Top Ten Things to Steal from Triangle
1. The music to the Honor Code song so they can never sing it again.
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1. The music to the Honor Code song so they can never sing it again.
Though established only two years ago, Advertise This is an exercise in successful self-promotion. It was born, in fact, on the floor of Dillon Gymnasium.
A good hip-hop show has to strike the proper balance between routines that are hard-hitting and high-energy and ones that are slower, smoother and less aggressive. BAC reaches that balance in their fall show, "Code Purple," with a nice assortment of routines that varied tremendously in style, mood, concept and choreography. However, these dances were tempered by their arrangement within the larger performance.
Event: CSA's "Around the World in 80 Minutes"
For freshmen, it’s the dreaded unknown. For upperclassmen, it’s the all-too-well-known fear of the worst fate a bad draw time can bring you. For a few newly minted Tigers, the TigerApps room guide offers a tantalizing — and sometimes heartbreakingly revealing — glimpse into the reality of the next nine months. Others remain blissfully ignorant of their fates until they cross the thresholds of their rooms, when the horrifying realization dawns.
Princeton’s very own a cappella group, the all-male Footnotes, will be launched into the national spotlight on Dec. 9 as they make their debut on NBC’s a cappella competition, “The Sing-Off.” After the announcement came on Monday that the Footnotes will be participating in the competition’s fourth season, Street sat down with group members Jonathan Schwartz ’14 and Ryan Fauber ’15 to talk about their experience on the show.
When I reviewed diSiac’s Ablaze last spring I had only one qualm: Their noncommittal adherence to their theme. This fall, diSiac chose to celebrate its 15-year anniversary with the theme and title: XV. Because “XV” is not really a theme at all, and that means that the choreographers and dancers are free of thematic constraints, it seems I no longer have anything left to nitpick.
Dear Sexpert,
Since its establishment in 2004, Fuzzy Dice Improv Comedy has grown from a few friends doing shows in the residential colleges to an established troupe performing in packed venues before boisterous and enthusiastic audiences. Originally intended to bring long-form improvisational comedy to campus, Princeton’s self-declared “Most Attractive Improv Group” has since evolved to include short-form games as well. Perhaps most recognizable of these is the eponymous Fuzzy Dice game, a variation of a traditional improv game that involves four players scrambling and shuffling between different scenes at the ring of a bell. Indeed, Fuzzy Dice is no stranger to experimentation, and it often modifies classical improv to make it its own.
Activity: Laser Tag
1. Your midterm.
The forthcoming Arts and Transit Center is supposed to bring Forbes into the heart of a new campus community, featuring new spaces for music, dance and theater classes, not to mention the construction of the most advanced WaWa in the world. However, in the process of fulfilling this ambition, a labyrinth of fencing and temporary pedestrian paths have taken root on the site, making the trek to Forbes not only taxing because of the distance but unpredictable, confusing and, quite often, terrifying. Half the time, you expect a sphinx to emerge to tell you a riddle, and the other half, you think Jack Nicholson is lurking behind a corner with an axe. But I digress. There are, in fact, several ways in which we can appreciate the construction maze to Forbes — and why it’s so much better than the boring offices and normal sidewalks that used to be on the same grounds.
Neon colors? Loud music? Impassioned exclamations of “bruuuaaaaaaaaaah!”? No, it’s not a rave. It’s Princeton Bhangra. The co-ed dance group, founded in the fall of 2011, specializes in energetic South Asian folk dance. Known for its rigorous movement and palpable enthusiasm, bhangra originated as a part of the harvest festival celebrations in the Punjab region of South Asia. Over the past 30 years, the style has garnered a rich and competitive following across college campuses in the United States, which has led to various fusions of bhangra with other styles, including hip-hop and reggae.
1. Bonfire will not burn John Harvard in effigy, because cults and paganism and blah blah political correctness blah
At Princeton, the Pace Center for Civic Engagement provides students with the opportunity to train to become emergency medical technicians and join the local rescue squad, treating patients around campus and in the local community. Street caught up with a number of student EMTs recently, many of them squad members for at least three years now, to ask them about what they do and why they do it.
Jeremy Ben-Ami’84 spoke on campus Tuesday afternoon about the present-day politics of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.Ben-Ami, the founder and president of advocacy group J Street, spoke to The Daily Princetonian about changes in the political climate on campus, particularly regarding Israel-Palestine.
How far into the present does the past reach? Princeton Chinese Theatre’s “I Myself He Himself,” written by Stan Lai, explores this question with the lives of two successful businesspeople, Jian Rujing and Chen Mo. Rujing works as an executive officer in her father’s company, while Mo serves on the board of directors in his firm. Although they shared a brief but passionate love affair when they were nine years younger, they meet as strangers in the present day to negotiate a deal for their two companies. Directed by Tianlong Wang GS and Jenny Guo GS and including English subtitles, this play explores the ramifications of people’s shared histories and the themes of regret and betrayal, demonstrating how the ghosts of the past affect the lives of the present.
New Jersey has eternally been plagued by stereotypes entrenched in pop culture from “Jersey Shore” to “The Real Housewives of New Jersey.” And yet, the state was the industrial mecca and the avant-garde muse for artists in the mid-20thcentury. Its abandoned manufacturing wastelands called to artists from across the Hudson, and many left their studios in New York to answer the call.
On Friday, Nov. 22, the atrium of the Frick Chemistry Laboratory will be transformed into the setting of an elegant dinner that is part of an age-old tradition. Unlike many other dinners (like the mysterious alumni conference whose perfectly level-floored tent took over Alexander Beach for three weeks), this event will be entirely student-organized, with a guest list that will be almost entirely students.
1. U. to hire first chief information security officer after HackPrinceton creates What Would Princeton's Secret Documents Say?