May 10, 1999 Volume 88, number 27
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"Existential oomph"
Cross-disciplinary
collaboration brings Mesoamerican potsherds and
ruins to life
Step into Davíd Carrasco's grand
Victorian house, and one the first things he'll
show you is a photo of himself and 30 prominent
archeologists, historians and other scholars -- all
wearing cardboard 3D glasses.
It's not the academic
stereotype, but neither is Carrasco's approach to
studying Mesoamerica, the portion of Central
America that developed one of the world's first
clusters of great cities, the Aztec and Mayan
civilizations.
more...
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Princeton myths -- debunked
Princeton has many
myths. Some seem the natural by-product of
storytelling at a place where the
institutional memory is limited by the
four years it takes most students to
graduate. Some are just bald-faced lies
that are cheerfully repeated because the
myths seem more interesting than the
truth.
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27 volumes --
and 20 more to come
Little did Thomas Jefferson dream, when he
donated $100 toward rebuilding Nassau Hall after
the fire of 1802, that Princeton would become the
home of The Papers of Thomas Jefferson.
"The Jefferson
Papers was the nation's first major project
in modern historical editing," says Barbara Oberg,
newly appointed editor of the papers. "It has set
the standard for the editions of the papers of the
nation's other founders."
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Ballroom dance: A club sport
May I have this dance?" Thanks to the Princeton
Ballroom Dance Club, the answer is likely to be
"Yes!"
The club currently boasts
about 80 members, according to Eleanor Aversa '01,
president of the group. "We have two beginning
classes, intermediate and advanced classes, and a
team that competes with other colleges," she says.
Aversa and Yuliy Sannikov '00 generally instruct
the beginners, while professional instructors are
hired for the intermediate, advanced and team
lessons, she says.
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Athletics
Lacrosse. On May 1, the men trounced
Dartmouth 16-1, completing their fourth perfect Ivy
League season; the Class of 1999 is the first since
1963 to graduate without losing an Ivy game. The
women defeated Brown 18-2, and as No.4 seed in the
NCAA championship they received a bye in the first
round. (Men: 8-3, 6-0 Ivy; women: 12-4, 6-1
Ivy)
Outdoor track and field. The men finished
first at the Heptagonal Championships May 1 and 2.
(Men: 1-0; women: 1-1)
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People
The John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation has awarded fellowships to
Howard Harrison and Gabrielle Snyder Beck Professor
of Economics and Public Affairs Ben Bernanke
for a project on "Economic Policy and the Great
Depression," Assistant Professor of Music Paul
Koonce ("music composition") and Professor of
Anthropology Emily Martin ("Cultural
Analysis of Mental Terrain in the United
States").
Darin Ernst, associate
research physicist at the Plasma Physics Lab, has
received the American Physical Society Award for
"outstanding doctoral thesis in plasma
physics."
Seniors Renee Hsia and
Fei Fei Li have been awarded Paul and Daisy
Soros Fellowships for New Americans. The
fellowships, designated for immigrants or children
of immigrants, provide half the cost of graduate
school tuition and a living stipend for up to two
years.
Associate University Librarian
for Rare Books and Special Collections William
Joyce and the other board members and
congressional sponsors of the President John F.
Kennedy Assassination Records Review Board have
been named recipients of the 1999 James Madison
Award sponsored by the American Library Association
Coalition on Government Information.
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Communiversity, April 24


Photos by Ron Carter
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