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(11/18/15 10:40pm)
1. It's still pretty warm outside.2. More-secular-than-usual Starbucks cups.3. Star Wars is one month away.4. Kung Fu Panda 3 is two months away.5. Pies, pies, pies.6. The squirrels are getting fatter.7. Cold weather = fewer bugs.8. Big sweaters.9. It will soon be acceptable to only listen to Michael Bublé's holiday album.10. It's still pretty warm outside!?
(11/18/15 10:35pm)
U. sees rise in height of international graduate students
(11/18/15 10:30pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(11/11/15 10:58pm)
When they were in the military, Max Kim ’16, Michael Liao ’17 and Ann Thompson GS began each day hours before the typical college student gets out of bed. Kim, who spent 25 months between his freshman and sophomore years in the Republic of Korea Air Force, would wake up at 6 a.m., report for roll call and go for a 30-minute jog before reporting to the logistics command office where he worked.
(11/11/15 10:56pm)
From Princeton's literal Revolutionary War battlefields to the campus' deep divisions during the Civil War, Princeton has been a campus integrally linked to America's wars. In celebration of Veteran's Day, we take a look back at moments from the Daily Princetonian archives during the two world wars. And yes, it's true: Hitler rejected the Triangle Club.
(11/11/15 10:50pm)
I first learned about the bombing of Hiroshima in the ninth grade. We were assigned John Hersey’s “Hiroshima,” a long-form article that follows six survivors as they navigate the horrific aftermath of the atomic bomb. The article told of a city completely leveled, of all-engulfing fires, of dying infants, of severed breasts, of burnt skin melting off of faces and limbs. The images made a deeper impression on me than did most things from my high school education. I thought I knew about Hiroshima — what had happened, what had followed.
(11/11/15 10:45pm)
Sociology professor Miguel Centeno’s course, SOC 250: The Western Way of War, is an iconic course on campus. While the class is listed as a Historical Analysis distribution requirement, The Western Way of War is not simply a history course: according to the course registrar, the class offers a “historical and analytical overview of war focusing on the origins and consequences of organized violence, the experience of battle, the creation and behavior of warriors and the future of such conflicts.”
(11/11/15 10:40pm)
This weekend, the Princeton Triangle Club will present its 125th musical comedy, “Tropic Blunder.” The show concerns the recipients of an all-expenses-paid island vacation, who have just so happened to win a soda company’s contest. When the island turns out to be cursed, Triangle’s particular brand of musical comedy ensues. To talk about the nautical-themed adventure, Street sat down with Tori Rinker ’16, the president of Triangle. “Tropic Blunder” will run Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in McCarter Theatre.
(11/11/15 10:35pm)
Princeton South Asian Theatrics presents “The Trump Card”
(11/11/15 10:30pm)
1. “Casino Royale” is better than “Spectre”
(11/11/15 10:25pm)
Cruz ’92 proposes dissolution of IRS at presidential debate, proposes annual tribute of insincere folksiness instead
(11/11/15 10:23pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(10/21/15 9:58pm)
The creative writing courses taught by A.M. Homes, under the umbrella of the Lewis Center for the Arts, are essentially a formal space for sharing and refining the art of storytelling.
(10/21/15 9:56pm)
After history professor emerita Nell Painter saw a New York Times cover depicting the Russian bombing of Grozny, the North Caucasus-located capital of Chechnya, she wondered why white Americans were called Caucasians. After spending a semester in Germany finding out, Painter wrote “The History of White People” in 2010, discussing how formerly non-white people were classified as white through their assimilation into American society.
(10/21/15 9:55pm)
Martha Friedman, lecturer in visual arts in the Lewis Center for the Arts, grew up in a family of scientists.
(10/21/15 9:50pm)
On Friday evening, when Anna Aronson ’16 and Cameron Platt ’16 utter their first lines as Nina Zarechnaya and Irina Arkadina in Anton Chekhov’s “The Seagull”, they will be following in the footsteps of two other Princeton women who performed the play for their senior thesis project — 10 years ago. In that production, Nikki Muller ’05 (of “The Ivy League Hustle (I Went to Princeton, Bitch!)” fame) played Nina, and Emma Worth ’05 played Arkadina.
(10/21/15 9:48pm)
Wanshou Lu is a street filled with the elderly. Located in Beijing, a city that is the embodiment of rapid modernization, the street retains aspects of a relaxed lifestyle, with grandparents walking leisurely along the storefronts as they barter for fruits and vegetables in the morning.
(10/21/15 9:46pm)
Although community service is often associated with direct volunteer-based service, Breakout Princeton is a Pace Center for Civic Engagement program offering an alternative break that allows students to engage in issues through service learning, a hybrid of community service and learning from policy stakeholders. Breakout owes its name to the fact that the trips occur during fall and spring break. The service learning aspect comes in when students learn about domestic social issues. Rather than completing a service project during the week, students meet policymakers, community organizations and those directly affected by the focus issue of the specific trip.
(10/21/15 9:45pm)
Music: Princeton University Orchestra October 2015 Concerts
(10/21/15 9:40pm)
1. Pumpkin