics. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theater, Room 301. 22 FRIDAY Social Mixer for Progressive Alumni and Students To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton College Democrats. Terrace Club, Library. UK Fellowships Alumni Reception: Rhodes, Marshall, Sachs Worcester, Gates, Churchill, and Fulbright UK To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by the Fellowships Advising Program, Office of International Programs. Carl A. Fields Center, Class of 1985 Meeting Room. 5:00 PM Alcoholics Anonymous Open Meeting To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University and the Office of Religious Life. Murray-Dodge Hall, East Room. Association of Latino Princeton Alumni Annual Reunions Reception/Pachanga To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Association of Latino Princeton Alumni. West College, Patio. Chapel Choir Reunions Alumni Sing Eric Plutz, University Organist; Penna Rose, Director of Chapel Music. To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by the Chapel Choir. University Chapel. Dharma after Princeton: A Hindu Alumni Mixer To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Hindu Life Program/ Princeton Hindu Alumni Network. Murray-Dodge Hall, West Room. Friends of Princeton Volleyball Reunions Reception To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Volleyball. Dillon Gym, Lobby. Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy Show! To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy. U-Store Courtyard Tent. High Meadows Fellows Alumni Gathering To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by the Pace Center for Civic Engagement. Frist Campus Center, Pace Center Lounge (Room 201A). Welcome To The Singles Jungle: Tiger Speed Dating Mixer Join members of the Classes of 1970–1990 and APGA. To 6:15 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1980 and the Alumni Association of Princeton University, with the Classes of 1990, 1985, 1975, 1970 and their satellites. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Room A. 5:15 PM Glee Club Reunion Reception To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Glee Club. Alexander Beach. 5:30 PM Friends of Princeton Track and Field Gathering To 7:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Track and Field. Princeton Stadium, Concourse near Weaver Track. 23 FRIDAY, May 29 Intime Reunions Barbecue To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by Theatre Intime. Murray-Dodge Hall, Class of 1969 Memorial Garden. 6:00 PM Episcopal Church Annual Cocktail Party To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Episcopal Church at Princeton. Procter House. Princeton Women’s Basketball BBQ To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Women’s Basketball. Schultz Lab, Tent. Friends of Rugby Annual Awards Ceremony and Senior Recognition Dinner To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Rugby. The Tiger Inn, 1952 Dining Room. L’Avant-Scène Alumni Reunions Reception To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by L’Avant-Scène, the French Theater Workshop. Blair Hall, T4. Princeton Shakespeare Company Alumni Reception To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Shakespeare Company. East Pyne Courtyard. 6:30 PM Friends of Rugby Annual Reunions Reception Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Rugby. The Tiger Inn, Rugby Porch. Naacho South Asian Dance Company Performance To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by Naacho Dance Company. U-Store Courtyard Tent. Shabbat Evening Services (Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform) To 7:30 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/ Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. 7:00 PM AA Haven To Midnight. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University and the Office of Religious Life. Frist Campus Center, Class of 1952 Room. ABPA and Graduate School Meet and Greet Reception To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Association of Black Princeton Alumni and The Graduate School. Chancellor Green, Lower Hyphen. Princeton Perspective Project Open House To 8:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Perspective Project. Butler College, Class of 1915 Room. 7:30 PM Festive Shabbat Dinner To 8:30 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/ Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. 24 FRIDAY Worship and Fellowship To 10:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Evangelical Fellowship. Friend Center, Room 101, Upper Atrium, and Convocation Room. 8:00 PM 13th Annual Shabbat Dinner To 10:30 PM. Sponsored by the Scharf Family Chabad House. Scharf Family Chabad House, 15 Edwards Place. Princeton Triangle Show: An Inconvenient Sleuth Tickets at www.triangleshow.com and at McCarter Theatre. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Triangle Club. McCarter Theatre Center, Matthews Theatre. Princeton University Players Presents The Fantasticks Tickets available at the door. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Players. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theatre, Room 301. Theatre Intime Presents How the Other Half Loves Tickets available at the door. To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by Theatre Intime. Hamilton Murray Theater. 9:00 PM FFR/Princeton BTGALA LGBT Alumni Welcome Cocktail Reception To 11:00 PM. Sponsored by FFR/Princeton BTGALA. Bendheim Center Library. Nassoons Reunion and Performance To 10:30 PM. Sponsored by the Nassoons. Colonial Club. Old NasSoul Arch Sing To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by Old NasSoul. 1879 Arch. Tigerlilies Alumnae Arch Sing To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Tigerlilies. Blair Arch. 9:30 PM On The Prowl: Tiger Singles Party Join members of the Classes of 1970–1990 and APGA. To 11:00 PM. Sponsored by the Class of 1980 and the Alumni Association of Princeton University, with the Classes of 1990, 1985, 1975, 1970 and their satellites. Butler College, 1915 Room. 10:00 PM Wildcats Reunions Arch Sing To 11:00 PM. Sponsored by the Wildcats. 1879 Arch. 10:30 PM Princeton Triangle Club Alumni Reunion To 1:00 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Triangle Club. McCarter Theatre Center, Matthews Theatre. 25 FRIDAY, May 29 11:00 PM Kindred Spirit Reunions Arch Sing To Midnight. Sponsored by Kindred Spirit. Blair Arch. Quipfire! Reunions Show Tickets available at the door. To Midnight. Sponsored by Quipfire! Improv Comedy. Hamilton Murray Theater. Roaring 20 Alumni Arch Sing To 1:00 AM. Sponsored by Roaring 20. 