Princeton University Campus Tour
Today I take you around Princeton University and show you some of my favorite buildings, libraries, and classrooms! Obviously there are a ton of cool spots on campus that I'd love to show but these are just some of the highlights, make sure to subscribe for more tours!
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HUGE Gainer Onto Concrete At Princeton University!
@PeteVincentSegro and @_billycosta_ go to Princeton New Jersey to get photos taken by @snyder.erica!
-Music-
Artist: Pistol Pete
Track: Shook
New EXTENDED Sunday Open Gym Time starting this APRIL! Now 3:30pm - 6:30pm every Sunday! Monday and Thursday are remaining at the same 9:00pm - 11:00pm time slot!
Bar Sharkz | World Calisthenics Organization | Monmouth Gymnastics
[GROUP CLASSES]
Bar Sharkz Parkour / Freerunning / Calisthenics classes every Monday and Wednesday 4:30pm - 5:30pm Beginners and 5:30pm - 6:30pm Advanced! Give Monmouth Gymnastics a call to sign up today!
Instagram: @Bar_Sharkz
Instagram: @PeteVincentSegro
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Instagram: @snyder.erica
Now scheduling Spring Sessions for One On One Personal Training in the Monmouth County / Middlesex County area of New Jersey! If Interested in one on one Personal Training for Weight Loss, Toning, or Building Strength through Calisthenics [Bodyweight Training] and or with [Weighted Training] contact us at BarSharkz@Gmail.com, call 732-850-3893, or visit us at BarSharkz.com! In House Training Available! Group classes for All Ages also Available!
Princeton NJ Top Newborn Photographer - Amber
Jen Davis is a premier Princeton and Robbinsville NJ newborn and family photographer. She is known for creating fun and fresh portraiture. Contact her today at jen@photographybyjendavis.com and
Filming and preserving memories of your newborn baby in Princeton and Robbinsville NJ.
This video can be found at
Investing in your memories is one of the best things you can do for yourself and your family. It is something that doesn't expire, but lives on forever to keep your story and legacy going. It is your tangible proof of family, childhood, and love.
Princeton Artists Alliance • Pine Barrens Exhibit
The Princeton Artists Alliance has the honor of exhibiting their show Pine Barrens Rediscovered at the Noyes Museum of Art in Oceanville, NJ. The exhibition will be on display until May 30, 2010
Nature and artist collaborate to express visions and interpretations of The New Jersey Pinelands. The Princeton Artists Alliance explored the pinelands on their hands and knees and in the air to understand the vastly unique qualities of the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Interpretations in sculpture, mixed media, photography, and painting describe the ecosystem and its dramatic importance in our region. The exhibition is accompanied by information from the New Jersey Conservation Foundation.
Visit:
Exhibiting Artists: Joanne Augustine, Hetty Baiz, Joy Barth, Anita Benarde, Rajie Cook, Dan Finaldi, Clem Fiori, Tom Francisco, Carol Hanson, Shellie Jacobson, Margaret K. Johnson, Nancy Kern, Marsha Levin-Roger, Charles McVicker, Lucy Graves McVicker, Harry Naar, James Perry, Linda Pochesci, Madelaine Shellaby, Marie Sturken, Barbara G. Watts
Dr. Jonathan L. Walton | Geddes W. Hanson Lecture
October 16, 2019 | The 2019 Geddes W. Hanson Lecture
Miller Chapel
Lecture: “How to Become a Famous Preacher! Henry Ward Beecher and the Ethics of Moral Suasion”
Lecturer: Jonathan L. Walton, PhD '06, MDiv '02, dean of the Wake Forest University School of Divinity in Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Robert Zuckerman, photographer - NJN/State of the Arts
State of the Arts producer Christopher Benincasa interviewed renowned photographer Robert Zuckerman on the set of this summers impending blockbuster Transformers 2 at Princeton University.
During the interview Zuckerman spoke of Kindsight, a project he has been working on for years that spins the random encounters of his life into often profound photo-essays. Zuckermans Kindsight pieces are featured in exhibitions, books, and most recently on his blog: kindsight.blogspot.com. State of the Arts also visits one of Zuckermans Kindsight photography workshops for students at Ridgewood High School in New Jersey.
Watch stories from past episodes of State of the Arts, listen to podcasts and more on our Web site:
The History of Discrimination at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton Part 2
Do admissions at elite universities contradict the widely shared American values of equality and meritocracy?
