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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T084500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T100000
DTSTAMP:20260513T152732
CREATED:20260417T135057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T192731Z
UID:23982-1779439500-1779444000@reunions.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Alumni-Faculty Forum — Beyond the Page: Nonfiction Narratives and the Future of Storytelling
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University  \nModerator:\nMeredith Martin\nDirector and Founder\, Center for Digital Humanities\, and Professor of English \nPanelists:      \nJames Lieber ’71\nFounding Partner\, Lieber Hammer Huber Paul & Hoffman \nEva Aridjis-Fuentes ’96\nFilm Director and Writer \nBrady Walkinshaw ’06\nFounder and Chief Executive Officer\, Noisy Creek \nLillian Xu ’16\nVice President of Podcasts\, Vox Media \n\nMODERATOR\nMeredith Martin\nMeredith Martin specializes in English poetry and literary form. Her recent book\, “Poetry’s Data: Digital Humanities and the History of Prosody” (Princeton University Press\, 2025)\, argues that poetry can teach us how to think critically about data\, and that critical data studies can illuminate how we read poems. Her work sits at the forefront of humanities and AI. A Schmidt Sciences Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI) grant recipient\, Martin is applying AI tools to analyze English poetry across millennia and exploring its capacities with narrative form. She co-edits the Journal of Cultural Analytics and convened the Special Interest Group on AI for the Association of Computers in the Humanities. She recently began a new interdisciplinary initiative at Princeton that explores the cultural and social implications of AI.   \nPANELISTS\nJames Lieber ’71\nA civil rights lawyer and Supreme Court practitioner\, James Lieber writes on law and society\, including crime\, prisons\, street gangs\, trials\, drugs\, sentencing\, fraud\, labor\, bioethics and voting rights for The Atlantic\, The New York Times Magazine\, The Nation\, Mother Jones\, The Village Voice\, The Washington Post\, The Wall Street Journal\, Social Policy and others. His books include “Friendly Takeover: How an Employee Buyout Saved a Steel Town\,” nominated for a Pulitzer Prize; “Rats in the Grain: The Dirty Tricks and Trials of Archer Daniels Midland\,” serialized in Regardie’s magazine; and “Killer Care: How Medical Error Became America’s Third Largest Cause of Death\, and What Can Be Done About It\,” twice an Amazon bestseller. His current project is an imagined 1879 case against Huckleberry Finn for killing his father. \nEva Aridjis-Fuentes ’96\nEva Aridjis-Fuentes is a Mexican-American filmmaker and writer. She directed the narrative features “The Favor” and “The Blue Eyes” and the documentaries “Children of the Street\,” “La Santa Muerte” (narrated by Gael García Bernal)\, “Chuy\,” “The Wolf Man” and “Goodbye Horses: The Many Lives of Q Lazzarus.” Her films screened at many festivals\, including Sundance and Edinburgh\, in theaters in the U.S.\, Mexico and the U.K.\, and on the Sundance and Criterion channels. They have all been nominated for or won prizes\, including two Ariel awards (Mexican Academy awards) for “Children of the Street\,” and the audience awards for best documentary at the Morelia\, Harlem and Musical Écran festivals for “Goodbye Horses: The Many Lives of Q Lazzarus.” Aridis-Fuentes attended New York University’s Graduate Film program\, where she later taught screenwriting. A writer for “Narcos: Mexico\,” Season 2 (Netflix)\, she also wrote the graphic novel “Monarca” (2022). \nBrady Walkinshaw ’06\nBrady Walkinshaw is the founder of Noisy Creek\, a media company dedicated to reinvigorating local newspapers and media outlets nationwide. Prior to Noisy Creek\, Brady was the CEO of Earth Alliance and CEO of Grist.org\, an American nonprofit online magazine founded in 1999 that publishes environmental news and commentary. Walkinshaw has also served as a state representative in Washington. Through his work\, he has developed an outstanding perspective on the changing media landscape on policy issues. \nLillian Xu ’16\nIn her role at Vox Media\, Lillian Xu leads growth\, talent partnerships and show development\, working with podcasts like “Today\, Explained” and shows led by Kara Swisher\, Scott Galloway\, Esther Perel\, Marques Brownlee\, Brené Brown\, Adam Grant\, Sue Bird\, Jake Sullivan and more. Prior to Vox Media\, she worked at New York Public Radio and like many Princeton grads\, she started her career in consulting. In college\, Xu studied Chinese politics\, snuck in as many creative writing classes as possible and spent many hours singing with the Glee Club and the Tigerlilies. She now lives in New York\, where she is professionally obligated to listen to a lot of podcasts and can also be found playing racquet sports\, making tea and talking to random people in cafés.
