Author Archives: princetonsjp

Rihanna challenges white feminism in controversial new video

By Misbah Awan
Queens, N.Y.

I am not an avid viewer of celebrity videos, partially because they don’t interest me but mostly because I know if I were to invest in watching them, I would feel as if my brain cells were slowly dying because of how these stars are represented.

Rihanna is different. She co-directed her most recently released video, “Bitch Better Have My Money.” While some white, female critics demonstrated discomfort with Rihanna’s video, I was not shocked by what I saw. I was amused. Continue reading

McKellen makes ‘Holmes’ worth watching

By Katherine Powell
Chicago, Ill.

In Bill Condon’s Mr. Holmes, Ian McKellen plays Sherlock Holmes, the famous fictitious detective. Holmes has retired to the countryside, to tend to bees and try to remember his last case, which led him to retire from his detective work. Holmes knows that the popular novel written by Watson has incorrectly made him the hero, but he has lost the threads of his memory. He lives in his home with a housekeeper, the widowed Mrs. Munro (Laura Linney) and her son Roger. Holmes is his typical gruff self, untangling the facts and investigating his own memory, while he grapples with his failing mind and feelings of loneliness.

One theme of the film is how much people need other people. Holmes spends his time trying to reconstruct the facts of his final investigation. He discovers that his fundamental mistake was not offering comfort to the woman, just cold facts. He realizes that logic is not the only thing that matters, and he becomes close to his housekeeper and her son, establishing a very sweet connection with the two. Continue reading

McKellen can’t save disappointing ‘Holmes’

By Jasmin Lee
Oakland Gardens, N.Y.

When you hear the name Sherlock Holmes, an image of a lanky man wearing a deerstalker and smoking a pipe in the shadows of a dark alleyway comes to mind. Mr. Holmes, directed by Bill Condon and based on Mitch Cullin’s novel, “A Slight Trick of the Mind,” offers a very different Holmes.

The film features an elderly Holmes (Ian McKellen) residing in a Sussex village with a widowed housekeeper Mrs. Munro (Laura Linney) and her 14-year-old son Roger (Milo Parker). Set in 1947, the film centers on a tormented Holmes, who is haunted by fading memories of a 30-year-old case that caused him to go into retirement. Continue reading

In prison, profs find their most eager students

By Juliana Kim
Queens, N.Y.

When Gillian Knapp first walked into the Garden State Youth Correctional Facility, she remembers the doors clanging shut behind her and the smell that lingered in the hallways. It was an odor familiar only to those who’ve ever been to a prison. As she walked through security, she didn’t know what to expect.

But Knapp wasn’t heading for a cell. Instead, she was going to a classroom.

Knapp, a retired astrophysics professor, now leads the Prison Teaching Initiative (PTI). After more than 25 years teaching at Princeton University, she decided she needed a change. With four other astrophysicists, she decided to take on the prison education crisis in the United States. Continue reading

Princeton astrophysicist defies stereotypes

By Doris Rodriguez
Miami, Fla.

If there’s one thing Jenny Greene knew when she entered college it was that she did not want to be a scientist.

When Greene started at Yale she immersed herself in the humanities, but come March she was utterly bored. After taking an astronomy course, she was hooked. She realized that the philosophical questions of the world just weren’t for her. Nineteen years later, she is an assistant professor of astrophysics at Princeton University. Here, she studies “supermassive black holes and the universe they live in.” Continue reading

Mayor Lempert draws on roots as community organizer

By Kaleb Anderson
Atlanta, Ga.

The small town of Princeton prides itself on continuing education and maintaining a safe community. Liz Lempert, mayor of Princeton, oversees a $6 million municipal budget and is committing herself to work toward a better and more diverse community.

Lempert grew up in San Mateo, Calif. Her parents are natives of New York state. She attended Stanford University and became a journalist in the Stanford, Calif. area. Lempert married, had two children, and moved to Princeton when her husband became a psychology professor at the university in 1999. Continue reading

Despite lead in polls, Trump garners skepticism on N.Y. streets

By ShiWanda Sheard-Perry
West Helena, Ark.

