Monday, April 27, 2009

Sunday, April 26, 2009

21 Questions with... Shirley Tilghman


PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PREZ

Name: Shirley Tilghman
Occupation on Campus: President
Major: Molecular Biology
Hometown: Princeton

Who's your favorite Princetonian, living or dead, real or fictional?
My daughter Becca '03

What is your greatest guilty pleasure?
Ice cream.

What's the best meal you've eaten in Princeton?
Any meal cooked by Sally Lewis Lamonica, the chef at Lowrie House

In one sentence, what do you actually do all day?
I work to ensure that in the future, including tomorrow, Princeton University is fulfilling to the greatest extent possible its potential to transform the lives of its students, and discover new knowledge.

Best place on campus?
Icahn Lab

Worst place on campus?
My daughter's former dorm room in Wilson College

What are your favorite ways to relax?
Ski

What's the last student performance you saw?
Orpheus Waking - Friday night

What's hanging above your desk and/or bed?
Icahn Lab water color by Rafael Vinoly, the architect of Icahn Lab

Where do you do your best thinking?
Walking

Do you know all the words to Old Nassau?
Yes

If you could change something about Princeton, what would it be?
I would move the entire campus, lock, stock and barrel, to the site of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. This would combine the most beautiful campus architecture (Princeton) with the most stunning natural setting (UBC).

What's your drink?
Diet Coke

What's your top vacation destination?
Colorado

How often do you cook?
Christmas and Thanksgiving

When's bedtime?
11:30 pm

New Butler or Old Butler?
New Butler!

Who is your mortal enemy?
Complacency

When's the last time you used cash?
Today

In 10 years, I will be…
doing something else

What makes someone a Princetonian?
Life long intellectual curiosity, and a commitment to use one's education to make the world a better place


CEA

(image source: princeton.edu)

Meet a pre-frosh: That annoying kid in precept next year!


As the tide of overeager pre-frosh recedes, we've come across this story of a Princeton-bound Michigan girl who aced the ACT, the SAT and the PSAT.

To make things worse, Willa Chen, the trifecta tool, is quoted as saying, "I wouldn't say I studied a lot."

Well, someone's going to make a lot of friends next year.

WAS

(image source: moneywatch.bnet.com)

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Princeton vs. the Spanish Flu of 1918


As the swine flu that emerged in Mexico began to make headlines, the quaint hamlet that is Princeton had its own worries: Whooping cough! ...But now swine flu too, after students from Queens began exhibiting symptoms this week.

All this talk of quarantines and masks and avoiding small children naturally got us thinking about the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic that infected a third of the world's population .

Princeton was lucky in that no students died, though the halls of McCosh were packed. We'd say the administration handled it pretty well --shutting off the campus and isolating its students from the flu.

We found an article in a recent Princeton Alumni Weekly, "Why Princeton was spared," about ...why Princeton was spared. Also in the article is a look back at what Princeton was like during World War I. (Hint: West Point!)

The best quotes after the jump.

More...

"Each of the 200 men who arrived at the paymaster’s school Oct. 1 from the naval training camp at Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx, where an outbreak had been noted, was ordered to strip. Their outer clothing was placed in a disinfecting room overnight, to be sterilized by exposure to barium dioxide-formaldehyde. The men then had a solution of chlorazene and menthol sprayed into their noses and throats before being given hot baths. Anyone who showed the slightest symptom of infection was dispatched to isolation."

"In an order dated Oct. 28, Goodrich prohibited all naval men from going anywhere in town east of Bayard Lane or north of Nassau Street without special permission...(It appears, however, that the ban on going into town was often evaded. In one story, a green freshman from the SATC program assigned to patrol Nassau Street discovered two upperclassmen who had sneaked off to Renwick’s ice cream parlor. When he confronted them and demanded their names, they gave him the names of a proctor and the dean of students, which he promptly reported to the corporal of the guard.)"

AW


Friday, April 24, 2009

Coincidence? I think not


No, Mr. Newman, it is no coincidence: Drunk kids do stupid things. And on this fine Newman's Day, let us sober ones enjoy the hijinks. Stories after the jump.
More...
4:00 PM, Frist third floor men's bathroom
An obviously drunk upperclassman stumbles into the bathroom wearing a backpack from which clinking can be heard. He stands at the urinal and, after a minute, a loud breaking sound pierces the silence.
Looking down, one finds a shattered beer bottle and its contents on the floor.
After around ten seconds of more silence, the drunk student grumbles: "Fuuuuuuuuuuuuck."

