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On the Campus
December 12, 2007:
California
letdown; strutting in New York
By
Jocelyn Hanamirian ’08
A team of 20 undergraduates traveled to Victorville,
Calif., at the end of October to watch the robotic car they engineered
compete in the semifinals of the DARPA Urban Challenge, a Pentagon-sponsored
contest to create a self-driving vehicle.
If their modified Ford Escape, dubbed Prospect 10,
could complete a series of maneuvering challenges autonomously,
they would have a shot at the finals and $3.5 million in prizes.
Though Prospect 10 failed to complete its tasks on
the challenge course and did not advance to the final round, Princeton’s
entry was still a success. As an all-undergraduate team with a $100,000
budget amid a pool of other contestants with heavy corporate sponsorship
and professional know-how, it was a victory in itself to advance
to the semifinal round as one of 35 teams from the 150 original
entrants.
“Most teams had a lot more people who could
dedicate more time to the project, while we had to balance class
and other extracurriculars, and they also had a lot more money to
buy better equipment,” said team member Ben Chen ’09.
“Princeton was aiming for a low-cost approach.”
The team worked tirelessly on its modified Ford Escape
throughout the summer and fall. There was rarely a moment that one
member of the team was not tinkering away in the garage set up for
the project by the engineering school. Prospect 10 was donated by
Ford Motor Co., but the team lacked other major corporate sponsorships
and had to forgo expensive sensors and high-accuracy GPS that other
teams could afford, instead relying heavily on cameras to act as
the car’s optical sense.
The course consisted of three missions over 60 miles
in a simulated urban environment. Cars had to execute left turns,
handle themselves in four-way intersections, follow lanes, and avoid
obstacles, all surrounded by other traffic.
“We had not tested the car rigorously enough
prior to arriving in California to ensure that all our systems were
integrated and working smoothly,” Chen said. “Had we
had more time on our hands prior to the competition to test our
vehicle, we may have been able to make it to the finals.”
The determined team will not let its empty-handed
return from California be the final word. They plan on competing
in the Intelligent Ground Vehicle Competition, a robotics competition
for undergraduates, held in June. And if department of motor vehicles
officials allow, they might even program Prospect 10 to pass the
New Jersey state driver’s license test.
By
Isia Jasiewicz ’10
Usually, the distinctive orange and black of the
Princeton University Band’s uniforms makes them stand out
from the crowd. During their annual stint at New York’s Village
Halloween Parade, however, they seemed to blend right in.
The band has been marching in the parade, which attracts
more than 2 million people annually to Greenwich Village, for as
long as present band members and recent alumni can remember. Band
president Greg Snyder ’08 said the event is one of the highlights
of the group’s season as well as its biggest opportunity for
exposure, since the parade is broadcast on NY1 News.
“It’s always cool to be marching along
and having millions of people see you,” said Snyder, a percussionist.
“It’s certainly one of the events we most look forward
to,” added the band’s alumni coordinator, Cindi Textor
’08, who plays trumpet.
It takes the band about three hours on Halloween
night to weave its way up Sixth Avenue through throngs of people
in costumes ranging from simple mask-wearers to transvestites. The
students march in lines, occasionally breaking up and “scrambling”
through the swarms of spectators.
Since the parade is one of few band events that isn’t
Princeton-specific, its members try to cater their repertoire to
a broader audience by playing Halloween-themed songs, like the “Time
Warp” from The Rocky Horror Show, and by sprucing
up their uniforms with Halloween details (one year, said Snyder,
a student even carved out a pumpkin and wore it on his head as he
marched).
The parade also attracts a small crowd of band alumni
each year. This time around, half a dozen alums marched with the
ensemble in the parade, said Textor. Former band president Ben Elias
’05, currently a graduate student at Columbia, brought out
his clarinet to take part. “The band has a really good relationship
with its alumni,” he said, “so I come back pretty often,
and I’m not the only one.”
Elias said that the group has changed since he was
a member: “Musically, they’re sounding better, and they’ve
definitely grown bigger.” Textor added that the band has “cleaned
up its act” since the ’80s and ’90s, taking on
a more professional attitude and improving on its musicality. “Most
of the feedback that I get from alumni is almost 100 percent positive,”
she said.
Elias added that the special camaraderie among band
alumni makes small reunions like the Village Halloween Parade particularly
special. “I have good friends from classes of people who are
10 years old than me,” he said. “I don’t think
many other groups have that connection.”
Photos by Hyunseok
Shim ’08
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