Celebrate the Lunar New Year
A4P Princeton Area Lunar New Year Get Together
Brunch Buffet to Celebrate the Year of the Sheep and Catch Up with PU Alumni, Family, and Friends
Date: Sunday, Feb. 22, 11:30 a.m. at Superstar Buffet
Location: Super Star East Buffet, 311 Nassau Park Blvd, Princeton, NJ 08540 (next to Sam's Club)
http://www.superstareastbuffet.com/
Cost (food, tax, and tip): Adults $13; Children ages 7 – 11 $8; Children ages 3 – 6 $7.
Please RSVP to: Mo Chen ’80 mo.chen@verizon.net with your name, affiliation (class, parent, staff member, professor etc.), and number of adults and children in your party. Pls. respond by Feb.18th. The room at the restaurant seats 30 comfortably.
Related Events
Lunar New Year Celebration (
Sunday, February 22, 2015 - 11:30 AM to
1:00 PM
)
Location: Super Star East Buffet, Nassau Park, Princeton
Cost: $13 adults, $8 children
Organized by: A4P
Posted by Princeton AAA over 10 years ago.
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RECAP First Friday Lunch - October 2014
Doyle Hodges, PhD Candidate at the Woodrow
Wilson School discusses civil-military relations
Doyle K.
Hodges, a doctorate candidate in the area of security studies at the Woodrow
Wilson School of Public and International Affairs made a presentation about the
relationship between civil-military relations in democratic political systems
and compliance with the laws and norms of War at the Nassau Club in Princeton,
New Jersey, on October 3, 2014.
Mr. Hodges is
a retired naval officer with twenty-one years of service. He commanded two
naval vessels, among other assignments. He also taught at the United States
Naval Academy.
His career
included several periods of duty that required his attention to political and
strategic matters. One of those assignments was as an aide to the Naval
Inspector General at a time when prisoner abuse in Iraq became public
knowledge. Consequently, the Inspector General and his staff, including Mr.
Hodges, investigated the treatment of prisoners at the Guantanamo facility and
later throughout the navy.
Mr. Hodges
noted that the abusive treatment of prisoners in the Global War on Terrorism
originated from the civilian political leadership, not from the military.
Recognition of that aspect of the problem leads naturally to the study of
civil-military relations and its influence on compliance with international
standards in the treatment of prisoners.
When
intensive interrogation and other potential abusive handling of prisoners seems
to be needed, at least in the eyes of some leaders, then there are three
choices:
1. Simply to proceed with such procedures,
ignoring international
norm,
the possibilities of adverse publicity, and a decline in
morale
of the interrogators;
2. To refrain from possibly abusive handling
of prisoners;
3. To "subcontract" abusive
measures to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), civilian security contractors,
or indigenous governments.
Such a
situation creates tension for military authorities whose professional
orientation has been largely toward avoiding involvement in political
decisions.
Such, at least, is the theory, as heavily influenced by
Samuel P. Huntington's study The Soldier
and the State (1957), which argued that military professionalism developed
in the United States during the 19th century as military leaders focused on
purely military concerns and, in most cases, no longer aspired to political
office.
This apolitical
military self-image has by no means been wholly accurate. Mr. Hodges cited the
conflict between President Harry Truman and General Douglas MacArthur about how
far United Nations troops should advance into North Korea during the Korean
War. Several years earlier, moreover, President Truman and both civilian and
uniformed leaders of the navy contended openly about the relative budgetary
support that should be given to the air force and the navy. Truman emerged as the victor in both these
controversies, but they demonstrated that political and military decisions
cannot be separated neatly.
An important
factor in considering the treatment of prisoners is the nature of the adversary.
In Vietnam, prisoners taken from the ranks of the North Vietnamese Army were
viewed simply as prisoners of war, but guerrillas, who struck United States and
allied troops without wearing uniforms, were considered to be in a different
category. Similar considerations emerged in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In
counterinsurgency conflicts, abuses and violations of international law may be
perpetuated by both sides, as, for example, during British efforts to suppress
nationalists fighting in the Irish Republican Army and similar guerrilla
organizations. The conflict between Israel and Hamas is another example of a
situation where behavior on the battlefield has become less sensitive to legal
restraints.
Civil-military
relations in democracies need an ethical foundation.
In the modern world, liberal democracies often turn to the
military services, but those services, in turn, need principles to follow in
murky conflicts.
In closing,
Mr. Hodges noted that in his studies he is benefiting materially from the
diversity of the faculty and student body of the Woodrow Wilson School.
Posted by lydia over 10 years ago.
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RECAP First Friday Lunch - May 2014
Ian Hogue, postdoc in Molecular Biology discusses Virus Transport and Spread
Ian B.
Hogue, a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Molecular Biology at
Princeton University, presented "Virus Transport and Spread" to the
Princeton Area Alumni Association (PA3) on May 2, 2014, at the Nassau Club in
Princeton, New Jersey.
Dr. Hogue received a B.A. (2003) from
the University of California, Berkeley. His Ph.D. (2010) in microbiology and
immunology is from the University of Michigan. He has a number of publications
to his credit already.
His presentation focused on the way in
which herpes viruses move within cells and how they spread between infected
cells.
Viruses have been an interest of Dr.
Hogue since his undergraduate days. The virus is a substance that can be the
carrier of infectious diseases. Despite their importance, many viruses have not
been studied extensively. Many of them are little known or not known at all.
