Volume 77, Number 3 September 28, 1987
Princeton University
Princeton, New Jersey 08544
Second class postage paid
at Princeton, New Jersey 08540
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Gift from Stuart
endo. ws , new chair.
in communication
The University has established the
Stuart Professorship of Communication
and Public Affairs in the Woodrow
Wilson School. A gift of Robert D.
Stuart Jr., U.S. Ambassador to, Norway,
his family, and the Quaker Oats Co.,
which Stuart served for many years, the
chair will enable a distinguished scholar
to study. the impact of the .media=
especially_ television-on public and
international affairs.
l Elliott ~edits U.S literary
Columbia University, Press publication provides first overall update since 1948
By Ann Waldron
The time was, right, said Emory Elliott,
for a new literary history of the United
States, and in 1982 when Columbia
one, he accepted.
"Deconstructionism was riding high,"
he said, referring to the currently
Commenting on his decision to fashionable type of literary criticism,
establish, the professorship, Stuart said, . "and literary history was a dubious
electronic media-on societal and of the Department of `English, was
political values. A research interested in making historicism less
professorship at the Woodrow Wilson dubious. The new Columbia Literary
School, backed by Princeton's academic History of the' United States, with. Elliott
resources, should provide a unique as general editor, is to appear in
vantage point for the study of those December. Although the. History has
media forces that will influence the 1,384 pages and will cost $59.95, he
future of Western democracy." and the publishers hope that serious
Woodrow Wilson School Dean readers and students as well as libraries
Donald Stokes noted. that "The link will buy it:
affairs will now be given the scholarly Elliott called on Willard Thorp, Holmes
attention it deserves. Television, in Professor of Belles-Lettres, Emeritus,
articular has had a revolution who was co-editor with Robert E.
impact ott the conduct of ourrelleections : ; .. Spiller -of-, Macmillan's 1948 landmark
and the ;character of our system of Literary History of the United States,,
political parties, We are extremely the last such history and the standard
grateful to Bob Stuart, his family and work for 'more than a generation. Thorp
the Quaker Oats Co. for giving gave him some, advice, wished him
Princeton and the Woodrow Wilson well and later wrote a blurb for the
School this fine opportunity-" jacket. '
Stuart, who graduated-with the Elliott picked five associate editors;
Class of. 1937, was one of the first three men and two women from major
International Affairs. Former chairman
and chief executive officer of. the
Quaker Oats Co., he served from 1970
to. 3980 as a charter trustee of the
University, and continues as a trustee
emeritus. He is the son of R. Douglas
Stuart and father of R. Douglas Stuart
III, James and Alexander, all of whom
attended Princeton.
Kevin Ferry, the University's first full-
Michael Aguilar '90 and Rigoberto time alcohol and drug counselor, was
Hernandez '89 have been chosen by featured this month 'on the front pages
the Mathematics Department to share of two consecutive issues of the Daily
the Incentives for Excellence Princetonian, where he described his
Scholarship Prize of $1,000 awarded to, goals for alcohol counseling and
the department by the National Science ' education-efforts likely to be of broad
Foundation in conjunction with its ' interest within the Princeton community.
Minority Graduate Fellowship Program. -Says Ferry, "Any alcohol program
The prize "recognizes the efforts of will have -certain givens. In a college or
[the University's] faculty to identify university setting, a percentage of
outstanding minority students in science, students will need intervention; another
engineering or mathematics and to, - percentage will find that issues relating
encourage, them to pursue advanced to alcohol use come up while they are
study in one of these vital fields." here, and they will benefit from
education:
Under the German-Marshall Research "But everyone can benefit from
Fellowship Program, Assistant Professor increased awareness of alcohol issues in
of Politics Nancy Bermeo and general, and that is why the program
Walker. Professor of Economics and I'm working on is intended to reach
International Finance Peter Kenen have across the campus."
been awarded 1987 grants to support' Operating out of McCosh Health
studies of U.S. - European relations. Center, Ferry has begun training .
By comparing Italy, Spain and students and administrators who have
Peronist Argentina,.Bermeo will direct responsibility for student life,
examine how the experience of including residential advisers, the staffs
dictatorship affects the thinking of ' of the residential colleges and
political elites involved in building representatives of the Dean of Students
democracies. Kenen will explore Office. He greeted members of the
methods of using policy rules and ' incoming class with a flyer describing
indicators to promote coordination of goals and including a questionnaire to
international economic policy. enable them to begin assessing their
own knowledge of and attitudes toward .
alcohol consumption. He plans a series
Emory Elliott, refers to Macmillan's Literary History, published in 1948.
editors made decisions about who were to be accorded a separate essay on his
major writers. There were very serious work. Some felt he had not. Others
questions involved in determining how -insisted that recent criticism on Gertrude
much space should be given to each Stein revealed her'to be a major writer-
author, literary movement -or group, and certainly as important as Fitzgerald. The,
genre. Matters of taste, current critical ' issue of gender was also at stake, since.
historical periods), and in June 1982 he were always present in these typically: claimed to be the great figures
called a meeting in New York to deliberations.: of the twenties, while little attention,.
establish a tentative table of contents ? For example, the editors asked until recently, had been paid to Stein.
and to select contributors. themselves whether F. Scott Fitzgerald The editors compromised: they decided
During three days of discussions, the had really written enough major books (Continued on page 3)
Alcohol, d or
rsig o se joins McCosh
'of workshops on different issues related sporadically' enforced only beget
to alcohol use and abuse, including- one confusion among students, he feels.
for eating club bartenders on "how'
how to According to Ferry, "Princeton has a
regarded drinking-even excessive
drinking-as part of a rite of passage
into- adulthood." In recent years "the
administration has recognized ' the need
people off."
Ferry identifies four components
in an alcohol program: information,
education, treatment and. referral.
"Information means letting students to reach out to students on alcohol
know what's'available and who's here issues," but complications relating to
to help; it also means making sure they "the traditional ethos," to the raising of
alcohol -and of state laws that pertain to
drinking. Education refers to programs
and workshops about issues relating to
alcohol' consumption, and the effects of
alcohol use and abuse on the person and
on loved' ones.
"Treatment may mean individual or
group counseling or meetings such as
those through Alcoholics Anonymous or
Adult Children of Alcoholics.. Referral
programs utilize resources in the
community-detox or rehabilitation
facilities, for example."
Ferry defines his first job on campus
as trying to help achieve. a.consensus of
what; the University's role in alcohol
issues will be. He feels that students
should be given "a considered vote"` on
recommended policy.
"What matters is consistency of
approach," he says. Standards that lack
consistent application and rules that are.
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autonomy of the eating clubs have made
it difficult to achieve a coherent policy.
Nevertheless, Ferry believes, there is
a consensus on campus that the time has'
(Continued on page 2)
This week's issue contains Staff News
on pages six and seven. Reported are
appointments and promotions in
Building Services, the Controller's
Office, Computing and Information
Technology, Development Information
Systems, Grounds and Building
Maintenance, Near Eastern Studies and
Occupational Health and Safety, as well.
as other staff changes. New members of
the biweekly staff are pictured, as are
graduates of Building Services' summer
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"lIrin&l6 t Weekly BultetiiiB September?28t; 9g7
Expenditures for Medicaid,. the hynrid the program and then discusses
state and federal program s upperting Medicaid from the federal and state
1V1d ~~? I eW Jersey si111,G the levers that can effect program change:'
prog omen inception ? ?_ 1.970 - - - - - ' .. .' ...
. _
Council on New Jersey Affairs.
------ ----
and Directions of New Jersey-
governor Brendan Byrne, chairman of
the Council on New Jersey Affairs, in
the report's preface. "These demands
are placing-new burdens. on state
decisionmakers to understand their
Medicaid programs and the effects
Editor. Jacquelyn Savam
Managing Editor: Sally Moren
Calendar and Assistant Editor: Carolyn Geller
The Bulletin ispublished weekly during
the academic year, except-when the
University is in recess and during'
examination weeks, and once in the summer
by the Office of Communications/
Publications, Stanhope Hall, Princeton
University, Princeton, N.J. 08544..
Permission is granted to adapt, reprint or
excerpt material from the Bulletin, without
attribution,, for use in other media.
Deadlines
All news, photographs and calendar
announcements for the Bulletin which covers
October 12 through October 18 must be
submitted not later than Friday, October 2.