WAS

(image source: pro.corbis.com)

Alienating the sickly since 1746

In light of the recent whooping cough outbreak on campus and the fact that we have a bunch of lanyard-sporting seventeen year-olds stumbling around, University Health Services sent out an email to the University community today urging "anyone with a cough or other symptoms of illness avoid circulating in public."

Pertussis could be a threat to next year's yield, and no one wants that.

So, to anyone with a sniffle or a bit of a cough, don't you dare show your face around Frist. Or play tonsil hockey with any prefrosh for that matter.

WAS

(image source: peoplespharmacy.com)

Thursday, April 23, 2009

IN "PRINT": Black Princetonians Discuss Campus Race Relations

Here are two Newsweek video clips that are companion pieces to this week's article on "post-racialism" at Princeton. The round table discussion features Princeton students talking about race relations on campus and what it means to be a black Princeton alumnus in the real world.



Another clip after the jump:
More...


BKN

I just railed a line of Adderall to write this post

A report by Margaret Talbot in this week's New Yorker described the recent rise of "neuroenhancing" drugs in modern American culture and, of course, in the Ivy League.

Interviewing an anonymous Harvard student called "Alex," Talbot reports that more and more students at competitive colleges are turning to such drugs. Some students against this off label use go so far as to say that working and taking tests on Adderall and Ritalin amounts to cheating.

Wow, whiners. Take a chill pill. Or some Focalin.

In all seriousness though, what does the increasing use of such drugs spell for competition on college campuses? And to all the dealers out there: get your prescription pads ready, this may be lucrative.

WAS

(image source: newyorker.com)

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

IN PRINT: Obama's new media director speaks at Princeton




Joe Rospars, who managed the new media aspect of then-Senator Obama's presidential campaign, spoke at Princeton last Thursday about the Democratic Party's head start in Internet campaigning.

He emphasized the role of participation and giving Obama supporters the tools and assistance they needed to become community organizers and take part in traditional campaign activities like phone banking and canvassing.

Rospars, who looks like he knows his way around Facebook and Twitter, said that the new media campaign's success came from giving people a way to participate.

”The technology we used was actually pretty simple — not a lot of significant, super complicated innovation happening,” Mr. Rospars said. “It was really about applying simple tools to lower the barrier to entry into the traditional campaign operation.”

For the full story, visit centraljersey.com.

AW

Borough Police arrest two of three campus creepers

Muhammad Kader, 38, was arrested in connection with a sexual assault incident that occurred last Friday night at Richardson Auditorium. According to Public Safety's Crime Log, Kader, who was working as a waiter on campus, assaulted a female member of Princeton's staff and "tried to kiss her and then touched her."

The assault was reported at 9:56 pm, during a dress rehearsal for Princeton Glee Club's performance on Saturday. The Crime Log also stated that "the victim was able to positively identify the suspect," who was taken into custody and sent to Borough Police Headquarters. Kader was released on $2,500 bail.

A suspect was also arrested in connection with early Sunday morning's incident that took place on Alexander Beach. In that incident, according to a Public Safety alert sent out Sunday morning, the suspect reached under a female student's clothes to touch her. The report said that he "approached the female student and attempted to speak with her, then grabbed her, preventing her from leaving after she attempted to walk away from him." Another female student intervened and tried to pull the victim away.

But what about the Campus Masturbator?!?


AW

Monday, April 20, 2009

IN PRINT: Ban Ki-Moon Looks to Woodrow Wilson for a "New Multilateralism"

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon discussed the urgent need for a new multilateralism during his address on Friday morning to an audience of nearly 1,000 people in McCarter Theatre.

”We need a new vision, a new paradigm and a new multilateralism,” Mr. Ban said. He defined this multilateralism as one that delivers “a set of global goods,” recognizes intercollaboration and has necessary authority and resources.

Mr. Ban traced this idea of multilateralism to former President Woodrow Wilson’s mission to create a League of Nations after World War I.

”He called for the nations to come together to ‘make it safe for every peace-loving nation,’ “ Mr. Ban said, quoting President Wilson. “Justice can be maintained to promote social programs and better standards of life with larger freedoms,” Mr. Ban added.

Read entire article at the Princeton Packet here.