1879 Arch. Midnight Nassoons Alumni Arch Sing To 1:30 AM. Sponsored by the Nassoons. Blair Arch. 26 SATURDAY Saturday, May 30, 2015 8:00 AM Crusaders Annual Gathering: Review of Year, 1912 Liturgy To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Ambassadors/Crusaders. Dickinson Hall, Room 211. 8:30 AM 5th Annual Princeton University Reunions Run (PURR) Registration: http://www.princeton90.com/dynamic. asp?id=25th_reunion_purr To 10:30 AM. Sponsored by the Classes of 1985 and 1990. West Windsor Fields. 9:00 AM Alumni-Faculty Forum: Changing Landscape in Africa Moderator: Leonard Wantchekon, Professor of Politics. Panelists: Kanni Wignaraja *89, Director, United Nations Development Coordination Office; Joseph Anderson ’65, President, Capital Research Associates; Shanta Deverajan ’75, Chief Economist, Middle East & North Africa Region, World Bank; Arlen Hastings ’80, Executive Director, Science Initiative Group at the Institute for Advanced Study; John Simon ’90, Founding Partner, Total Impact Capital; Connie Lewin ’05, Director of Marketing and Strategic Partnerships, Sustainable Health Enterprises. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Whig Hall, Senate Chamber. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Cultural Property and the Future of Museums Moderator: James Steward, Director of the Princeton University Art Museum and Lecturer with the rank of Professor in Art and Archaeology. Panelists: Jan Stuart *83, Melvin R. Seiden Curator of Chinese Art, Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Hugh Davies ’70 *76, The David C. Copley Director and CEO, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego; Lisa A. Banner ’85, Independent Curator and Visiting Associate Professor, Pratt Institute; Michèle Morgan ’85, Museum Curator of Osteology and Palaeoanthropology, Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University; Frederick Ilchman ’90, Chair, Art of Europe, and Curator of Paintings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCormick Hall, Room 101. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Federal Government— Is Dysfunction Endemic? Moderator: Julian Zelizer, Malcolm Stevenson Forbes, Class of 1941 Professor of History and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Steve Forbes ’70, 27 SATURDAY, May 30 Chairman and Editor-in-Chief, Forbes Media; Cheryl A. LaFleur ’75, Commissioner, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission; Beth Cobert ’80, Deputy Director for Management, Office of Management and Budget; Peter Bass ’85, Managing Director, Promontory Financial Group; Ramesh Ponnuru ’95, Senior Editor, National Review, and Columnist, Bloomberg View; Andrew Bruck ’05, Counsel to the Deputy Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 50. Alumni-Faculty Forum: The Health of Healthcare Moderator: Heather Howard, Director, State Health Reform Assistance Network, Woodrow Wilson School, and Lecturer in Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Steven G. Gabbe ’65, Senior Vice President for Health Sciences, The Ohio State University, and Emeritus CEO, OSU Wexner Medical Center; Chris Feudtner ’85, Professor of Pediatric, Medical Ethics & Health Policy, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and The Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; Ted Kyi ’90, Senior Vice President, Business Intelligence & Analytics, Matrix Medical Network; Lauren (Brinkmeyer) Goebel ’00, Vice President, Transformation and Organizational Development, Rush Health. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Room 302. Annual Aquinas Breakfast and Open House To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Aquinas Institute (Roman Catholic Chaplaincy). St. Thomas Aquinas House, Chaplain’s Residence, 24 Charlton Street. Breakfast and Exhibition: Suits, Soldiers, and Hippies: The Vietnam War Abroad and at Princeton To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library. Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Wiess Lounge. Friends of Princeton Fencing Reunions Breakfast To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Fencing. Jadwin Gym, Hodes Plaza Tent. Friends of Princeton Track 5k Fun Run, Reception, and Award Ceremony To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Track & Field. Murray-Dodge Hall Tent. Friends of Tiger Band Annual Meeting of the Board of Directors To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Friends of Tiger Band. Frist Campus Center, Room 309. Princeton Class Ring Sale To Noon. Sponsored by the Princeton Ring and Frame Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. Princeton University Rowing Association Annual Members’ Meeting To 10:30 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Rowing Association. C. Bernard Shea ’16 Rowing Center, Gordon Sikes ’16 Room (2nd floor). 28 SATURDAY Princetoniana “Take It or Leave It” Tent To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University, the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana, and the Alumni Council Committee on Reunions. East Pyne, South Lawn Tent. Breakfast Discussion –‑ Your Online Legacy: Estate Planning in the Digital Age Randy Harris, Esq. ’72, Partner, McLaughlin & Stern, LLP; Jennifer Jordan McCall ’78, Partner, Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP; Edward W. Felten, Robert E. Kahn Professor of Computer Science and Public Affairs, Director, Center for Information Technology Policy, and Associate Director, Program in Technology and Society. To 10:00 AM. Sponsored by the Office of Gift Planning. Wallace Hall, The Oxman Family Room. 9:15 AM Jewish Orthodox Shabbat Morning Service To Noon. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. The Identity of Asian American Studies at Princeton and Beyond Asian breakfast and talk by Anne Cheng ’85, Professor of English and African American Studies; Beth Lew-Williams, Assistant Professor of History. To Noon. Sponsored by the Asian American Alumni Association of Princeton (A4P). Chancellor Green Rotunda. 9:30 AM Alumni Physicians/Healthcare Professionals Reception To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by Health Professions Advising. 36 University Place, Suite 230. Friends of Princeton Squash Gathering To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Squash. Jadwin Gym, C Floor Zanfrini Room. 9:45 AM Jewish Conservative Shabbat Morning Service To Noon. