University to mark completion of Woodrow Wilson installation with public discussion, dedication

 

Double Sights,Installation,Schudders Plaza

Construction of “Double Sights,” an installation about the complex legacy of Woodrow Wilson, is nearing completion on Scudder Plaza adjacent to Robertson Hall, home of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The University will mark the installation’s completion with a public discussion and dedication on Saturday, Oct. 5.  

Princeton University Art Museum Appoints Juliana Ochs Dweck as Chief Curator

The Princeton University Art Museum has named Juliana Ochs Dweck to be chief curator, a new role occasioned by the Museum’s continuing growth. Dweck joined the Museum in 2010 and, prior to this appointment, served as the Museum’s Andrew W. Mellon curator of academic engagement. In her new role, effective immediately, she is responsible for providing intellectual and programmatic leadership for the Museum’s curatorial program, including guiding a team of 11 curators as well as curatorial and research assistants and interns.

Kocher, Leifer receive NIH Director’s New Innovator Awards for biomedical and behavioral research

Princeton faculty members Sarah Kocher and Andrew Leifer are among 60 researchers nationwide to receive 2019 New Innovator Awards from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The awards are part of the NIH Common Fund’s High-Risk, High-Reward Research Program, which supports investigators pursuing highly innovative, high-impact biomedical and behavioral research.

Get moving! The mystery of animal group behavior

It’s not uncommon to see a flock of birds, startled by some perceived threat, take to the air in a highly coordinated flight. Similar behavior can be observed in schooling fishes where each fish, mimicking the movement of its neighbor, turns, darts or zigzags away from a threat with uncanny precision. In both cases, it seems as if the respective groups — the flock and the school — are acting as a single, unified entity

University to mark completion of Woodrow Wilson installation with public discussion, dedication

Double Sights, sculpture installation in progress, Scudders Plaza

Construction of “Double Sights,” an installation about the complex legacy of Woodrow Wilson, is nearing completion on Scudder Plaza adjacent to Robertson Hall, home of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The University will mark the installation’s completion with a public discussion and dedication on Saturday, Oct. 5.

PEI awards $1.01 million in Water and the Environment Grand Challenge projects

The ecological impacts of extreme weather, a national “climate park” in the New Jersey Meadowlands, and engineered nanoparticles that target groundwater pollutants are among the 13 projects funded by the Princeton Environmental Institute (PEI) as part of its Water and the Environment Grand Challenge program. Totaling $1.01 million, the newly awarded undertakings explore an array of topics in multiple disciplines, from wastewater emissions and the role of climate change in spreading plant diseases, to nitrogen-hungry bacteria and a plan to capture carbon dioxide while mitigating mining runoff. The projects run from 2019 to 2021.

‘All for Earth’ podcast features endurance runner Clare Gallagher

For Clare Gallagher, Princeton Class of 2014, the urgent cry of “all hands on deck” to combat climate change brings her to her feet. Literally. An ultramarathoner and trail runner, Gallagher discusses on the latest episode of “All for Earth” about how her career provides an intimate connection with fragile ecosystems that are under stress from climate change.

Barbara Garcia: A first-generation college student spends summer doing research at PPPL

As a first-generation college student, Barbara Garcia had to figure out a lot of things on her own when applying for college. Her parents were Mexican immigrants who didn’t go to college and couldn’t help her navigate the application process, couldn’t help her study for the SATs or look over her application essays.

Garcia forged ahead and found out everything she needed to know herself. That resourcefulness was useful to her as a Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships (SULI) program participant at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), where she spent 10 weeks doing hands-on research on an advanced liquid centrifuge with physicist Erik Gilson.

This story was also featured in Energy.gov

 

Microsoft President Brad Smith and ‘The Daily Show’ host Trevor Noah discuss tech and society

The implications of technology’s impact and reach were the subject of a broad conversation between Microsoft President Brad Smith and “The Daily Show” host Trevor Noah, who spoke before a capacity crowd Sept. 27 in Princeton’s Richardson Auditorium.

Additional coverage in the PAW:

https://paw.princeton.edu/article/sapping-our-attention

https://paw.princeton.edu/article/microsofts-smith-81-daily-shows-noah-discuss-technology-princeton-event

https://paw.princeton.edu/article/microsofts-smith-81-daily-shows-noah-discuss-technology-princeton-event

University to mark completion of Woodrow Wilson installation with public discussion, dedication

 

Double Sights,Installation,Schudders Plaza

Construction of “Double Sights,” an installation about the complex legacy of Woodrow Wilson, is nearing completion on Scudder Plaza adjacent to Robertson Hall, home of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The University will mark the installation’s completion with a public discussion and dedication on Saturday, Oct. 5.