Conflicting pressures -
Medicaid, whose funding has grown costs. These competing forces have led
from $124 million to $15 billi Mdicid tblihp
.on,, now ?eao estas comlex,
represents both the largest single incentive-based reimbursement systems
category of federal aid to New Jersey for health care providers, to extend
and the second . largest item in the state's eligibility (increasing health services for'
own budget, second only to education. low-income women and children) and to
recommended a further. lO percent based long-term health care services for
increase in Medicaid spending, a request the elderly and disabled. These issues `
that was supported, with' minor . are addressed in the succeeding chapters
adjustments, by the legislature. of the report. The final chapter presents
"Federal legislation is giving states a short summary of program trends.
greater latituQ to define their Medicaid , The Council on New Jersey Affairs
programs at a time when constituents . was founded in 1981 to provide a forum
and providers are concerned about for in-depth study and critical discussion
comprehensive health care coverage and of issues of long-term importance. The
about cost implications,".writes former council comprises 31 leaders in
government, business, labor, higher-
education., and civic organizations. From'
the outset, its work has been supported ..
by the Florence and John Schumann
Foundation of Montclair.
The council regularly commissions
program changes have"on the health and papers to provide background for its
welfare systems of each state." own discussions and to clarify issues
It is for these reasons-enormous and fora larger audience. "The Dynamics
growing costs, new state responsibilities and Directions of New Jersey Medicaid"
and the broad implications of Medicaid is the 10th working paper to be
polic that the council decided a
y- published. Financial support from the
report on Medicaid would be timely. Fund for New Jersey helped secure
The report begins; with an' overview of research-time for the report.
- Helen Frances Mills, 80, who retired
in ' 1967 as a secretary in the. Woodrow
Wilson School after 23 years with the
Council committee University, died on July. 13.
Born in Asbury Park and a resident of
urges Ivy, Tiger Princeton since 1942, she is survived by
~~ her step-son, Robert; two step-
i to revise policy grandchildren; and two step
Twelve Woodrow Wilson School M.P.A.' students have been "awarded Presidential greatgrandchildren..
Management Internships for two years beginning this fall. Standing are Lynne By unanimous vote of the members
Davidson (1), Terri Ethridge, Susan Marquis, Dirk Damrau, Mark Moore and present at 'its meeting on September 19, - A service "was held in the University
Sarah Shackelton; seated are Sharon Belshe (1) and Joel Friedman. Not pictured the. Executive Committee of the Alumni Chapel on September 19 in memory of
at e Carol,"Kuntz, Carlos Palacios, Michael Tavis and William Turner, as well as Council adopted the following Laurance S. Myers, a junior from
Baxter Hunt;" who was selected as ari altet'nate. resolution: Omaha, Neb., who died. September 17'
1. We affirm our belief in the total at Princeton Medical Center
.
lo- Professor of Geophysics William commitment by the vast majority of the Myers had undergone emergency
surgery. September 16 after he was
found at his off-campus apartment with
severe lacerations on his wrists and, stab
Wounds to his chest.
An autopsy performed September 18
Kevin Ferry
Alcohol counselor
(Continued from page 1) wrote her dissertation on Renaissance-
come for change. "I feel' very optimistic allegory
', discussing how- the
about.the openness of everyone I've conventions of allegorical writing were
met-students,' administrators and
professional staff members-in
discussing alcohol policy and
programming possibilities. The
University is ready to provide services.
The resources available here are
exceptional and can contribute to depressing that scholars only write
making Princeton's program a national' scholarship. The writers I admired-
model." -
Ferry comes to Princeton from
the University of Southeastern
Massachusetts, where he was . '
coordinator of alcohol and drug applications saying that I wanted to
education since 1984. He designed and teach and write journalism.. I did get a
implemented the school's alcohol and couple of job offers," she said.
drug counseling and education program. Editing appeals to her. "I like not,
He developed an orientation program on having to write," she said. "Right now
alcohol and substance abuse issues for I enjoy working in a structured
incoming freshmen and -residence hall
staff and coordinated an information
and referral network connecting the
university to community services. He
also authored the official statement of
the university's alcohol policy.
For the' past five years, Ferry Record and Sunday Weekly in Havre
maintained a private counseling practice de Grace, Md., has been named staff
on Nantucket Island, where he designed writer, and Andrew Mytelka '85, a copy
an information and referral network for editor for Princeton University Press,
people experiencing alcohol-related will do class notes and sports., Still to,
problems. As an instructor at Bristol be hired is a production editor, who will
Community College in Fall River,, be in charge of computerized design and
and taught Massachusetts' first college-
level course on alcohol use and abuse.,
A certified alcohol counselor, Ferry
earned his bachelor's degree from Roger
Williams College and his master -of arts
in teaching from Bridgewater State
College.
Jason Morgan has been awarded the ' alumni body to equal access for women
1987 Maurice Ewing Medal, presented at Princeton.
jointly by the-American Geophysical "2. We deplore the negative effect
Union and the U.S..Navy. caused by the membership policies
In recognition of her work on 19th- perception of the University's offered .evidence that Myers' wounds
and 20th-century French, literature, commitment to equal access for women. were self-inflicted, according to the
Professor of Romance Languages and "3. We urge Ivy Club and Tiger Inn Mercer County prosecutor's office and,
Literatures Suzanne Crelly Nash - to reconsider their positions and, for the the Princeton Township police.
received a 1987 alumnae award from well-being of Princeton, voluntarily Myers was a philosophy major and a
the Wells College Alumnae Association. adopt. membership policies providing,
member of the junior varsity tennis
-Nash graduated from Wells College in equal access for women." team. He had lived at Wilson College as
1958. Said Alumni Council Director an underclassman. He came to Princeton
Richard Scribner '58, "The Executive from West Side High School in Omaha;
0- Albert, Einstein Professor of Science Committee wanted to emphasize its where he had been active on -the speech
P. James Peebles has been inducted - commitment to work actively with all , - and debate team and as co-captain,of
into the Royal Society of Canada. parts of the University community-the varsity tennis.
clubs, students and administrators- He is survived by his parents, Larry
At the 29th Annual Conference of the toward promptly putting this problem to WI. '62 and Mariana Gesman Myers,
International Association of Campus rest."
Law Enforcement Administrators, The Alumni Council's Executive
Director of Public Safety Jerrold Witsil Committee consists of elected and
was presented with the President's 'appointed members, including class and of Creighton Department of Psychiatry,
Award. A past president of the regional club and association presidents, c/o Dr. Frank Menolascino, 602 South
'
association, Witsil was cited for his and the chairmen of the Council's 13 45th Street, Omaha NE 68131
.
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Michelle Preston, a graduate alumna
in the Class of 1986, is the new editor
of the Princeton Alumni Weekly,
succeeding Charles Creesy '65, who has
become computer administrator for the
Princeton University Press.
Preston, a past contributor to the
PAW, has been a fact checker for The
New Yorker.
She is clearly excited about her new
fob.. A r ready s are intelligent and educated and interested in a wide range
of things," she said. "There's not much
2 ? pressure from advertisers."
Preston grew up in New Orleans and,
went to Vassar, where she graduated '
first in her class in 1980. While she was
working on her Princeton Ph.D. in ?
English, she taught preceptorials. She:
influenced by the rhetorical training
people got in the humanist schools. For
one year she was a lecturer in English at
Princeton, "I came, to graduate school intending _.,
to teach," she said, "but I found it
T.S. Eliot, Richard Blackhiur and
Robert Penn Warren-had all found a
wide audience." She enrolled in John
McPhee's writing class. "I wrote job
every two weeks. I like the pressures of
magazine work."
Two of three other vacancies have _
been filled at the PAW. David
Williamson '84, a reporter for the
Memorial contributions may be made
to the University of Nebraska/University
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Princeton grads, predominated
at Constitutional Convention
By Ann Waldron
r Princeton Weekly Bulletins September= 2S, 1.9$7 3
Madison in his notes on the convention.
"Nevertheless, the threat was a
frightening one.
John Murrill, professor pf history, likes
to say that the Federal Constitutional
Convention held 200 years ago in
Philadelphia was the first Princeton
alumni college.
Of the 55 delegates who composed
the Constitution between May and
September of 1787, nine were Princeton
alumni; this was nearly twice as many
as from any other American or Britjsh
college.
Princetonians, Murrin poilts out, led
each of the three factions that dominated
the convention. James Madison, Class
of 1771, pushed the Virginia Plan, and
William Paterson, Class of 1763,
presented and vigorously defended the
New Jersey Plan, which appealed to the
small states. Neither of these models for
the Constitution was ultimately adopted.'
But among the leaders who promoted
the plan that was adopted-a lower
house elected in proportion to
population and an upper house in which
each state, regardless of size had equal
representation-Oliver Ellsworth of
Connecticut, a member of the Class of
1766, figured prominently.