FDR arrived at Harvard in September 1900. A Groton grad, Roosevelt exemplified the prototypical Harvard student. Filled with elite club systems (Eating Clubs, Final Clubs, Secret Societies) which were very hierarchical and dictated the social life at the University, every school had stringent quotas and attempted to keep Jews, Catholics and blacks out of their schools.
Dean Lawrence R. Velvel of The Massachusetts School of Law interviews author and University of California Berkeley professor Jerome Karabel about his book, The Chosen The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton.
The Massachusetts School of Law also presents information on important current affairs to the general public in television and radio broadcasts, an intellectual journal, conferences, author appearances, blogs and books.
THE MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL OF LAW IS NEW ENGLAND’S MOST AFFORDABLE AND DIVERSE LAW SCHOOL. We are dedicated to growing tomorrow’s leaders; empowering them with professional skills taught by instructors with real world experience, in a fun supportive campus environment.
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The History of Iran / US Relations: American Imperialism - Stephen Kinzer on Overthrow Part 2: Vietnam, Iran and Chile
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The Legacy of Dominicanidad
A Symposium on the Work of Lorgia Garcia Pena
ESL in North Plainfield, NJ - Take English Classes With Uceda School Today!
Visit to learn more information about taking ESL classes in North Plainfield, NJ!
Welcome to Uceda School of North Plainfield. North Plainfield is one of the many locations that Uceda School has in New Jersey. Discover North Plainfield’s long heritage by visiting its antique buildings and landmarks throughout the city. This school is located within an hour from Princeton, Philadelphia, and New York City by car, so you may visit major cities nearby easily.
Visit the New Jersey State Museum to learn about its prehistoric times, the natives and modern history to help you fully experience New Jersey. You can also access many restaurants, retail shops, and cafes near the school for your needs.
Menlo Park shopping mall has all your shopping needs with its enormous selection of stores. Enjoy your weekends at the movie theater, arcade, and other entertainment venues at Menlo Park mall to relax from an intense ESL curriculum.
Learn English with the best curriculum and instructors at Uceda School of North Plainfield, NJ today!
Foster Baha'i School
Foster Baha'i School, New Jersey - Children Classes for Mercer County. NJ Baha'i School covering Princeton, Hamilton, Lawrenceville... Through arts, intellectual inquiry, worship and fun, our school community strives to nurture person's noble spirit, to inspire world-embracing thoughts and goals. Unity in diversity is one of our core beliefs. We welcome and celebrate people of all backgrounds. Introductory classes, as well as more intensive study sessions, are also offered. Bring all your friends!
FosterBahaiSchool.org
Photography by Eileen Tyson; Video by Annick Elziere
QuestBridge Virtual Event
Curious about what it’s like to be a Princeton student? This video features a Q&A panel of Princeton Quest Scholars and admission officers who cover topics including resources on campus, unique social and academic opportunities, and student life at Princeton.
Troy Meadows Wetland & Forest Enhancement
Troy Meadows, NJ
Wetland and Forest Enhancement
Wildlife Preserves, Inc.
info@wildlifepreserves.org
Troy Meadows is a US National Natural Landmark located in the central Passaic basin, in northern New Jersey. It is primarily owned by a private, nonprofit organization—
Wildlife Preserves, Inc. —and managed as a natural area and wildlife sanctuary.
Troy Meadows is a mix of meadows, fields, and forests containing a variety of common and endangered plant and animal communities and many biological features, ponds and vernal breeding pools. It is part of the Atlantic flyway and serves as a staging area for migratory waterfowl. It is an exceptional resource for many species of fauna and flora and contains a dense population of avian and amphibian species, a particular haven for frogs, salamanders, and marsh birds.
Troy Meadows was once rated the “highest quality inland wetland in the State of New Jersey” by the US Department of Interior (published in its 1954 nationwide inventory of wetlands resources) but has since been degraded by encroaching suburban development, water and silt pollution, and invasive species of plants that are taking over its once native, natural habitat.
Wildlife Preserves is on an aggressive campaign to remove invasive species of plants from the meadows and woodlands at the north-end of Troy Meadows in an effort to enhance the freshwater marsh, forests, and wildlife habitat here. The project also includes installing deer exclusion fencing around some of the woodland areas, and replanting the meadows and woods with native plants species.
All the invasive species—from phragmites–reed grass, Japanese barberry, to stilt grass—have been located, mapped, and are being eradicated.
Studies have shown that the dense stands of reed grass have raised the elevation of the soil beneath the marsh by several feet, displacing the water that was once so prevalent and important for marsh and migratory birds at Troy Meadows. In forest areas, barberry bushes and stilt grass fill the land and smother the seed-bearing flora that provides food, shelter, and habitat for indigenous fauna.
