(Photo by E.J. Greenblat)


TUNED IN AND UNPLUGGED: Several of Princeton's popular hubs are going wireless to accommodate the ever-growing laptop population. David Barry, shown here at the Library, is just one of many people who have discovered how to stay in touch while keeping mobile.

No Strings Attached: Downtown Princeton Quietly Becoming an Internet Hotspot

Matthew Hersh

A casual look at any one of downtown's popular gathering spots will tell you that either more and more people are finding more time to spend out of the office, or, more and more people are finding that they can find work effectively out of the office.

Marchand Re-Elected Mayor; Hospital, Debt, Affordable Housing Are Goals

Matthew Hersh

Setting the re-use of the hospital lands, affordable housing, and studying long-term debt as primary goals for 2006, Township Mayor Phyllis Marchand, recapped 2005 and then looked forward as she was elected by Township Committee last Wednesday to a ninth consecutive one-year term at the Township's annual re-organization meeting.

Making Time for Civic Duty: Is Local Government Geared for the Young?

Matthew Hersh

In 2001, Ryan Lillienthal, at 33, just two-and-a-half years into his first elected term on Princeton Borough Council, stepped down from his post, citing the time management constraints he faced after becoming a commuter.

Crossing Nature's Line: Huck Finn in the Heart of Darkness

Stuart Mitchner

Just out on DVD and available at both Premier and Princeton video, Werner Herzog's Grizzly Man is one of those films in which the world becomes a museum or, if you like, a zoo, except that the specimen on display is not a grizzly bear (Ursus horribilis) but a blond, apparently bi-polar male human being in his forties named Timothy Treadwell who had spent 13 summers living unarmed among the bears in Alaska's Katmai National Park until one of the animals he had been filming attacked and devoured him and his girl friend.