Week In Review: Minor Medical Incident Edition (June 14 - June 20)

If you are one of the poor phantoms haunting this ghost campus right now, craving some marginally-Princeton-related excitement, this might be the fix you need. We've got our mainstays-- Whitman's gubernatorial race, Bradley's World Cup squad -- but this was also a week of broken ankles, bloody noses, and fainting spells. Oh, and heinous refereeing. Tigers sorta set the media aflame this week, for better or for worse.

Something tells us a Fortune cover with a thoroughbred isn't the best candidacy PR move Running for office tends to bring all the unsavory bits to the surface, as Meg Whitman '78 probably knows by now. Her whole family seems to be fair game: gossip rags have had a field day mining all the exploits of Whitman and her sons, Griff Harsh '09 and Will Harsh '11. A few days ago, Gawker conveniently rolled it all into one, hyper-hyperlinked, mud-slinging blog post. They lead things off with Griff allegedly breaking some lady's ankle, and not on the b-ball court:

According to a police report filed later that night, [a 22 year-old woman Valerie] Sanchez and her friends had mocked his fraternity and said "fuck you" and "fuck your fraternity" to him before Sanchez swiped Griff's baseball cap off his head. The altercation escalated when both parties arrived at Blue Chalk Cafe. According to Valerie's statement to the police, they were inside the bar when Griff "pushed" her "with two open hands on her chest and shoulder area." She fell down and felt her right ankle "snap." A nearby security guard witnessed the event and corroborated Valerie's version of the events.

The aftermath? Whitman "posted Griff's $25,000 bail with a cashier's check and brought her son home," and the charges were eventually dropped under vague circumstances.And further stoking the Whitman media flame: maybe-governor Meg apparently roughed up one of her young eBay employees, as the New York Times reported on Monday:

Ms. [Young Mi] Kim later told at least one colleague that Ms. Whitman used an expletive and shoved her. According to one of the eBay employees knowledgeable about Ms. Whitman’s version of the incident, Ms. Whitman said that she had physically guided Ms. Kim out of the conference room.

Unlike Griff's incident, there was no word as to her actual technique -- did she also use the patented Whitman family double-open-hand shove? -- but at least Ms. Kim escaped unscathed. Maybe Whitman was just getting in the right mindset, taking after her potential predecessor? Unanswered questions.There was no roughhousing involved, but General David Petraeus *87 apparently fainted during a congressional hearing on Afghanistan strategy. Senator McCain aimed a question, then "stopped mid-sentence, his face frozen, as Petraeus slumped forward from his seat on to the witness table." The general recovered quickly, chalked it up to dehydration and jet lag, and shrugged it off ... pretty reasonable. (Happens to the best of us. Now that I think of it, happened to that one kid at that one bar mitzvah in 7th grade.)Meanwhile, the media proceeded to grossly overreact and degenerate into some kind of weird speculative frenzy, best summed up by a genius Huffington Post video:

One of our Press Clubbers works with a DC intern who was present at the hearing and said it was a pretty low-key affair: he left, got some water, came back and apologized. Leave it to the media to blow things violently out of proportions!!!And after the jump, graphic images of Congressman Jared Polis '96 bleeding out of his face. Proceed at your own risk:what is this I dont evenI guess I neglected to mention that he'd be smiling. Kinda maniacally. While driving. If you are really confused right now, as you should be, well, I have no consolation except that Gawker is just as confused as we are. Apparently Polis tweeted this bloody mess sans context, adding only that "u should have seen the other guy!" One commenter drew an apt comparison to that one Andrew W.K. album.And finally, on a completely non-medical note, we have some U.S. World Cup woes. Down 0-2 to Slovenia at the half, Bob Bradley '80 coached the team to a glorious comeback to tie it up, and then watched them ostensibly win it as the game wound down. That is, until ref Koman Coulibaly disallowed the goal for reasons as yet unknown, making a lot of people -- some of them on the internet -- very angry. Coulibaly was dropped from the rest of the Cup. Bradley thought it was "a good goal"; here's his take on the game and the botched call:Although this makes things a bit dicier in Group C, The Ink wishes him and our U.S. squad the best this coming week. And as for other Princetonians: keep your hands to yourself, stay hydrated, and when leaking bodily fluids on the road, try not to show the world.(images via mikemoon.us and gawker.com)

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Gen. David Petraeus *85 *87 to become commander of U.S. forces in Afghanistan

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Week in Review: World Cup Edition (June 7 - June 13)