One of the tensest moments at the
convention was provided by Gunning
Bedford Jr. of Delaware, valedictorian
of the Class of 1771. During the
deliberations, Bedford declared, "The
large states dare not dissolve the
confederation. If they do the small ones
-will find some-foreign ally of more
honor and good faith, who will take
them by the hand and do them justice."
"He did not mean by this to
intimidate.' or ' alarm," wrote James
Although Bedford later apologized,
"his speech sobered everyone,"
according to Murrin.
Of the 55 delegates to the convention,
25-including George Washington and
Benjamin. Franklin-had not attended
any college. Five had attended William
and Mary, and the same number had
been to Yale. Three were Harvard
graduates and three Columbia. Two had
been to the University of Pennsylvania,
one to Oxford and one to Glasgow. I '
(One delegate had studied at three.
Scottish universities.)
The Princetonian delegates
represented six different states, while
the Yale men came from four, and all
the Harvard graduates were from
Massachusetts.
The other Princeton "alumni present
were Alexander Martin,, Class of 1756,
of North Carolina; Luther Mart; 1766,
Maryland; William C. Houston, 1768,
New Jersey (he had been a professor of
mathematics and natural philosophy at
Princeton); William R. Davie, 1776, z
North Carolina; and Jonathan Davie,
1776, New Jersey.
In appreciation of his work at the
convention, the trustees of the
University voted on October 1, 1787,
to award an honorary doctor of laws
degree to James Madison, who would
later become the nation's fourth
president. Of him, Georgia delegate
William Pierce wrote, "Every Person
seems to' acknowledge his greatness. He
blends together the profound politician
with the Scholar. ... is a Gentleman, of
great modesty, with a remarkably sweet,
temper.'
Pew biomedical sciences pro ra m
supports Rous virus research,....
Assistant Professor of Biology Marilyn she joined the,princeton faculty in July
Resh is one of 20 young researchers 1986. -
named 1987 Pew Scholars in the
Biomedical Sciences, A 13-member
national advisory committee of the
program, which is supported by the Pew
Charitable Trusts, invited 80 institutions
to nominate one candidate each, then
awarded grants of $200,000 apiece to '
those 20 junior faculty members who
showed "outstanding promise in basic
science or clinical research that will
help advance human health."
A Princeton graduate in the Class of
1977, Resh earned her Ph.D. in
biochemistry at Harvard in 1982 and
,continued there as a postdoctoral fellow
rrA cell and developmental biology until
Resh's research is supported lly the
Editors made hard decisions defining major writers American Cancer Society as we as by
the Pew award.
(Continued from page t) D. Rubin Jr., of the University of North backgrounds.-Princeton contributors in The Pew grant is designed to
essay on Hemingway,. Carolina at Chapel Hill, who wrote to' additron to Showalter are Holmes ' supplement other funds," she comments.
to have an
Fitzgerald and Stein, written by a ' say, "You did it to us again." He ' `Professor of Belles-Lettres A. Walton "It allows you the freedom to pursue
woman, Linda, Wagner-Martin of explained that when he was a young Litz,. who wrote on T.S. Eliot and Ezra exploratory experiments you -might, not
had Pound, and Associate Professor of be able to do otherwise."
Michigan State. man, the editors of the 1948 history
Elliott and the other editors wanted to slighted the South. Now that he was an English Lee C. Mitchell, who wrote on As an example, she describes a
involve as many women scholars as old man," Rubin observed, the young naturalism and the "determined life." project to examine the phenomenon of
possible. "About a third of our people were still leaving out. the South: auto-phosphorylation in pp60S"
contributors are women," he noted. He said that we defined American Deadlines met despite delays In the cell, pp60S`c catalyzes the
"The 1948. history, had one woman writers as Northeastern 'writers- Elliott said he built so much time into transfer of phosphate groups from ATP
contributor." . Melville, Thoreau; James and the schedule that, in spite of dilatory molecules to pp60S'C itself a reaction
They negotiated how many pages to Whitman," Elliott explained. "He said' contributors, he met every deadline. known as auto-phosphorylation. Only
allot to Henry' James and to Faulkner. - Northern"writers usually looked around "I called people. I had wives phoning one of the sites on the pp60Sr` protein
After deliberating whether it were and saw Faulkner and included him, and me up to say, `He's really working on where autb-phosphorylation occurs has
possible to write a full essay in 25 then proclaimed all the others to be it." I went through marriages and been identified. I plan to identify the
pages, they concluded that it wasn't and regional writers, by which they meant divorces; I'd start out talking to the first other sites-find out how many,
agreed on 35 pages for each. But we inferior writers. We tried to combat this spouse, and by the time I got the essay there are and where-and Oetermine
decided to hold it to 25 pages for problem in several ways, such as' adding I'd be talking to the second spouse." whether the phosphate groups alter the
Emerson and Thoreau," said Elliott. chapters on Thomas Jefferson and the Elliott has been invited to lecture transforming activity of the protein (that
"We originally decided Robert Frost writing of the South and Poe in a about the History in various European is, its cancer-causing capacity).
should have several pages devoted-to Southern context." -countries, as well as in China and This is a project that involves both
him in the essay on diversity in
American poetry, However, the ' author Essays avoid '`ghetto-izing'
who wrote that essay was not a Frost The criticism offered by Nina Baym
fan, so we decided to devote a separate of the University of Illinois was that
essay to Frost. John D. Moore, the women did not get not enough attention.
director of Columbia University Press,
was horrified to think that at one point
we only had a few paragraphs on
Frost."
So, Elliott said, "We lined up an
additional essay by [Professor of
English] Elaine Showalter on women
writers between the wars,"
He takes. pride in the editors' early
Advisory editors critiquecontents - responsiveness to criticism. "We knew
When he. sent the tentative table of we needed specialized essays on various
contents out to his four advisory editors, groups, but to avoid ghetto-izing we
"I got three blasts," Elliott commented also told every contributor to include
ruefully. '
Houston-Baker of the University. of
Pennsylvania was -distressed by what he
regarded as the scant, treatment of black
writers in, the 19th century, and he
called for a separate essay on Frederick
Douglass.
`.. Elliott said, "We didn't feel
Douglass's canon was large, enough for Modern Language Association, and an woman rose and "asked, "go you have
that, but we added an essay on, social Asian-American professor asked me ' an essay on children's literature?"
discourse and nonfictional prose that how her people would get in: We called His. jaw dropped. He explained, that
included abolitionists, and social in a specialist on immigrant writers, although there is some discussion along
reformers and that devoted a substantial Werner Sollors. Eventually, after further the way of the.children's literature of
portion to Douglass. Also, we asked' consultation 'with several minority each period, this kind. of writing. is not
every contributor, throughout the book, critics, there were separate essays, on singled out for special treatment.
to be careful to give full attention to 20th-century Afro-American, Asian- When his challenger insisted that
writers from minority groups. One of American and Mexican-American children's literature may be the most
the most important developments in writers." important of all, since it is the first
American literature of the last 25 years The book is a celebration of diversity, thing we read, Elliott said that it would
has been the excavation and ' Elliott said, reflecting the contribution have to be the task of the editors orthe
minority and women writers who had
-
"
been lost from sight. Another objection came from Louis
absorbed in a biography of Beethoven,
Scott jotting, in The Princeton Alumni
Weekly, the nicknames'of the. football
heroes of his time. He had risen
suddenly to his feet, grabbed the
mantlepiece, and fallen dead, spread-
eagled on the floor. "I don't think I can-
do it," I repeated to Cindy Wall.
-By Sheilah Graham,
"The Room. Where Scott Died,"
The New York Times Magazine,
July 26, 1987
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Fitzgerald's last words
women and minorities in the broader identity-and there is always the ... assistant producer Cindy Wall [of
treatment of periods and genres. Kate politics of professional politics. The Film Company] ... called me from
Chopin, for instance, appears in the Somebody attacked us by saying there is Washington to say, "We would like to
essay on women writers and also in the . no such thing as American literature, film you in the room where Scott
essay on realism and regionalism."
Still, as Elliott traveled and spoke
about the forthcoming history, other
Brazil When he has spoken of, it, he
has tried to help his audiences -
understand the many ways in which
putting together such a book in the frruitful. they'll open up whole new .
United States involves different kinds of av nis of research for me;
politics.
,The politics of theory involves
questions. like this: Is the new
Her research focuses on the Rous
sarcoma virus,, which causes cancer in
chickens.
