Nassau Inn Bendheim Ctr for Finance

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Nassau Inn Bendheim Ctr for Finance A B C D E F G H I J K L M VANDEVENTERAVE. 22 WITHERSPOONST. CHAMBERSST. 1 ROUTE 206 Palmer Garden Palmer Square House Theatre 114 221 NASSAU ST. ROCKEFELLER NASSAU ST. 179 201 COLLEGE PRINCETON AVE. Henry OLDENST. CHARLTON ST. Scheide MURRAY PL. Madison House Caldwell Burr 185 2 LOT 9 Guard STOCKTON ST. Holder Booth Maclean House House Firestone LOT 10 Lowrie Hamilton Stanhope Chancellor Library Green UNIVERSITY PL. Green House Alexander Nassau F LOT 2 Joline WILLIAM ST. B D Campbell Hall Friend Engineering Energy MATHEY East Pyne Hoyt Center J MERCER ST. LOT 13 P.U. Quadrangle Research COLLEGE West Cannon Chapel Computer College Green Press C Blair 20 Science 3 LOT 8 Dickinson A G CHAPEL DR. Buyers Dodge 36 Wallace Sherrerd E Mudd LOT 3 35 Clio Whig Corwin EDWARDS PL. Witherspoon McCosh Library Von Lockhart Murray Bendheim Neumann Theater Edwards McCormick Robertson Bendheim North Architecture Marx 116 48 Little Fisher Finance Tiger Bowen Garage 120 58 86 Foulke Colonial Prospect Dod 4 Laughlin 1879 PROSPECT AVE. Apartments ELM DR. ELM Art Campus Princeton Museum Prospect Quadrangle BROADMEAD ST. Theological DICKINSON ST. 2 Woolworth Tower Ivy Cottage Cap & Cloister Charter Bobst 91 Henry House Cannon Seminary 1901 Gown 71 Dillon Brown Prospect Gym Gardens Frist College Road Terrace Campus Computing Apartments Stephens Cuyler 1903 Jones Center Center Pyne Fitness LOT 26 5 Center Feinberg Wright LOT 4 COLLEGE RD. McCosh LOT 14 LOT 25 1937 Center for 5 Dillon Dillon Walker Health 2 1 West Jewish Life Ferris East 1939 Center LOT 5 Thompson McCarter 4 3 Patton IVY LN. LOT 18 WILSON Dodge- Apartments Theatre Osborn Lewis LOT 11 6 5 7 COLLEGE Guyot Library Peyton Graduate College Fisher WESTERN WAY COLLEGE RD. WEST Spelman 8 Gauss 1927- Eno Upper Tennis Courts 26 Berlind WHITMAN 1915 Clapp Moett Strubing Theatre COLLEGE Princeton Field 6 Murley- Wilcox 1938 Rock Schultz Fine Wu Stadium Princeton Pivirotto North Community Yoselo Bldg. D 171 99 Station Hargadon (Dinky) Hall Thomas McDonnell Strubing GRADUATE Lauritzen Clarke COLLEGE 106 New BUTLER Bogle Powers Field Field South South Wilf LOT 22 Baker 1981 COLLEGE Field 1967 Scully Icahn Jadwin 120 Sexton 7 Baker 126 LOT 6 Field FORBES Rink Bloomberg Campbell Wyman COLLEGE LOT 29 200 Poe Pardee Field Cottage Field Field Finney Elm Streicker Field Wyman Proctor Cleveland Bridge Frelinghuysen FitzRandolph House West Tower Lourie-Love Field Observatory MacMillan Pavilion 1912 Pavilion Lodge Frick FITZRANDOLPH RD. West Weaver Track Garage Caldwell 8 1895 Roberts WASHINGTON RD. Stadium (Lot 7) Chilled Field Stadium Fieldhouse LOT 21 Water Guard Neuroscience Cogen Plant Booth and Architecture Plant Myslik Plummer Lab 180 Cooling Psychology DeNunzio Towers Field Field Pool LOT 19 LOT 28 Jadwin Elementary Lenz Gym Particle Labs Thermal Tennis Energy Center Springdale Gulick 9 Golf Course LOT 23 Pavilion ALEXANDER ST. LOT 17 SOUTH DR. LOT 16 SPRINGDALE RD. 1952 Bedford Stadium LOT 17 Field 228 DR. ELM LOT 32 10 LOT 27 262 LOT 24 FACULTY RD. Lake Carnegie University buildings Class of 1887 11 Boathouse University buildings under construction LOT 33 