Day 1 - Friday, May 31St

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Day 1 - Friday, May 31St ATHLETICS FRIENDS GROUPS 2019 REUNIONS EVENTS Day 1 - Friday, May 31st Start Time End Time Organization Event Location Friends of Princeton William C Campbell Alumni 11:00 AM 6:00 PM Springdale Golf Club Golf Tournament Friends of Princeton 11:00 AM 2:00 PM Sailing Team BBQ Lockwood-Pirie '27 Boathouse Sailing Friends of Princeton 12:00 PM 1:30 PM Chalk Talk Lewis Library, Bowl 120 Men's Basketball Princeton Football Princeton Football Association Princeton Stadium, Powers 12:00 PM 3:00 PM Association Alumni Game Field Friends of Princeton Annual Meeting of the Rugby 2:00 PM 5:00 PM Tiger Inn Rugby Endowment Board Friends of Princeton 3:00 PM 5:00 PM Alumni Picnic Jadwin Gym, Hodes Plaza Tent Men's Basketball Princeton Football Princeton Football Association Princeton Stadium, Powers 3:00 PM 6:00 PM Association Alumni Reception Field Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Volleyball 4:00 PM 9:00 PM Dillon Gymnasium, Lobby Volleyball Reunions Reception Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Women's 4:00 PM 6:00 PM Triumph Brewery Women's Soccer Soccer Happy Hour Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Wrestling 4:00 PM 7:00 PM Tiger Inn Wrestling Reunion Friends of Princeton Friends of Wrestling Reunions 4:00 PM 7:30 PM Tiger Inn Wrestling Social Friends of Princeton Friends of Rugby Annual Reunions 5:00 PM 6:30 PM Tiger Inn Rugby Reception Friends of Princeton 5:00 PM 8:30 PM Princeton Women's Basketball BBQ Schultz Hall, Tent Women's Basketball Friends of Rugby Annual Awards Friends of Princeton 6:30 PM 8:00 PM Ceremony and Senior Recognition Tiger Inn Rugby Dinner Day 2 - Saturday, June 1st Start Time End Time Organization Event Location Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Fencing 9:00 AM 12:00 PM Jadwin Gym, Hodes Plaza Tent Fencing Breakfast Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Squash Jadwin Gym, C Floor, Zanfrini 9:00 AM 11:00 AM Squash Reunions Room Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Field Hockey & 10:00 AM 1:00 PM Field Hockey & Friends Friends of Princeton Lacrosse Class of 1952 Stadium of Princeton Lacrosse Reunion Friends of Princeton Friends of Men's Soccer Alumni 10:00 AM 12:00 PM Roberts Stadium, Myslik Field Men's Soccer Game Friends of Princeton Friends of Princeton Softball Slow 10:00 AM 12:30 PM 1895 Field (Softball Field) Softball Pitch Game and Picnic Friends of Princeton 10:00 AM 12:00 PM Alumni Swim Meet DeNunzio Pool Swimming and Diving Friends of Princeton Stephanie Edwards Diehl ’98 10:00 AM 12:00 PM Dillon Gymnasium, Court 1 Volleyball Alumni Match Friends of Princeton 10:00 AM 11:30 AM Water Polo Alumni Game DeNunzio Pool Water Polo Rugby's 32nd Annual R.U.S.T. Friends of Princeton Haaga House and Rickerson 10:30 AM 12:00 PM Alumnae-Undergraduate Exhibition Rugby Field at West Windsor Match Friends of Princeton Princeton Stadium, Powers 10:30 AM 1:30 PM Friends of Sprint Football Reunion Sprint Football Field Friends of Princeton Lenz Tennis Center, Cordish 10:30 AM 1:00 PM Friends of Princeton Tennis Social Tennis Family Pavilion Rugby's 49th Annual "Doc" Whitton Friends of Princeton Haaga House and Rickerson 11:00 AM 12:30 PM Cup Alumni-Undergraduate Rugby Field at West Windsor Exhibition Match.
