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 Web 
              Exclusives: Inky 
              Dinky Doa PAW web exclusive column by Hugh O'Bleary (paw@princeton.edu)
 
 September 
              12, 2001:Inky, Dinky, Do
 With 
              apologies to Larry King
 By Hugh O'Bleary
 
 On a weekday evening, 
              after a long day at work, the train ride home from New York to Princeton 
              Junction can be a soporific experience. As the train clatters and 
              sways its way through the New Jersey landscape, heads nod, eyes 
              droop and close, an occasional soft-or not so soft-snore is heard. 
              On a recent ride, I found myself slipping into just such a dozy 
              state. I staved off my yawns by reading the most recent copy of 
              PAW, but by Metro Park, I had finished the entire issue, even the 
              President's column, and sleepiness was starting to creep over me, 
              my thoughts lurching into dreams of old Tigers, Ivy football and 
              campus renovations. I shook myself awake and started in on a copy 
              of USA Today that had been left behind by a disembarking passenger. 
              
 It only made matters 
              worse. I was halfway through Larry King's column-marveling that 
              the man was given a national forum and presumably a hefty paycheck 
              for what was basically a list of whatever half-baked thoughts happened 
              to be running through his mind-when things began to blur, like the 
              wavy screen on an old sit-com signifying a dream sequence, and I 
              was in the embrace of Morpheus.
 I was drifting, floating 
              on clouds of gauzy newsprint. Princeton.Larry King.Prince.King. 
              A man in suspenders and oversized glasses, who looked a little like 
              Harold Shapiro, hailed me in a gruff voice, saying, "Here you 
              go, my friend," then handed me a folded paper. He tapped the 
              page with his finger and muttered something that sounded like "my 
              two cents." I looked down and began to read. 
 When you say "history," 
              you say "Nassau Hall."  Don't you just have to 
              think that in the wild a tiger would beat a bulldog every time? 
              And what's a Cantab, anyway? The Annex's meat loaf 
              is good eating, my friend. You look up Environmental 
              Isotope Geochemistry in the dictionary, you get a picture of Tullis 
              C. Onstott. . Why doesn't U.S. News & World Report just retire 
              the trophy? For a high-powered academic, 
              Shirley Tilghman is one handsome lady.  Roman gladiator to Princeton 
              prof: What other actor of his era has the range of Russell Crowe? 
               I ran into the always-classy 
              Peter Singer recently and over a terrific dinner (vegetarian, naturally) 
              he assured me that he never meant to encourage bestiality in any 
              of his writings. Some folks just read what they want to read into 
              anything. Next, look for the controversial Singer to drop a bombshell 
              regarding cannibalism.  How come Harvard doesn't 
              have a H-Rade, or Yale a Y-Rade?  Yours truly will be doing 
              a cameo (as a crusty columnist with a heart of gold-a real stretch) 
              in the upcoming Triangle show. A recent quintuple bypass and a second 
              honeymoon to Tahiti with Shawn and the kids interrupted rehearsals, 
              but I'll have my lines down by opening night.  Sociology professor Paul 
              DiMaggio may have won the 2001 Theory Prize from the American Sociological 
              Society, but did he ever have a 56-game hitting streak?  You know, Brooke Shields 
              can't come back to reunions often enough.  When you think about 
              it, Woodrow Wilson's serving as president of both Princeton and 
              the United States is a heckuva one-two punch. Has anyone else ever 
              pulled that one off?  Scott Fitzgerald has 
              to make anybody's short list of great American novelists. The tragedy 
              was that his life had no second act.  Is there a prettier body 
              of water in North America than Lake Carnegie?  The Ivy League title 
              will come down to a four-way tie between Brown, Penn, Princeton 
              and Harvard. You read it here first, folks.
 You can reach Hugh O'Bleary 
              at "Hugh O'Bleary" <paw@Princeton.edu>paw@princeton.edu 
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