"When'this virus infects cells," she
explains, "it_expresses a protein,
pp60Sr", that causes the normal cells to
become malignant. This event, known
as transformation, occurs only when the
pp605" protein is attached to the cell
membrane." With a research team that
includes a graduate student,, a technician
and several undergraduates, she says,
"We're studying how the pp60Si? protein
.becomes incorporated in the membrane,
what other proteins it interacts with in
the membrane, and why it has to be in
the membrane to cause cancer."
biochemistry and molecular biology. It
,Ali nrnhahly take several years hit.
historicism valid? The` politics of culture
has to do with high and low culture:
What kind of writing is legitimate?
There are the politics of region, the
politics of gender, the politics of
ethnicity, the politics of national
only English literature." Fitzgerald died. .. -
Finally, after the page proofs had It was` almost 47 years since that
been read, when it was too late to "make Saturday afternoon when Scott and I
changes, Elliott gave a speech where a were in my Hollywood living room, I,
Princeton Weekly Bulletin September 28,1 981
O Admission charged.
v Not open to the general public
All other events listed in the Weekly
Calendar are open to members of the
University community and, the general
public, free of charge.. Any speaker -
not otherwise identified is a member
of-the faculty, staff or student body of
Princeton University.
'Monday .
September 28
Arts .
7:30 p.m. East Asian Studies seminar
in Modern Chinese Literature video.
The True Story of Alt Q, 202. Jones.
Lectures
Noon. Cognitive Studies lecture.
"Improving Inductive Reasoning."
Geoffrey Fong. Langfeld Lounge,
Green.
4:00 p.m. Chemical Engineering
graduate seminar. "A New Technique
for Studying Dielectric. Relaxation in
Aqueous Colloids." David F. Myers.
A224 Engineering Quadrangle.
4:00 p.m. Electrical Engineering/
Electronic Materials and Devices
seminar. "Electronic and Structural
Properties of Hydrogenated. a-Si,Ge
Alloys."-Kenneth D. MacKenzie,
Harvard Univer=sity. C207 Engineering
Quadrangle. ;
4:30 p.m. Comparative Literature
lecture.. "The Negative Way Negated:-
Samuel Beckett." Shira Wolosky.
4:30 p.m. Peter B. Lewis Lecture
Series on Forty Years of American
Diplomacy.. "The United States in the
International Economy Since 1947.".
Robert G. Gilpin. i Woodrow Wilson
School.
7:30 p.m. Computing and Information
Technology Education Series. '
"Fundamentals of Computing 1.
Howard Strauss. Room 101,
87 Prospect.. Registration required,
call 452-6028.
7:30 p.m, Woodrow Wilson School
lecture. "The U.S., Objectives in the
Uruguay Round." harles Blum,
assistant t:S trade representative for
multilateral negotiations. 1 Woodrow
Wilson School.
Lectures
0 Noon to 4:30 p.m. Personnel
Services follow-up of July 13-17
workshop on- "Supervisory
Management." Tower, Fine.
? 12:30 p.m. Energy and
Environmental Studies seminar.
"The Future of Arms Control."
H121 Engineering Quadrangle.
2:00 p.m. Chemistry seminar.
"Conformational Energy Calculations
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Notices
9:30 p.m. Amnesty International
meeting. Murray-Dodge.
Sports
3:30 p.m. Men's junior varsity soccer
vs. Camden Community College.
Gulick Field.
7:30 p.m. Men's varsitysoccer vs.
Fairleigh Dickinson University -
Teaneck.. Lourie-Love Field.
Barney in McCarter Theatre's production of The Middle Ages by A.R. Gurney Jr.,
which runs through October
A. Scheraga, Cornell University.
Wednesday
DuPont Seminar Room, Frick. Thursday
4:00 p.m. Mechanical and Aerospace September 30
Engineering seminar in Applied Physics, October I
Fluid, Mechanics; Combustion, and _
Dynamics and Control. "Asynchronous Arts
Optical Sampling-A New Combustion 4:30 p m. Creative Writing/English
Diagnostic Technique. Gaylen King, Department reading. Mona Simpson,
Purdue University. C207ngineering novelist; and Paul Mul4oon, poet,
Notices Quadrangle. Social gathering at reading their own work. Room 130,
Noon. Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. 3:30 p.m. 185 Nassau Street.
West Room, Murray-Dodge.
8:00- p.m._ Hillel Foundation Israeli folk
4:15 p.m. Plasma Physics colloquium.
"Topology of the Large Scale Structure
of the Universe." Richard Gott. Gottlieb
Auditorium, PPL, Forrestal.
4:30 p.m. Physics colloquium. "Physics
at CERN." H. Schopper, director
general, CERN. A- 10 Jadwin. Pine.
4:30 p.m. Woodrow Wilson School/ 4:00 p.m. Biology seminar. "Receptor-
International Studies lecture. "The CIA Mediated. Fertilization in Mammals." Lectures
and American Foreign-Policy." Robert Paul Wasserman. Roche Institute of ? 9_?n1) a_m_ Computing and information
--r --y .,_ col cu........ log . 100 v.uy v.. 1 echnology Education Series.
Arts intelligence, CIA. Dodds Auditorium, 4:15 p.m. Industrial Relations/Labor "Introduction to the IBM PC 1." Eileen
7:30 p.m. German/Art and' Archaeology Woodrow Wilson School. ,Economics seminar. "The Use of Wages Jones and Leila Shahbender Pike. D229
Weimar Film Series. Murnau: 7:30 p.mComputing and Informatiop in Coordinating Hours." Aloysius Siow, Engineering Quadrangle. Registration
Nosferatu. 101 McCormick. Technology Education Seri es. Columbia University. - 211 Dickinson. required, call 452-6028.
7:30 p.m. History Department films. - "Fundamentals of Computing 2." 4:30 p.m. Chemistry seminar. Noon. Molecular Biology seminar.
Documentary: Hiroshima/Nagasaki; Howard Strauss. Room 101, "Synthesis of Natural and Unnatural Daniel Broek,:Cold Spring Harbor. 3
Stuart Heisler: The Negro. Soldier. 87 Prospect. Registration required, Products."- Jeffrey D. Winkler, Lewis Thomas Lab.
Wood Auditorium, McCosh. call 452-6028. University of Chicago. DuPont Seminar 2:00 p.m Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
sited Campus inlnisulest universiq 4:30 p.m., bridge joining Frick and Community Climate Model." David L:
Chapel panel discussion on business, Hoyt.. Williamson, NationalMeteorological
Peace and Justice 87: How Can We 4:30 p.m. Computing and Information Center, Washington, D.C. 209 GFDL,
Serve?" David Sand '79, Franklin Technology Education? Series. Forrestal.
Research and Development Corp., "Demonstration of the IRIS 4:15 p.m. Econometric Research/Oskar
Boston,'and Andrea Schutz *71, Lenox, Workstation." David Laur. E423 ' Morgenstern Memorial Seminar.
Lawrenceville. I Woodrow Wilson Engineering Quadrangle. Registration "Estimation of Variation of Price
School. required, call 452-6028..,- Elasticities From Household Survey
4:30 p.m. East Asian Studies lecture. Data in Developing Countries." Angus
Notices "Family Ideology of the Gono (Japanese Deaton. 211 Dickinson.
7:30 p.m. GO Club meeting. Stevenson Rural Entrepreneurs)." Anne Walthall:, 4:30 p.m. Humanities Council!
Hall. For information call Rick University of Utah. 202 Jones Social Romance Languages and Literatures
.,
Mott- '73, 924-7310 or 466-1602. gathering at 4:00 p.m. lecture. ."Gadda: romanziere
Department lecture. "How Functional
Structures: Syntax or Semantics?"
Lectures
? Noon to 2:00 p.m. Personnel
Services follow-up of March 8-9
workshop on "Contributing to .
Organizational Effectiveness." Tower,
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4:30 p.m. Humanities/American
Studies/Afro-American Studies/
Eberhard L. Faber Memorial Lecture.
"Emancipation and Unloosing: Southern
Workers in 1865." Nell Irvin Painter,
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill. 5 Woodrow Wilson School.
7:30 p.m. Computing and Information
Technology Education ~ Series. "Using
and Caring for Your Toshiba." Krishnan
Ramaswami. Room 101, 87 Prospect.
Registration required, call 452-6028.
7:39 p.m. Computing and Information
Technology Education Series. "Using
and Caring for Your Zenith." Lisa
Muiiiz. 5 Woodrow Wilson School.
Registration required, call 452-6028.