Shea Rowing Non-University property N Center TO ROUTE 1 > Hibben Apartments 12 Helm Magie Apartments Theatres: WHITMAN COLLEGE 201 Nassau Street (J2) Clio Hall (G3) I R Princeton Berlind Theatre (E6) 1981 Hall (F7) 221 Nassau Street (J2) Cloister Inn (K4) Icahn Laboratory (H7) Roberts Stadium (H8) University Garden Theatre (H1) Community Hall (F6) 86 Olden Street (K4) Cogeneration Plant (F8) Ivy Club (J4) Robertson Hall (I4) McCarter Theatre (E5) Fisher Hall (F6) 58 Prospect Avenue (K4) College Road Apartments (E5) J Rock Magnetism Laboratory Theatre Intime (Murray Theater, Hargadon Hall (F6) 91 Prospect Avenue (L4) Colonial Club (J4) (H6) Jadwin Gymnasium (K9) Destinations G3) Lauritzen Hall (F6) 116 Prospect Avenue (L4) Community Hall (F6) Jadwin Hall (I7) S Nassau Hall (G3) Murley-Pivirotto Family Tower 120 Prospect Avenue (L4) Computer Science Building (K3) Admission (Clio Hall, G3) Joline Hall (E3) Scheide Caldwell House (G2) Princeton University Store (F6) 30 University Place (E7) Computing Center (L5) Alumni Association (Maclean Jones Hall (H5) Schultz Laboratory (H6) (114 Nassau Street, G1; 36 North Hall (F6) 35 University Place (E3) Cooling Towers (F8) House, F2) Scully Hall (H7) University Place, E3) South Baker Hall (F6) 36 University Place (E3) Corwin Hall (I3) L Art Museum (G4) Sexton Field (L7) Prospect House (H4) 48 University Place (E4) Cottage Club (J4) Laughlin Hall (F4) Auditoriums: WILSON COLLEGE Shea Rowing Center (H11) Public Safety (200 Elm Drive, 71 University Place (E5) Cuyler Hall (G5) Lauritzen Hall (F6) Betts (Architecture School, H3) 1927-Clapp Hall (H6) Sherrerd Hall (J3) F7) 130 University Place (E7) Lenz Tennis Center (G9) Dodds (Robertson Hall, I4) 1937 Hall (H5) D South Baker Hall (F6) Registrar (West College, F3) 20 Washington Road (I3) Lewis Library (I6) Helm (50 McCosh Hall, H3) 1938 Hall (H6) DeNunzio Pool (K8) Spelman Halls (F6) Restrooms (Frist Campus 1895 Field (G8) Little Hall (F4) Richardson (Alexander Hall, F3) 1939 Hall (G5) Dickinson Hall (H3) Springdale Golf Course (C9) Center, H5; Chancellor Green, 1879 Hall (H4) Lockhart Hall (E3) Taplin (Fine Hall, second floor, Dodge-Osborn Hall (H5) Dillon Court East (F5) Stanhope Hall (F2) G2) 1901 Hall (F4) Lourie-Love Pavilion (H7) I6) Feinberg Hall (G5) Dillon Court West (F5) Stephens Fitness Center (F5) Women’s Center (Frist Campus 1903 Hall (G5) Lowrie House (A2) Taylor (Frick Chemistry Gauss Hall (G6) Dillon Gymnasium (F5) Streicker Bridge (I7) Center, H5) 1912 Pavilion (H8) Laboratory, J8) Walker Hall (G5) Dod Hall (G4) M Strubing Field (L7) Woodrow Wilson School 1915 Hall (G6) Wood (10 McCosh Hall, H3) Wilcox Hall (G6) Dodge Hall (G3) Maclean House (F2) (Robertson Hall, I4) 1927-Clapp Hall (H6) T Broadcast Center (Lewis Library, Dodge-Osborn Hall (H5) MacMillan Building (F8) UPPERCLASS HOUSING 1937 Hall (H5) Terrace Club (I4) I6) ATHLETICS Madison Hall (E2) 1901 Hall (F4) 1938 Hall (H6) E Thermal Energy Storage Tank Cannon Green (G3) 1952 Stadium (I9) Magie Apartments (G12) 1903 Hall (G5) 1939 Hall (G5) East Pyne Hall (G3) (F8) Career Services (36 University Athletic Ticket Office (Jadwin Marx Hall (H4) Brown Hall (G4) 1952 Stadium (I9) Edwards Hall (F4) Thomas Laboratory (H6) Place, E3) Gymnasium, K9) McCarter