Princeton Area Alumni Association

Newsletter: March 2012

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March 2012


In this newsletter:




Princeternship Program

Register today! Please fill out our online registration form.

* Deadline for March Princeternship hosts to register: Monday, January 23, 2012 *
 

What is the difference between a Princeternship and an internship?

Princeternships are short-term (1-3 contiguous days), offer no pay, and are hosted by alumni to help Princeton undergraduate students get the “feel” for a specific career field. Students are selected and matched by Career Services. Internships are longer term (from several weeks to a year), may involve pay, and provide a work function in support of the organization. Interns are selected and hired by the hosting organization.
 
What are the benefits of the Princeternship program to me and my organization?
 
The Princeternship Program gives alumni hosts the opportunity to connect with current Princeton undergraduates, gain access to potential summer interns and future employees, and increase student awareness of their career field and their organization. To learn more about the student benefits of the Princeternship program, please read their student blogs.
 
What does the Princeternship experience involve?
 
Princeternships usually last 1-2 days, but could last as long as 3 days. The student “shadows” the host through a typical day’s activities. A 1 day Princeternship might include meetings, informational discussions, and/or interviews with colleagues, tours of the organization, and general observation of business proceedings. Information from the students’ applications—including their areas of interest, academic major, and previous experience—can help in the structuring of individual Princeternship experiences.
 
When do the Princeternships take place?
 
The Princeternships will take place on the following dates:
     January 9 – 13, 2012 (Reading Period)
     January 30 – February 3, 2012 (Intercession Break)
     March 19 – 23, 2012 (Spring Break) 
 
Alumni will choose a 1-3 day period during one (or more) of these times. These opportunities will then be advertised to students.
 
When is the deadline to register?
 
The deadline to register for returning Princeternship hosts for the January Princeternships (Reading Period & Intercession Break) is October 7, 2011. The deadline to register for new Princeternship hosts for the January Princeternships (Reading Period & Intercession Break) is October 12, 2011. The deadline to register for March Princeternships (Spring Break) is January 23, 2012.
 
What type of work experience, job skills and other talents do students bring to the Princeternship?
 
Since the Princeternship Program is open to all undergraduates, your student could be a freshman with more limited work experience or a senior with more relevant experience. The required resume and statement of interest from the student will provide additional information to the host. However, the primary intent of this experience is for students to find out more about their career interests, so students will not be expected to be “equipped” with the necessary work experience and job skills.
 
What type of work will students do?
 
Students can assist with research, laboratory work, data analysis, and editing, just to name a few examples. They could also be asked to participate in planning and problem-solving sessions with their host and his/her staff or meet with staff from different departments within the organization. Some students may be assigned small projects, to be completed as part of a team effort or individually, during the course of their Princeternship.
 
Can I have more than one student per opportunity?
 
Yes, this is left to the discretion of the alumni hosts.
 
Am I responsible for the student’s housing, transportation or other expenses?
 
No, the student’s expenses are paid in full by the student.
 
How does the selection process work?
 
Career Services will review and match student applications for each Princeternship opportunity during November (for Reading Period and Intercession Break) and February (for Spring Break). Alumni and students will be notified of the placements by early December and early March, respectively.
 
How do I go about listing a Princeternship opportunity?
 
If you are interested in participating in the Princeternship Program, please fill out our online registration form link at the top of this page.  If you have further questions, please contact Lisa Bogdanski, Assistant Director for Student/Alumni Engagement Programs, at 609-258-8387 or lbogdans@princeton.edu.

Visit http://bit.ly/bYzaK7 for more information about the program, how to register, upcoming deadlines, and to read student blogs.
Related Events

Offer to host a Princeternship over Spring Break (March 19-23)! ( Monday, March 19, 2012 - 2:09 PM to Friday, March 23, 2012 - 2:09 PM )

The Princeternship program is an opportunity for alumni to host current students at their workplace for a one- to three-day externship experience to give them a “day in the life” perspective of your career, industry, and/or organization. This might include student participation in meetings, shadowing, demonstrations, Q&A sessions, case studies, and/or tours. Visit http://bit.ly/bYzaK7 for more information about the program, how to register, upcoming deadlines, and to read student blogs.
Deadline to volunteer is Jan 23, 2012.


Posted by Lnhahn over 14 years ago.


