Street goes behind the walls of three different campus clubhouses.
There are some things that just cannot be taught in a class. That’s what Devon Chen ’13 learned as a freshman after she took the Bartending 101 class offered through the Princeton Formal Services Agency.
Street critiques the background music at all of your favorite Princeton haunts.
The Princeton Shakespeare Company takes on a difficult play with Christopher Marlowe’s “Dr. Faustus” and, for the most part, delivers a profound and captivating show.
If you like art history, frustration and young men pruning in ennui, “The Rule of Four” might be for you.
It’s difficult for me to explain how the Orange and Black Ball made me feel. I’ll admit that it verged on being lame at some points, and yet I found myself content as I walked home afterward.
Communism meets classic rock against the grim, totalitarian backdrop of 1970s Czechoslovakia.
The first installment of the Harold and Kumar series follows the exploits of our two pothead heroes — Indian-American Kumar Patel and Korean-American Harold Lee — as they go on a search for White Castle hamburgers to satisfy their munchies and continue their everlasting hunt for more marijuana.
Some people can’t see Princeton without picturing Russell Crowe heaving a huge desk out of the window above.
Sarah Beth Durst’s young adult novel “Enchanted Ivy” is a mix of fantasy, action, teenage uncertainty, Princeton life and “Twilight” — and surprisingly, it’s still worth the read.
The program in theatre’s annual fall show is typically a high point of the Princeton theater season. This year’s production of Cusi Cram’s “Fuente Ovejuna: A Disloyal Adaptation” is a solid show that falls a bit short as a marquee event.
“Sharpay’s strong hands massaged her back, while his mouth did things to hers she’d never imagined.” Yeah. That just happened.