Pair of graduates to receive top alumni honors at university

   Princeton University graduates George Rupp, president and chief executive officer of the International Rescue Committee, and Arthur Levinson, president and chief executive officer of Genentech, have been selected as the 2006 recipients of the university’s top honors for alumni.
   Mr. Rupp, a member of Princeton’s Class of 1964 who also has served as president of Columbia and Rice universities, will be given the Woodrow Wilson Award.
   Mr. Levinson, a 1977 graduate alumnus, will be awarded the James Madison Medal.
   They will receive their awards and deliver addresses on campus during Alumni Day activities on Feb. 25.
   The Wilson Award, named for the former university president, is given each year to an undergraduate alumnus or alumna whose career embodies the call to duty in President Wilson’s speech, "Princeton in the Nation’s Service."
   The Madison Medal is named for the fourth president of the United States and the person many consider Princeton’s first graduate student. It is presented each year to an alumnus or alumna of the graduate school who has had a distinguished career, advanced the cause of graduate education or achieved an outstanding record of public service, the university said.
   On Alumni Day, Mr. Levinson will speak on "Creating and Sustaining a Corporate Culture of Scientific Innovation" at 9:15 a.m.
   Mr. Rupp will present a lecture on "Local Conflicts/Global Challenge" at 10:30 a.m. Both talks will take place in Richardson Auditorium of Alexander Hall.