Theatre (E5) Cuyler Hall (G5) 1967 Hall (G7) Elementary Particle Laboratories Tiger Inn (J4) Chapel (H3) Baker Rink (F7) McCormick Hall (G4) Dod Hall (G4) 1981 Hall (F7) (L9) Tower Club (I4) Communications, University DeNunzio Pool (K8) McCosh Hall (H3) Foulke Hall (E4) Energy Research Laboratory Bulletin (22 Chambers Street, Dillon Gymnasium (F5) A McCosh Health Center (H5) U Henry Hall (E4) (L3) E1) Jadwin Gymnasium (K9) Alexander Hall (F3) McDonnell Hall (I6) U-Store (36 University Place, Laughlin Hall (F4) Engineering Quadrangle (K3) Davis International Center (120 Princeton Stadium (K6) Architecture Laboratory (H3, Moffett Laboratory (H6) E3) Lockhart Hall (E3) Eno Hall (H6) Alexander Street, E7) Roberts Stadium (H8) J8) Mudd Library (J3) Upper Strubing Field (L6) Patton Hall (G5) Dean for Research (91 Prospect Architecture School (H3) F Murley-Pivirotto Family Tower TRANSPORTATION Pyne Hall (F5) V Avenue, L4) Art Museum (G4) Feinberg Hall (G5) (F6) Shuttle Bus to Newark Airport Scully Hall (H7) Visitor Parking (Lot 23, F9; Dean of the College (West Ferris Thompson Apartments Murray Theater (G3) (Nassau Inn, Palmer Square, Spelman Halls (F6) B Lot 21, L8) College, F3) (L5) Myslik Field (H8) F1) Wright Hall (G5) Baker Rink (F7) Von Neumann Hall (L3) Dean of the Faculty (Nassau Fine Hall (I6) Taxi (Nassau Street, F2) Bedford Field (H10) N Hall, G3) GRADUATE COLLEGE (A7) Finney Field (K7) W Train (Princeton Station, Dinky, Bendheim Center for Finance Nassau Hall (G3) Dean of the Graduate School Firestone Library (H2) Wallace Hall (J3) E6) GRADUATE HOUSING (I4) Neuroscience and Psychology (Clio Hall, G3) Fisher Hall (I4) Walker Hall (G5) Visitor Parking (Lot 23, F9; Lot Butler Tract East of Broadmead Bendheim Hall (I4) Buildings (I9, under Dean of Undergraduate Fisher Hall (Whitman) (F6) Weaver Track Stadium (K8) 21, L9) (not shown) Berlind Theatre (E6) construction) Students (West College, F3) FitzRandolph Observatory (L8) West College (F3) Hibben Apartments (G12) Blair Hall (E3) New South Building (F6) Development (Helm Building, Forbes College (D7) West Garage (Lot 7, F8) Lawrence Apartments (South of Bloomberg Hall (G7) North Garage (L4) E12) Student Residences Foulke Hall (E4) West Lodge (A7) golf course, not shown) Bobst Hall (L4) North Hall (F6) Employment, Human Resources Frelinghuysen Field (K8) Whig Hall (G3) Magie Apartments (G12) Bogle Hall (G6) (New South Building, F6) BUTLER COLLEGE Frick Chemistry Laboratory (J8) P Wilcox Hall (G6) Stanworth Apartments (North Bowen Hall (K4) Fields Center (58 Prospect 1915 Hall (G6) Friend Center (J3) Palmer House (D1) Wilf Hall (H6) of Nassau Street, not shown) Brown Hall (G4) Avenue, K4) 1967 Hall (G7) Frist Campus Center (H5) Pardee Field (H7) Witherspoon Hall (F3) Wyman House (A7) Building A (Butler College, G6) Financial Aid, Undergraduate Bloomberg Hall (G7) Patton Hall (G5) Woolworth Center for Musical Building D (Butler College, H6) G (West College, F3) Bogle Hall (G6) Peyton Hall (J6) Studies (H4) Burr Hall (H2) Garden Theatre (H1) Firestone Library (H2) Building D (H6) Campus Building Plummer Field (H8) Wright Hall (G5) Buyers Hall (F3) Gauss Hall (G6) Frist Campus Center (H5) Wilf
Recommended publications
  • Princeton Alumni Weekly
