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(11/19/14 11:06pm)
Nov. 12 looked like just another peaceful fall day inside the Orange Bubble. Squirrels scampered harmoniously across green courtyards as smiling students strolled to class, coffee in hand. All seemed well, and yet inside the J.Crew store in Palmer Square, a storm was brewing. The offer of a special, exclusive sale extended to Princeton students had incited a fervor among undergrads anxious to try their hand at shopping discounted, cold-weather apparel from this Ivy’s unofficial mascot. The Facebook event advertising the occasion had been accumulating RVSPs for weeks; all were prepared for the crusade. When the clock finally struck 5 o’clock on that fateful day, Princeton students turned out in droves, charging into the store en masse. The battle commenced.
(11/19/14 11:06pm)
Staff Writer Hannah Park and Staff Photographer Grace Jeon took a trip to 185 Nassau St. for the annual Open Studios at the Lewis Center for the Arts. Juniors and seniors in the Program in Visual Arts exhibited their current works in progress and shared a few of their thoughts on art, inspiration and their work.
(11/19/14 11:05pm)
1. Chancellor Green masturbator torments students, conspicuously pleasures self during trying academic times
(11/19/14 11:05pm)
I know what to expect when I go see diSiac. I know that I can expect energy, synchrony and technique. I know that I can expect beautiful lifts, flips and short solos cast against a backdrop of strong performances by the company. I know that I can expect a showcase of talent and skill, as opposed to a spectacle of gratuitous sexiness. And I know the nuts and bolts of the show’s structure: it opens with a lengthy but high-energy hip-hop number, then alternates with contemporary pieces.
(11/19/14 11:04pm)
Theater: ‘Red Noses’
(11/19/14 11:01pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(11/14/14 5:00pm)
The chant “B-A-C, B-A-C what?” echoed in Frist Film/Performance Theatre as the lights dimmed, and the Black Arts Company's fall show thus began. The 12-piece set was designed and choreographed to follow a central theme of high school and the various cliques one might run into at a typical, high-performing“Academy.” The show opens with a comedic and engaging video that lives up to the highly entertaining BAC standard for filler videos.
(11/12/14 11:08pm)
Professor Eric Wieschaus is not the standoffish scientist you might expect of someone who won the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work identifying the genes that shape the formation of embryos in fruit flies. Full of color and passion, he is as content to rhapsodize about flies as he is to explain the minutiae of embryonic development and its larger implications for biological research as a whole.
(11/12/14 11:08pm)
(11/12/14 11:08pm)
For a quarter century, the Hubble Space Telescopehas continually transformed our understanding of outer space. Last month, it spotted a galaxy 13 billion light-years away — thesmallest, faintest and farthest galaxy yet — causing us to wonder what may be out there looking at us, flickering in the distance. This human fascination with the universe’s vastness is but one of Tracy K. Smith’s interests in her Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of poems, “Life on Mars.”
(11/12/14 11:07pm)
In November, the Triangle Club solved a mystery that could only be solved by a certain sleuth. For their 124thyear as a group, the Princeton Triangle Club staged “An Inconvenient Sleuth,”a play where the mayor of “Smalltown” is kidnapped and both the characters and audience attempt to discover the mastermind behind it all. This Reunions, the mystery has returned, and so has "An Inconvenient Sleuth" for encore performances during Reunions weekend.
(11/12/14 11:06pm)
Over the past week, USG has turned many heads — quite literally — with its latest campus movement: the Princeton Perspective Project. The project was organized by members of the USG, the Office of the Dean of the College and the Office of the Vice President for Campus Life. In support of the project’s campaign, many students have changed their Facebook profiles pictures to its trademark black-and-white, rotated photos that symbolize one of the project’s missions: to encourage students to look at themselves and others with a new “perspective.”
(11/12/14 11:05pm)
1. ‘Prince’ commenter compares allegedly circulated, officially discussed TI blowjob photo to girl tying shoe.
(11/12/14 11:05pm)
Some plays are foolproof.“Romeo and Juliet”isn't one of them — in fact, the hazards are numerous. And unfortunately, the current iteration produced jointly on campus by Theatre Intime and Princeton Shakespeare Company falls into many of them.A little aimless blocking, poor chemistry, lack of energy in key players, some hollow dialogue — and one of Shakespeare's best known and most popular plays may keep you only mildly engaged.
(11/12/14 11:04pm)
1.Grabbing a meal sometime.
(11/12/14 11:02pm)
Panel: What Arts Are Good For
(11/12/14 11:00pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(11/05/14 11:08pm)
Long before Macklemore started popping tags in 2012 and hipsters emerged in recycled ’90s plaid, thrift stores were a must for anyone searching for good deals and the potential for big buys on a budget. While the University is not the first place that comes to mind when looking for a good secondhand find, there are three consignment stores within walking distance from campus. Senior Writer Margot Yale took her artistic flair and penchant for discount fashion to Nearly New, Greene Street Consignment and Jane Consignment to get a feel for each store and determine what she could buy with a budget of $20.
(11/05/14 11:06pm)
1. Mary from the eponymous film “There’s Something About Mary.”
(11/05/14 11:06pm)
Ever since Mamoun’s Falafel opened its first New York branch in 1971, the food has been a hit. The chain was selected as one of “1000 Places To See Before You Die,” holds a four-and-a-half star rating on Yelp and ranks among the most popular restaurants in New York according to TripAdvisor.