URL:https://reunions.princeton.edu/event/beyond-the-page-nonfiction-narratives-and-the-future-of-storytelling/
LOCATION:McCosh Hall\, Room 10\, NJ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni-Faculty Forum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://reunions.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/aff_banner.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T114500
DTSTAMP:20260513T152732
CREATED:20260417T132600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T192730Z
UID:23971-1779445800-1779450300@reunions.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Alumni-Faculty Forum — The Campus and the Constitution: Free Speech\, Civil Discourse and Academic Freedom
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University  \nModerator:\nMartin S. Flaherty ’81\nCharles and Marie Robertson Visiting Professor at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs \n  \nPanelists:      \nJerry Blakemore ’76\nVice Chancellor for Institutional Integrity and General Counsel\, University of North Carolina at Greensboro \nAlysa Christmas Rollock ’81\nVice President for Ethics and Compliance\, Purdue University \nJennifer Rexford ’91\nProvost and Gordon Y.S. Wu Professor in Engineering \nSusan Ridgely ’96\nProfessor\, University of Wisconsin-Madison \n\nMODERATOR\nMartin S. Flaherty ’81\nMartin Flaherty is a visiting professor at Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs and the Leitner Family Professor of International Human Rights Law at Fordham Law School\, where he co-founded the Leitner Center for International Law and Justice. He also teaches at Columbia Law School and Barnard College\, and has held academic positions in Beijing\, Seoul and Belfast. Earlier in his career\, he clerked for Justice Byron R. White of the U.S. Supreme Court and Chief Judge John Gibbons of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. A graduate of Princeton (A.B.\, summa cum laude)\, Yale (M.A.\, M.Phil.) and Columbia Law School\, Flaherty has led human rights missions worldwide. He is president of the American Association of the International Commission of Jurists\, a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and an adviser to the United Nations General Assembly. \nPANELISTS\nJerry Blakemore ’76\nJerry Blakemore has more than 30 years of experience in higher education administration and law. In his current role\, he oversees all legal\, regulatory and compliance matters for UNC Greensboro and offers guidance to the board of trustees\, the chancellor and other university administrators on a wide range of issues. Blakemore earned his B.A. in political science at Princeton and later graduated from the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law. While at Princeton\, he served as secretary of the undergraduate assembly and vice chair of the Third World Center governance board. Additionally\, Blakemore has held the position of chair of the board of directors for the National Association of College and University Attorneys\, a professional organization with more than 5\,000 attorney representatives. \nAlysa Christmas Rollock ’81\nAlysa Christmas Rollock ’81 is Purdue University’s vice president for ethics and compliance. In that role\, she serves as the University’s chief ethics and compliance officer\, as well as its equal opportunity officer. In her position\, she supervises the University’s Office for Civil Rights and its Policy Office and serves as special legal counsel upon appointment. Rollock oversees the University’s efforts to communicate to all faculty\, staff\, students and contractors Purdue’s commitment to freedom of expression\, and the rights and responsibilities associated with it\, including serving as a presenter in the University’s annual new student orientation program on freedom of expression. Before joining Purdue\, she was an associate professor of law at Indiana University-Bloomington\, where her research and teaching were concentrated in the areas of corporate law and finance\, securities regulation and professional responsibility. A history major at Princeton\, Rollock earned her law degree from Yale University.  \nJennifer Rexford ’91\nJennifer Rexford is the provost\, Gordon Y.S. Wu Professor of Engineering and professor of computer science at Princeton University.  She received her B.S.E. degree in electrical engineering from Princeton\, and her Ph.D. degree in electrical engineering and computer science from the University of Michigan. Before joining Princeton in 2005\, Rexford worked for eight years at AT&T Labs-Research. Her research focuses on computer networking with the goal of making future networks worthy of the trust society increasingly places in them. She is co-author of the books “Web Protocols and Practice” (2001) and “The Real Internet Architecture: Past\, Present\, and Future Evolution” (2024) and co-editor of “She’s an Engineer? Princeton Alumnae Reflect” (1993). Rexford is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences\, the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences. \nSusan Ridgely ’96\nSusan Ridgely\, a professor of religious studies\, uses ethnographic case studies to integrate the category of age into the analytic triad of race\, class and gender in the study of American religious traditions and American culture more broadly. Her most recent book is “One True Church: An American Story of Race\, Family\, and Religion” (2026). She is also the author of “Practicing What the Doctor Preached: At Home with Focus on the Family” (2016) and “When I was a Child: Children’s Interpretations of First Communion” (2005)\, as well as editor of “The Study of Children in Religions: A Methods Handbook” (2011) and “The Bloomsbury Reader in Childhood and Religion” (2017). In 2026-27\, she will serve as interim director of the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin. 