7:30 p.m. Health Services lecture.
"What Everybody, But Everybody,
Should Know About AIDS." Brian G.
Zack. Dodds Auditorium, Woodrow
Wilson School.
8:00 p.m. Renaissance Studies/History/
Romance Languages and Literatures -
lecture. "Problems of Belief in the 16th
Century: The Religion of Rabelais."
Michael Screech, Oxford University.
1 Woodrow Wilson School.
Arts
7:30 and 9:30 p.m, Film Society.
Francois Truffaut: Day for Night.
Kresge Apditorium, Frick:.
8:00 p.m. Humanities Council reading.
John McPhee reading from his newest
work, Rising From the Plains, Film
Theater, 185 Nassau Street.
0 8:00 P.M. McCarter Theatre drama
series. A.R. Gurney Jr.: The Middle
Ages. McCarter Theatre. Seminar-
follows. - -
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Weekly. Calendar
Mark Baltin, New York University.
5 Woodrow Wilson School
4:30 p,m. Medieval Studies/History of
Science lecture. "Hugo of Santalla,- the
Cathedral of Tarazona and an Arabic
Collection of Scientific Texts in the
Second Quarter of the 12th Century."
Charles Burnett, Warburg and Courtald
Institute, .London. 230 Dickinson.
4:30 p.m Physics colloquium. "Statics
and Dynamics of Spin Glasses." Daniel
Fisher. A-10 Jadwin.
"4:30 p.m. Russian Studies lecture.
-."Soviet Literature in the New Era of
2:55 p.m. Men's varsity and junior -
-varsity cross country vs. University of
Pennsylvania. _ Clarke Field.
5:00 to 10:00 P.M. Women's varsity
volleyball/Princeton Invitational. Dillon
Gym.
Saturday.
October - 3.
Gktshost." Ariatolii Rybakov, author. Arts
Betts Lecture Hall, School of 0 4:30 and 9:00 p.m, McCarter Theatre
A
hit
rc
ecture drm sie AR Ge
.aaers...,urny Jr.: The
4:30 p.m. University lecture series on Middle Ages. McCarter. Theatre.
Commemorating the Constitution: An 7:30, 9:30 and 11:30 p,m, Film
Examination of Current Perspectives. Society. Medhi Charef; Tea in the
"Emergency-power and the Harem. Kresge Auditori um, Frick.
Constitution." Jeffrey K. Tulin.
2- Woodrow Wilson School. Notices
7:00 p.m. Computing and Information 8:00 p.m. Princeton Scottish Country-
Technology Education Series.
Dancers. Murray-Dodge.
"Fundamentals of Computing 3."
87 Prospect. Registration, required, 2:00 p,m, Men's junior varsity soccer
call 452-6028.
vs. N.L Institute of Technology.
:7.39 p.m. Stude_ nt Volunteers/Interfaith/ Gulick Field.
United Campus Ministries/University 5:00 to 10:00 P.M. Women's varsity
Chapel panel discussion on medicine. volleyball/Princeton Invitational. Dillon
"Peace and Justice '87: How Can We Gym.
"
Serve?
Stephen A. Hoffman '77,
Brigham Young Women's Hospital,
Boston; Shearwood McClelland '69,
College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Columl7a. University, New York; and
Beth Rom Rymer '73, Institute for
Stress Management; Hoffman Estates,
- Ill. I Woodrow Wilson School.
Notices--
6 900 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Personnel
Services orientation program for new
employees. Senate Chamber, Whig.
o Noon. International Center
conversation over lunch. Murray-
Dodge.
Arts
7:30` and 10:00 P.M. Film Society.
Gregory Nava: El Norte. Kresge
'08.
Auditorium, Frick.
00 p.m.MeCarter Theatre drama
Ages. McCarter Theatre.
Jtuv~i~aty D. i 1cu ;G iw rievai Jerv1Ce U17~ ll.~-7Ca \. . . j1V~>?:y .
W9,00, a .m. Computing and Information Art Museutn
PURRS
n
P
) ca
(
access the
ALS database
Technology Education Series. Closed for expansion and renovation. and many others, but it has certain Robert'M. Gates, deputy director of
"Introduction to the IBM PC 2: Eileen disadvantages, according to Oppenheim. central intelligence, will speak about
Jones and Leda Shabender Pike. D229 Firestone Library A trained librarian is needed to "The CIA and American Foreign
Engineering Quadrangle. Registration Exhibition Gallery: Monday-Friday, operate the system, which takes staff Policy" on September 29 in Dodds
required, call 45t-6028. 9:00 a,m. to 5:00 p.m.; Saturday, time, limits user access an
d introduces Auditorium at the Woodrow Wilson
3:30 p.m, of Science 9:00 a.m.- to noon, 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.; an intermediary into every search. It is School. Beginning at 4:30 p.m., the
colooquiim u Continuity or Change Sunday, 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. expensive, costing from $0.50 to $3 per lecture is sponsored by the school and
in Medical Practice 1660-1740?" "Curators' Choice: An Introduction to minute, and there is an additional by the Center of International Studies.
Andrew Wear, University of Aberdeen, the Collections." Through October 2. charge for each bibliographic citation Appointed deputy director of central
Scotland, 217 Palmer. Social gathering The Leonard L. Milberg Gallery for the printed; the average search costs from intelligence in April 1986, Gates is the
follows, 220 Palmer.--. Graphic Arts (second floor): Monday- $10 to $50, with charges billed to principal deputy to the director of the
3:30 p.m. Population Research seminar. Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.; p
departmental accounts or paid in cash. agency. Following the illness and death
'Assessing the Impact of a Health Saturday, 9:00a.m. to noon, 1:00 to PAIS on CD-ROM, however, of Director William M. Casey, he'
Intervention on;Socio=Economic 5:00 p.m.; Sunday, 2:00 to 5:00 p.m served as acting director from December
Differentials lit Mortality." Sajeda "Princeton Iconography, 1760-1-987.'' .. 18, 1986, until May 26, 1987.
Amin. 21 Prospect. Through October 2. -University physician Gates joined the CIA in 1966 as an
4:00 p.m. Mechanical and Aerospace Lobby: Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m. to intelligence, analyst and. as one of two
Engineering seminar in,Applied Physics, 11:45. p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, noon talks about AIDS assistant national intelligence officers
Fluid Mechanics Combustion, and to 8 :00 p.m. = for strategic programs. In 1974 he was
Dynamics and Control. `New Short "What Everybody, But Everybody, assigned to the staff of the National
Wavelength Light Sources." Roger W. Gest Oriental Library Should Know About Aids" will be the Security Council and served there five
Falcone, University of California, Jones Hall. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. topic discussed by Director of Sexual years under three presidents. Returning
Berkeley. D221 `Engineering . to 11:00 p.m.; Saturday, 10:00 a.m. Health Services Dr. Brian Zack on to the CIA in 1979, he. was appointed o
Quadrangle, Social gathering at to 5:00
.
S
d
2
0
p
m;
un
ay
:
0 to September 30 A questiondiefdmiiiii
,.,. an answer a sers o anstratve postons,.
3:3(1 p m 11:00 P.M. period will. follow his talk, which begins including that of national intelligence.
4:00 p oily Psychology lecture. "Japanese Calligraphy of the Edo at 7:30 p.m. in Dodds Auditorium-at the officer for the Soviet Union and in
"Communication and Social Cognition Period, 1600-1868." Woodrow Wilson School, 1982, that of deputy director for
in Monkeys=" Robert Seyfarth and ' AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency intelligence,
Dorothy Cheyney, University of Museum of Natural History Syndrome) is a devastating disease that As deputy director for intelligence, he
Pennsylvania. Langfeld Lounge, Green. Guyot Hall. Monday-Friday, 9:00 a.m. has currently affected'over 40,000 was in charge of the CIA division
to 5:00 p.m.' Closed weekends. Americans, half of whom have died. responsible for all analysis and
Notices "Bird of the Month: Fabulous, any more cases are reported production of finished intelligence.. In
12:30 O .m. Campus Fund Drive fund. Pheasants." worldwide.: AIDS can strike all September 1983 Gates was also made
run. Campus. For information call 734- "Evolution of the Horse.,' segments of the population-men, chairman of the National Intelligence
7696. "The California Condor., women, adults and children-regardless Council, where he directed the
8:00 p.m. World Folkdance of sexual preference or level of 'sexual . preparation of all National Intelligence
Cooperative instruction; requests at a Seeley G. Mudd Library activity. Estimates prepared by the Intelligence
9;00 p.m Location posted at Olden Street: Monday-Friday, 9;00 a.m. Presenting a broad overview of Community.
