John Callahan '10
Q: What values do you bring from home to Princeton?
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Q: What values do you bring from home to Princeton?
Q: What values do you bring from home to Princeton?
Q: What physical things do you bring to Princeton to remind you of home?
Dear Incoming Freshman,
Many students may not remember economics professor Ben Bernanke, but Fed-watchers know him as the Chairman of the Federal Reserve. Appointed in February 2006, Bernanke has kept the economy relatively stable, but storms may be brewing on the horizon.
In the middle of a hectic tech rehearsal two days before opening night of Pearl Cleage's "Flyin West," I sat down with the director, Roger Mason, to talk about this Black Arts Company production that explores issues of identity and race.
The Daily Princetonian's yearlong experiment with human-animal hybrids came to an end yesterday when the paper's leadership passed back into decidedly human hands. A pandaesque-chanda was last seen several weeks ago, when one of the creatures was spotted waddling out of the office, crumpled blanket in hand.
When I first heard about the new James Bond in "Casino Royale," I was excited but skeptical. What business could the peculiar-looking Daniel Craig, best known for his role as a thug in the British film "Layer Cake," have in a James Bond movie? To my surprise, "Casino Royale" succeeds as a great Bond film precisely because of Craig's decision to play the hero as a distinctly unsophisticated spy.
Justin Timberlake may think he brought "Sexyback," but sexy never left the college campus.
A senior CIA intelligence analyst stressed in a lecture yesterday evening that the policies leaders enact today shape the views and actions of generations to come.
Q and A with head coach Richard Barron of the women's basketball team, who will try to lead the Tigers to the first NCAA Tournament bid of his six-year tenure:
Q and A with head coach Joe Scott '87 of the men's basketball team, who enters his third season at the Tiger helm. Scott is still awaiting his first league championship as Princeton head coach. Scott gives his insight as to which of his players may have breakout years and send the Tigers over the top.
NEW YORK, N.Y., Oct. 2 — In the deep night, when office workers have gone home and the subway rhythm lulls, the homeless emerge to reclaim the city streets. From the polished marble of Columbus Circle to the sleazy lingerie shops of Hell's Kitchen, the city belongs to them. A black woman in a burlap coat pushes a shopping cart stuffed with scrap and plastic bags along the sidewalk. A white man with unkempt beard, wild eyes and long fingernails rummages through trash cans, oblivious to the din of unloading trucks. The night is redolent with peculiar smells: the scents of coffee and fresh bread, trash and urine mingle in the niches and doorways where homeless people curl up to sleep.
Following a short speech at the U-Store Saturday, former New Jersey Governor James McGreevey conducted a joint interview with reporters from The Daily Princetonian, Times of Trenton and Princeton Packet.
What is the hardest part of coaching at Princeton?
Anyone who has ever been to a mall with me knows that, when it comes to the food court, it is not a matter of whether we eat Chinese food but rather, how many times. I love mall-style Chinese food; when they pile on that rice into a mound of greasy, buttery, bulk-bought deliciousness, it sets my heart a-pattering like nothing else you can buy for $5.99 outside Amsterdam.
Anyone who has ever been to a mall with me knows that, when it comes to the food court, it is not a matter of whether we eat Chinese food but rather, how many times. I love mall-style Chinese food; when they pile on that rice into a mound of greasy, buttery, bulk-bought deliciousness, it sets my heart a-pattering like nothing else you can buy for $5.99 outside Amsterdam.
Last Tuesday, the LGBT Center sponsored a panel discussion, "The Religious Right's Obsession with Gay Sex." We supposed that the pejorative title was meant to draw attention but hoped that the presentations would at least begin with a fair exposition of the views of religious conservatives on homosexual conduct and identity. We expected the sort of free and evenhanded intellectual exchange befitting an event sponsored by an official University administrative office intended for the whole University community. We were spectacularly disappointed.
Last Tuesday, the LGBT Center sponsored a panel discussion, "The Religious Right's Obsession with Gay Sex." We supposed that the pejorative title was meant to draw attention but hoped that the presentations would at least begin with a fair exposition of the views of religious conservatives on homosexual conduct and identity. We expected the sort of free and evenhanded intellectual exchange befitting an event sponsored by an official University administrative office intended for the whole University community. We were spectacularly disappointed.
Regarding "Under fire, University backs choice of speakers" (Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006):