    00paw0206_cover3NOBOX_00paw0707_Cov74 1/22/13 12:26 PM Page 1 Arts district approved Princeton Blairstown soon to be on its own Alumni College access for Weekly low-income students LIVES LIVED AND LOST: An appreciation ! Nicholas deB. Katzenbach ’43 February 6, 2013 • paw.princeton.edu During the month of February all members save big time on everyone’s favorite: t-shirts! Champion and College Kids brand crewneck tees are marked to $11.99! All League brand tees and Champion brand v-neck tees are reduced to $17.99! Stock up for the spring time, deals like this won’t last! SELECT T-SHIRTS FOR MEMBERS ONLY $11.99 - $17.99 3KRWR3ULQFHWRQ8QLYHUVLW\2I¿FHRI&RPPXQLFDWLRQV 36 UNIVERSITY PLACE CHECK US 116 NASSAU STREET OUT ON 800.624.4236 FACEBOOK! WWW.PUSTORE.COM February 2013 PAW Ad.indd 3 1/7/2013 4:16:20 PM 01paw0206_TOCrev1_01paw0512_TOC 1/22/13 11:36 AM Page 1 Franklin A. Dorman ’48, page 24 Princeton Alumni Weekly An editorially independent magazine by alumni for alumni since 1900 FEBRUARY 6, 2013 VOLUME 113 NUMBER 7 President’s Page 2 Inbox 5 From the Editor 6 Perspective 11 Unwelcome advances: A woman’s COURTESY life in the city JENNIFER By Chloe S. Angyal ’09 JONES Campus Notebook 12 Arts district wins approval • Committee to study college access for low-income Lives lived and lost: An appreciation 24 students • Faculty divestment petition PAW remembers alumni whose lives ended in 2012, including: • Cost of journals soars • For Mid east, a “2.5-state solution” • Blairs town, Charles Rosen ’48 *51 • Klaus Goldschlag *49 • University to cut ties • IDEAS: Rise of the troubled euro • Platinum out, iron Nicholas deB.
    [Show full text]
  • Norman William Usher Norman Usher Passed Away in His Manhattan
    Norman William Usher Norman Usher passed away in his Manhattan home on May 6, 2015. Born in Omaha, Nebraska under the last name Osheroff, he graduated from Omaha Central High School. His Princeton major was Economics and he was a member of Key and Seal Club. He played trumpet in the Tigertown five and the Triangle. After graduation, he spent two years in the U.S. Army and was stationed in Korea. He continued to play the trumpet while in the service. Norman completed an M.B.A. degree at the NYC Graduate Business School of Scientific Management. He worked in the Data Processing division of IBM in Philadelphia. He married Deanna Sorenson in 1962 but was divorced at the time of his death. James Crawford James Crawford died on August 13,2015 of natural causes, Born in the Philippines, he spent most of World War II interned with his family at the Santo Thomas University, Manila. He graduated from the Thatcher School, Ojai, CA. His college major was English and he was a member of Tower Club. After graduation, he received his master’s degree and Ph.D. at the University of California, Berkeley in History, and he attended to Naval Post Graduate School to study Russian. The Navy utilized him in the Intelligence Service. Jay was a devoted father and grandfather. He had a wealth of knowledge and was an avid sports fan. During his career he worked as a journalist and interviewed Ronald Reagan and Walt Disney. He is survived by his wife Carolyn, his daughter Audrey, Stepchildren Lynne, Dawne, Chris and Jim and four granddaughters.