Princeton Global NetNight 2012

Princeton Area Alumni Association Global NetNight

Cheryl L. Rowe-Rendleman, ‘81

 

Wednesday March 14, 2012

According to Tom Peter’s Career Survival Guide, we are all CEOs of our own companies. To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You. Princeton Alumni from around the world gathered on March 14-pi Day – for the second annual Princeton Global Net Night (GNN). Over 600 alumni from 28 regional associations met, exchanged business cards, and pondered this year’s central theme “Developing Your Personal Brand.”

“Everyone has a brand whether you think about it that way or not,” stated Dr. Andrea Zintz, Managing Director of Strategic Leadership Resources (http://www.strategicleadershipresources.com/) and speaker at the Princeton Area Alumni Association’s Global Net Night. In an ice-breaker exercise, Zintz asked 25 PA3 alumni, who had gathered at the office of Princeton AlumniCorps on 12 Stockton Street, to provide four words that described their impression of their networking partner’s personal brand. She explained that strong brands evoke an emotional response from each person’s customers, bosses, and colleagues.  People were branded with words like busy, traditional, nonconformist, self-directed, and enthusiastic. Several participants were surprised at the impressions they gave to and received from others within the first few minutes of meeting. Zintz explained that a brand is any number of written, digital or interpersonal impressions that we share consistently about ourselves. She then spent the rest of the evening leading an interactive discussion about why we align ourselves with certain brand and how to manage our personal brands for career development. This year’s Net Night was ably managed by Andrew Lieu ’06  and attracted a lively gathering of Tigers representing graduations years from 1976 to 2008 and various career stages with alumni  transitioning, trolling, or settled in their careers.

For more information or discussions on developing your personal brand join the Princeton Global NetNight groups  on Linkedin (http://www.linkedin.com) or Facebook.

 


Related Events

Princeton Global NetNight 2012 ( Wednesday, March 14, 2012 - 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM )

Princeton Global NetNight 2012: Developing Your Personal Brand

Join us to hear Andrea Zintz speak on Developing Your Personal Brand, and then stay to talk with fellow
Tigers. Don’t miss this opportunity to connect in person with local Princetonians who want to further their career development and strengthen their networks. Please email Andrew Lieu (alieu@alumni.princeton.edu) to RSVP.

When:

Wednesday, March 14, 2012
7:00 – 9:00 p.m.
Reception begins at 7:00 p.m.
Presentation begins at 7:30 p.m.

Where: Princeton AlumniCorps Office (12 Stockton Street, Princeton, NJ 08540). Entrance to parking is on Mercer Street (directly across the street from the Nassau Club, near corner of Mercer and Stockton)

Parking: There is limited parking at the Princeton AlumniCorps office. There is also metered, street parking.

RSVP: Please email Andrew Lieu (alieu@alumni.princeton.edu) to RSVP

Speaker Info: Dr. Andrea Zintz specializes in executive and high potential leadership strategy, succession and development. She has over 30 years experience in Leadership Development, Change Management, Human Resources Development and Training. Andrea currently works primarily with senior leaders and leadership teams in business units of Fortune 500 corporations to develop high potential and senior leaders through team alignment/development strategies and coaching.

Additional Info: PA3 is hosting its second Global NetNight event. Last year over 25 Princeton alumni gathered together and enjoyed an evening of learning and networking. Attendees representing a span of over 60 years of Princeton undergraduate and graduate education met at Maclean House on the topic of Networking Without Borders.

Message from the Speaker:
You may have heard people say they are working on creating their "personal brand." Of course, you don’t really “create” a personal brand. You already have one! To prove this, simply Google your name followed by your home town. If you have a Facebook page or LinkedIn profile your name probably comes up on the first page. Perhaps you are listed in the phone book. Maybe you have recently been mentioned in a local news article. All of these things are part of your personal brand. It’s already out there and you can’t do anything about it. What you CAN do is manage your personal brand so what people see about you is what you WANT them to see.

Personal branding was popularized by an article by Tom Peters first published in Fast Company Magazine (”A Brand Called You") over 10 years ago. He starts out the article by writing, “Regardless of age, regardless of position, regardless of the business we happen to be in, all of us need to understand the importance of branding. We are CEOs of our own companies: Me Inc. To be in business today, our most important job is to be head marketer for the brand called You.”

In her highly interactive and productive workshop, our speaker, Dr. Andrea Zintz, will address the following:
• What is a Personal Brand? — understand the critical importance of personal branding.
• Default Brand—an honest evaluation of how others perceive you. Examine how this may be different from how you would like to be perceived.
• Discover your distinct contribution, your unique value and talent.
• Personal Brand Commitment—what would you like to be known for? How this is the foundation for managing your brand.


Location: Princeton AlumniCorps Office (12 Stockton Street)

Posted by Lnhahn over 14 years ago.


