Princeton Magazine
 
 
February 2011

Feature

The World to Talk About. It comes as no surprise that the 87-year old “retired” physicist Freeman Dyson is absolutely delighted about recent Wikileaks of U.S. State Department information.

History

Sylvia & Company. The first English-language bookshop and lending library in Paris, it opened in November of 1919, welcoming in American and European writers and artists and introducing the world to James Joyce by publishing Ulysses.

Profile

Judy and Oye Olukotun. From the moment we began until the end of the two-hour conversation, Judy and Oye Olukotun seemed bemused by the idea that they were being interviewed at all.

Profile

Regan Hofmann. Only a few years before, the idea of standing up in front of an audience of people she knew to tell her story would have been unthinkable to her. But Hofmann has come a long way.

Culture

Life, Liberty & The Pursuit of Jewish Identity. From each exhibition floor of Philadelphia’s National Museum of American Jewish History, there is a clear view of the site where American freedom was born.

Food

Bell’s Tavern. In 1938, during the second wave of the Great Depression, Jack Bell took a chance on opening an eatery in Lambertville.

The Last Word

Zoe Hart. Former Pennington resident, now international mountain guide, writer, and occasional cake baker.

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