SJP

[photo credit: http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S23/99/93I68/index.xml?section=featured]

Sunday, April 19, 2009

IN PRINT: Black in the Age of Obama

Michelle Obama '85 didn't like her time at Princeton. In her senior thesis, she wrote how she always felt she was "black first and a student second" because of "a white cultural and social structure that will only allow me to remain on the periphery of society … never becoming a full participant."

Almost 25 years later, do Obama's observations still reflect what it's like being an African American student at Princeton? Newsweek interviewed two multigenerational black families that attended Princeton, and their experiences show what "postracialism" actually means in today's world.

Click here for the full Newsweek story and for video of Princeton students discussing race relations on campus today.


BKN

Take Ivy: A Trip Down Nostalgia Lane

A Japanese photographer traveled to Ivy League schools in the late 1960s to document the American Trad/Ivy League Preppy style of the era. Copies of the book are very hard to come by (a copy was just sold on eBay for $1500), and photos from the book have been circulating the blogosphere like crazy in recent months.

Here are the photographs of Princeton in the book. Take a gander! And pine away for a bygone era. (Except for the whole anti-black/anti-women part...)


More...





BKN

(image sources: http://thetrad.blogspot.com/2008/12/take-ivy-chapter-i.html & http://thetrad.blogspot.com/2008/12/take-ivy-chapter-ii.html & http://acontinuouslean.com/2008/05/19/take-ivy/)

Dear Campus Masturbator: Please Stop.

The Princeton community has received two Campus Safety Alerts from Public Safety since yesterday morning about reports of lewdness and sexual contact. The first report is, well, hilarious. But the second incident, not so much.

The first incident:
In separate incidents at approximately 2 and 2:39 a.m. on Saturday, April 18, 2009, two Princeton University female students reported a male was masturbating and exposed his genital area to them while they were walking alone across campus. The first incident took place as the victim was walking on McCosh Walk toward the University Store and the suspect was on the steps between Buyers and Witherspoon halls. The victim said she also saw the suspect earlier in the evening near 1879 Hall and the School of Architecture, where he was masturbating as he walked behind her. The second victim reported that she saw the suspect near the first entry of 1879 Hall, where he exposed himself. The victim said the suspect ran toward Washington Road toward Nassau Street. The suspect did not come into direct contact with either victim.
The second incident:
A female Princeton University student reported that she was grabbed by a male suspect who reached under her clothes to touch her. The suspect had first approached the female student and attempted to speak with her, then grabbed her, preventing her from leaving after she attempted to walk away from him. The suspect released the victim and walked towards West College after another student witnessed the incident and intervened by attempting to pull the female student away.
Scary!

It's unclear whether the two incidents are related, but both emails describe the suspect as a Hispanic male in his mid to late 20s. In the meantime, carry pepper spray! And I'm sure Public Safety will use this incident to argue why they need guns. "But how else can we stop public masturbation??! We must shoot them!!"

BKN

21 Questions with... Cat Tully '10

PROFESSIONAL VIOLINIST IS HISTORY MAJOR, TAKES PRIVATE LESSONS WITH ITZHAK PERLMAN(!)

Name:
Caitlin (Cat) Tully
Age: 21
Major: History
Hometown: Vancouver/Austin/New York
Eating club/residential college/affiliation: Whitman/ Potentially 2D…
Activities on campus: Firestone. Good conversation. Spontaneous hijinks when opportunity arises.

Who's your favorite Princetonian, living or dead, real or fictional?
Tony Grafton, for starting the HUM sequence.

What's the best meal you've eaten in Princeton?
On campus, probably challah French toast with fresh whipped cream a friend and I made for a bunch of people last year.

In one sentence, what do you actually do all day?
Try to deserve to be here.

What is your greatest guilty pleasure?
Depends on the context and when you ask.

What's the last student performance you saw?
King Lear, Laura Fletcher’s production. And Angels in America.

Do you know all the words to Old Nassau?
If I say no is that going to come back to haunt me? I know the actions…

More...

What do you hate most about Princeton?
Depends on the context and when you ask.

What's your drink?
Coffee. Whiskey on the rocks. Coffee.

How often do you cook?
Less than I’d like, i.e almost never.

What's your favorite medication?
Coffee. And late night runs.

What's hanging above your desk and/or bed?
Flower string lights.