All these invasive plants have created an imbalance in the ecosystem and this is the blight that many environmental organizations and individuals are attempting to heal.
The Troy Meadows project is a five to twenty-year plan that includes the establishment of a wetland mitigation bank, deed restricting the mitigation area in perpetuity, eradicating all the invasive plants species, replacing them with native species, and restoring the meadows to its previous pristine condition.
Greenfield Village Historical Site by Daniel L
Greenfield Village Historic Site Presentation English 4th period
Script
Good Morning/Afternoon, I’m Daniel Lipsitz and I’m going to tell you about Historic Greenfield Village. It became a historic site when Henry Ford put the village together.
When Henry Ford was making his cars and Edison was making his light bulbs and the parts of the first Wright brothers plane is there and pretty much where everything important made around hundred years ago was put here.
Henry Ford gave money to transport the buildings that led America forward that were all around America and put them all in one important and historical village. The village was completed in 1929.
The Village was created to get all the buildings where historical things happens into one place so that people can learn and be fascinated by what the early Americans accomplished and how now we take them for granted.
Henry Ford was in charge of the village and he let everybody interested in the accomplishments that happened there use the village.
Each of the individual building hold historic moments that we can not live without like Edison's light bulb or the Wright Flyer.
The video will start now:
Picture 1 - Greenfield Village opened October 21, 1929, near Henry Ford’s Ford Motor Company. It was his idea to start the village after he restored his childhood home, he wanted to bring old historic America alive for a new generation. It was opened exactly 50 years after his former boss, Thomas Edison made the first incandescent light bulb.
Picture 2/Video - As soon as you enter the village you can board one of two 1931 Ford Double A buses. Ford Motor Company built produced the undercarriage,
chassis, engine, and drivetrain, the rest was built by Coachmaker Company in Indianapolis Indiana. They found the old bus in a barn in Florida and restored it.
Picture 3 - The next few pictures will show you The Wright Brothers home, store and workshop, all moved from Dayton, Ohio.
Picture 4 - First is their home. They made their own home improvements, building the home’s wrap around porch and fireplace mantelpiece and redesigning the interior stairway.
Pictures 5, 6, 7, 8 - These pictures are their bicycle store. Did you know Wright the Brothers never had seatbelt on their planes when they were flying?
Pictures 9, 10, 11, are their workshop in the back of the store where they made their first planes. The Wright brothers first successful flight was during december 17, 1903.
Picture 12 - Their shop’s backyard
Picture 13 - A scenic street view
Picture 14 - A candy store
Pictures 15, 16, 17, 18, - We now see Menlo Park. Menlo Park where Thomas Edison's labs and buildings were. They were originally in New Jersey. Menlo Park was Edison's “Invention Factory”. We can see even the generators he built to make electricity. Did you know Henry Ford worked for Thomas Edison here? The Quadricycle was Ford’s first car and he designed when working in Edison’s lab.
Picture/Video 19 - One of Thomas Edison’s most famous inventions was the phonograph. He first recorded Mary Had A Little Lamb
Picture/Video 20, 21 - Let’s listen again and look again.
Picture 22 - This is his teletype machine for following the stock market.
Picture 23 - his glass lab where they made the glass for his light bulb.
Picture 24 - his study
Picture 25 - that was Menlo Park
Pictures 26, 27, 28 - Before Ford’s cars, people rode horse and buggies
Picture 29 - Greenfield Village is very scenic
Pictures 30, 31, 32, 34 - There are so many historic places here. This is Daniel Webster’s home. He wrote the first dictionary. Webster learned 20 different languages to prepare himself for studying the origins of words. He made a textbook nicknamed the “blue-backed speller” in 1783, which sold more than 100 million copies.
Pictures 35, 36, 37, 38 - These pictures show his study where he wrote the dictionary and one of his earliest dictionaries is there.
Pictures 39, 40, they even have Robert Frost’s House, he wrote a famous poem called The Road Not taken
Picture 41 - Many animals are there in the Village too just like from 100 years ago.
Picture 42 -we begin leaving Greenfield Village
Picture 43 - I hoped you liked your visit. The Village shows the importance of each invention that happened in the buildings in Greenfield Village.
People that go explore the village will get fun experiences which gives them something to brag about to their friends.
Also when we went in the wright brothers bicycle shop I found a very interesting quote saying “.... and only 66 years after the Wright brothers built and flew their plane we sent people to the moon.”
Thank you.