185 Nassau Street. - fo'5.00 p m Closed weekends AIDS ' 1
Education is the key to the prevention history from Indiana University and a
of this disease, as well as to the Ph.D. in Russian and Soviet history
prevention of irresponsible from Georgetown University.
Approved For Release 2011/09/01: CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600850006-6
Sports
Sunday
October 4
Arts
0 2:00 and 7:30 p.m. McCarter Theatre
drama series. A. R. Gurney Jr.: The
Dillon Gymnasium
For hours call 452-4466.
Library
For hours call 452-3181.
Tours offered Monday-Saturday at,
10:00 and 11:00 a.m., 1:30 and
3:30 p.m.; Sunday at 1:30 and
.3:30 p.m.
For information call 452-3603.
Pros~ect Association
For information cali.452-3455.
McCarter Theatre Box Office Rich
d
A
i
m
ar
son
ud
toriu
For reservations call 683-8000, Monday- For reservations call 452-5000, Tuesday-
Saturday, noon to 6:00 pm
. Fid 430 t 630 p Fid
ray,:o:.m.;ray and
Oran ge Ke _ Grade Service Saturday, noon to 2:00 p.m. Closed
g -- y Sunda
artrl Monda
y
y
assau Notes
New'. computer index can ' be tested at WWS
The Public Affairs Information Service
Inc. (PAIS), an association of libraries
that has published indexes in public
affairs and public policy since 1914,
recently selected the Woodrow Wilson
School Library as a test site for its new
information retrieval system, PAIS on
CD -ROM, under the sponsorship of
Computing and Information
Technology.
With this system, an IBM-PC and a
compact disk player give the user
immediate access to the entire PAIS
database of 250,000 references
published in English and five other retrieval.'.'
languages from 1972 through 1986. The She emphasizes that, although the
4 3/4-inch disk holds 14_ years of indexed system is being tested at the Woodrow
material and can hold 15 more as the Wilson School, "the information
database is updated. contained in the dat
base i
a
i
bl
s
ppl
a
ca
e
7:30 and 9:39 p.m. Film Society. Luis According to Woodrow Wilson to many fields not j
t the
i
l
us
soc
a
, Bunuel: Viridiana. Kresge Auditorium, School librarian Linda Oppenheim, the sciences. A biologist might, want to'
Frick. PAIS index has long been "the most study bioethics; someone in the
logical starting place for any research in humanities might look for material on
Notices the social sciences." Students initiating . government support of the arts. Any
0 4,11-:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Prospect research' projects with a visit to the card topic that has a public policy aspect can
Sunday countr
brunch
y
Religion - . '
11:t'A air. University Chapel, SeMce
of Holy. Communion. The Rev. Sue
Anne Steffey Morrow.
is not in the catalog, she points out.'
"Government documents, for instance.
There are -just too many of them.
Princeton stopped cataloging ,
government documents in 1977."
rs is
But the PAIR index lists mat
e
Sports that are not-generally catalogued, s
'
1:30 p.m. Men
s freshman football vs. as journal articles, government
Dartmouth College. Palmer Stadium. - documents, pamphlets, court deci
,Exhibits
time and work away on the thing
the library closes at midnight."
The system currently available Jp I A, I A deputy director
iuc uding modes of transmission A native of Kansas, Gates holds a
"Princeton Memorabilia. of the 1890s. and recommended precautions to bachelor of arts degree from the College
Sports
agency reports and conference'
proceedings.
prevent its spread, Zack says, or William and Mary, a master's in -
61 -
users with neither technical knowledge
nor searching experience to browse
through the database and locate the
information they want almost
immediately. No librarian is necessary;
the system is, up as long as-the library is
open; and the cost per use is far less
than with PURRS. =
Oppenheim feels' that the new .system -
is ideal for Princeton, especially in view
of the University's emphasis on
independent academic work. "Students
can use it themselves and become
PAIS on CD-ROM will continue to
be tested in the Woodrow Wilson
School library until November 15.
"We want lots of feedback on this."
Oppenheim says. "We need staff,
students and faculty to use the system
Approved For Release 2011/09/01 : CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600850006-6
The Staff News section carries articles
about members of the University staff
ai,u uuornauvn about. university
employment policies and practices.
CIT appoints three, promotes one
In Computing and Information
Technology, Brad Gianulis and Joe
Tierney have become members of the
professional technical staff; Daniel
Oberst and Saletta Van Fleet have'
joined the administrative staff.
Says Gianulis, "We have a software
package that allows students to produce
animation and realistic images of their
data. I'm in charge of that operation."
A graduate of the University of
Tennessee. School of Architecture,
Gianulis'received a bachelor's degree
in 1981. From 1982 to 1985 he
was, employed as an applications
programmer 'in Chicago and then as
director of computer: services for an
architectural firm in Charlotte, N.C. In
the area pf computer animation, he has
several film credits, and he has spoken
as a guest lecturer at the University of
Illinois School of Architecture and the,.
Institute of Industrial Engineers
Conference.
A native of Kansas City, Mo.'
Gianulis lives in Princeton with his
wife, Debbie, 'and their preschooler,
Brad Gianulis (,l), Joe-Tierney and Daniel Oberst
He also did one year`of graduate
studies in mathematic linguistics at
Joanna. In addition to electronics, he is Massachusetts Institute of Technology. '
interested in photography: . From 1978 to 1981 he was with
As statistical software consultant,
Tierney promises, "I will provide
statistical computing support to anyone,
in the University,who needs it."
He holds a 1983 bachelor's degree in
sociology from St. Joseph's University
in Philadelphia and a 1985 M.A. in
demography and sociology from
Princeton- As, a graduate student in the
Office of ,PopulationResearch, he has
been a teaching assistant,, Yvon several
fellowships and published papers iii.
population studies.
mount College in Tarrytown,
N Y_ first as an instructor in math and
statistics and then as computer center'
manager. For the past five years he has
been director of networking activities
Born in Rochester N.Y.,, Oberst is
married to Martha Richmond, who
director of. health profession advising.
They live in LawtenceYille with their
three, children (six), Jesse (five)
and Keturah (one).
With the. University": since 1976, Van
Fleet started as a keypunch operator in
Administrative Services, then moved to-
the` Controller's Office as an account
gclerk1: In 1982 she transferred to
'C
d
Sally Van Fleet
In Molecular Biology Mark Floccp has
been promoted to the senior technical
staff.
In Mathematics Scott Kenney has
been promoted to department manager.
Dean of the College
Transferring from Undergraduate
Financial Aid, where she was assistant
director, Karen McMichael has been
promoted to admission officer in the'
Admission -Office.
Facilities
Cynthia Horr, who was previously
associate director of the Center for
Visitor and Conference Services, has
been promoted to director.
In Food Services, Barry Telford
has been promoted from manager at
Forrestal to production manager at
Forbes College.
Library
Stephen Ferguson, who will continue
to serve as curator of rare books, has
now been given a supplementary
appointment as, assistant University
librarian for rare books and special
collections.
Transfers
Susan Batton and Philippe Menos
have been transferred from the
administrative staff to the technical staff
in Firestone Library, and Shari Taylor
from the administrative staff to the
technica( staff in,A{rt and Archaeology.
Nancy Drago has moved from the
position of department manager in
Romance Languages and Literatures to
administrative assistant in Latin
American Studies.
Born and raised in Upper Darby, Pa.,
Tierney now lives in Bensalem, Pa.,
with his wife Donna: "I'm'an
enthusiastic fan of my alma mater St.
Jog's basketball team," he says.
Director of advanced technology and
applications Oberst is in charge' of two
groups that investigate, evaluate and
pilot new innovative technologies in
computing and information processing.
After graduating from the University
of Notre Dame in 1970 with a,
bachelor's degree in mathematics and
omputing an
Information Technology c
-an has now been promoted to the.. Cavalier and Cr lwford take positions
_., position of administrative assistant to
the director of advanced technology and as members of the Controller's Office
lic
"I d
h
t
app
atons.
o w
a
ever needs
- doing," she says. "I like looking for
more efficient ways to get office jobs
French, Oberst taught mathematics fora A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., Van
year in California, then(spent the next Fleet is a graduate of Princeton High
four years in Malaysia teaching math , . School. She worked at Opinion
and science in the Peace Corps and later Research Corp. for nine years before
working as; curriculum coordinator for joining the University. A resident of
the National University of Malaysia. In Hamilton Square, where she lives with.