    [Show full text]
  • David M. Reed Dave Died on February 8, 2021, in Bryn Mawr, Pa. He Was
    David M. Reed Dave died on February 8, 2021, in Bryn Mawr, Pa. He was 89. He was raised in Pittsburgh and came to Princeton from Shadyside Academy. At Princeton he was a member of the varsity soccer and wrestling teams, joined Cap & Gown and was in the cast of the Triangle Club in the years when the troupe made annual appearances on the Ed Sullivan Show. He majored in English and his thesis “Mark Twain and God” prefigured an interest in the ministry. Dave received a Master of Divinity from Princeton Theological Seminary in 1958 and became a Presbyterian minister, working with several congregations in Philadelphia. Driven by a desire to provide a more personal level of counselling, he earned a Doctorate in Psychology from Tulane University in 1965. He subsequently joined the Marriage Council of Philadelphia. He had a distinguished fifty-year career as a psychologist in the Philadelphia area, continuing to see patients into his early 80s. In addition, he was a radio talk show host on WCAU 1210 radio for several years beginning in the late 1970s, providing advice to callers anxious for access to a caring voice. Dave was married for 37 years to Carolyn Chapple before her death in 1993, and 23 years to Kathy Keogh before she too passed away in 2018. He is survived by his children David Jr. ’79, Douglas and Jennifer; stepchildren Sara and James; six grandchildren and a step-grandchild. John Atwater Bradley – Memorial Note Brad died on February 23, 2021. At Brooklyn Technical High School (NY) he was active in student government, glee club, and swimming.
    [Show full text]
  • IM Chair's Manual 2017-2018
    IIMM CChhaaiirr’’ss MMaannuuaall 22001177--22001188 Jessica Ward Associate Director of Athletics/Director of Campus Recreation 609-258-6605 [email protected] TABLE OF CONTENTS Intramural Sports Chairs 3 Chairs Meeting Schedule 4 Chairs Responsibilities 4 Communications Network 5 How to Enter a Team 6-7 Forfeit Fees 8 Game Changes 9 Defaults 10 Awards 10 Student Conduct 11 Eligibility 12-14 Leadership is a Choice, Not a Position. -Joe Martin 2 INTRAMURAL SPORTS CHAIRS Affiliation Name Email Chris Umanzor [email protected] Butler College James Sung [email protected] Cannon Club Spencer Long [email protected] Cap & Gown Paulita Lara [email protected] Charter Kai Liu [email protected] Cloister Ben Eisner [email protected] Colonial Tianay Zeigler [email protected] Cottage Ben Kellogg [email protected] Aslesha Parchure [email protected] Forbes College Christopher Howard [email protected] Chris Murphy [email protected] Grad College Fermi Ma [email protected] Ivy David Crane [email protected] Ally Bouchard [email protected] Mathey College Paul Horvath [email protected] Quad Jason Dell’Aquila [email protected] Alexander Kirschenbauer [email protected] Rocky College Uri Schwartz [email protected] Colter Smith [email protected] Terrace Daniel Taub [email protected] Tiger Inn Ethan Cohen [email protected] Jennifer El-Fakir [email protected] Tower Sri Nimmagadda [email protected] Whitman College Ashley Dong [email protected] Joseph Collins [email protected] Wilson College Jane Blaugrund [email protected] 3 IM CHAIRS’ MEETING SCHEDULE All Meetings held in Dillon Gym Library at 12:00p.m. Lunch will be provided Fall Spring Tuesday, September 12th Friday, February 9th Friday, October 13th Friday, March 9th Friday, November 10th Friday, April 6th *25 Intramural Points are awarded per meeting to each organization present.
    [Show full text]
  • Daily PRINCETONIAN High Mid-80S Vol
    Founded 1876 Today's weather Published daily Partly Sunny since 1892 The Daily PRINCETONIAN High mid-80s Vol. CXV, No. 69 Princeton, New Jersey, Wednesday, May 22,1991 ©1991 30 Cents Incident prompts debate on how to relate survivor stories By SHARON KATZ ence about sexual assault in a letter again," said Women's Center par- nenccs. not always be accountable," Lowe The revelation that a female appearing in today's issue of The ticipant Alicia Dwyer '92. "I would "There is no way we can ensure added. "There is something which undergraduate falsely accused a fel- Daily Princetonian. Brickman hope that people would see it as a that everything we hear is truth, but happens in that dynamic which is low student of sexual assault has spoke in Henry Arch during this minority event, which will lead not we need to listen not to find the not controllable. People's confu- raised questions of how to most year's march about her experience, to distrust of the march but truth in (the stories) but for what sions cannot be checked by reality effectively speak out against sexual shortly after which she submitted a increased participation in the plan- kinds of needs these people have counseling." violence on campus. letter to the 'Prince' repeating her and what we can do to help," Clark added that from a clinical While administrators have sug- story. Maharaj said. perspective, the open-mike format gested that the use of an open-mike The dean of students office News Analysis Take preventive measures might not serve survivors' best format for the annual "Take Back responded to her allegations made While several administrators interests.