PA3 Private Tour of Museum Exhibition - Gothic Revival

PA3 Private Tour of "Princeton and the Gothic Revival: 1870 - 1930" at the Princeton University Art Museum 

Sunday, April 22, 2PM - 3PM
Free, but limit spaces
Please RSVP to George Bustin '70 at bustin@princeton.edu

We have been able to arrange a dedicated, private tour of the exhibition with the curator, Jody Seasonwein, to be held on Sunday, April 22 at 2 pm -- exclusively for PA3 members.  There will be no charge for the tour, but we are limited to 25 participants because of space limitations of the galleries.  The first 25 to sign up will be included.  Further details will be provided.  If there is a lot of demand beyond the 25, we will try to arrange a second private tour with a trained docent on a subsequent date. 

Related Events

PA3 Private Tour of Museum Exhibition - Gothic Revival ( Sunday, April 22, 2012 - 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM )

PA3 Private Tour of the “Princeton and the Gothic Revival: 1870–1930” at the Princeton University Art Museum
Free, but limited spaces
RSVP to George Bustin '70: bustin@princeton.edu

Location: PU Art Museum
Cost: Free
Organized by: bustin@princeton.edu

Posted by Princeton AAA over 14 years ago.


Reception & Dinner with Prof. Jonathan Cohen/Neuroscience



A Joint PA3/Graduate School Event

featuring

Professor Jonathan Cohen (Psychology)
Founding Director of the Neuroscience Institute
at Princeton University


Tuesday, March 6th, 2012
Cocktail Reception and Talk at 5:30PM
Dinner at 6:30PM

    

~~~~~~~~~~

Join graduate and undergraduate alumni for this unique opportunity to meet with
Prof. Cohen at a cocktail reception at Wyman House (Dean Russel's residence),
followed by dinner at the High Table in Procter Hall, Graduate College.

Read about the High Table at 
 http://www.princeton.edu/~gradcol/perm/hightable.htm)

~~~~~~~~~~

All PA3 members (graduate and undergraduate alumni) are invited.  

Courtesy of the Graduate School's Office for Alumni Relations, the event is FREE!

