Letters to the Editor
Regarding "Under fire, University backs choice of speakers" (Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006):
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Regarding "Under fire, University backs choice of speakers" (Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2006):
"I cannot imagine a better person to launch our 75th anniversary celebrations," Wilson School dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 said Sept. 30 as she introduced U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to the more than 3,000 students, faculty and alumni gathered in Jadwin Gym.
"I cannot imagine a better person to launch our 75th anniversary celebrations," Wilson School dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 said Sept. 30 as she introduced U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to the more than 3,000 students, faculty and alumni gathered in Jadwin Gym.
I wasted two and a half hours of my life this past Tuesday night. After a long day of class and extracurriculars, I decided that it would be a good idea to stop by the "Intellectuals and the Institution" panel. I entered a bit late, while Wilson School dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 was praising U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The audience was comprised of townies by the dozen, lots of angry grad students and undergrads and faculty drawn more by Slaughter and West than by the subject matter. After Slaughter came Princeton celebrity-professor Cornell West GS '80, who spent his opening statement discussing the virtues of the Socratic method.
I wasted two and a half hours of my life this past Tuesday night. After a long day of class and extracurriculars, I decided that it would be a good idea to stop by the "Intellectuals and the Institution" panel. I entered a bit late, while Wilson School dean Anne-Marie Slaughter '80 was praising U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The audience was comprised of townies by the dozen, lots of angry grad students and undergrads and faculty drawn more by Slaughter and West than by the subject matter. After Slaughter came Princeton celebrity-professor Cornell West GS '80, who spent his opening statement discussing the virtues of the Socratic method.
My Daily Princetonian career began with a failed attempt to quit. (One week of covering women's tennis will do that to a freshman.) Three years later, I'm still on staff and not writing women's tennis. Instead, I flatter myself to think that I've found my niche — a little section of the 'Prince' that I've managed to make my own: the Q&A. Therefore, it seems appropriate to close this chapter of my undergraduate career with a "Best Of" section, an amalgamation highlighting three years of surprising, funny and occasionally strange Q&A moments.
My Daily Princetonian career began with a failed attempt to quit. (One week of covering women's tennis will do that to a freshman.) Three years later, I'm still on staff and not writing women's tennis. Instead, I flatter myself to think that I've found my niche — a little section of the 'Prince' that I've managed to make my own: the Q&A. Therefore, it seems appropriate to close this chapter of my undergraduate career with a "Best Of" section, an amalgamation highlighting three years of surprising, funny and occasionally strange Q&A moments.
Alex Lenahan '07 has been elected USG president by an overwhelming majority after a second round of voting that ended even more bitterly than the first.
Alex Lenahan '07 has been elected USG president by an overwhelming majority after a second round of voting that ended even more bitterly than the first.
Well, it worked.
Well, it worked.
Q: Does jealousy have a proper place in a relationship?
When Nate Domingue '06 and Robert Moore '06 heard the Yale student rap group 108 Tongues, the two Princeton hip-hop artists decided they were, according to Moore, "garbage."
This is Powell Fraser, reporting from the front lines of the War on Fun. I'm on assignment for The Daily Princetonian, sent to cover the war in my own Hunter S. Thompson "gonzo" fashion. Like George Orwell in Catalonia, however, I consider myself both a reporter and a soldier in this epic struggle against tyranny. I'm here to report that the battle's just begun: many have been lost, but tell me, who has won? The answer is, as of yet, unclear.
Jennifer Kogler '03 knew what to do with a B.A. in English. She graduated from Princeton with creative thesis in hand and, in the following two years, this California native saw her manuscript grow by one hundred pages. By the time it was complete, Kogler had a contract with one of the most prestigious publishing houses in America.
Vulva. Yes, we did just say vulva. Your sleep-deprived brain has not abandoned you yet. We're not just talking about the vagina today; we're talking about the whole pussy. Welcome to SCORE!, the Street's new sex column. We'll be ringing your bimonthly bell with columns dedicated to the many facets of sex at Old Nassau. Today's topic: the vagina.
Like mushrooms, poker games have been multiplying on campus over the past couple of years. And like any predominantly masculine endeavor, poker games tend to breed poker stories. Every player tells them — the big wins, the awful beats, the nights you just can't lose. Matthew Cherackal's poker story puts them all to shame.
Recently, Daily Princetonian senior writer Sofia Mata-Leclerc sat down with junior rowers Steve Coppola and Pat Cotter. They discussed erging, spandex uniforms and unsanitary living conditions.
Several hallways in Forbes college were vandalized Sunday night as sign-in clubs picked up new sophomore members, prompting an investigation by the Residential College Disciplinary Board.
I'd like to begin with an important announcement: the Boston Red Sox are no longer the official baseball team of this sports section.