Human beings may breathe them in easily. Viruses can be underlying factors in
worsening disease, moreover.
Viruses are not all dangerous. Some of
them are beneficial or helpful. One found in sheep is required for
reproduction, for example. Viruses are not like bacteria. Indeed, viruses
disappear when they enter cells. They disassemble, in a sense, although they
persist.
Dr. Hogue referred to computer
"viruses," which can be thought of as similar to biological entities.
Computer viruses only refer to information, of course. A biological virus is a
physical entity.
Knowledge of infectious agents began
in the 17th century when devices, that is, microscopes, developed that could
detect micro-organisms. It was theorized that such organisms could spread
disease. This was the "germ theory" of disease. Filters could prevent
the passage of bacteria, but then new classes of infectious agents were
discovered that could penetrate filters, namely viruses.
Although viruses do not directly
create tumors, they can transmit them simply by picking up broken
cancer-causing copies of our genes. Most cancers are not generated by viruses,
but viruses can contribute to the chances of getting cancer. The ultimate goal
of viruses is to spread between cells – other effects, such as cancer, are a
by-product.
Today, genomes are being used to
identify viruses.
The alpha sub-family of herpes viruses
can cause chicken pox and shingles, and another version causes cold sores.
The alpha herpes viruses in particular
move into the nervous system quickly and fuse with cells in order to enter them
and import their viral genes. Factors like stress, fever, and infection can
cause changes in cell biology.
Just as is the case with viruses, not
much is really known about cells. Thus, viruses are "great tools" for cell research.
Dr. Hogue finished his talk by showing the audience a movie of flourescent virus particles exiting from an infected cell. A publication describing his work is currently in press and will appear in the scientific journal, PLOS Pathogens.
Posted by lydia over 10 years ago.
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First Friday Lunch - Jane Manners, 4th year grad student in History
Join us for First Fridays, a monthly recurring event for undergraduate and graduate Princeton alumni, graduate students, and parents. On the first Friday of each month, area alumni and their guests will meet to enjoy a prix fixe luncheon at the Nassau Club in downtown Princeton. As a special bonus for PA3, a Princeton University PhD candidate will present his/her work to the group in this informal setting. Topics vary monthly and are always interesting! Have a look at our impressive roster of previous luncheons.On January 9th, we will be joined by Jane Manners, a fourth year graduate student in History and graduate prize winner in the Princeton University Center for Human Values. Her dissertation examines the early history of the federal bailout, focusing on the financially calamitous Great New York Fire of 1835 and its aftermath. She is particularly interested in the ways in which New York's increasingly central role in the national economy complicated constitutional understandings of Congress' power to come to the aid of the financially imperiled private actors. Jane has an A.B. and a J.D. both from Harvard and served as a law clerk for Judge Mark Wolf in the District of Massachusetts. She has worked as a teacher, a journalist and a philanthropic grant maker.
As always, there is sure to be a lively discussion! Please join us.
Specially priced at $25/person (or $30 if you choose not to pay PA3's annual dues), lunch includes three courses, a complementary beverage (wine, beer, soft drink) and coffee/tea. Pre-registration is preferred.
>> Looking forward to seeing you...in your orange and black! <<
Date: Friday, January 9th, 2015
Time: 12 noon - 2 pm
Location: Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St, Princeton, NJ
Nassau Club membership is not necessary to attend this event.
Dress is business casual.
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Related Events
First Friday Lunch (
Friday, January 9, 2015 - 12:00 PM to
2:00 PM
)
Jane Manners, fourth year graduate student in the Department of History, will discuss early history of the federal bailout.
Location: Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St, Princceton
Cost: $25 dues paying mbr / $30 others
Organized by: PA3
Posted by lydia over 10 years ago.
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PA3 Book Club February Meeting
Happy
New Year everyone!
We
received a good number of votes for "Everything is Illuminated" by
Jonathan Safran Foer '99, and so it will be the first book of hopefully many in
2015. Sev Onyshkevych '83 recommended the book, the description of which is
included below, and so he has agreed to lead the meeting.
We
will meet on Tuesday, February 3rd at 7pm in the Class of 1952 Room in Frist Campus Center.
Looking forward to seeing familiar
faces, and hopefully some new, at the meeting!
Linsay
Everything is Illuminated: by
Jonathan Safran Foer '99 (author of Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close).
Jonathan Safran Foer, a young American Jew, journeys to Ukraine in
search of Augustine, the woman who saved his grandfather's life during the Nazi liquidation
of Trachimbrod,
his family shtetl.
Armed with maps, cigarettes and many copies of an old photograph of Augustine
and his grandfather, Jonathan begins his adventure with Ukrainian native and
soon-to-be good friend, Alexander "Alex" Perchov, who is Foer's age
and very fond of American pop culture, albeit culture that is already out of
date in the United States. Alex studied English at his university, and even
though his knowledge of the language is not "first-rate", he becomes
the translator. Alex's "blind" grandfather and his "deranged seeing-eye
bitch," Sammy Davis, Jr., Jr., accompany them on their journey. (from
Wikipedia) (Recommended by Sev Onyshkevych)
Related Events
PA3 Book Club February Meeting (
Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - 7:00 PM to
9:00 PM
)
Location: Class of 1952 Room in Frist Campus Center.
Organized by: PA3 Book Club
Posted by LinsayHiller over 10 years ago.
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