    [Show full text]
  • Connect to Cap News from the Board Chair Tom Fleming ’69
    NEWSLETTER | Fall 2017 Cap and Gown Club Connect to Cap News from the Board Chair Tom Fleming ’69 Dear Cap Members, Graduate Interclub Council (GICC) meeting that 95% of the recommendations have been implemented. It was great to see so many Cap and Gown mem- Much has changed since then at Princeton and at bers at the club after the Princeton-Yale Football the clubs. With more evolution required, as head of Game on November 11th. Our manager, Dennis the GICC for the last six years, at our annual lunch Normile, and the staff hosted a fabulous post-game with the University Trustees, I suggested a new Task buffet on the side terrace, helping us warm up after Force. The University welcomed the opportunity. a chilly loss. There is always next year! Some of the challenges we look forward to address- We recently celebrated Cap’s 125th birthday, a time ing include: to take stock and be sure the club is strong for the • Princeton has received positive publicity for tripling the per- next 125 years. We have been working hard thanks to generous centage of Pell Grant Eligible (“PGE”) students (annual family alumni support, to expand and maintain our historic building. We income significantly below $60k). Our 22% number is well also are improving best practices and safety so we can continue above the comparable statistic of 17% at Harvard and 16% a positive social environment for our undergraduate members. at Yale. Nationally and in the Ivy League, college social organizations are • As part of the University’s strategic plan, there is a plan to build under pressure.
    [Show full text]
  • Campus Princeton Museum Prospect Quadrangle BROADMEAD ST
    A B C D E F G H I J K L M VANDEVENTERAVE. 22 WITHERSPOONST. CHAMBERSST. 1 ROUTE 206 Palmer Garden Palmer Square House Theatre 114 221 NASSAU ST. ROCKEFELLER NASSAU ST. 179 201 COLLEGE PRINCETON AVE. Henry OLDENST. CHARLTON ST. Scheide MURRAY PL. Madison House Caldwell Burr 185 2 LOT 9 Guard STOCKTON ST. Holder Booth Maclean House House Firestone LOT 10 Lowrie Hamilton Stanhope Chancellor Library Green UNIVERSITY PL. Green House Alexander Nassau F LOT 2 Joline WILLIAM ST. B D Campbell Hall Friend Engineering Energy MATHEY East Pyne Hoyt Center J MERCER ST. LOT 13 P.U. Quadrangle Research COLLEGE West Cannon Chapel Computer College Green Press C Blair 20 Science 3 LOT 8 Dickinson A G CHAPEL DR. Buyers Dodge 36 Wallace Sherrerd E Mudd LOT 3 35 Clio Whig Corwin EDWARDS PL. Witherspoon McCosh Library Von Lockhart Murray Bendheim Neumann Theater Edwards McCormick Robertson Bendheim North Architecture Marx 116 48 Little Fisher Finance Tiger Bowen Garage 120 58 86 Foulke Colonial Prospect Dod 4 Laughlin 1879 PROSPECT AVE. Apartments ELM DR. ELM Art Campus Princeton Museum Prospect Quadrangle BROADMEAD ST. Theological DICKINSON ST. 2 Woolworth Tower Ivy Cottage Cap & Cloister Charter Bobst 91 Henry House Cannon Seminary 1901 Gown 71 Dillon Brown Prospect Gym Gardens Frist College Road Terrace Campus Computing Apartments Stephens Cuyler 1903 Jones Center Center Pyne Fitness LOT 26 5 Center Feinberg Wright LOT 4 COLLEGE RD. McCosh LOT 14 LOT 25 1937 Center for 5 Dillon Dillon Walker Health 2 1 West Jewish Life Ferris East 1939 Center LOT 5 Thompson McCarter 4 3 Patton IVY LN.