URL:https://reunions.princeton.edu/event/the-campus-and-the-constitution-free-speech-civil-discourse-and-academic-freedom/
LOCATION:McCosh Hall\, Room 10\, NJ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni-Faculty Forum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://reunions.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/aff_banner.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T154500
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T170000
DTSTAMP:20260513T152732
CREATED:20260417T132135Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T192729Z
UID:23969-1779464700-1779469200@reunions.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Alumni-Faculty Forum — Climate at the Crossroads: Energy\, Finance and Global Stability
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University  \nModerator:\nJesse Jenkins\nAssociate Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment \nPanelists:      \nRobert Klee ’96\nSenior Lecturer\, Yale School of the Environment \nMarilyn Waite ’06\nManaging Director\, Capital for Sustainability \nMarcus Stewart ’11\nInvestor Relations\, Chevron \n  \n\nMODERATOR\nJesse Jenkins\nJesse Jenkins leads the Princeton ZERO Lab\, which focuses on improving and applying energy systems models to evaluate and optimize low-carbon energy technologies\, guide investment and research in innovative energy technologies\, and generate insights to improve energy and climate policy and planning. His scholarship and teaching have been recognized with multiple awards\, including the Howard B. Wentz\, Jr. Junior Faculty Award. Jenkins’ public impact on American energy policy has also been honored by inclusion on the TIME100 Next\, TIME100 Climate and Vox.com “Future Perfect 50” lists. He advises several clean-energy technology companies. Jenkins came to Princeton in 2019. \n  \nPANELISTS\nRobert Klee ’96\nRob Klee is a leading energy and environmental practitioner\, with more than 20 years of experience in academia\, public policy\, law and consulting. At Yale\, he teaches energy\, climate\, and environmental law and policy\, and serves as the managing director of clean energy programs at the Center for Business and the Environment. He also leads Yale’s certificate program in financing and deploying clean energy for working professionals. Outside of Yale\, Klee is principal of Klee Sustainability Advisors\, a ﬁrm that advises clients on the strategic\, legal and regulatory issues surrounding clean energy deployment and sustainable materials management. He serves on the advisory boards of Audubon (Connecticut and New York) and the Trust for Public Land (Connecticut). From 2013 to 2018\, Klee served as commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. A geology major at Princeton\, he earned master’s\, doctorate and juris doctor degrees at Yale. \nMarilyn Waite ’06\nMarilyn Waite has worked across four continents in renewable and nuclear energy\, climate modeling and investment. She is the author of “Sustainability at Work: Careers That Make a Difference\,” and her writing has been featured in outlets such as the Financial Times\, Le Monde and the Boston Globe. Waite previously led the climate finance portfolio at the Hewlett Foundation\, the energy practice at Village Capital\, energy models as a senior research fellow at Project Drawdown\, and innovation projects at Orano and Framatome (formerly AREVA). She holds a master’s degree with distinction in engineering for sustainable development from the University of Cambridge and a bachelor’s degree in civil and environmental engineering\, magna cum laude\, from Princeton University. She serves on multiple boards and investment committees\, including Climate First Bank. \nMarcus Stewart ’11\nMarcus Stewart is a member of the Investor Relations team at Chevron. Prior to this role\, he worked in finance and strategy roles in the company’s Permian Basin operations\, supply and trading\, downstream and new energies businesses. Before joining Chevron\, he worked for six years in natural gas midstream\, split between Kinder Morgan and Platts. He holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Princeton University and received his MBA from the University of Texas McCombs School of Business.