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. 10:00 AM Alumni Row and Barbecue Lunch To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Rowing Association. C. Bernard Shea ’16 Rowing Center. Alumni Swim Meet To Noon. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Swimming and Diving. DeNunzio Pool. Alumni Water Polo Game To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Water Polo. DeNunzio Pool. 29 SATURDAY, May 30 10:00 AM All-Level Yoga Instructor: Sage Mehta ’07. To 10:45 AM. Sponsored by the Class of 2007. Lawn behind Spelman (rain location: Wilcox Hall, Dance Studio). Beyond Gatsby: The Fabled Gardens of Long Island’s Gold Coast CeCe Turner Haydock ’75, Landscape Architect. To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Class of 1975. Architecture Building, Betts Auditorium. Campus Green Tour To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Office of Sustainability. Frist Campus Center, South Lawn Tent. Friends of Men’s Soccer Alumni Game To Noon. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Men’s Soccer. Roberts Stadium, Plummer Field. Friends of Princeton Men’s Lacrosse Social Gathering To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Men’s Lacrosse. Class of 1952 Stadium. Friends of Princeton Softball Slow Pitch Game To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Softball. 1895 Field (Softball Field). Friends of Princeton Ultimate Alumni Game To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Ultimate. West Windsor Fields. Friends of Princeton Women’s Soccer Game and Meet and Greet with New Coaching Staff To Noon. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Women’s Soccer. Roberts Stadium, Plummer Field. Honor Committee Open House To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Honor Committee. Butler College, Class of 1915 Room. Princeton-Blairstown Center Breakfast and Reunion To Noon. Sponsored by the Princeton-Blairstown Center. Murray-Dodge Hall, West Room. Triangle Oral History Project: Share Your Memories To Noon. Sponsored by the Princeton Triangle Club. McCarter Theatre Center, Matthews Theatre. 10:30 AM A Conversation with President Christopher L. Eisgruber ’83 Introductory remarks will be followed by an open forum for questions. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Alexander Hall, Richardson Auditorium. Alumni-Faculty Forum: 50 Years since the Voting Rights Act: One Person, One Vote Moderator: Tera Hunter, Professor of History and The Center for African American Studies. Panelists: Morgan Kousser ’65, William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of History and Social Science, California Institute of Technology; Peter Baugher ’70, Partner, Schopf & Weiss LLP; Sally Frank 30 SATURDAY ’80, Professor of Law, Drake University; John Lavelle Jr. ’85, Partner, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP; Lucinda Robb ’90, Community Volunteer; Steven Feldstein ’00, Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, U.S. Department of State. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Whig Hall, Senate Chamber. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Food Obsessed in America? Moderator: Smitha Haneef, Executive Director, Campus Dining. Panelists: Roberta Isleib ’75, Author, alias Lucy Burdette; Jill Baron ’80, Integrative and Functional Medicine Physician; Beth Quatrano Diamond ’85, Founder, Cooking for a Change; Lydia Itoi ’90, Food and Travel Journalist; Kerry Saretsky ’05, Corporate Strategy Director-Global, HarperCollins Publishers, and Blogger at FrenchRevolutionFood.com; Katie Seaver ’10, Intuitive Eating Coach. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Room 302. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Journalism in the Age of Smart Phones Moderator: Pam Belluck ’85, Health and Medical Writer, The New York Times. Panelists: Paul Haaga ’70, Acting President & CEO of NPR; Marc Fisher ’80, Senior Editor, The Washington Post; Jennie Thompson ’90, Supervising Producer, NBC News; Jane Greenway Carr ’00, ACLS Public Fellow & Contributing Editor, New America; Koda Mike Wang ’10, Chief Operating Officer, The Huffington Post. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCormick Hall, Room 101. Alumni-Faculty Forum: Pandemic and Public Health Emergencies Moderator: Leslie Gerwin, Associate Director, Program in Law and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Keith Hansen *87, Global Practices Vice President, World Bank; Henri Ford ’80, Vice President and Surgeon-in-Chief, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, and Vice-Dean of Medical Education, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California; Paul Biddinger ’90, Vice Chairman for Emergency Preparedness, Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Emergency Medicine; Barbara Saatkamp Taylor ’95, Assistant Professor of Infectious Diseases, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio; Joanna Gaines ’05, Senior Epidemiologist, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Lieutenant Commander, U.S. Public Health Service. To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 50. Bernstein Gallery Mimosa Reception: Celebrating All Things Woody Woo To 11:30 AM. Sponsored by the Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni. Robertson Hall, Bernstein Gallery. 31 SATURDAY, May 30 Celebrating Christian Life at Princeton: Princeton Faith and Action Annual Brunch To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Faith and Action. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Rooms A, B, and C. Friends of Princeton Tennis Open House To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Tennis. Lenz Tennis Center, Cordish Family Pavilion. Friends of Sprint Football Reception To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Sprint Football. Princeton Stadium, Class of 1956 Room. Princeton Cycling Annual Reunions Ride To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton University Club Cycling. Dillon Gym, Parking Lot. Rugby’s 29th Annual R.U.S.T. Alumnae-Undergraduate Exhibition Match (Women) To Noon. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Rugby. Haaga House and Rickerson Field, West Windsor Fields. The 2015 Millennial Lecture — Effective Fundraising and Effective Giving: An Economist’s Perspective Jonathan Meer ’02; Associate Professor, Texas A&M University. To Noon. Sponsored by the Class of 2000. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theatre, Room 301. Tigerlilies Morning Alumnae Arch Sing To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Tigerlilies. 