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(12/10/14 11:05pm)
The use of lowercase lettering in regards to the posters and associated statements of the Women*s Center throughout this articleare intentional, as it is a part of the organization's recent rebranding publicity campaign.
(12/10/14 11:04pm)
1. University agrees to extend gender-neutral housing to five people who attended panel
(12/10/14 11:02pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(12/10/14 11:02pm)
Dance: PUB’s 'Winter Solstice'
(12/03/14 11:08pm)
Step off the Dinky into the new station, and you enter a world transformed. After putting us through the ad hoc efficiency of the temporary Dinky station, Princeton has declared: Welcome to the future.
(12/03/14 11:08pm)
1. Sweet potato curly fries.
(12/03/14 11:08pm)
In a special edition ofHeadliners andHeadshakers, more aptly titled Headliners and Headshakers this week, we have selected a few comments that inspired vigorous head and fist shaking.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Cactus Karma is a relatively young band that brings together student musicians from across the Princeton music scene. Their specialty as a group is a unique and original mix of R&B with some jazzy horns, hip-hop and soulmusic, bringing a new sound to campus.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Two years ago, Logan Roth ’15 struck out on finding “something to do” during the summer.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Originally based in Manhattan Beach, Calif., a bustling beach city just outside of Los Angeles, Riley “noclip” Thomasson ’15 has spent his past three years at Princeton juggling electrical engineering and EDM. As a senior, Thomasson has begun to taste breakthrough success, with his most recent track “world-01” just released onDiplo’s Mad Decent label and EDM.com — a deal he struck by sending his music out to EDM outlets from the Terrace Club library on a whim.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
When your band includes a conservatory-trained violinist on lead guitar, a lead vocalist with an obsession for Carole King and jazz and members who formerly belonged to soft indie and screamo groups, you can only imagine the musical mélange brought to the table but also the possible difficulties of coming together harmoniously. Psychobaby, however, tackles this head-on and utilizes its diversityto their advantage in creating a unique sound.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Maybe it’s because there’s only true daylight between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m., or maybe it’s because shorts and parkas don’t mix well, but one thing is for sure: Dillon Gymnasium and the towpath get much less crowded during the wintertime. As the weather gets colder, the words “workout,” “gym” and “exercise” seem to be used less and less frequently, and rarely with a cheery tone.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Four-year-old Naftzger saw a Christmas concert and immediately fell in love with strings. She asked for violin lessons from her mother, who promised she could take lessons once she turned five.Her mother assumed the obsession would just be a phase in which her daughter would lose interest, butby her fifth birthday, Naftzgerhadn’t forgotten. She took up the violin and played the instrument until her sophomore year of high school, when she switched over to viola.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Kovey Coles ’15 and Hawa Sako ’15 are a powerhouse duo of music production and composition. When Coles and Sako met four years ago at the end of their freshman years, they began collaborating with different beats and new sounds. Eventually, the pair formed their band, BROWNI.
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Taking its name from an inside joke related to one of the band’s member’s roommates calling “San Pellegrino” (a type of soda) “San Peligro” (St. Danger in Spanish), St. Danger is a student band that will blow you away with their enthusiasm and musicality. Previously part of another student band named Moxie, the trio of Conor McGrory ’16, Doug Wallack ’16 and Kenny Hulpach ’16 define their sound as “classic rock meets indie rock.”
(12/03/14 11:07pm)
Charlie Baker ’17 and Lachlan Kermode ’17 became friends last year during rehearsals for Grind Arts Company’s “Sweeney Todd.”
(12/03/14 11:06pm)
What are the consequences when corruption runs so deeply in a society that it infiltrates even the purest of hearts and causes the downfall of even the brightest ideals? “Mr. Mule,” a play about a small village’s struggle with corruption during the regime of the Kuomintang in early 20thcentury China, explores just that. Written by Shen Zhou and Lu Liu and directed by Qin Xia ’16 and Eddie Chen ’16, “Mr. Mule” delivers a scathing satire on the lengths that people will take to justify their own corrupt decisions.
(12/03/14 11:04pm)
Lecture: Heems: Race, Hip-Hop, Activism
(12/03/14 11:01pm)
Dear Sexpert,
(11/19/14 11:08pm)
Victoria Chung ’14, Miriam Holmes ’15, Kathleen Newman ’15, and Edwin Rosales ’17 all havesomething in common: They plan to become teachers after they finish their Princeton education.To help them fulfill that goal, they are all currently working toward certificates in teacher preparation, a program that gives students the training and support they need to become state-licensed teachers. Senior Writer Jennifer Shyue spoke with these students in the Teacher Prep program to learn more about their personal motivations and views on teaching.