NEW YORK — Donald Trump is a shocking subject. In interviews with the Princeton Summer Journal, people on the street in New York responded with everything from gasps to looks and sounds of disgust and disapproval.  These everyday New Yorkers were all from different places and backgrounds, but they all had one thing in common — they are not for Donald Trump.

New Yorkers either had a mouthful to say or made no comment at all about the leading Republican candidate. The biggest challenge was finding someone who would actually speak on the subject. But when they did they gave some very interesting responses. Continue reading

On N.Y. streets, Trump’s candidacy wins smiles, skepticism

By Kamila Czachorowski
Norridge, Ill.

NEW YORK — Donald Trump is against political correctness, has said the Mexican government is sending criminals and rapists to the United States, and lacks experience as an elected official. On Aug. 6, the day of the first Republican debate, 13 people on the High Line in New York answered questions about Trump. Given Trump’s reputation, their initial reactions were either a laugh or smile.

There was much discussion about why the businessman is at the top of the polls and whether he can even be considered a legitimate candidate. Four of the 13 people interviewed believed that Trump’s popularity is due to his charisma, candor and connections — qualities reflective of his background in the entertainment industry. Continue reading

Zwicker promises evidence-based policy

By Samuel Lee
Fullerton, Calif.

Princeton University plasma physicist and professor Andrew Zwicker unravels complex political issues with what he knows best: science. As the New Jersey General Assembly election in November quickly approaches, Zwicker said the scientific method will play a role in his campaign to represent the 16th District.

“I will promise to use evidence to make decisions because that’s what I do as a scientist,” the Democratic candidate said. The General Assembly is the lower house of New Jersey’s bicameral legislative body, and elections are held each odd-numbered year. If elected on Nov. 3, Zwicker could enact state laws and propose amendments to the state’s constitution. Continue reading

Physicist launches bid for assembly

By Katherine Powell
Chicago, Ill.

Andrew Zwicker wants to change the way people think about politicians.

“I want to use evidence to make decisions,” he said at a press conference on Aug. 1. “Facts cannot have a political position. The facts are the facts.”

Zwicker, a plasma physicist and bioethics professor at Princeton University, is running as a Democrat for one of two positions as general assemblyman of the 16th district, which includes the town of Princeton.

The theme of Zwicker’s proposed policies is basing decisions on facts and science, instead of party politics and rhetoric. He believes that scientists are valuable in politics because they are familiar with tedious research and used to making fact-based decisions.

Wearing khaki pants, an aqua polo and an easy smile while speaking to the Princeton Summer Journalism Program, Zwicker talked about Gov. Chris Christie, education, and how he intends to bring science to politics.

Zwicker criticized the lack of local leadership from Christie, who is a Republican presidential candidate. Zwicker said Christie’s decisions are grounded in his desire to impress a national audience, and that he has disregarded the needs of New Jersey.

“I have a real problem with this governor,” Zwicker said. “He is running a presidential campaign. It seems that he has abandoned New Jersey.”

He criticized Christie’s decision to pull out of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a coalition of states in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic that aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Zwicker believes participating in the alliance could have brought money into the state. As an assemblyman, Zwicker promises to use statistics and scientific studies to decide the best course of action.

Zwicker also said he was an advocate of marijuana legalization. “There should be no debate about studying medicinal marijuana,” he said. Zwicker also confirmed that he had smoked marijuana, before quickly backtracking that it was something he did when he was young. 

In addition, Zwicker wants to remedy what he calls the inequality of New Jersey’s school systems. He believes good teachers are discouraged by high-stakes standardized testing, where they are evaluated on how their students do.

Zwicker’s introduction to politics began when he was a child growing up in Englewood, N.J. His mother, a retired English teacher, sparked his interest in politics. Her passion for political issues piqued his curiosity.

“The arguments I remember helped me get interested in politics,” Zwicker said.

Later, working in the plasma physics lab at Princeton, Zwicker saw an older scientist and colleague, former U.S. Congressman Rush Holt (D.-N.J.), enter the political arena. He said that Holt was a major inspiration to him. Zwicker realized that there was a role for scientists in government, and he believes that he will help the people of the 16th district by evaluating the facts and making informed decisions from there.