1879 Arch. 11:00 AM Environmental Studies Program Alumni Reception To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Environmental Institute. Guyot Hall, Atrium. Field Hockey and Women’s Lacrosse Alumnae Gathering To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Field Hockey and Friends of Princeton Women’s Lacrosse. Bedford Field. Fred E. Fox ’39 Memorial Concert To Noon. Sponsored by the Princeton University Band. Cannon Green. Friends of Princeton Women’s Ice Hockey Gathering To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Women’s Ice Hockey. Poe Field, 1912 Pavilion (Picnic Shelter). How Chocolate Is Made: From Bean to Bar with the Institute for Chocolate Studies To Noon. Sponsored by the Institute for Chocolate Studies. McCosh Hall, Room 10. Princeton Tiger Alumni Brunch To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by The Princeton Tiger. 48 University Place, Room 402. Professor Hubert Alyea ’24 *28 Memorial Demonstration Lecture To Noon. Sponsored by the Department of Chemistry. Frick Chemistry Laboratory, Taylor Auditorium. 32 SATURDAY Rugby’s 46th Annual “Doc” Whitton Cup Exhibition Match (Men) To 12:30 PM. Sponsored by the Friends of Princeton Rugby. Haaga House and Rickerson Field, West Windsor Fields. TigerGear Sale To 4:00 PM. Sponsored by TigerGear Student Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. Yearbook Sale To 3:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Yearbook Agency. 48 University Place, Courtyard. 11:30 AM 2 Dickinson Street Co-op Alumni Brunch Cooking begins at 9:30 AM. To 1:00 PM. Sponsored by 2 Dickinson Street Co-op. 2 Dickinson Street. Friends of PUP Reunions Brunch To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Players. Rocky-Mathey Classroom. Michael Graves: Memories To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the School of Architecture. Architecture School. Noon Festive Shabbat Lunch To 1:30 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/ Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. Princeton Evangelical Fellowship Luncheon To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Evangelical Fellowship. Friend Center, Convocation Room. Prospect House Open House To 2:00 PM. Sponsored by Prospect House. Prospect House. Shere Khan Alumni Gathering To 2:00 PM. Sponsored by Shere Khan. Spelman Lawn (near Picasso statue). 12:15 PM University Press Club Alumni Lunch To 1:45 PM. Sponsored by the University Press Club. Chancellor Green, Upper Hyphen. 1:00 PM Murray-Dodge Café: Cookies and Tea To 5:00 PM. Sponsored by Murray-Dodge Café. MurrayDodge Hall Café. 2:00 PM The One and Only P-rade! To 5:45 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. FitzRandolph Gate, Front Campus, Cannon Green, Chapel Drive, Elm Drive, Poe-Pardee Fields. 33 SATURDAY, May 30 4:15 PM WPRB and Nassau Weekly Alumni Reception with 75th Anniversary Oral History / Station ID Recording by Alumni To 6:15 PM. Sponsored by WPRB and the Nassau Weekly. Bloomberg Hall, WPRB Studios. 4:30 PM The Daily Princetonian Alumni Barbecue To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by The Daily Princetonian. 48 University Place, Courtyard. 5:00 PM Alcoholics Anonymous Open Meeting Alumni and their friends are welcome. To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University and the Office of Religious Life. Murray-Dodge Hall, East Room. Fuzzy Dice Reunions Show To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy. U-Store Courtyard Tent. TigerNet Discussion Group Reception To 6:00 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Room B. 5:30 PM Roman Catholic Vigil Mass To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by the Aquinas Institute (Roman Catholic Chaplaincy). University Chapel. Post P-rade ABPA Reunions Awards Ceremony and Annual Meeting To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by the Association of Black Princeton Alumni. Carl A. Fields Center. CJL Post P-rade Reception and Open House To 5:30 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. FFR/Princeton BTGALA Post-P-rade LGBT Alumni Reception To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by FFR/Princeton BTGALA. Frist Campus Center, Room 246 (LGBT Center). Princeton in Africa Alumni and Friends Post P-rade Gathering To 6:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton in Africa. Butler College, Class of 1915 Room. Princeton in Asia Alumni Reunion To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by Princeton in Asia. Bobst Center for Peace and Justice, Room 101. Princeton University Band Alumni Reunion To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Band. Schultz Lab, Tent. 34 SATURDAY 6:00 PM Songline’s Spoken Word Poetry Showcase To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by Songline Slam Poetry. McCosh Hall, Room 10. Taekwondo Social Hour To 7:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Taekwondo. Frist Campus Center, Multipurpose Room C. 6:30 PM Naacho South Asian Dance Company Performance To 7:00 PM. Sponsored by Naacho Dance Company. U-Store Courtyard Tent. Princeton University Ballet: Reunions Show To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Ballet. Lewis Center for the Arts, Hagan Dance Studio. PSC Presents: Complete Works of Shakespeare (Abridged) To 8:30 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Shakespeare Company. East Pyne Courtyard. 7:00 PM AA Haven To Midnight. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Class of 1952 Room. Lobster Club Improv Comedy Show Tickets available at the door. To 8:00 PM. Sponsored by the Lobster Club. Butler College, Amphitheater. Manna Christian Fellowship: Reunions Large Group To 8:30 PM. Sponsored by Manna Christian Fellowship. Murray-Dodge Hall, First Floor. Princeton Triangle Show: An Inconvenient Sleuth Tickets at www.triangleshow.com and at McCarter Theatre. To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Triangle Club. McCarter Theatre Center, Matthews Theatre. Princeton University Players Presents The Fantasticks Tickets available at the door. To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Players. Frist Campus Center, Film and Performance Theatre, Room 301. Theatre Intime Presents How the Other Half Loves Tickets available at the door. To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by Theatre Intime. Hamilton Murray Theater. 