    [Show full text]
  • Antropologia Patrimoniului Gastronomic
    ANTROPOLOGIA PATRIMONIULUI GASTRONOMIC Prof.univ.dr. Carmen Costea A 5.2a_12_2014 1 Argument autohton în favoarea acestui curs Antropologia culturală modernă îşi are originile în sec. al XIX-lea în conceptul de "etnologie" care presupune compararea organizată a societăţilor umane. Etnologii au avut un interes deosebit în cercetarea mediului în care trăiesc oamenii în diferite părţi ale lumii şi a modului în care ei recunosc, acceptă, folosesc conceptele legate de credinţă, tradiţie şi practici şi obiceiuri similare. Există voci care susţin că asemănările de civilizaţie înseamnă că diferite grupuri au trecut prin aceleaşi etape ale evoluţiei culturale. Aceste cercetări de natură antropologică continuă să preocupe, în maniere felurite, oamenii din diferite localizări, legându-i de experienţa şi cunoaşterea generală, de înţelesurile complexe ale vieţii. Metodele antropologie aplicate diferă de la sociologi la economişti, de la psihologi, la politologi. Economiştii se uită mai degrabă la măsuri globale, cum ar fi produs naţional brut şi venitul pe cap de locuitor, precum şi la modul de distribuire a veniturilor şi inegalitatea într-o societate. Antropologia oferă un altfel de analiză, de o granulaţie fină a informaţiilor calitative din spatele unor cifre seci, cum ar fi natura grupurilor sociale implicate şi semnificaţia socială a compoziţiei de venituri. Într-o asemenea abordare intră şi demersul de a cerceta alimentul şi nutriţia ca patrimoniu cultural, dincolo de cunoaşterea etnologică sau de folclor. Acesta este motivul pentru care cursul actual îşi propune să ofere o mai bună înţelegere a acestor concepte legate de om, obiceiurile locale, instituţiile patrimoniale cu rol în susţinerea valorilor, dar şi a ideii de afaceri şi de comportament în dezvoltarea complexă a pieţei şi firmelor în interiorul reţelelor complexe care contribuie la dezvoltarea sustenabilă Demersul actual are în vedere câteva puncte-cheie, care reprezintă, de altfel, componentele de bază ale lucrării.
    [Show full text]
  • Kenneth Arthur Ford, Jr. Ken Ford Died on May 4, 2015 in Sarasota Florida
    Kenneth Arthur Ford, Jr. Ken Ford died on May 4, 2015 in Sarasota Florida. Born in Chicago, IL, he graduated from New Trier High School. At Princeton he was a Psychology major, a member of Terrace Club and active in the Wesley Group. He was on the Program Committee of the Psychology Club. After college, he began graduate studies and a teaching assistantship at the University of California at Berkeley. He was employed as a research psychologist by the U.S. Navy at Point Loma. He moved to Los Angeles to complete his Ph.D. at the University of Southern California in 1976. His later career involved testing in industrial psychology. Ken married several times but lived alone for the past 25 years. He enjoyed line dancing three times a week and actively pursued his interests in science, math and industry. At the time of his death he had retired to Sarasota Fl. The class sends condolences to his two children Bailey and Arthur. James Mitchell Voorhees Jim Voorhees died peacefully in his sleep May 17, 2015. Born in Plainfield, NJ, he graduated from Plainfield High School. He was proud to become a third generation Princetonian. Jim majored in Psychology, minored in Music and was a member of Charter Club and the Jazz Club. He and his roommate, Dick Lethen, collaborated on several musical scores. Jim wrote the music and Dick, the lyrics. Jim was drafted into the Army after graduating from Princeton. Upon completing training at Ft. Douglas in Salt Lake City, he was transported to Ft. Lewis, Washington, where he boarded a troop ship destined for Korea.