Recommended publications
  • Friday, June 1, 2018
    FRIDAY, June 1 Friday, June 1, 2018 8:00 AM Current and Future Regional Presidents Breakfast – Welcoming ALL interested volunteers! To 9:30 AM. Hosted by Beverly Randez ’94, Chair, Committee on Regional Associations; and Mary Newburn ’97, Vice Chair, Committee on Regional Associations. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. Frist Campus Center, Open Atrium A Level (in front of the Food Gallery). Intro to Qi Gong Class — Class With Qi Gong Master To 9:00 AM. Sponsored by the Class of 1975. 1975 Walk (adjacent to Prospect Gardens). 8:45 AM Alumni-Faculty Forum: The Doctor Is In: The State of Health Care in the U.S. To 10:00 AM. Moderator: Heather Howard, Director, State Health and Value Strategies, Woodrow Wilson School, and Lecturer in Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Mark Siegler ’63, Lindy Bergman Distinguished Service Professor of Medicine and Surgery, University of Chicago, and Director, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, University of Chicago; Raymond J. Baxter ’68 *72 *76, Health Policy Advisor; Doug Elmendorf ’83, Dean, Harvard Kennedy School; Tamara L. Wexler ’93, Neuroendocrinologist and Reproductive Endocrinologist, NYU, and Managing Director, TWX Consulting, Inc.; Jason L. Schwartz ’03, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and the History of Medicine, Yale University. Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University. McCosh Hall, Room 50. Alumni-Faculty Forum: A Hard Day’s Night: The Evolution of the Workplace To 10:00 AM. Moderator: Will Dobbie, Assistant Professor of Economics and Public Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School. Panelists: Greg Plimpton ’73, Peace Corps Response Volunteer, Panama; Clayton Platt ’78, Founder, CP Enterprises; Sharon Katz Cooper ’93, Manager of Education and Outreach, International Ocean Discovery Program, Columbia University; Liz Arnold ’98, Associate Director, Tech, Entrepreneurship and Venture, Cornell SC Johnson School of Business.
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  • Princeton University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics
    PRINCETON TIGERS goprincetontigers.com Princeton University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics 2014-2015 Visiting Team Guide Princeton, New Jersey Phone: 609-258-3534 Fax: (609) 258-4477 www.goprincetontigers.com 1 PRINCETON TIGERS goprincetontigers.com Table of Contents Welcome & General Information 3 Mission Statement 4 Emergency Contact Info and Athletic Trainers 5 Coaching Staff Directory 6 Athletic Department Staff Directory 8 Athletic Communications Staff 9 Directions to Princeton University 10 Directions to Princeton University Athletic Facilities 11 Princeton University Campus Map 12 Princeton University Athletic Facilities 13 Princeton University Athletic Facilities Map 14 Transportation 15 Princeton University Department of Athletics Preferred Hotel Partners 18 Princeton University Department of Athletics Preferred Dining Partners 20 2 PRINCETON TIGERS goprincetontigers.com Welcome to Princeton! America's best minds have been visiting and meeting in the Princeton region for more than 200 years. The Princeton region offers a stimulating combination of performances by nationally and internationally acclaimed theater and musical groups, museums that address every intellectual interest, as well as modern fitness centers, gourmet restaurants, bustling malls, and sports events of every form and league. All of this can be found in a region that evolved from significant events in American history and that is known for its charming old fashioned shopping villages, monuments, and beautiful parks. As you prepare for your trip, we hope you will find this guide a useful resource. It was compiled with information to assist you with your travel plans and to make your stay in Central New Jersey even more enjoyable. Please feel free to contact members of the Princeton staff if you have any additional questions or need further assistance.
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  • The Signal, Vol. 97, No. 5 (April 12, 1972)
    Racism Demonstration At Quimby s Prairie Effigies of Dr. Clayton Hrower, Pres id?nt of Trenton Steite College and Dr. Marion Hosford, head of the Nursing De­ partment, ware burred at an anti-racism rally of 200 students in front o:? t he administration building 0:1 Monday, April 10. A list of five student.demands were presented before the integrated audience, as three weeks of racial con­ frontation between black faculty members and the college's president culminated. The confrontation centers on a Human Re­ lations Sub-committee report claiming racism in off-campus housing and the nursing department. Carol Jackson, professor of Af^u- American studies,acted a-, spokosuaa. foT- b lack students in reading demands which include: l) the immediate re­ instatement of a former nursing student, Hosilard ogbum; 2) the immediate firing of Dr. Marion Hosford. h~ud of the nursing department; 3, that thirty-five fef Che seventy admissions offered in ivrsing be given to black and other minority stjdeuts; 'a) that a black ci.ce- pre r.j.'i. * x;t U be h ired immediately at Trenton State:> 5) the iinnediate removal, of Dr. Lutz from the cff-campus housing list, and tbi issuing of a campu -vide policy that off-campus housing discrimination will not be tolerated. The administration las reported that Dr. Lutz's name was re- moved la4-© last week. Dr. Lawrence Houston,professor of psychology, heated the Human Relations S ub-coamittee invest igalvo i which brought tl.e charges of racism to the college's administration. Ia reflecting the meeting with Brewer, Houston recounted," he was insensitive, aid I felt very strongly that something should be do.ie about the racism on the campus.