8:00 PM Princeton University Orchestra Lawn Concert To 9:15 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Finney and Campbell Fields. Traditional Shabbat Third Meal (Seudah Shlishit) To 9:00 PM. Sponsored by the Center for Jewish Life/Hillel. Center for Jewish Life, 70 Washington Road. 35 SATURDAY, May 30 8:30 PM Shere Khan Alumni Arch Sing To 10:00 PM. Sponsored by Shere Khan. 1879 Arch. 9:15 PM Fireworks! To 9:45 PM. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Finney and Campbell Fields. 10:00 PM Campus Club Cookie Night To Midnight. Sponsored by Koleinu. Campus Club. Footnotes Alumni Open House To 11:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Footnotes. Rockefeller College, Common Room. Katzenjammers Alumni Arch Sing To 11:00 PM. Sponsored by the Katzenjammers. Blair Arch. Tigressions Arch Sing To 11:30 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton Tigressions. 1879 Arch. 11:00 PM FFR/Princeton BTGALA LGBT “After the Tents” Dance Party To 3:00 AM. Sponsored by FFR/Princeton BTGALA. Carl A. Fields Center. Katzenjammers Alumni Reception To Midnight. Sponsored by the Katzenjammers. Rocky-Mathey Classroom. Quipfire! Reunions Show Tickets available at the door. To Midnight. Sponsored by Quipfire! Improv Comedy. Hamilton Murray Theater. 11:30 PM Princeton Tigertones Arch Sing To 2:00 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Tigertones. Blair Arch. 11:45 PM The Princeton Footnotes Alumni Arch Sing To 2:00 AM. Sponsored by the Princeton Footnotes. 1879 Arch. 1:00 AM Kosher BBQ at Chabad To 3:00 AM. Sponsored by the Scharf Family Chabad House. Scharf Family Chabad House, 15 Edwards Place. 36 SUNDAY, May 31 Sunday, May 31, 2015 8:30 AM Outdoor Action Leaders and Friends Breakfast To Noon. Sponsored by Outdoor Action. Chancellor Green Rotunda. 9:30 AM Alcoholics Anonymous Meeting: Beyond the Steps To 10:30 AM. Sponsored by the Office of Religious Life. Murray-Dodge Hall Café. 10:00 AM Chapel Reunions Service Rev. Dr. Alison L. Boden, Dean of Religious Life and of the Chapel; Rev. Dr. Richard N. Chrisman ’65, Director of Religious and Spiritual Life, Skidmore College; Chapel Choir. To 11:00 AM. Sponsored by the Office of Religious Life. University Chapel. Orthodox Divine Liturgy of Pentecost Fr. Daniel Skvir ’66. To Noon. Sponsored by the Orthodox Christian Fellowship. Murray-Dodge Hall, First Floor. 11:00 AM Annual Christian Worship Service Featuring Testimonies of Reunions Participants To 12:15 PM. Clif Fenton ’65, Mo Chen ’80, and Dr. Mike Armstrong ’85. To 12:15 PM. Sponsored by Princeton Faith and Action and Christian Union. Nassau Christian Center (corner of Nassau and Chambers Streets). 37 Campus EXHIBITS Exhibits Class of 1980 Around the World in ’80 Ways: Class of 1980 Photo Exhibition and Art Auction In celebration of its 35th reunion, the Class of 1980 presents a photo exhibition of ’80 alumni living and traveling around the world, as well as an art exhibition and auction featuring art created by Class of 1980 alumni. All proceeds of the auction will be donated to the Class of 1980 Community Service Fund. Thursday, Noon to 5:00 PM; Friday, 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM; Saturday, 9:00 AM to Noon. Sponsored by the Class of 1980. Scully Hall, Courtyard and 1st Floor Commons. Firestone Library Versailles on Paper: A Graphic Panorama of the Palace and Gardens of Louis XIV This exhibition documents the contemporary representation of Versailles through a multifaceted array of prints, books, maps, medals, and manuscripts. It highlights in particular those elements that today survive only on paper: ephemeral festivals; short-lived creatures (courtiers, animals, flowers); fragile groves and fountains too costly to maintain; and once celebrated masterpieces of art and architecture that were irrevocably destroyed or altered. The “paper Versailles” is quite different from the one that millions of tourists visit every year and affords many unusual and surprising glimpses into a largely lost world. All the books and prints on display were created in the 17th and 18th centuries. With only a few exceptions, they were selected from the holdings of Firestone and Marquand Libraries, acquired over the past 140 years. A large number of these items came as gifts; therefore, this exhibition also honors the curators, alumni, and friends of the Princeton University Library who have built its remarkable collections. Thursday and Friday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM; Saturday and Sunday, Noon to 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections and the Friends of the Princeton University Library. Firestone Library, Main Exhibition Gallery. Found in Firestone Whenever a building gets turned inside out, unexpected mementos of its past inhabitants are sure to emerge. The renovation of Firestone Library, a project scheduled to continue to 2018, has involved the demolition of several areas and the discovery of diverse ephemera. Found in Firestone, a new exhibition in the main lobby of the University Library, shows some of the items left behind by the workers who built the Library and the students who have studied there. Thursday and Friday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM; Saturday and Sunday, Noon to 5:00 PM. Sponsored by Firestone Library. Firestone Library Lobby. 38 Campus EXHIBITS Frist Campus Center Beer Jackets and Reunion Jackets on P-rade The incomparable Tiger Fashion Show! The Bob Rodgers ’56 Reunion and Beer Jacket Collection archives almost a century of Princeton history. Highlights from the collection are on display to commemorate the historic and ongoing tradition of celebratory jackets at Reunions. New for 2015 — Reunions buttons from each Class! Sponsored by the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana. Frist Campus Center, Display Cases, Level 100. Lewis Center for the Arts Program in Visual Arts Senior All-Stars Show An exhibition of selected work in a variety of media by graduating seniors in the Program in Visual Arts. Thursday to Saturday, 10:00 AM to 4:30 PM. Sponsored by the Lewis Center for the Arts. 185 Nassau Street, Lucas Gallery. Maclean House Princeton Postcards from the Golden Age While postcards had been used in the U.S. since 1848, shortly after the introduction of the postage stamp until 1898, the Post Office held a monopoly on printing postcards. Private enterprises began producing them, however, and they sold them as “souvenirs” since the term “postcards” was considered taboo until 1901. Thereafter, the floodgates opened and the Golden