PA3 expresses its sincere gratitude to the Graduate School Office for Alumni Relations for arranging and hosting us for this truly special event. 
We also thank Dean Russel for opening his home to us again to enjoy this memorable evening.

~~~~~~~~~~


RSVP to Cathy Haught *05 chaught@alumni.princeton.edu.
Spaces are limited, so please respond early.

 


Wyman Ctr1_sm Ph3_sm
Related Events

PA3/Grad School 'High Table' ( Tuesday, March 6, 2012 - 5:30 PM to 7:30 PM )
Location: Graduate College
Cost: Free, courtesy of the Graduate School's Office for Alumni Relations
Organized by: PA3/Graduate School

Posted by lydia over 14 years ago.


Bollards & Trash at D&R Canal State Park

March 24, 2012: A dozen PA3 volunteers spent a Saturday morning improving a stretch of the D&R Canal State Park. One crew erected bollards to prevent vehicular access to the canal path, while another collected trash from along the roadside and path. Pictured left to right in the group photo: Nell Whiting so69, Rick from the State of NJ (our mentor for the day), Zhijun Wu p09, Kristin Epstein '97 (with two daughters standing in front), Arlen Hastings '80, Arthur Eschenlauer '56, Jim Robertson (holding daughter), Tom Hastings '79, Sara Hastings '09 and Dan Hayes-Patterson '09. Thanks, everybody!


D_r_group_3_24_12 P1010040 P1010049 P1010053
P1010056 P1010059 P1010066 P1010070
Related Events

Community Service: State Park Maintenance ( Saturday, March 24, 2012 - 9:30 AM to 1:30 PM )
Location: Trenton Marsh

Posted by Arlen over 14 years ago.


PU Chapel Choir Concert

Milbank Memorial Concert
Saturday, April 21, 8 p.m.

Celebrating 20 Years of Chapel Music With Penna Rose
All-Night Vigil, Op. 37 by Sergei Rachmaninoff
and music of
 Chesnokov, Hogan, Tippett, Whitacre and Wilberg
Chapel Choir • Penna Rose, conductor
 
Admission free

The members of the chapel choir especially wanted to invite nearby alumni to their spring concert on April 21st in the Princeton chapel at 8:00 pm. This is a particularly special concert because they are celebrating our director, Penna Rose, and the twenty years that she has been directing the choir. Visit their website for more information: http://www.princetonchapelchoir.com/
Related Events

PU Chapel Choir Concert ( Saturday, April 21, 2012 - 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM )

Area alumni are invited to this free concert by the University Chapel Choir.

Location: PU Chapel
Cost: Free
Organized by: PU Chapel Choir

Posted by Princeton AAA over 14 years ago.


Private Tour of "Capping Liberty" Numismatic exhibit at Firestone Library.

PA3 members are invited to a private curatorial tour of the upcoming exhibit at Firestone Library, on Wednesday 4 April 2012, from 5:30 to 7:00 PM at the Milberg Gallery in Firestone Library.  Tour begins at 6; wine will be served.  Cost:  Free to PA3 members. 
RSVP to PrincetonAreaAlumni@gmail.com to reserve a spot.

Capping Liberty:
The Invention of a Numismatic Iconography for the New American Republic

An Exhibition of Coins, Medals, Banknotes, and Related Books, Manuscripts,
and Graphic Arts from Princeton University Collections
Milberg Gallery, Firestone Library, March 3, 2012, to July 8, 2012


The exhibit highlights the Library's rich collection of Revolutionary-War coinage including the first coin issued under the US Constitution, the 1792 half-disme (sic; they used the French spelling).
Other important coins from the Princeton University Numismatic Collection in
the exhibition are four issues of the seventeenth-century Massachusetts silver shilling
coinage, two examples of the tin "Continental dollar" patterns of 1776, and a 1794 (14
star) silver dollar.

The "poster piece" of the exhibition is the gilt bronze striking of Augustin Dupré's
1783 Libertas Americana medal, a gift of Rodman Wanamaker, Class of 1886, which is
believed it have been the basis for the depiction of Liberty on the early United States
coinage. It is accompanied by a selection of ancient coins that inspired it, including a
Sicilian dekadrachm and a series of denarii of the Roman Republic and sestertii of the
Empire that show the goddess Libertas and her distinctive cap. Other important medals in
the exhibition are an original bronze striking of Dupré's Diplomatic Medal of 1791 (one
of only three known), a gift of the scholar of ancient and American coinage Cornelius
Vermeule III, and a hand-engraved medal believed to have been given to Henry “Light-
Horse Harry” Lee (Princeton Class of 1773). Also on display are three unique plaster
moulds made by Jean-Baptiste Nini as preparatory models for his famous terra-cotta
medallions of Benjamin Franklin.

Complementing the coins and medals from the Numismatic Collection are many
items from other divisions of Princeton’s Special Collection, including books formerly in
the libraries of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. Among
the depictions of Liberty from colonial publications is the portrait of John Hancock
engraved in 1774 by Paul Revere, where the patriot is flanked by a knight with a copy of
the Magna Charta and Liberty with her cap. In manuscript letters George Washington
voices support for Jefferson's "Propositions Respecting the Coinage of Gold, Silver and
Copper," and John Adams asks Mint Director Benjamin Rush (Princeton Class of 1760)
for examples of United States coinage for his son John Quincy Adams to send to Russia.
A 1778 print attributed to the painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard depicts Benjamin Franklin
crowned by the goddess Liberty, and a large piece of Toile de Jouy fabric printed around
1785 has the image of George Washington in a gold chariot drawn by cheetahs.
When the founders of the American Republic declared independence from Great
Britain on July 4, 1776, one of the major tasks they took on was the creation of a coinage
for the new nation. There were few precedents to guide them in choosing specific images
to represent the ideals of their republican form of government as most existing coinage
bore the image of a monarch. The leading figures in the process of selecting the
numismatic imagery of the American Republic were Benjamin Franklin, Thomas