URL:https://reunions.princeton.edu/event/climate-at-the-crossroads-energy-finance-and-global-stability/
LOCATION:McCosh Hall\, Room 10\, NJ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni-Faculty Forum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://reunions.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/aff_banner.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260522T151500
DTSTAMP:20260513T152732
CREATED:20260417T122310Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T181724Z
UID:23965-1779458400-1779462900@reunions.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Alumni-Faculty Forum — Sustaining the Arts: Leadership\, Innovation and Public Responsibility
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University \nModerator:\nStacy Wolf\nDirector\, Princeton Arts Fellowship; Director\, Program in Music Theater; Professor of Theater in the Lewis Center for the Arts and American Studies \n  \nPanelists:      \nAlina Ziaja MacNichol ’81\nSenior Director of Development and Mezzo-Soprano\, Opera Carolina \nDonna Nuttall Joe ’86\nFormer Executive Vice President and General Counsel\, Corporation for Public Broadcasting \n Stephanie Leotsakos ’16\nComposer\, Conductor\, Soprano\, Violinist; Founder\, Gnotes by Stephanie\, LLC \nDeborah Lugo *14\nVice President of Programming and Education\, Hobby Center for the Performing Arts \n\nMODERATOR\nStacy Wolf\nStacy Wolf teaches classes on musical theatre and U.S. culture\, including a seminar on the musicals of Stephen Sondheim. She is the author of four books\, most recently\, “Beyond Broadway: The Pleasure and Promise of Musical Theatre Across America\,” which is a study of local and amateur musical theater at high schools\, summer camps and community theaters\, and “Feminist Approaches in Musical Theatre\,” which she co-authored with Paige Allen ’21. She is a 2017 Guggenheim Fellow and received a 2017 President’s Award for Distinguished Teaching at Princeton. \nPANELISTS\nAlina Ziaja MacNichol ’81\nAlina Ziaja MacNichol has 13 years of experience in arts management\, maintaining sponsor\, donor and ticketing databases\, and securing financial sustainability through donor cultivation\, grant management\, and event planning. As senior director of development at Opera Carolina\, she has also been part of the company’s marketing and community engagement teams. A classically trained mezzo-soprano\, she has performed with Opera Carolina for 25 years and in several chamber groups in the Charlotte area. After graduating from Princeton in 1981 with a Bachelor of Science in Engineering and working in the helicopter industry for 15 years\, she transitioned to nonprofit management in 2005\, serving as the executive director of of Charlotte Sister Cities and the Charlotte International Cabinet prior to joining Opera Carolina. MacNichol serves on the board of Charlotte Sister Cities and was previously on the boards of the Women’s Impact Fund and the Polish School of Charlotte. \nDonna Nuttall Joe ’86\nDonna Joe is a corporate attorney with more than 25 years of in-house experience serving as a key thought partner and strategic adviser to boards\, CEOs\, senior executives and cross-functional business units. For the last 16 years\, she has worked in the nonprofit sector\, most recently as general counsel\, for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting\, leading complex commercial transactions\, managing compliance and procurement programs\, and providing strategic legal advice on corporate governance\, risk management and contracts. She is a former chair and board member of My Own Place — a nonprofit organization that provides a comprehensive range of services that support adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities. \nStephanie Leotsakos ’16\nStephanie Leotsakos is a Colombian Greek American musician and educator. Her recent conducting engagements include the premiere of Iris Karlin’s “Yehudit” with Hebrew Union College\, along with productions of Jeremy Beck’s “Black Water” with City Lyric Opera\, Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” with Amore Opera and Fauré’s Requiem with the Princeton University Glee Club. As the 2024 National Opera Association’s Dominick Argento Fellow\, she is pursuing a Ph.D. in composition at Rutgers University. Her original multimedia operas “OMG” and “Young Goodman Brown” have been performed in opera festivals and on concert stages nationally and internationally. A prizewinning soprano\, Leotsakos has performed with Amore Opera\, New York Lyric Opera Theatre and the Vermont Philharmonic Orchestra. She frequently performs both traditional and contemporary repertoire and continues to appear as a soloist and recitalist in the greater New York area. Her business\, Gnotes by Stephanie\, is an educational initiative developing creative resources and technologies for neurodivergent music learners. \nDeborah Lugo *14\nDeborah Lugo serves as the artistic lead for Houston’s Hobby Center for the Performing Arts\, driving creative vision and strategy execution for programming\, education and community engagement initiatives. Lugo is an established arts and education leader recognized for building exemplary institutions with a collaborative and inclusive approach. Previously\, Lugo served as the founding executive director of Arts Connect Houston\, where she helped build a community of more than 90 partner organizations from diverse sectors aligned in the mission of expanding equitable access to the arts for students across Houston. She also served as the executive director of Mercury Chamber Orchestra\, leading the organization as it grew from a Baroque ensemble to a renowned chamber orchestra. Originally from Puerto Rico\, Lugo holds a Master in Public Policy degree from Princeton University and a bachelor’s degree in violin performance from Florida International University. \n 