Where do you do your best thinking?
Trustees Room, early in the morning, or when it’s raining. And while running.

When's bedtime?
Not regular.

New Butler or Old Butler?
Old Butler.

What do you think of Dean Malkiel?
I’ve never met Dean Malkiel, so I think I’ll pass.

Where is the worst place on campus?
Wherever you are when life sucks. Geography never seems to help too much then. Or Firestone, with a walk back to Whitman in December at closing.

Who is your mortal enemy?
For me to know and them to find out.

When's the last time you used cash?
Today.

In 25 years, I will be...
Hopefully alive, interesting, interested, without too many regrets, and having done some things I don’t foresee now.

Where do you go to study alone?
Why would I give that up?

What makes someone a Princetonian?
Last I heard, a sticker on a piece of paper. I think what qualities that represents probably changes over time….and I’m too young to know yet what our generation will turn into.

(image source: http://www.imgartists.com/?page=artist&id=214&c=2)



IN PRINT: People Still Listen to Records! And Their Stores Now Have Their Own Day!


While enjoying the fine Springtime weather of the past weekend, you may have noticed the throng of people gathered outside the Princeton Record Exchange (Prex, as the cool kids say) at around 10 in the morning. Turns out these intrepid earlyish risers (for college) were waiting to get their hands on some limited edition vinyl, in celebration of the second annual Record Store Day. Said one enthustiastic record store owner when we called him up on Saturday: "It's a national frickin' holiday!" Not yet, good sir, but dare to dream.

Full article here
image source: nytimes.com

SKG

IN PRINT: President of Israeli Supreme Court Speaks at Woody Woo

Dorit Beinisch, the equivalent of the Chief Justice on the Israeli Supreme Court, talked about balancing security and human rights in the age of terror. And while the topic was no doubt fascinating, we found ourselves more distracted by some of the differences between the American Supreme Court and the Israeli model. For example:

- The US court hears 60-80 cases in a given year. The Israeli Supreme Court hears 5000 (!)
- US justices serve for life, while Israel has a max age (we kind of like this idea, having spent time with people in the 70 and over demographic. Good for half-moon cookies, bad for precedent augmenting legal decisions)

Full article here

SKG

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Yale? I hear that place sucks.


Yale recently launched an entire website to street safety in response to a string of traffic accidents and a year after a pedestrian Yale student was killed by a car.

Apparently New Haven drivers are so barbaric that walking Yalies, when not dodging knives wielded by crackheads, are keeping a wary eye out for their lives.

Sure, nothing ever happens in Princeton, but I'm glad to know my body won't be meeting a fast-moving vehicle between classes.

WAS

(image source: yaledailynews.com)

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Go Away Prefrosh

You know it's that time of year when the University erects a ridiculous circus tent on Alexander Beach, ruining pretty springtime vistas and impeding your drunken walk home from the Street. That's right: hundreds of earnest and overeager 18 year-olds are about swarm all over campus and there's nothing you can do about it.

The only thing a student can do to minimize contact with prefrosh is to not host them. It looks like many have decided to do just that, hence a somewhat urgent email today to Matheyites from Matt Frawley, Mathey's DSL:
This Thursday over 700 pre-frosh will be arriving on campus, and though a good number of you have graciously signed up to be a host for one or more of those pre-frosh, we need MORE hosts. We are especially in need of male students to host.
...
So will this be an inconvenience? A bit.

Are you really too busy to host? Well, who isn’t!!

Nevertheless, students are giving back by hosting. Please take a moment to give serious consideration to this opportunity and help save a pre-frosh from going somewhere other than Princeton.

Thanks,
Matt
Ah, yes, appealing to our sense of civic duties as Princetonians. Sorry. Won't work.

BKN

Deep thoughts from Melissa Harris-Lacewell

Politico's Arena, charting daily debates among policy-makers and scholars about recent moves in Washington, today tracks reactions to Obama's shift in Cuba policy.

While contributors like John Kerry and Princeton professor Julian Zelizer add some fresh perspective to the discussion, Melissa Harris-Lacewell, professor of politics and African-American studies at Princeton (and prominent Twitter-er), weighs in on the debate with some, uh, "insight":
I just returned from a week traveling and working in South Africa. After 7 days of Russian vodka and Cuban cigars it is clear to me that ideological battles should not restrict the free consumption of the best our cold war opponents export. Open Cuba!
Profound, embarrassing, it's all the same thing.

