Week in Review: July 13 - 19
If a tree falls in Princeton during the summer, and no students are there to hear it, yes, still, nothing ever happens in Princeton. In this week's edition: Sotomayor yada yada yada, Jeff Peek won't be attending reunions anytime soon, moving walkways are a moving farce, the Wall Street Journal backs us up on the Kindle thing(!), a lax coach cries, and Stan Katz would love to have you for dinner tonight.
- First things first. Oh, right, that Sotomayor person we've been hearing about: Well she was better at Princeton than we are, and her first couple of nights at the U. she thought that a cricket was in her room (But it was actually outside! How funny is that!). And she's on her way to becoming the second Princeton grad on the Supreme Court. No big deal. But seriously, can we just confirm her and move on? This is taking longer than Michael Jackson's autopsy.
- Meanwhile, theStreet.com updates us on another alum who's not doing as hot as ol' Sonia. Jeff Peek '69 is CEO of CIT, a company providing small and midsized commercial loans. CIT's not doing too hot these days, and on Thursday, federal regulators denied CIT a bail out. The company's stock crashed nearly 75%. The article suggests some fingers are pointing at Peek. And a little digging found that Peek's wife penned an anonymous article in Portfolio recently, in which she complained about how because of the recession she couldn't throw moneybags around, or something. Princeton alums: Win some, lose some.
- This week in "studies that contribute little to our understanding of the world": The Telegraph reports that "Researchers have found that using [moving walkways] at airports, especially at busy times, can actually slow you down because people reduce their walking pace on the human conveyor belts and cause blockages." Travelers everywhere slowly are realizing they have been living a lie. Princeton locomotion researcher Manoj Srinivasan contributed mathematical models to the study to show "that people slow down on walkways to reduce energy consumption." Well, yeah, I'm sure tons of lazy people would ride around in motorized scooters to "reduce energy consumption."
- This week in "I told you so": The Wall Street Journal writes on the latest trend of using "e-books" instead of hard copy texts in higher education. They report that in a "Student PIRG study, 75% of college students said they would prefer print to digital texts." The organization running the study "slammed existing e-textbook efforts such as CourseSmart for “being on the wrong track.” The article states also that students in pilot courses testing the Kindle have been bailing out of using the thing, preferring hard copies to e-books. They don't see the use, it seems. Wait, that sounds familiar... Oh, yes, right, we said that.
In case you didn't hear, we're bad at another sport now that we're losing our head lacrosse coach, Bill Tierney, to University of Denver. But he's going to miss us, or at least that's what we got from this cheesy profile by the AP. Best moment: "Packing up the plaques was easy. The letters were harder. He read through each one, a box of tissues close by." Well I'd be crying too if I were moving to Denver.
- If at one point this week you happened to be asking yourself, "I wonder what Wilson School professor Stan Katz is doing this weekend," then you're in luck. The man himself posted a riveting narrative of his experiences on The Chronicle of Higher Education's "Brainstorm" blog. He apparently watched Frozen River on Thursday evening ("a superb DVD") and went to see Harry Potter on Friday ("overly plot-driven, hard to follow, overblown, pretentious, and genuinely tedious"). On Saturday he went to see the opera Lucia di Lammermoor. He plans to barbecue tonight. This post was a brainstorm indeed. (Note: Reading the actual post is not recommended. We apologize for including this dull bit, but, as the saying goes, "Nothing ever happens in/around/about/concerning Princeton.")