URL:https://reunions.princeton.edu/event/sustaining-the-arts-leadership-innovation-and-public-responsibility/
LOCATION:McCosh Hall\, Room 10\, NJ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni-Faculty Forum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://reunions.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/aff_banner.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260523T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260523T114500
DTSTAMP:20260513T152732
CREATED:20260417T121346Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260508T192729Z
UID:23960-1779532200-1779536700@reunions.princeton.edu
SUMMARY:Alumni-Faculty Forum — AI and Human Value: Creativity\, Ownership and the Future of Work
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by the Alumni Association of Princeton University \nModerator:\nSteven A. Kelts\nLead\, Integrated Ethics in Computer Science; Lecturer\, Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs and the Department of Computer Science; Professional Specialist\, Center for Information Technology\n \n  \nPanelists:      \nDina Nayeri ’01\nFaculty Member\, University of St. Andrews\, Scotland \nBlake Parsons ’11 \nLead Product Manager\, DoorDash AI Support \nEno Reyes ’21 \nChief Technology Officer\, Factory \nRobert Gordon III *89 \nSenior Strategic Leader\, AI and Digital Innovation\, DSS\, Inc. \n\nMODERATOR\nSteven A. Kelts\nSteven Kelts runs the Integrated Ethics in Computer Science initiative\, working with future programmers to embed responsible practices into their work habits. He has been an ethics adviser to the Responsible A.I. Institute and a director of the nonprofit All Tech Is Human. His recent research focuses on two things: the measurement of effective ethics teaching for computing students; and the potential for ethical action in today’s tech firms. Along with a team from Princeton’s Department of Psychology\, he won the National Ethics Education Research Award for a recent study of his tech-ethics students. He is the recipient of two grants from Princeton’s Center on Science and Technology for a program called “Agile Ethics\,” and of a University-wide award for his leadership of the GradFUTURES initiative on Ethics of AI. \nPANELISTS\nDina Nayeri ’01\nDina Nayeri’s acclaimed books\, essays and stories are published in more than 20 countries and taught in schools across Europe and the U.S. “Who Gets Believed?” was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle award. “The Ungrateful Refugee” was a finalist for the Kirkus Prize in Nonfiction\, Los Angeles Times Book Prize\, and won Germany’s Geschwister-Scholl-Preis. The Observer called it “a work of astonishing\, insistent importance.” A former fellow at the Columbia Institute for Ideas and Imagination in Paris and winner of a National Endowment for the Arts literature grant and the Iowa City UNESCO City of Literature Paul Engle Prize\, Nayeri has written essays and stories that have been published in The New York Times\, The New Yorker\, The Guardian\, “Best American Short Stories” and many other publications. A graduate of Iowa Writers’ Workshop\, Harvard Business School and Princeton\, Nayeri is a reader at the University of St. Andrews.  \nBlake Parsons ’11\nBlake Parsons is a product leader building AI-powered customer support across chat and voice at DoorDash. His current focus is improving AI agent performance with the goal of replacing Tier 1 support while maintaining strong customer outcomes. Previously\, he was director of product management at BirchAI (acquired)\, leading generative AI products for enterprise healthcare\, and earlier helped build Uber Eats ads and led driver growth and operations products at Uber. He began his career in strategy and operations consulting at Bain & Company. Parsons earned a B.S.E. in mechanical and aerospace engineering from Princeton and a Master of Engineering from the University of Cambridge. He represented both universities as a varsity heavyweight rower. Outside of work\, he is an AI tinkerer\, aspiring mechanic and occasional chef\, and the father of a 2-year-old. \nEno Reyes ’21\nEno Reyes is co-founder and CTO of Factory\, a Sequoia Capital-backed startup building an enterprise platform to enable\, deploy and measure the impact of frontier software development agents called Droids. His interests span cognitive science\, computer science and artificial intelligence. Previously\, he was a research engineer at Hugging Face and a software engineer at Microsoft. Reyes was named to the 2025 Forbes 30 Under 30 North America list in artificial intelligence. \nRobert Gordon III *89\nRobert Gordon is the senior AI strategist of Document Storage Systems\, Inc.\, an information technology and software development company focused on veterans health. A graduate of Princeton’s School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA)\, Gordon serves as a board member\, secretary and governance chair of Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID). He is a former deputy under secretary of defense for military community and family policy in the Pentagon\, and former president of Be the Change Inc. His 26-year military career included overseeing the American Politics program as an academy professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He is the recipient of the Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service\, SPIA’s Edward P. Bullard Distinguished Alumnus Award and the National Conference on Citizenship’s Franklin Award. \n 
URL:https://reunions.princeton.edu/event/ai-and-human-value-creativity-ownership-and-the-future-of-work/
LOCATION:McCosh Hall\, Room 10\, NJ\, United States
CATEGORIES:Alumni-Faculty Forum
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://reunions.princeton.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/aff_banner.jpg
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