Princeton University Athletics
Players Mentioned

Gudmundsen, Honigberg and Lewis-Lamonica Named Art Lane Award Winners
May 30, 2008 | General, Men's Swimming and Diving, Women's Lacrosse, Men's Rowing - Lightweight
Ted Gudmundsen, Michael Honigberg and Katie Lewis-Lamonica share the 2008 Art Lane '34 Award, given to honor selfless contribution to sport and society by an undergraduate athlete.
Art Lane won the Pyne Prize and captained the 1933 Princeton football team to the national championship as an undergraduate before going on to a career as a Naval officer, a federal judge and a corporate general counsel.
Ted Gudmundsen took the 2005-06 school year off to work with Africare in Zambia, where he spent six months working on business development for groups of unemployed youth and then six months in education. The focus of his educational effort was to teach critical thinking to 400 students through an innovative curriculum that utilized traditional American board games as learning tools.
He also has been active in the Odyssey of the Mind competition, which presents students with a contemporary issue that is addressed and solved through the performance of a skit. Ted brought the program to the Lawrence school district and created a program that saw five teams the first year advance to international competition.
Ted Gudmundsen is a physics major from Great Falls, Va.
Michael Honigberg also has spent time in Africa as an educator, teaching math and English in the impoverished township of Kensington's slum area near Cape Town, South Africa. The summer before his trip to Africa, he worked at the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., in the burn unit with children who were recovering from burn injuries.
Additionally, he has volunteered with the Special Olympics and taught disabled children to swim. He has also been involved in swimming lessons for local Princeton children and has even been a volunteer violinist at Princeton-area nursing homes. He will be returning to Africa after graduation to work in pediatric AIDS treatment for a year before heading to medical school.
Michael Honigberg is a Woodrow Wilson School major from McLean, Va.
Katie Lewis-Lamonica has been active with Princeton Engineers Without Borders, a local chapter of a national humanitarian organization that implements sustainable engineering projects in developing countries. Katie helped raise $30,000 annually as Vice President of the organization, and in the summer of 2006 she spent three weeks in Peru helping install solar energy while also teaching the local villagers basic physics, the benefits of sustainable technology and the operation and maintenance of the system.
She also tutored in the English as a Second Language program, worked as a mentor in the Trenton Bridge Lacrosse Program, volunteered at the Anchor House shelter for abused and homeless youth and helped out at eight women's health centers in New York City with maternal infant care.
She also traveled to Cape Town, South Africa, where she worked with Mothers To Mothers, a mentoring program offering peer education and support to HIV-positive pregnant women and new mothers.
Katie Lewis-Lamonica is a Woodrow Wilson School major from Lawrenceville, N.J.
Art Lane won the Pyne Prize and captained the 1933 Princeton football team to the national championship as an undergraduate before going on to a career as a Naval officer, a federal judge and a corporate general counsel.
Ted Gudmundsen took the 2005-06 school year off to work with Africare in Zambia, where he spent six months working on business development for groups of unemployed youth and then six months in education. The focus of his educational effort was to teach critical thinking to 400 students through an innovative curriculum that utilized traditional American board games as learning tools.
He also has been active in the Odyssey of the Mind competition, which presents students with a contemporary issue that is addressed and solved through the performance of a skit. Ted brought the program to the Lawrence school district and created a program that saw five teams the first year advance to international competition.
Ted Gudmundsen is a physics major from Great Falls, Va.
Michael Honigberg also has spent time in Africa as an educator, teaching math and English in the impoverished township of Kensington's slum area near Cape Town, South Africa. The summer before his trip to Africa, he worked at the Children's National Medical Center in Washington, D.C., in the burn unit with children who were recovering from burn injuries.
Additionally, he has volunteered with the Special Olympics and taught disabled children to swim. He has also been involved in swimming lessons for local Princeton children and has even been a volunteer violinist at Princeton-area nursing homes. He will be returning to Africa after graduation to work in pediatric AIDS treatment for a year before heading to medical school.
Michael Honigberg is a Woodrow Wilson School major from McLean, Va.
Katie Lewis-Lamonica has been active with Princeton Engineers Without Borders, a local chapter of a national humanitarian organization that implements sustainable engineering projects in developing countries. Katie helped raise $30,000 annually as Vice President of the organization, and in the summer of 2006 she spent three weeks in Peru helping install solar energy while also teaching the local villagers basic physics, the benefits of sustainable technology and the operation and maintenance of the system.
She also tutored in the English as a Second Language program, worked as a mentor in the Trenton Bridge Lacrosse Program, volunteered at the Anchor House shelter for abused and homeless youth and helped out at eight women's health centers in New York City with maternal infant care.
She also traveled to Cape Town, South Africa, where she worked with Mothers To Mothers, a mentoring program offering peer education and support to HIV-positive pregnant women and new mothers.
Katie Lewis-Lamonica is a Woodrow Wilson School major from Lawrenceville, N.J.
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