WAS

(image source: pbs.org)

Sunday, April 12, 2009

National Media Only Covers Embarrassing Things About Princeton

The New York Times profiles Smashcraft Heroes, Princeton's videogaming club. Its members? "Mostly Asian, mostly male" engineers. Classic. (Our latest 21 Questions is on Mona Zhang '12, the president of the club.)

The reporter describes a recent match of Starcraft against Tsinghua University in Beijing. Of course, being Princetonians, one participant felt the need to relate the game to international relations and geopolitics:
Ke Wan, a graduate student from China who is studying operations research, detailed each world’s character traits: Zergs are prolific and fast, Terrans are sophisticated strategists, and individual Protoss units are extremely powerful. Wan drew a geopolitical analogy. “Zerg is like China,” he said. “It depends a lot on its large population. The U.S. is Protoss because it emphasizes the value of the individual. And Terran is Russia or the former Soviet Union, a huge high-tech war machine.” He plays as Terran.
Read the article, reflect upon on what Princeton has become, and shed an emo tear or two for Old Nassau.

BKN
(image source: nytimes.com)

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Princeton's First Co-eds

The weather is finally turning around (well, except today), so we thought we'd share some pictures of Princeton's first co-eds (via Covenger + Kester) on what seems to be warm spring day.
More...



BKN

Friday, April 10, 2009

Twitter, or, the New Frontier of Narcissism

The Prince reported this week that "tweeting" has increased in popularity recently, and has attracted the attention of a few big names on Princeton's campus, namely Melissa Harris-Lacewell and Cornel West. Not mentioned was Peter Singer, who also updates his Twitter quite frequently.

It's to be expected that these update-streams from noted scholars at a prestigious institution should be self-referential, yes, and perhaps even a bit introverted. But these three take it to a new level.

More...
Indeed, Ms. Lacewell, Mr. West, and Mr. Singer seem to "tweet" only about... themselves. Of course, that's what Twitter's all about, right? The homepage asks all the same question: "What are you doing?"

But while celebrities like Shaq, Diddy, and Seth Rogen often give "shout outs" to their fans and regularly respond to others' posts, this Princeton trifecta manages to keep their tweeting furiously egocentric.

On March 29th, former NPR host Farai Chideya posted about a lecture Lacewell was to give at Harvard. Lacewell responded with, "Thanks for the support. Wish u were here. Wish I could still hear your voice daily. We need a show."

Alright, one instance of turning an offhand comment into a self-referential boast. But that's just the tip of the iceberg.

Lacewell's April Fools "joke" was to post, "After Harvard lecture last night I was offered 7 pm slot on MSNBC beginning next week!" After receiving a couple responses congratulating her, she admitted it was a prank but "thanks for thinking it 'should' be true!"

Don't worry; it's okay to cringe.

Cornel West isn't shy about self-aggrandizing either. Since West's first post on February 27th, nine out of the scholar's ten posts have been quotes... of his own.

Peter Singer, on the other hand, focuses mainly on his new book, The Life You Can Save which addresses the ethics of the poverty issue. But he also focuses on how often he goes on shows to talk about it. And who reviews it for the Wall Street Journal. Oh, and book signings and readings. Also, the fact that "Shapoor Mohamadi, from the UK, is going to present the book to his Member of Parliament. Nice idea." Oh, and that due to the "generosity of Erroll Treslan, a Canadian citizen, every Canadian MP is going to receive a copy of The Life You Can Save."

Singer is altruistic. And everyone should frickin' know it, damn it.

It's all a bit dizzying, perhaps even nauseating, but at least they're not sticking their head in the public sector.

And while on the subject of warped vanity, Mr. Singer has an adorable set of photographs of himself (cuddling with animals, no less), on his website. If it weren't so cute, the whole thing would be painful.

WAS

(image source: twitter.com)

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

21 Questions with... Mona Zhang '12

Update 4/12: Zhang and Smashcraft Heroes have also been profiled by the NYTimes.
TRAILBLAZING FEMALE PRESIDENT OF SMASHCRAFT HEROES GAMING CLUB PWNS N00BS (W00T W00T!)