    [Show full text]
  • Princeton.Edu
    Name of Chief/Director: Paul L. Ominsky, Executive Director Name/Email for Point of Contact: Lisa Linn De Barona, Administrative Operations Manager, [email protected] Number of Staff members: Core Team – 9 – (Executive Director, Director of Operations, Associate Director of Support Services, Administrative Captain, Patrol Captain, Administrative Operations Manager, Budget Manager, Communications Center Manager, Security Operations Manager) Sworn Command Staff – 8 – (2 Lieutenants, 4 Patrol Sergeants, 1 Detective Sergeant, 1 Community Relations Sergeant) Commissioned Police Officers – 19 – (17 Patrol, 2 Detectives) Non‐commissioned Patrol Officers – 35 – (11 Art Museum, 11 Library, 13 Patrol) Communications Center Dispatchers – 12 Administrative and Technical Staff – 5 Fire Marshal Office ‐ 2 Total Staff – 90 Chartered in 1746 and located in the heart of historic Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University is the fourth‐oldest college in the United States. Princeton University’s Department of Public Safety serves a thriving community of more than twelve thousand undergraduate and graduate students, faculty and staff. Students from more than 98 countries are currently enrolled at the University. 98% of the undergraduate students live on campus. Princeton’s main campus in Princeton Borough and Princeton Township consists of approximately 10 million square feet of space in more than 180 buildings on 500 acres. Including Springdale Golf Course, Lake Carnegie, and roads for which the University owns the right‐of‐way, Princeton owns 759 acres in the township and has 214 acres in the borough. The University plays a major role in the educational, cultural, and economic life of the area by bringing 815,000 visitors and approximately $2 billion in economic activity to the region annually.
    [Show full text]
  • OUR LATEST Laureate a Ngus Deaton Wins the Nobel Prize in Economics
    REMEMBERING 75 YEARS LIMITATIONS ON C.K. WILLIAMS WITH WPRB CAMPUS SPEECH? PRINCETON ALUMNI WEEKLY OUR LATEST LAUREATE A ngus Deaton wins the Nobel Prize in economics NOVEMBER 11, 2015 PAW.PRINCETON.EDU 00paw1111_Cover2.indd 1 10/28/15 10:38 AM S:7” Invest In What Lasts How do you pass down what you’ve spent your life building up? A Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor can help you create a legacy plan based on the values you live by. So future generations can benefit from not just your money, but also your example. Let’s have that conversation. morganstanley.com/legacy S:9.25” © 2015 Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC. Member SIPC. CRC 1134840 04/15 November 11, 2015 Volume 116, Number 4 An editorially independent magazine by alumni for alumni since 1900 P RESIDENT’S PAGE 2 INBOX 5 FROM THE EDITOR 6 ON THE CAMPUS 13 Angus Deaton wins Nobel Public-safety officers gain access to guns African American studies now a department Endowment results Remembering C.K. Williams STUDENT DISPATCH: Anscombe Society SPORTS: Women’s basketball Road to Rio LIFE OF THE MIND 25 Stacey Sinclair on implicit bias Marina Rustow on the Cairo Geniza Harry G. Frankfurt on inequality PRINCETONIANS 39 Josh Morris ’99, rock climber “We Flourish” alumni conference Historian Gordon Chang ’70 Ken Katkin ’87, a WPRB DJ, in CLASS NOTES 43 1984, page 28 MEMORIALS 62 The Voice of Princeton 28 Can We Say That? 32 WPRB, our much-loved campus radio Across the country, there are calls for CLASSIFIEDS 70 station, is celebrating its 75th anniversary.
    [Show full text]
  • Connect to Cap! Support Cap!
    NEWSLETTER | Spring 2012 ConnectCap and Gown Club to Cap News From the Board Chair Tom Fleming ’69 Dear Cap Members, Focus of the Committee Here is an update on the latest news from the ECSC’s efforts are divided into three areas of concentration: GICC (Graduate Inter-Club Council) and the ECSC (Eating Club Steering Subcommittee). • University Policies This has been a very active period of collabo- • Cost Issues ration between the clubs and the University. • Admissions Reform In the fall newsletter, I mentioned that I have been co-chairing the ECSC along with the Undergraduate President of Tower Club. We established goals for admis- Our outgoing undergraduate President, Derek Grego ’12, is one sions reform that encourages of the four undergraduate members. This task force was cre- a workable system for all clubs ated by the GICC as a follow-up to the Report of the Task Force while preserving each club’s right on Relationships between the University and the Eating Clubs, to decide who and how to admit mem- which was commissioned by President Tilghman and released in bers. We seek maximum choice for sophomores in a fair and the spring of 2010. efficient process. The ball is now in the court of the undergradu- ate presidents to see if they can devise a system to make this Respecting the important guiding happen. I will report more on this in the next newsletter. principle that the clubs are independent of the University, the official members University Policies and Cost Issues of the ECSC are four grad board The University encourages greater choice for undergraduates in presidents and four undergraduate dining and social options.
    [Show full text]