1977 he earned a master's degree in her 16-year-old daughter -Angela, she
international education and in 1980 an enjoys, reading, movies, handicrafts
M.Phil.4 in mathematics education from P (especially crocheting) and weekend'
Columbia University Teachers College. ? visits to area flea markets.
Recent graduates. Sixteen who graduated from Building Services Supervisory
Training Class "were honored at a reception held at Prospect in August. Pictured
with instructor John Allen (c) are James Ponder (1), Jesus Ramos, Richard
Clugston, Gerald Adderley, Oscar Garrett, Eurniee Rozier, Milton Brown,
Marjorie Ellison, Antonio Sferra, Samuel Griffiths,. Antonio Cifelli and Paul
Romain; not pictured are Rose Yates, Claudia Hubbard, Vincenzo Cifelli and
Photographs by Robert P. Matthews
The Controller's Office recently
acquired two new administrative staff
members.
Senior internal auditor Bruce
Cavalier appraises the reliability of
financial, and operating information "so
that management can better control
operations under its responsibility."
A 1979. graduate of Rutgers
University with a B.A. in accounting,
Cavalier worked six years for Conrail- as
financial analyst and one year for RCA
as general accountant. Born in
Philadelphia, he now lives in Voorhees,
N.J.; his wife, Virginia, is a registered .
nurse at West Jersey Hospital in
Voorhees. The couple are fans of
traveling and backpacking, and Cavalier
himself "takes full advantage of the gym
facilities" on campus.
Manager of investment administration
Kate Crawford's job is "to monitor and
report on the performance of Princeton's
investment portfolio and to handle
special investment-related assignments."
Before joining the University, she'
worked for five years as a manager at
Thomas Cook Inc. and ran Crawford
Consulting, her own business consulting
firm. Previously, she .spent three years
in California, employed by a general
contracting firm and a real estate
company in San Francisco, and in the
'California division of the Bank of
America.
Originally from St.. Louis,. Mo.-
Crawford graduated with honors from.
Colby College in 197$ and went on to
earn her M.B.A. from. , the University of
San Francisco in 1980. She has many
interests, including jazz and classical,
music, contemporary American art,
Japanese prints, volleyball and weight-
lifting; for recreational reading she likes
psychology.'
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Staff News
Four move up from biweekly to administrative staff
Sharon Fleming
Four' former biweekly employees 'have
joined the administrative staff.
As operating budget anajyst in the
Controller's Office, Sharon Fleming
resolves income and expense questions,
develops University-wide budget
summaries, and monitors income and
expenses for University departments.
She was previously secretary to the
director of the -budget.
Born in Davenport, Iowa, Fleming
spent most of her life in Colorado and
graduated from the University of
Colorado in 1979 with a degree in
biology. Before coming to Princeton,'
she worked for the Pearl S. Buck
Foundation in Pennsylvania. Now she
lives in Yardley, Pa., with her husband
Ron, a project manager in management
information systems for Squibb
Pharmaceuticals. Her hobbies are
traveling, and collecting and restoring
antiques;, her favorite sports are
volleyball and racquetball. "And', being
from Colorado, of course I'm an avid
Broncos fan," she says.
Approved For Release 2011/09/01: CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600850006-6 -
-Princeton Weekly, Bulletin September 28J9,87 7.
degree at Rutgers University. Her
g.. $ husband, William, makes prototype
hearing aids for Siemens Hearing
Instruments in Piscataway. Grenier likes
to spend "as, much time as I can with
my daughter"-Melanie Patricia, age
g, gr,
three.
Judy Gross, program assistant in Near
Eastern Studies, assists the director with
administrative responsibilities. She came
to the department as a secretary in 1976
and most recently worked there as data
entry specialist.
Before coming to Princeton, she
was a medical secretary at Brooklyn
Veterans Administration Hospital and
at Mt. Sinai Hospital at Elmhurst.
A native of Brooklyn, N.Y. Gross is
a resident of East Windsor. She and her
Ez , husband, Edward, who is a CPA in
New York City, have two children:
.. fl Debbie, who just graduated from the
Judy Gross Univer'sity of Delaware, and Stefanie,-a
student at C.W. Post College on Long
Lynn Grenier, who has been. with the Island. Gross herself is a part-time
Department of Building Services for two
of her seven years with the University,
hasbeen promoted to administrative
assistant in that department. In her new
job she will supervise accounting,
maintain personnel records and oversee
all day-to-day operations of the office.
Before joining. Building Services,
Grenier was in the Controller's Office.
A resident of Perth Amboy, she is
currently working toward a business
student of business administration at
Mercer County Community College. ,
She enjoys walking, swimming and the
theater.
John, Stryker, a 'veteran of 13 years in
the carpentry shop' of the Department of
Grounds and Building Maintenance, has
been made general. foreman.
In his new job, he will oversee the
masonry, key, glass, carpentry and paint
shops. In addition, he is responsible for
John Stryker
work in campus and University. real
estate.
Born and raised on a Belle Mead
dairy farm, Stryker is agraduate of
Princeton High School. He now lives in:,
Cranbury with his wife, Geraldine. The
Strykers have two grown, children, one
of whom, John Jr., works in the "
University's air conditioning shop.
Stryker, who is usually called Jack,
has been chief of the Cranbury Fire
Company for 16 years.
New employees join Development Information 'OHS
taken positions at the University.
Daniel Dunlop, director of
Development Information Systems,
supervises the data processing that "
supports the University's fund-raising
activities. In addition, he `says, "We'll
be working with Computing and '
Inf6rmatior echnology to .develop and
install.a, niversity-wide information
-systemti:-
As an undergraduate Dunlop was', in a
cooperative program of the U.S. Air
Force and the University of Illinois,
from which he received an electrical
engineering degree in 1956. He has an
extensive employment background in
technical and administrative services,
having worked for Western Electric in
Hopewell and for the McCall Corp.. the
Boy Scouts of America and Dow Jones
in South Brunswick. For the past five
years he was- self-employed as a data
processing consultant.
A native of New Jersey, Dunlop is a
pilot; he lives in Robbinsville, "just so I
could be close to the airport there."
When not aloft, he likes boating,_
bowling and personal computers."
Cynthia Pondel, assistant safety,
engineer in Occupational Health and
Safety, does general safety surveys on
Summer grri,vals. Members of the biweekly staff who joined the University this
Altci Crocker in Psychology, technical secretary Abigail Cole in, Chemistry, rental
equipment operator Jeff Wall in Building Services, secretaries Margaret Murphy
in the Controller's Office and Marjorie DeFrank in Athletics, animal caretaker
William Marsh in Molecular Biology and technical secretary Patricia Trinity in the
campus and conducts accident ` occupational safety and health is from
investigations. She also leads safety the University of Wisconsin-
training programs for University . Whitewater. Raised in Minocqua,
employees. Wise, she enjoys both downhill and
Before coming to Princeton, Pondel water skiing. "I've really started to
worked for the National Safety Council enjoy the shore since I moved to New
in Chicago' as-safety director and section Jersey," she says. She also likes'
administrator. Her 1981 degree in needlecraft and watching old movies:
(above) secretary Mary Kay Caswell (1) in the Controller's Office, receptionist
Lorri Hanna in Housing,` technical secretary Martha McMorrow, in the Woodrow
Wilson School, apprentices Delmar Harmon and Hyetfe Briscoe in the Utility
Plant, secretary Christine Lindgren in 'the Office of Research and Project .
Administration, equipment operator" Jeffrey Durep'os in Athletics and janitor" Bony_
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Approved For Release 2011/09/01: CIA-RDP89GO072OR000600850006-6
?e4?]t-'t Jeti S`eplember 2; 1981
Princeton University is an Equal
Opportunity Affuinative' Action Employer,
Minority /Female/Handicapped! Veteran.
Detailed descriptions of jobs are available
in the job opportunities pages, posted at
various locations on campus, or from the.
Personnel: Office. PPL is an abbreviation
for Plasma Physics, Laboratory. A-
recording of job openings may. be heard
by calling (609).452-3303.
Administrative
and related staff.
The following jobs described in previous
issues are still open: associate director,
advanced information systems,.
Management Information Systems;.
designer; engineering and construction,
Engineering; manager, planned giving,
Controller's Office; programmer analyst, -
Management Information Systems.
Accounts administrator. Oversees, operation
of budget-and accounting in areas of payroll,
computer account registration, outside client
relations, and invoicing and purchasing;
.
assists manager of budget and finance.