Age of the Postcard began. While the majority of postcards are of buildings, Princeton’s photogenic campus has inspired well over 1,000 different postcards over the years. This exhibit focuses on the iconography and symbolism of Princeton, including numerous artist-drawn cards. Over 100 years later, these postcards continue to be sought after by deltiologists and collectors of Princetoniana, alike. Sponsored by the Alumni Council Committee on Princetoniana. Maclean House, Library. Office of International Programs 7th Annual International Eye Photo Exhibit Hosted by the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies, the exhibition showcases the experiences of Princeton undergraduates through photographs taken while they participated in international study, internships, service, and research. Thursday to Sunday, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Office of International Programs. Aaron Burr Hall, 2nd and 3rd floors. Princeton University Art Museum The City Lost and Found: Capturing New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, 1960–1980 American cities underwent seismic transformations in the 1960s and 1970s, from shifting demographics and political protests to reshaping through highways and urban renewal. Amid this climate of upheaval, photographers, architects, activists, performance artists, and filmmakers 39 Campus EXHIBITS turned conditions of crisis into sites for civic discourse and artistic expression. Thursday, 10:00 AM to 10:00 PM; Friday to Sunday, 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Sponsored by the Princeton University Art Museum. Princeton University Art Museum. Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library Suits, Soldiers, and Hippies: The Vietnam War Abroad and at Princeton The Vietnam War was one of America’s longest and most controversial wars. Suits, Soldiers, and Hippies: The Vietnam War Abroad and at Princeton is a new exhibition at Princeton University’s Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library that highlights the major events of the war such as the Gulf of Tonkin incident, the Tet Offensive, and the invasion of Cambodia, and focuses on how these events affected government policy and American society at large. More than a mere narrative of events, the exhibition reveals the perspectives of the individuals involved in the war, including policy makers, soldiers, and everyday citizens. Thursday and Friday, 9:00 AM to 4:45 PM; Saturday, 9:00 AM to 11:30 AM (with tour at 10:00 AM and free continental breakfast until 11:00 AM). Sponsored by the Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library and the Friends of the Princeton University Library. Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library, Wiess Lounge. 40 INFORMATION Campus Information Alcohol Policy at Princeton University The University alcoholic beverage policy is designed to be consistent with the laws of the state of New Jersey and also reflects the need for mutual respect and personal responsibility within a diverse community. The University and the Town of Princeton prohibit: • Transport of an open container of alcohol across common spaces of the University. (Common spaces are areas such as lounges, open campus, meeting halls, etc., outside of Reunions headquarters.) • Possession of a container of alcohol by persons under the age of 21. • Serving of alcohol to persons under the age of 21. Alcohol: The State of New Jersey New Jersey has very strict laws concerning driving under the influence of alcohol and drugs. Persons found guilty of DUI charges are subject to substantial penalties, including fines and imprisonment. In addition, the Town of Princeton prohibits the transporting of open containers of alcohol in public places, such as streets and sidewalks (including Prospect Avenue). Finally, please note that golf carts are considered vehicles for purposes of DUI and open container laws. Animals With the exception of service animals (or those in training) for guests with disabilities, attendees are not permitted to bring animals into academic and dormitory buildings, major reunion headquarters sites, or the P-rade. Athletic Facilities Alumni and their guests are invited to use the following University athletic facilities. Dillon Gym Thursday: 6:30 AM to 8:45 PM Friday: 6:30 AM to 3:45 PM Saturday: 9:00 AM to 1:30 PM Sunday: Noon to 5:45 PM Dillon Pool Thursday: 6:45 AM to 9:00 AM; 11:30 AM to 2:00 PM; 5:00 PM to 8:00 PM Friday: 6:45 AM to 9:00 AM; 11:30 AM to 2:00 PM Saturday: 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM Sunday: 1:00 PM to 4:00 PM Stephens Fitness Center Thursday: 6:30 AM to 8:45 PM Friday: 6:30 AM to 3:45 PM Saturday: 9:00 AM to 1:30 PM Sunday: Noon to 5:45 PM DeNunzio Pool Thursday: 9:15 AM to 11:15 AM Friday: 9:15 AM to 11:15 AM 41 INFORMATION Tennis Courts The 12 recreational tennis courts adjacent to the Lenz Tennis Center will be open Thursday through Sunday for play during daylight hours. In addition, there are three clay courts available for play (please groom following your use). Time on the courts works on a first-come, firstserved basis. Centralized Registration and Wristbanding To improve customer service for all alumni returning to Reunions, and to provide more security for wristband distribution, the Office of Alumni Affairs has created centralized wristbanding locations for the satellite classes of the 5th through 65th Reunions. • 5th Satellite Classes (2009-2014): Baker Rink Tent Thursday: Noon - Midnight Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 a.m. Saturday: 10:00 a.m. - Midnight • 10th - 35th Satellite Classes (1978-2008): Baker Rink Thursday: Noon - Midnight Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 a.m. Saturday: 10:00 a.m. - Midnight • 40th - 55th Satellite Classes (1958-1977): Alexander Hall Thursday: Noon - 9:00 p.m. Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. Saturday: 10:00 a.m. - 10:30 p.m. • 60th Satellite Classes (1953-1957): Princeton Stadium with Class of 1955 • 65th Satellite Classes (1951-1952): Forbes College with Class of 1950 Thursday: Noon - 9:00 p.m. Friday: 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. Saturday: 9:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. • Graduate Alumni and their guests register at the APGA headquarters site at Cuyler. • Old Guard Alumni and their guests register at Forbes College Computing Resources During Reunions weekend, Princeton’s Office of Information Technology (OIT) provides wireless Internet access to all campus visitors. The service is free of charge and requires no registration. Your use of the Visitor Wireless Service constitutes your agreement to abide by the University’s Acceptable Use Policy, posted at www.princeton.edu/itpolicy. If you do not agree to abide by that policy, do not connect to this network. Wireless Networking Wireless networking is available in nearly all of Princeton’s buildings, and in many outdoor spaces such as Cannon Green and Reunions headquarters sites. Visitors should connect to the network called “puvisitor.” 