Jefferson, and George Washington, each of whom made contributions that reflected
personal background, attitudes, and ideals. Following a rancorous dispute between the
Senate and the House of Representatives, the ultimate choice for the main image for the
new coinage was "an impression emblematic of Liberty," which took the form of the head
of a beautiful woman, sometimes accompanied by a cap derived from classical attributes
of the Roman goddess Libertas. Together with the complementary attributes of an eagle
and a wreath, this symbol came to exemplify the United States of America.
The rich resources of Princeton University Library’s Department of Rare Books
and Special Collections serve as the basis of an exhibition entitled "Capping Liberty,"
which illustrates the search for imagery and the selection and adoption of symbols for a
national coinage.
"The star of the show will undoubtedly be the Princeton specimen of the 1792
'half disme'," predicts Alan Stahl, the exhibition's curator. This is a superb example of the
first coin minted by the United States government under the Constitution. Delays in
passing the Mint Act of 1792 left little time to strike coins that year, so a very small issue
of half dismes (the old French spelling was used on the piece) was minted in a temporary
facility, reputedly from silver supplied by George Washington for the purpose. Fewer
than 2,000 examples are believed to have been struck. The Princeton specimen was
purchased by Charles A. Cass, Class of 1904, from an auction in 1917, by Thomas Elder
where it was described as "the finest known specimen of this exceedingly rare coin." It
came to Princeton with the impressive Cass numismatic collection by bequest in 1958.
The specimen has been characterized by Roger Siboni, president of the American
Numismatic Society, as "perhaps the finest, or one of the finest 1792 half dismes in
existence" in an article in Coin World (Sept. 1, 2008).
Other important coins from the Princeton University Numismatic Collection in
the exhibition are four issues of the seventeenth-century Massachusetts silver shilling
coinage, two examples of the tin "Continental dollar" patterns of 1776, and a 1794 (14
star) silver dollar.
The "poster piece" of the exhibition is the gilt bronze striking of Augustin Dupré's
1783 Libertas Americana medal, a gift of Rodman Wanamaker, Class of 1886, which is
believed it have been the basis for the depiction of Liberty on the early United States
coinage. It is accompanied by a selection of ancient coins that inspired it, including a
Sicilian dekadrachm and a series of denarii of the Roman Republic and sestertii of the
Empire that show the goddess Libertas and her distinctive cap. Other important medals in
the exhibition are an original bronze striking of Dupré's Diplomatic Medal of 1791 (one
of only three known), a gift of the scholar of ancient and American coinage Cornelius
Vermeule III, and a hand-engraved medal believed to have been given to Henry “Light-
Horse Harry” Lee (Princeton Class of 1773). Also on display are three unique plaster
moulds made by Jean-Baptiste Nini as preparatory models for his famous terra-cotta
medallions of Benjamin Franklin.
Complementing the coins and medals from the Numismatic Collection are many
items from other divisions of Princeton’s Special Collection, including books formerly in
the libraries of Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, and Thomas Jefferson. Among
the depictions of Liberty from colonial publications is the portrait of John Hancock
engraved in 1774 by Paul Revere, where the patriot is flanked by a knight with a copy of
the Magna Charta and Liberty with her cap. In manuscript letters George Washington
voices support for Jefferson's "Propositions Respecting the Coinage of Gold, Silver and
Copper," and John Adams asks Mint Director Benjamin Rush (Princeton Class of 1760)
for examples of United States coinage for his son John Quincy Adams to send to Russia.
A 1778 print attributed to the painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard depicts Benjamin Franklin
crowned by the goddess Liberty, and a large piece of Toile de Jouy fabric printed around
1785 has the image of George Washington in a gold chariot drawn by cheetahs.

Cap-lib
Related Events

Private tour of Capping Liberty: The Invention of a Numismatic Iconography for the New American Republic Exhibit ( Wednesday, April 4, 2012 - 5:30 PM to 7:00 PM )

A private tour by Firestone Library's Curator of Numismatics, Alan Stahl, for PA3 members.

Exhibit will be open from 5:30 to 7 pm on Wednesday 4 April 2012.
Curatorial tour begins at 6.
Wine will be served.
R.S.V.P. to PrincetonAreaAlumni@gmail.com


Location: Milberg Gallery; Firestone Library
Cost: No charge to PA3 members
Organized by: PA3 and Firestone Library

Posted by vsevolod over 14 years ago.


PA3 and the Princetoniana Committee Need Your Help

Last summer PA3 teamed up with the Alumni Association's Princetoniana Committee to conduct interviews with alums from the 1940s. Those interviews, focused on the alums' experiences at Princeton, form a part of a larger body of oral history of our beloved alma mater housed in the University Archives at Mudd Library. Of the old guard interviews conducted thus far, a common thread is recurring mention of a few professors, fondly remembered even after many decades, as truly outstanding scholars and teachers. The existing oral history transcript library includes interviews with several venerable professors, and the PA3 and Princetoniana Committee are very interested in adding to it by identifying and interviewing those professors that truly stand out in the memories of alumni, both undergraduate and graduate.

Consequently, you could do us a great service by giving some thought to your Princeton experience and replying with the names of any cherished professors, including a short explanation of what subject they taught and why they stand out so plainly in memory. We will use this input to help guide us in the selection of professors emeriti to interview. Please respond to Tom Swift '76 or call him at 908-369-1601. Thank you.  


Posted by Sara over 14 years ago.