Name:
Mona Zhang
Age: 19
Major: undecided
Hometown: Gaithersburg, Maryland
Eating club/residential college/affiliation: Forbes College

Who's your favorite Princetonian, living or dead, real or fictional?
Princeton from Avenue Q, but I don't suppose he's actually a Princetonian

What's the best meal you've eaten in Princeton?
Dumplings made from scratch and random ramen at three in the morning

In one sentence, what do you actually do all day?
I answer emails

What is your greatest guilty pleasure?
Gossip Girl and chasing squirrels

What's the last student performance you saw?
Various snippets of performances at the CSA banquet from Triple 8, the Juggling Club, and more

Do you know all the words to Old Nassau?
Three cheers for Old Nassau, la la la la lassau

What do you hate most about Princeton?
The sewage and maybe the cobblestone when I'm wearing girl-shoes

What's your drink?
Coke
More...

How often do you cook?
Random holidays here and there

What's your favorite medication?
Caffeine

What's hanging above your desk and/or bed?
An outdated Harry Potter calendar that I haven't bothered to replace--that and a quill

Where do you do your best thinking?
On the floor

When's bedtime?
3am, but 7am when OSL finals are on

New Butler or Old Butler?
FORBES.

What do you think of Dean Malkiel?
Who?

Where is the worst place on campus?
I think parking lots are really ugly. The one behind New South isn't very pleasant.

Who is your mortal enemy?
Sida Huang '12

When's the last time you used cash?
Today at Witherspoon for a large cafe mocha with whipped cream :)

In 25 years, I will be…
unemployed or a pro-gamer

Where do you go to study alone?
I bring all my books to the hammock on the Forbes terrace, but then I just fall asleep.

What makes someone a Princetonian?
The requisite genius and laziness behind every Princetonian's intellectual facade

(image source: dailyprincetonian.com)

Minor Detail?

The Prince ran a story yesterday about a new novel written by Jean Hanff Korelitz, a former reader for the Princeton admissions office. The story is about a fictional Princeton admissions officer and some sort of secret she harbors.

The reporter interviewed Korelitz to ask about her connections to Princeton and to discuss her book, and he even interviewed a student who used to babysit for her kids once upon a time. But over the course of nearly 600 words, the article doesn't mention the very minor detail that Korelitz's husband is Paul Muldoon. Nope, not important or noteworthy at all.

BKN
(image source: dailyprincetonian.com)

Forbes Magazine discovers something called "prep schools"

Forbes.com posted a story yesterday about an earth shattering discovery: there are these crazy things called "prep schools"!

Perhaps we're being assholes, but isn't the existence of prep schools, like, pretty much common knowledge? We half expect Forbes to write about something called the "Ivy League" and "parochial schools" next week.

In addition to a slideshow of some prep schools, the piece offers wonderful insights such as, "The Ivy League is still the Ivy League." The rest of the article can basically be summed up as such: Prep schools are private! They can be famous! They have pretty campuses! Rich people go there! But so do poor people! They have famous alumni! They send their kids to the Ivy League! But so do public schools!

The most obnoxious part of the article is at the end:
But at the end of the day, writing Harvard or Princeton on your résumé really does mean something. So does what prep school you attended.
Okay, we can only hope writing "Princeton" on our résumé "really does mean something." Because with grade deflation and the Great Depression 2.0, we're just sure our prep school education will come in real handy.

BKN
(image source: forbes.com)

Monday, April 6, 2009

SPOTTED: George Costanza

[Insert Seinfeld Joke Here]

Yes, that's right -- everyone's favorite nineties neurotic paid a visit to Old Nassau today. Or at least Jason Alexander, the actor who played him, did.

Alexander, also the star of the orangutan caper "Dunston Checks In", was on campus with his teenage son and started off the day with an Orange Key tour. Turns out the actor did his research before coming: he asked his group's tour guide about Princeton's much-debated grade deflation policy (no word about his take on the matter). According to the guide, Alexander stuck to the front of the pack and stayed attentive throughout the tour despite the day's heavy downpour of rain.

Word has it that Alexander later stopped by Theatre Intime, where he obligingly posed for pictures with a few lucky students.

DCW

People who make us feel inadequate: Lauren Bush '06 ends world hunger, starts own fashion line

Lauren Bush '06, Dubya's niece and model, has done a lot since graduating with an anthropology major three years ago. Last summer, she launched the FEED 100 Campaign, which sells stylish burlap bags to put food in the mouths of hungry Rwandan children. For instance, if you purchase a $30 bag, you will provide 100 school meals! And you if buy a $60 bag, you will feed one child for an entire school year! Average cost to feed one Princeton upperclassman for an entire school year? $6,960.