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  • Cannon Green Holder Madison Hamilton Campbell Alexander Blair
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  • Doerler Landscapes Dustry
    t"°Fran kiln news-recorD VoL25, No. 12 Twosections, 38 pages Phone725-3300 ThursdayApril, 7,1977 Secondclass postagepaid at Manville,N.J. 08885 $4.50a yesr115 cents per copy news notes White resigns as GOPhead Because of his opposition to Joseph Martino Republicancan- didate for the Franklin townshipcouncil election, James White resigned last weekendfrom his post as President of the Franklin Township Republican Club, P In a statement issued to the News-Record this week, My. Whitesaid that "after weeksof consideration he found he could not remain neutral, so with the advice from friends and other party workershe had to cometo this very painful decision. " Mr. White served as president of the RepublicanClub for the past 18 months. Under his leadership the membership grew from under twenty to morethan 150. He noted that he was in- strumental in the formation of the YoungRepublican Club, and in the organization o| nmnerousfund-raising events. Van Houten new board president Harry Van Hnuten was elected president of the board of education at Mondaynight’s board organization meeting, while Sondra Sulambecame the newvice president. Mr. Van H~mten was nominated for the post by former president Sandra Grundfest and was opposed by Margaret Scherbina, who was nominated by Kenneth Lungdon. She received votes from Mr. Langdon, herself and newly elected board memberEdward Vetter. Mrs. Grundfest, Janet Salzman, Mrs. Sulam and new memberBruce Davidson joined Mr. Van Houten in his election. Board memberMorton Schaeffer was not present. Mrs. Scherbina was again nominatedfor the vice presidency, but lost to Mrs. Sulam by a similar vote. Mrs.
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  • Bruce Springsteen: (609) 924.1707 ROSSEN MILANOV, MUSIC DIRECTOR 16 Dickinson Street
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  • VSRC Checklist
    Student ID#: _____________________ Nondegree Arrival Checklist Prior to your arrival at Princeton University, you must accept your offer of admission using our online system. In addition, you must complete University Health Services requirements at http://www.princeton.edu/uhs/IncomingGrad. You are required to have submitted your completed medical history and immunization record prior to your arrival, or you will not be permitted to check-in or receive your University ID card. As a UMDNJ or VSRC nondegree student, you may arrive on campus no earlier than three (3) University business days prior to your start date. You must report to the following offices in the order specified upon your arrival at Princeton University. All other nondegree students should abide by the start of the academic term/year. This form will be initialed by each office you have visited and, as a last step presented to the Graduate Program Administrators office at the department to which you have been admitted. If you arrive after office hours and you’re living in University housing, please go to Public Safety, 200 Elm Drive to obtain your housing packet. Otherwise, please visit the offices below in the order listed during regular office hours Monday – Friday 8:45 am – 5:00 pm during the academic year and 8:30 am – 4:30 pm during the summer. • Davis International Center (International students only) _______________ 87 Prospect Avenue, 1st Floor o To check-in and validate your official documentation • Graduate Admission Office _______________ One Clio Hall, Ground Floor o To complete an I-9 Form . International Students MUST present • Passport • I-20 or DS2019 • I-94 (must be printed; http://www.cbp.gov/i94) .
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  • Campus Tower CDE Quad Ivy Cottage Cap & Cloister Charter Bobst 91 115 DICKINSON ST
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  • This Is Princeton
    PPrincetonrinceton WWomen’somen’s BasketballBasketball 2007-082007-08 World-renowned academics. Storied athletic programs. A beautiful campus. History all around. And with the contributions Princeton graduates make every day, still so much more history is yet to be made. THE CAMPUS, THE UNIVERSITY Players Divider TThishis isis PrincetonPrinceton PRRINCETONINCETON WOOMENMEN’S BAASKETBALLSKETBALL 22007-08007-08 6666 WWWWWW.GOPRRINCETONINCETONTIIGERSGERS.CCOMOM 67 PPrincetonrinceton WWomen’somen’s BBasketballasketball 2007-082007-08 THIS IS PRINCETON that holds almost fi ve million books and almost PPrincetonrinceton UUniversityniversity 35,000 current journals and periodicals—near- ly all on accessible open-stack shelving; an art Princeton’s main campus covers 500 acres, museum that exhibits works from its own and and its more than 160 buildings exemplify a other outstanding collections, complement- wealth of architectural styles, ranging from co- ing courses in art and archaeology; a natural lonial buildings to collegiate Gothic dormitories history museum; a computing center and to modern structures by eminent architects. clusters of microcomputers throughout the Coeducational since 1969 (women comprise campus; and outstanding recreational and about 45% of an average freshman class), athletic facilities. Princeton enrolls approximately 7,200 students Beyond the University’s historic campus is (4,900 undergraduates/2,300 graduate students). the town of Princeton, a community of 30,000 Coming from all 50 states and from more than people and the home of the Institute for Ad- 70 foreign countries, Princeton students are an vanced Study (where Albert Einstein spent the unusually talented and diverse group that repre- last 22 years of his life), Princeton Theological sents many economic, ethnic, social, cultural and Seminary and Westminster Choir College of religious backgrounds.
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