42 INFORMATION Getting Computer Help While on Campus The OIT Support and Operations Center (also known as the “Help Desk”) is open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to help with computing and networking problems. To speak with a Help Desk consultant on the phone, call 609-258HELP (4357) and press option 1. For online chat, go to the OIT homepage (princeton.edu/oit) and click on the link on the right. You can also send email to helpdesk@princeton. edu. Computing Facilities Available during Reunions There are several computing facilities (“clusters”) available for your use during Reunions weekend. These machines will have a special Reunions configuration and will not require you to log in. You can simply visit one of the facilities listed below and gain access to the Internet. Reunions computer clusters will be located as follows: • McCosh Hall, Room B59 • Friend Center, Rooms 005, 007, and 009 • All OIT workstations in Frist Food and Beverage Options For Frist Campus Center and other café operating hours during Reunions, visit www. princeton.edu/us/dining/hours/reunions-dining-hours.pdf Food Trailers Friday and Saturday, 10:00 PM to 1:00 AM, U-Store Courtyard. Refer to the P-rade map for concession stand locations. Housing Dormitory rooms can only be unlocked by an individual with a keycard assigned to Reunions campus housing. All dormitory outside doors will be locked between the hours of 2:30 AM and 7:00 AM and will only be accessible with a keycard. Please note: The dormitory room doors will automatically lock when the door is closed so remember to bring your keycard when you leave your room. For lockouts or replacement keycards, please contact a member of the student crew at the headquarters site at which you received your keycard or a member of the student crew located closest to your dormitory. All keycards and linens must be returned on Sunday by Noon to your headquarters checkout. Keycards will be deactivated at Noon. Lightning Storms: Emergency Preparedness Individuals are ultimately responsible for their personal safety and should take appropriate action when threatened by lightning. Adults must take responsibility for the safety of children in their care during severe weather. However, awareness of certain lightning safety guidelines can greatly reduce the risk of injury or death. 1. Identify in advance a location (e.g., building, bus, car) that would be safe during a thunderstorm. Locations that offer little or no protection from lightning include tents, golf carts, or open shelters, such as parking garages. 2. Public Safety will attempt to notify your reunion if a bad storm is expected and if evacuation of the headquarters 43 INFORMATION site is recommended. However, when you first see lightning or hear thunder, go to the safe location immediately. 3. Avoid standing under Reunions tents during severe storms; while tents provide protection from the rain, they do not provide protection from lightning. If lightning is striking nearby when you are outside, you should: a. Crouch down and put your feet together. Place your hands over your ears to minimize hearing damage from thunder. b. If part of a group, spread out. You should avoid being in close proximity (minimum of 15 feet) to other people. 4. Suspend outdoor activities for at least 30 minutes after the last observed lightning flash or thunder clap or until your reunion receives the “All Clear” message from Public Safety. 5. Persons injured by a lightning strike do not carry an electrical charge and can be handled safely. Apply First Aid procedures to a lightning victim if you are qualified to do so. Call Public Safety Emergency at 609-258-3333. Lost and Found If you discover you have lost an item over the weekend, please check first with the student crew at your major reunion headquarters. The Office of Alumni Affairs crew also collects lost and found items, and you may stop by Maclean House or contact this crew directly for information (609-258-3468). Shortly after Reunions, lost and found items will be moved to Public Safety (609-258-1000). Medical Services If you or your companions need assistance, medical help is available for bee stings, cardiac symptoms, or anything in between. Please program your cell phone with Public Safety’s Emergency number 609-258-3333, or dial 9-1-1 from any blue light phone or campus landline. Dialing 9-1-1 on a cell phone routes to the nearest emergency call center and may slow emergency response time. Orange Key Campus Tours Tours will be offered Thursday and Friday at 11:15 AM, 1:00 PM, and 3:30 PM, leaving from the Admission Reception Area in Clio Hall (top floor). Parking All entrances to the University will be closed to vehicles during Reunions. To access the campus shuttle, park cars in Lots 20/32 or Lot 21, next to Jadwin Gym. Accessible parking is available in Lot 16 with access to ADA-compliant shuttles. Reserved parking is available in Lot 16 for the Old Guard and 65th Reunion. Please refer to the foldout 2015 Reunions Headquarters and Parking map for details. P-rade The P-rade begins at 2:00 PM on Saturday. Alumni and their families are welcome to march. Be sure to check the P-rade map in this booklet, in your Reunions issue of the Princeton Alumni Weekly, or on posters at your major reunion headquarters site and around campus for the route and staging area for your class. Orange signs will also be 44 INFORMATION posted along the route — or you can look for your classmates in their reunion costumes. Refer to the P-rade map for concession stand locations. The finale is on Poe-Pardee fields. Parents of members of the Class of 2015 are encouraged to sit on the bleachers reserved for them at the finale for the best views and photos. As always, please help keep the P-rade moving! Public Safety Contact: The Department of Public Safety (DPS) is located at 200 Elm Drive, on the southern end of main campus. DPS operates 24 hours a day. The