But Lauren must do more good! You know, "In the Nation's Service" blah blah. She has just launched her own fashion line, called Lauren Pierce, which made its debut at Barney's last week. Her line uses eco-friendly materials, and each collection will support a charitable organization. It's like she's her uncle, George W., except the opposite. And did we mention she's hot? And dating Ralph Lauren's son?

Pictures of her Spring '09 collection after the jump: More...
(via vanityfair.com & images from nymag.com, feedprojects.org)

BKN

Sunday, April 5, 2009

IN PRINT: Tom Kean is Mad at Congress; Terrorism Inspires Morbid, Stoic Humor

Tom Kean, former Governor of New Jersey and the co-chair of the 9/11 Commission, delivered the keynote speech at the somewhat terrifyingly named conference, "Emergency Preparedness in the Region: What Have We Done & What is Still Needed?" This reporter was hoping the answers were Everything and Nothing, respectively. Sadly, they were not. Highlights from his speech and the conference after the jump...
More...
Just in case you forgot about terrorism/ Al Qaeda:
"They've stated plainly and continue to state they want to kill Americans, and they want to kill as many of us as they can wherever they can. They want to produce mass casualties."

He's ANGRY at Congress:
“Congress was very anxious and willing to reform the executive branch. They were not so willing to reform themselves,” said Kean. “The 9/11 commission recommendations have made no headway, or very little headway, in congressional reform.”
Why is Congress a problem? Well, it turns out the Department of Homeland Security still has to report to 86 congressional committees, down from 88 since the 9/11 Commission Report was release. Michael Chertoff told Kean that he spent one third of his time preparing to testify in front of Congress.

Other highlights from the rest of the conference:
The audience laughing when the head of the New Jersey office of Homeland Security passed off a question to someone from the Port Authority, saying, "I’m a believer that if we have another event in this area its going to be on Port Authority property,” to which he responded, "hopefully not before I retire!" Hillarious! Clearly, this was a conference full of people who spend their time contemplating terrorist attacks on American soil; they'll get their laughs when they can.

Full Story here.

SKG

Update: And here!

AW

NY Times profiles Orszag '91

The New York Times recently profiled Pres. Obama's budget director, Peter Orszag '91, who has been tasked with the unenviable job of overseeing the federal budget. We learn that he is a "supernerd" with grand ambitions:
Everything about the way he has interpreted his new job speaks of ambition: the policy heavyweights he has hired for the Office of Management and Budget, his efforts to persuade cabinet secretaries to let him help shape their plans, a public profile as high as that of any budget director since David A. Stockman’s polarizing tenure under Ronald Reagan a quarter-century ago.
He is also a sex symbol?
More...
“He’s made nerdy sexy,” said Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff.
And then, of course, he's also a Princetonian:
In classic political fashion, Mr. Orszag trained for Washington rivalry through family rivalry, not just with his father but also with his economist brothers. Peter, Michael and Jonathan Orszag have worked and written papers together and still compare electronic gadgets and their Princeton grade-point averages. [emphasis added]
Is this what Princeton alumni do when they become important? Oh dear God... Save us from ourselves! And who are the magical parents who birthed three Princeton economists? Michael was Class of '89, Peter was Class of '91, and Jonathan was Class of '96, and all three were econ majors.

Do they compare their theses as well? If so, Peter is the loser with only 80 pages, while Michael wrote 187 pages and Jonathan wrote 104 pages. Even worse? Peter's thesis title: "Congressional Oversight of the Federal Reserve: Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives." It sounds so exciting it sends a shiver up my leg!

BKN

(source: nytimes.com & http://libweb5.princeton.edu/theses/index.htm)

Princeton in The New Yorker

Update 4/6: This cartoon, coincidentally, is particularly fitting because Class of 2010 President Aditya Panda '10 just sent an electronic missive saying that all rising seniors will be offered free membership to the Princeton Club in NYC for an entire year starting this summer. Score! (We'll just ignore the unfortunate fact that the Princeton Club is ugly and embarrassing compared to the Harvard and Yale Clubs.)
By Henry Martin '48
Published in The New Yorker (December 12, 1988
)

BKN

(image source: http://tigernet.princeton.edu/~ptoniana/)