Credits: The Henry Ford Official Guidebook. The staff and volunteers like the bus driver and phonograph operator at Greenfield Village.
(also if you go to greenfield village make sure to go to the giftshop, it has very good souvenirs)
Analysis: Illinois' requirement of LGBTQ history in public school – EWTN News Nightly
Robert George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University, analyzes Illinois’ new law requiring the inclusion of contributions from LGBTQ individuals in public schools’ history courses. He also shares how Catholic parents can respond.
#FromTheBottomTV | EPISODE 1 | The REAL Jersey Shore Pt 3 | Atlantic City, New Jersey
The last and final part to Woozy Will's From The Bottom TV series The REAL Jersey Shore is finally here! Walk with him as he takes you back to his hometown, Atlantic City, New Jersey, and premieres a few new music videos with local Hip Hop artists he has collaborated with and chops it up with the some of the best spittas from South Jersey! The show and all videos are Edited and Directed by Woozy Will. Follow him on Twitter at @woozywill_FTB and on Instagram at illwill_FTB. For any promotional videos, photo shoots, or collabs, contact Woozy's email at FromTheBottomTV@gmail.com .#FTBtv
Anthony Johnson: CASPR explores the mid-IR for new sensing capabilities
Mid-infrared sensors have the ability to detect minute amounts of chemicals in the environment or atmosphere, exhaled by humans, or emitted from spills, combustion, or natural sources.
- SPIE Defense Security + Sensing Symposium
Anthony Johnson is Director of the Center for Advanced Studies in Photonics Research (CASPR) and professor of Physics and Computer Science & Electrical Engineering at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). He is also a director of MIRTHE (Mid-Infrared Technologies for Health and the Environment).
MIRTHE is a National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center headquartered at Princeton University, with partners City College New York, Johns Hopkins University, Rice, Texas A&M, and the University of Maryland Baltimore County. The center encompasses a world-class team of engineers, chemists, physicists, environmental and bio-engineers, and clinicians. MIRTHE's goal is to develop Mid-Infrared (£ - 3-30 µm) optical trace gas sensing systems based on new technologies such as quantum cascade lasers or quartz enhanced photo-acoustic spectroscopy, with the ability to detect minute amounts of chemicals found in the environment or atmosphere, emitted from spills, combustion, or natural sources, or exhaled.
Johnson graduated with a BS in Physics from the Polytechnic Institute of New York in 1975 and earned a PhD in Physics in 1981 from the City College of the City University of New York (CCNY). His PhD thesis research was conducted at AT&T Bell Laboratories in Murray Hill, NJ, with support from the Bell Labs Cooperative Research Fellowship Program for Minorities. He was a Distinguished Member of the Technical Staff in the Photonic Circuits Research Department at Bell Labs for 14 years prior to joining the New Jersey Institute of Technology in 1995, where he was Chairperson and Distinguished Professor of Physics until 2003.
His current research interests include the ultrafast photophysics and nonlinear optical properties of bulk, nanostructured, and quantum well semiconductor structures, ultrashort pulse propagation in fibers and high-speed lightwave systems. Johnson received the 1988 AT&T Bell Labs Distinguished Staff Award; the 1994 Black Engineer of the Year Special Recognition Award; the 1996 Edward A. Bouchet Award of the APS; the 2005 Science Spectrum Magazine Trailblazer Top Minority in Science Award; and an Honorary Doctor of Science degree from CCNY in 2011.
Elaine Lalanne received a BA in Physics from Wellesley College in 1994 and a PhD from the joint department of Applied Physics from New Jersey Institute of Technology/ Rutgers University-Newark in May 2003. She is currently a Research Scientist at CASPR, where her work involves studying the nonlinear optical properties of bulk, nanoclustered, and quantum-well semiconductor structures. She co-developed an integrated laboratory mid-IR ultrafast diagnostic instrument. Her current research focuses on four-wave mixing in chalcogenide waveguide in the mid-IR and investigating gain dynamics in quantum cascade lasers and structures.
The work described in the video was partially supported by NSF Major Research Instrumentation Grant ECS-0619548 and NSF MIRTHE Engineering Research Center Grant ERC-0540832.
Albert Einstein on being smart (quote)
If you like nature, little creatures and flying, you will love my book :) Thanks!
