How does theater help us navigate charged issues? How does a sculpture help bring history into the present moment? The Princeton and Slavery Project is creating opportunities for Princeton students and community members to bring the arts to questions like these — in the classroom, at McCarter Theatre and through an installation commissioned by the Princeton University Art Museum.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
CPUC committee seeks suggestions for naming new garden, East Pyne arch
The CPUC Committee on Naming that last spring recommended that the former West College be renamed Morrison Hall in honor of Nobel Laureate and former Princeton faculty member Toni Morrison and that the main auditorium in Robertson Hall be named in honor of Nobel Laureate and former Princeton faculty member Sir Arthur Lewis is seeking suggestions for the naming of two spaces that the trustees have referred to the committee for this year.
Sonya Smith joins Woodrow Wilson School as director of graduate admissions
Room for growth: Princeton’s Vertical Farming Project harvests knowledge for a budding industry
Princeton University’s Vertical Farming Project began at a conference in 2016 when the topic turned to increasing the crop yield of hydroponic systems — wherein plants are grown indoors without soil by using only water and nutrient solutions — by pressurizing water with extra oxygen in a tank before feeding it to the plants. The idea was on everyone’s lips.
Effects of climate change demand holistic adaptation response
Princeton scientists, alumna honored with Edison Awards
Scientists from Princeton University and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) have won 2017 Edison Patent Awards from the Research & Development Council of New Jersey. Princeton alumna and trustee Laura Overdeck was honored as Educator of the Year. The winners were recognized Nov. 2 at the Liberty Science Center in Jersey City, New Jersey.
Princeton, a student and Microsoft file federal lawsuit to preserve DACA
Princeton University, one of its students and Microsoft have mounted a legal challenge to the federal government’s termination of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program as announced on September 5, 2017. The complaint, filed on November 3 in federal court in Washington, D.C., alleges that DACA’s termination violated both the United States Constitution and federal law.
Princeton research project explores past ties to slavery
Princeton rowers create bonds, opportunities with Special Olympics athletes
Are the grandkids worth it? Climate change policy depends on how we value human population
If the human population continues to grow, more pressure will be put on carbon dioxide emissions — leaving future generations vulnerable to the effects of climate change. To head this off, greenhouse gas emissions must be reduced, but that could cost billions of dollars or more over the next few decades, a dilemma plaguing today’s policymakers.
Hush, little virus, don’t say a word: How Princeton scientists investigate sleeping viruses
Mix of biotech, data science in NJ is promising for better health and business growth, panel concludes
Companies and academic institutions of New Jersey have a unique opportunity to solve health care problems and grow new businesses at the intersection of biotechnology and data science, a panel of leaders from industry and academia concluded at a conference convened by Princeton University on Oct. 25.
Bialek wins the APS Max Delbrück Prize in Biological Physics
Two Princeton astrophysicists receive funding to study merging neutron stars
‘Diverse Perspectives’ converge on campus
Princeton offers transfer admission process for undergraduate students
Eight Princeton researchers receive NIH BRAIN Initiative awards
Shapiro: What the fall of Raqqa means for the future of ISIS
Old phones get new life in high-powered computer servers
While most consumers don’t pay much attention to the fate of dead smartphones, Princeton University researchers are envisioning a way to breathe new life into them. Instead of tossing old phones in a junk drawer or burying them in a landfill, the researchers want to turn them into high-powered computer servers.