Communication Center and Welcome Desk on the first floor at 200 Elm Drive are staffed 24 hours a day. For non-emergencies dial 609258-1000, and for all immediate emergencies please call 609-258-3333. On-Campus Emergencies: Dialing 9-1-1 from any University landline phone connects you to the Department of Public Safety’s emergency line. If you are on campus and dial 9-1-1 from your cell phone you will automatically be routed through the state approved 9-1-1 Switched Telephone Network and be connected to the appropriate state approved Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP), which would, in most situations, be the Princeton Police Department. If you want to reach DPS quickly and easily, we suggest you program your cell phone with 609-258-3333. There are 23 blue light communication towers throughout campus and 42 blue light phones. With the push of a button the user can communicate directly with DPS Communication Center. This enhanced technology also allows DPS to send out emergency broadcast alerts (e.g., seek shelter due to an impending lightning storm) as needed. The location of each tower is digitally displayed to the DPS Communication Center. Reunions Mobile Throughout Reunions, you can quickly access helpful information — from event schedules to alerts, from transportation logistics to P-rade staging sites. Just navigate to http://m.princeton.edu/reunions on your smartphone or other mobile device. Reunions Rover In addition to providing campus shuttles and hotel buses, the University coordinates Reunions Rover – a student-driven golf cart transport service for alumni and guests with mobility issues. Overseen by University Services, the rovers will be clearly marked and will make continuous loops around campus. Please feel free to wave the student driver down if a ride to your destination would be helpful. Transportation — Campus Shuttles The Office of Alumni Affairs provides a shuttle service to help you move around the campus and from the main parking lots (see 2015 Headquarters and Parking map foldout). 45 INFORMATION There are three campus shuttle routes: • Central Line (Main Campus) • East Line (Lot 21) • Forbes Line Note that because of special events, area construction, and traffic, shuttles may need to be rerouted and routes combined. A real-time shuttle tracker is available through Reunions Mobile, http://m.princeton.edu/reunions. The shuttle service hours are: Thursday: 1:00 PM to Midnight Friday: 8:00 AM to 2:00 AM Saturday: 8:00 AM to 2:00 AM* Sunday: 8:00 AM to Noon *Limited service during the P-rade between 2:00 PM and 5:30 PM Transportation — Hotel Shuttles The bus stop for hotel return shuttles will be in Lot 23, and drop off will be at the West Garage (near Baker Rink). Hotels serviced by this program are available Thursday afternoon through Saturday. Route 1 North of Princeton: Route A: Doubletree, Sonesta ES Suites, and Hampton Inn Route B: Marriott, Forrestal Route C: Westin, Forrestal Route D: Holiday Inn Express, Crowne Plaza, and Holiday Inn Route E: Homewood Suites and Courtyard by Marriott Route F: Best Western and Residence Inn Monmouth Junction Route K: Westminster Choir College Route 1 South of Princeton: Route G: Residence Inn (MarketFair), Hyatt Place, and Hyatt Regency Route H: Howard Johnson, Comfort Inn, and Extended Stay America Route J: Clarion and Red Roof Inn Route 95 and 206: Route I: Springhill Suites and Chauncey Conference Center Bus schedules are located in the hotel lobbies, the Frist Campus Center Welcome Desk, all headquarters sites, and on the buses. You may also access them through Reunions Mobile, http://m.princeton.edu/reunions. Please note that service may be delayed to and from the hotels due to local traffic and construction. 46 Upcoming EVENTS Addendum Please note, an online addendum is available on the Office of Alumni Affairs’ Reunions 2015 website: alumni.princeton. edu/reunions/2015/events/ Save the Date for Upcoming Events Pre-rade, Barbecue, and Step Sing (Class of 2019) September 13, 2015 Yale Game and Tiger Tailgate November 14, 2015 Alumni Day and Service of Remembrance February 20, 2016 Reunions 2016 May 26–May 29, 2016 (Memorial Day Weekend) Reunions 2017 June 1–June 4, 2017 Reunions 2018 May 31 – June 3, 2018 Locomotive Cheer Princeton’s first cheer, “Hooray, hooray, hooray! Tiger Siss-boom-ah, Princeton!” was adapted from the “skyrocket” cheer of the Seventh Regiment of New York City as they passed through Princeton on their way to Washington a few days after the outbreak of the Civil War. The cheer was intended to simulate the launch, explosion, and reaction to a firework. Sometime in the 1890s, the skyrocket cheer developed into the “locomotive,” Princeton’s longest-used and most distinctive cheer, which starts slowly and picks up increasing speed, suggesting the sound of a locomotive: Hip! Hip! Rah, Rah, Rah, Tiger, Tiger, Tiger, Sis, Sis, Sis, Boom, Boom, Boom, Ah! Princeton! Princeton! Princeton! 47 Nightly Entertainment Thursday, May 28, 2015 HQ Class Entertainment Group 5th 2010 5th 2010 10th 2005 15th 2000 20th 1995 25th 1990 30th 1985 35th 1980 35th 1980 40th 1975 45th 1970 55th 1960 60th 1955 APGA APGA Purple Sage Andy Lowy RUBIX KUBE IVA Silent Disco with FoPo DJs Rock Star Karaoke Ostrich Hat Side One The Class of 1980 Jazz All-Stars THE British Invasion Tribute Rick Fiori Jazz Quartet Tom Artin ’60 Jazz Band James Freund ’56 Trio Tiger Soundsystem Friday, May 29, 2015 HQ Class Entertainment Group 5th 2010 5th 2010 10th 2005 10th 2005 15th 2000 15th 2000 20th 1995 25th 1990 30th 1985 35th 1980 40th 1975 45th 1970 50th 1965 55th 1960 60th 1955 APGA APGA Avan Lava DJ D. Scott Zac Brown Tribute Band 45 Riots St. Lucia Jessie’s Girl FoPo DJs and Karaoke QuestLove The Right Mix Band Steve Wexler and the Top Shelf The Alex Donner Sound with DJ Mike The Fabulous Grease Band Liquid Pleasure Ivory Jim Hunter ’62 and the Headhunters Stan Rubin’s Jazz All Stars Atomic Funk Project Saturday, May 30, 2015 HQ Class Entertainment Group 5th 2010 5th 2010 10th 2005 15th 2000 15th 2000 20th 1995 20th 1995 25th 1990 30th 1985 35th 1980 40th 1975 45th 1970 50th 1965 50th 1965 55th 1960 60th 1955 APGA APGA RUBIX KUBE Viceroy Heartbeat Dance Band Bayside Tigers DJ Suga Ray The Trammps FoPo DJs Jessie’s Girl Right On Band Stereo Junkies Steve Wexler and the Top Shelf Big Ray and the Kool Kats Masters of Soul Satisfaction — Rolling Stones DJ Cool Blawenberg Occasional Dixieland Band The Classix 48
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