Requires several years of experience in Professional tech nical
financial/accounting/budgetary areas and
experience with computers. Background in Research associate.. One or more positions
mainframe environment helpful. Grade 3/4, available under several sponsore.d projects,
Salary: $22,100-$29,450. working with faculty, researchers and
Computing and Information Technology . students. Responsibilities include design .and
Req. 8639 implementation of software systems as well
as their experimental evaluation. Requires
Assistant dean of students and special A.D. and, experience in at least one of the
assistant to dean of college for support following areas: databases, distributed
services/minority life., Serves as principal . systems, VLSI design, artificial intelligence,
adviser to dean's of college and students on computer architecture. Salary: open. Send
quality of undergraduate life for minority resume to Hector Garcia-Molina,
students, including admissions, financial aid, .. Department of, Computer Science.
and develops programs responsive to needs
and talents of students whose racial of
cultural backgrounds complicate adjustment;
participates in deans' staff meetings.
and contributes to formulation and
implementation of policies concerning
academic and residential life; oversees
summer freshman orientation program.
Requires strong organizational, problem-
solving, analytic, communication and
collaborative skills; ability to interact with
variety of groups; sensitivity to needs of
students from diverse family, social,
economic and religious backgrounds;
experience as an administrator or faculty
member in academic setting. Experience
working with Latino students and other
Third World students and'organizations
preferred. Application deadline: October 9.
Dean of Students Req. 7369
Media services technician. Provides
Assistant director. Responsible for annual , audiovisual services for classes and special
giving activities of several alumni classes events occurring between 3:00 and 11:00
and their major reunion drives. Works p.m. daily; maintains and repairs growing
closely with class agents and special gifts inventory of audiovisual and language
chairmen; maintains contact with class laboratory equipment. Requires associate
presidents and other class leaders; travels. degree in electronics or audio engineering
Ability to inspire and guide volunteers, as ' and three years, of experience in field.
well as good communication and - Video production experience, ability to use
organization skills essential. Must enjoy microcomputer and certification as audio or
working with individuals and in team audiovisual technician desirable.
Director of graduate admission.
Responsible for administrative management
of office, meeting diverse needs of faculty,
staff and prospective students. Plans and
directs processing of admission materials.
Trains and supervises permanent and
temporary staff. Assists in ongoing
development of computer systems. Prepares,
analyzes and presents comparative data.
Coordinates graduate registration. Requires
bachelor's'degree, with one to three years of:
supervisory management experience and
with automated online record keeping
systems, mass mailings and administrative
experience in higher education highly
desirable. Application deadline: October 5.
Send resume and names of three references.
Grade 4. Salary: $23,900-$29,450.
Graduate School Req. 8790
Executive assistant. Provides administrative
support to' dean of students by representing
office to University community and general
public; implements budget allocations and
expenditures; supervises staff; plans and
coordinates conferences and receptions;
assists in overseeing physical plant;
researches and prepares reports: Requires
excellent communication skills, previous
supervisory and budget experience and
demonstrated organizational skills. Ability to
handle sensitive and confidential matters
essential. Familiarity with office computers
preferred. Grade 2. Salary: $20,500-
$24,600.
Dean of Students Req. 7371
Football Intern. Assists coaching staff
with coordination of recruitment, scouting of
opponents, entry of computer data and
logistics of game. Modest stipend and
benefits offered. -
Athletics, Physical Education and
Recreation Req; 8399
Lab and shop.
Animal caretaker II. Performs routine
duties related to the care of laboratory
animals; maintains records and data; assists
with the needs of'students and faculty.
Requires A.A.L.A.S. certificate and/or
previous experience and ability to lift 50
pounds. Salary: $16,850.
Psychology Req. 7579, 7580
Lab assistant II. Performs routine
laboratory support, which includes preparing
solutions, washing glassware and accurately
measuring components of solutions and
media. Some math ability helpful.
Salary: $13,935.
Molecular Biology
Senior technical, 'assistant..-Plans and
executes complex technical procedures and
tasks by following proven approaches and
methodology and taking time and cost into
consideration; participates in execution of
major projects with senior technicians,
supervisors and/or engineering associates;
monitors work of junior technicians;
participates in design and fabrication of
special purpose: computer.
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Foreman. Responsible for general,
administration of multiple operations within
Building Services Req: 8739
hat's- happening?
If you subscribe to the
Princeton Weekly Bulletin,
you won't have, to ask what's
happening . at Princeton. University.
The day-by-day, hour-by-hour Weekly
Calendar includes University-sponsored
events scheduled 'on campus. Athletic
events, concerts, lectures, exhibits,
movies and plays (including all McCarter
Theatre productions) can be found in the
Bulletin's center spread.
Lively news and feature stories -
introduce you to, University personalities
and keep you abreast of exciting
research, faculty and staff achievements
and student activities and perspectives
A subscription for 30 issues of the
Bulletin covering the 1987-88 academic -
year is just $16.00.
Please make checks payable, to '
Princeton University. Mail them with this
coupon to: Communications/Publications
Office, Stanhope Hall, Princeton University,
Princeton, N.J., 08544: Telephone (609) 452-3600.
Name
Zip
Proctor. Provides for safety and security' of
`students, visitors, 'employees and property
tt within the University. Requires extensive : .
knowledge and experience of safety/security
procedures to conduct investigations,
respond to emergencies and prevent crimes.
Salary: $24,814
Public Safety Req. 8605
.Office coordinator. Coordinates work of
office staff. Performs secretarial duties
which entail knowledge of assigned area,
exercising discretion regarding sensitive and
confidential material, and contact with
students, faculty, deans and department
heads.
Council of Ivy Group Presidents
Req. 8782;
rOffice and Clerical Receptionist. Handles incoming telephone
calls and greets visitors for office, section
Library office assistant H. Performs'
and/or building; provides routine information
established guidelines,- which may require . places; maintains appointment schedules; ?
judgment in the application of policies and performs a variety of clerical and typing
procedures within an area of assignment..es. Typing 45 wpm. Salary: $13,525.
Must be able to work with the public and Admission Office Req. 8470
handle detailed and diverse jobs efficiently. Health Services Req. 7347
General library and GEAC experience Undergraduate Admission Req. 8641'
helpful. Typing 30 wpm. Salary: $12,384.
Firestone Library Req. 8442 Secretary II. Performs secretarial duties for
one or more members pf the faculty, -
Office assistant II. Performs clerical work research 'or administrative staff, requiring.
- such as assembling, classifying, coding, some judgment in the application of policies
posting and computing information according and procedures dealing directly with
to established guidelines, which may require students, faculty and/or others. Requires two
judgment in the application of policies and years of related experience and/or post high
procedures within an area of assignment. school education. Typing 45 wpm.
Requires one year of related experience and/ Salary: $13,525.
or post high school education. Typing Sociology Req. 5901
30 wpm. Nine-month position.
Salary: $12,825 FTE.
Graduate School Req. 7692
Office assistant III. Performs clerical work
such as .examining and evaluating data
according to established guidelines, which
,requires some independent judgment in the
application of policies and procedures in
both assigned and related work areas.
Requires three years of related work
experience and/or post high school
education. Typing 45 wpm. Salary: $14,425:
Building Services Req. 8595
English Req. 6238 (10-month position)
General Counsel and Secretary
Graduate School Req. 6268 (10-month
position)
Personnel Services Req. 8500.
Visual Arts (10-month position)
Office assistant IV. Provides clerical
support, which requires independent
judgment in the application of policies and
procedures in both assigned and related work
areas; exercising discretion, procures, -
examines, evaluates and prepares
confidential. information according to
established guidelines. Typing 45 wpm.
Salary: $17,500.
Alumni Council Req. 8374
. Personnel Services Req. 8798
:Part-time and/or -
temporary
Call (609) 452-6130 for further
information regarding part-time and/or
temporary positions..
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Secretary III. Performs secretarial duties
for one or more, members of the faculty or
research or administrative staff, which
requires some independent judgment in? the
application of departmental or office policy
and procedure in dealing directly `with
students, faculty and others, Must exercise
discretion in obtaining and providing factual.
and confidential information, which entails
knowledge of both assigned and related work
areas and University operation. Typing -
45 wpm. Salary: $15,450.
Athletics Req. 8388
Computer Science Req. 8522:
Dean of Students Req.' 7370
Graduate School Req. 8324
Research and Project Administration.
Technical research secretary II. Performs
secretarial duties for one or more members
of the faculty or research or administrative
staff. Types and proofreads technical reports,--
manuscripts and abstracts requiring
knowledge of word processing. Requires two
years of work experience and/or post high
school education, which includes at least"six
months of related work experience. Typing
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering