Anna Mazarakis
Anna Mazarakis content overview
Close ’64 Football Players Make One Final Trip to Visit Teammate
After Jim Rockenbach ’64 was told he has two months to live, the friends traveled to see him in Florida
Through Poetry, Joshua Bennett *16 Speaks ‘to the Human Soul’
‘I was always trying to express the music in my head with the people I trusted’
Blinded by an IED, Brad Snyder Made History in the Triathlon
Snyder is the first American man to win gold in the triathlon either in the Paralympics or the Olympics
Matthew Spellberg *17 Seeks New Ideas for a Better World
Spellberg plans to expand the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s mission beyond disarmament
International Fellowship Groups Go Remote, Hope to Return Abroad
‘Folks are really ... wanting to get back into the field,’ said M.B. Dillon ’06, the executive director of Princeton in Asia
Regeneration Pioneer Cato Laurencin ’80 Wins Major NAACP Honor
The innovative engineer-physician-scientist has ambitions for the future
Tamar Laddy ’94 Penned a Hallmark Movie for Christmas in July
‘It’s a love letter to my in-laws and their Christmas traditions’
Writer Melissa Balmain ’87 Adds a Twist of Humor to Fairy Tales
‘They got rescued, they lived happily ever after — yawn!’
Women’s Rugby Goes Varsity
In 2022–23, rugby will become Princeton’s 18th women’s varsity sport
Keeping an Eye on Biden Administration’s Higher Ed Policies
Immigration policy is just one national issue that could affect the University’s work and mission
Lives: Karl Meyer *53 *56
He Chronicled An Era’s Biggest Events
Picturing Pandemics
From a Princeton Exhibition: Images of Illness
Museum Unveils Design for New Home, Aims to Reopen in 2024
The building itself is composed of nine interlocking cubes, or pavilions
Cool and Calm, Dr. Lucy McBride ’95 Delivers COVID Information
‘To me, health is not just about seeing your doctor once a year and checking the boxes’
When All is Gone, Harry Weber ’64’s Bronze Statues Will Stand
Weber became one of the few non-athletes in the St. Louis Sports Hall of Fame
Princeton Adjusts to Teaching and Learning Dance, Chemistry, and More Online
Professors described students as “shell-shocked” and “highly stressed,” but also relieved to be together online.
Her Love of Beauty Resonates Still
Princeton Portrait: Elizabeth Milbank Anderson (1850–1921)
To LIFE
The University Art Museum exhibits decades’ worth of images from one of the world’s most influential magazines
Lives: Lynn King ’83
As She Was Dying, She Embraced Living
Nicola D’Ascenzo: His Work of Art Welcomes All
Princeton Portrait