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Albert Einstein (/ˈaɪnstaɪn/;[2] German: [ˈalbɛɐ̯t ˈaɪnʃtaɪn] ( listen); 14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist. He developed the general theory of relativity, one of the two pillars of modern physics (alongside quantum mechanics).[1][3]:274 Einstein's work is also known for its influence on the philosophy of science.[4][5] Einstein is best known in popular culture for his mass–energy equivalence formula E = mc2 (which has been dubbed the world's most famous equation).[6] He received the 1921 Nobel Prize in Physics for his services to theoretical physics, in particular his discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect, a pivotal step in the evolution of quantum theory.[7]
Near the beginning of his career, Einstein thought that Newtonian mechanics was no longer enough to reconcile the laws of classical mechanics with the laws of the electromagnetic field. This led to the development of his special theory of relativity. He realized, however, that the principle of relativity could also be extended to gravitational fields, and with his subsequent theory of gravitation in 1916, he published a paper on general relativity. He continued to deal with problems of statistical mechanics and quantum theory, which led to his explanations of particle theory and the motion of molecules. He also investigated the thermal properties of light which laid the foundation of the photon theory of light. In 1917, Einstein applied the general theory of relativity to model the large-scale structure of the universe.[8][9]
He was visiting the United States when Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 and, being Jewish, did not go back to Germany, where he had been a professor at the Berlin Academy of Sciences. He settled in the U.S., becoming an American citizen in 1940.[10] On the eve of World War II, he endorsed a letter to President Franklin D. Roosevelt alerting him to the potential development of extremely powerful bombs of a new type and recommending that the U.S. begin similar research. This eventually led to what would become the Manhattan Project. Einstein supported defending the Allied forces, but largely denounced the idea of using the newly discovered nuclear fission as a weapon. Later, with the British philosopher Bertrand Russell, Einstein signed the Russell–Einstein Manifesto, which highlighted the danger of nuclear weapons. Einstein was affiliated with the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, until his death in 1955.
Einstein published more than 300 scientific papers along with over 150 non-scientific works.[8][11] On 5 December 2014, universities and archives announced the release of Einstein's papers, comprising more than 30,000 unique documents. Einstein's intellectual achievements and originality have made the word Einstein synonymous with genius.
Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition (3/4), Yevgeny Morozov | piano faculty Rutgers NJ
Pianist Yevgeny Morozov performs Mussorgsky Pictures At An Exhibition [3 of 4]. New Brunswick, Central New Jersey (NJ). Rutgers Mason Gross School of Music (piano faculty Extension Division). Nicholas Music Center, Rutgers University.
Yevgeny Morozov is a an international Award-Winning classical pianist, who is currently completing his doctoral studies at Rutgers University, Mason Gross School of Music. He was featured to perform at numerous music festivals and concert series, among them the V. Middle European Festival of Concert Art, Prokofiev's Music Festival in Moscow, International Keyboard Institute & Festival in New York City, Mannes Festivals La Belle Époque and The Birth Of Romanticism, Around The World With Mason Gross Musicians, Sarasota Music Festival in Florida.
Apart from performing, he teaches piano at the Mason Gross School of Music (Extension Division) of Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He also teaches privately, gives master classes, holds lectures and adjudicates.
Private piano lessons for all ages and levels are available in Сentral NJ, including New/North/South/ East Brunswick, /East/West Windsor, Princeton, Plainsboro, and all surrounding areas. Middlesex County NJ, Mercer County NJ, Union County NJ, Monmouth County NJ.
For more information please visit
Thank you for watching!
Mussorgsky Pictures at an Exhibition (4/4), Yevgeny Morozov | piano faculty Rutgers NJ
Pianist Yevgeny Morozov performs Mussorgsky Pictures At An Exhibition [4 of 4]. New Brunswick, Central New Jersey (NJ). Rutgers Mason Gross School of Music (piano faculty Extension Division). Nicholas Music Center, Rutgers University.
Yevgeny Morozov is a an international Award-Winning classical pianist, who is currently completing his doctoral studies at Rutgers University, Mason Gross School of Music. He was featured to perform at numerous music festivals and concert series, among them the V. Middle European Festival of Concert Art, Prokofiev's Music Festival in Moscow, International Keyboard Institute & Festival in New York City, Mannes Festivals La Belle Époque and The Birth Of Romanticism, Around The World With Mason Gross Musicians, Sarasota Music Festival in Florida.
Apart from performing, he teaches piano at the Mason Gross School of Music (Extension Division) of Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He also teaches privately, gives master classes, holds lectures and adjudicates.
Private piano lessons for all ages and levels are available in Сentral NJ, including New/North/South/ East Brunswick, /East/West Windsor, Princeton, Plainsboro, and all surrounding areas. Middlesex County NJ, Mercer County NJ, Union County NJ, Monmouth County NJ.
For more information please visit
Thank you for watching!