PSAT's new show covers everything from Shakespeare to Ke$ha
The Bard meets the Indian subcontinent meets a parody of the Princeton theater scene in "Shakespeare's Ramesh and Juhi," the latest original production from Princeton South Asian Theatrics.
The Bard meets the Indian subcontinent meets a parody of the Princeton theater scene in "Shakespeare's Ramesh and Juhi," the latest original production from Princeton South Asian Theatrics.
Kevin Murphy and Dan Studney's "Reefer Madness," could be described as shocking, scandalous and even reprehensible. And by that, I mean hilarious, entertaining and outrageous.
Arriving at college can often transform students' attitudes toward tobacco. Many freshmen are away from their parents for the first time and are meeting new types of people. College also gives students large blocks of unplanned time on a daily basis and a stressful workload, both of which can lead to smoking.
If the standing-room-only crowd that packed into the Rockefeller College Common Room last Friday night came to glimpse some of the hottest bodies in Princeton, it certainly found them.
The first time can be scary. Especially when there are caffeine pills involved. This week, Street interviewed three students about their first time pulling an all-nighter.
"On the Styx," the senior thesis exhibition by Julie Dickerson' 10 and Kaitlyn Hay '10, explores a different kind of boundary: that bewtween natural creation and man-made destruction.
These are all-nighter notes, a special breed that may actually decrease your understanding of the material if you glance over them before an exam. A brief guide.
Tina Fey, and Steve Carell, two of the comedy world's brightest stars, appear in the supremely underwhelming "Date Night."
Your guide to what's happening this week at Princeton.
On his debut album, Slash is joined by a variety of vocalists, from rising pop stars to classic rock dinosaurs.
I have my own "all-nighter club," and we meet pretty much every week.
It was July 3, 1776. The Declaration of Independence was due the next day and they hadn't written a word.
It takes a real leap of theatrical imagination to envision “The Women,” Clare Boothe Luce’s 1936 satire about the lives of women in Manhattan high society, the way co-directors Briyana Davis ’13 and Julia Blount ’12 have in their production.