Chew on this: Examining racial identity one literary bite at a time

ptonfeast_20150430_PrincetonFeast_DLA__20_homepage copyThe class of “Food, Literature and the American Racial Diet” taught by Anne Cheng, a professor of English and African American studies, embarked on a comparative racial-ethnic literary journey, delving into works by Asian American, African American, Jewish American and Latino authors, journalists and film directors.  With the help of the new Campus Dining initiative led by Executive Director Smitha Haneef to support students’ academic experience, students shared their own experiences with culture and food by creating dishes presented and tasted at the “Princeton Feast” held April 30.

As he prepares to leave PPPL in 2016, Smith reflects on five decades in physics and at Princeton

Screen Shot 2015-07-29 at 11.27.46 AMAs a young man, A.J. Stewart “Stew” Smith won the Canadian National Lacrosse Championship as a member of a powerful Vancouver, British Columbia, club team. That early success and love of teamwork foreshadowed an illustrious career in which Smith has played leading roles as an educator, particle physicist and administrator coordinating vast, vital research efforts. 

Infants use expectations to shape their brains

Screen Shot 2015-07-22 at 2.20.54 PMInfants can use their expectations about the world to rapidly shape their developing brains. A series of experiments with infants ages 5 to 7 months has shown that portions of babies’ brains responsible for visual processing respond not just to the presence of visual stimuli, but also to the mere expectation of visual stimuli, according to the researchers from Princeton University, the University of Rochester and the University of South Carolina.

Service and mentorship focus of Princeton-in-Washington’s landmark year

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The Princeton-in-Washington Program is celebrating its 50th summer bringing together students studying or interning in Washington D.C., with alumni living in the area. This year’s program runs June 17 to Aug. 1 and will feature a packed schedule of speakers, panel discussions and social events providing Princetonians an inside look at the political, cultural and social life of the nation’s capital.

What’s the impact of Supreme Court upholding Affordable Care Act subsidies?

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld on Thursday, June 25, a key provision of the Affordable Care Act, or ACA, keeping health insurance coverage within reach for millions of Americans.

Thirty-four states in the U.S. are reliant on the federal exchange for ACA enrollment of their residents. Now, with the court’s 6-3 ruling, residents of those states can continue to access subsidies to help them pay for health coverage through the federal exchange.

We discussed the ruling with Heather Howard, director of the State Health Reform Assistance Network and lecturer in public affairs at Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.

Princeton’s Annual Giving campaign raises $61.5 million

Screen Shot 2015-07-07 at 3.47.22 PMPrinceton University’s 2014-15 Annual Giving campaign raised $61,490,178 — the highest total in Annual Giving history — with 60.3 percent of undergraduate alumni participating. The results are notable for their strength and breadth across all of Princeton’s constituencies: undergraduate alumni, graduate alumni, parents and friends.