Procrastination can be productive
Ethan LiBy understanding the psychology that underpins procrastination, we can transmute our procrastinatory tendencies into directed diligence
By understanding the psychology that underpins procrastination, we can transmute our procrastinatory tendencies into directed diligence
Most people either watched or heard about the video of Laquan McDonald being murdered in 2014, yet it seems that the majority of Princeton students have not followed up on the case.
If you must choose your wellness or achieving high marks, choose your wellness every time.
You don’t need to wear a ball gown to cram for midterms, but that doesn’t mean it’s time for sweats.
It seems that in discussions of problematic male behavior, there are many men on campus who assume that — because they’ve taken Gender and Sexuality courses or are “so happy” that the head of their team, group, eating club, or government is a girl — they can’t be part of the problem.
Overtly partisan court packing is an immodest and shortsighted strategy, and its advantages are likely negligible once the opposition party regains control.
Even the small sparks of political awareness and events that do occur, such as traditional public debatesor the political activities fair, are confined to the areas surrounding Whig-Clio Halls—it definitely is not a campus-wide phenomenon.
It then feels more natural to talk about Matt Damon’s hilarious Brett Kavanaugh impression or Melissa McCarthy's repeated skewering of Sean Spicer than it is to deal with the real political effects that the events being parodied have produced.
These are the names we fondly colloquialize; turning Witherspoon into “’Spoon” or redefining “McCosh” as a verb. The buildings become integrated in our daily lives, yet the people after whom they are named do not represent the diversity of current students.
As a society, we can’t pursue progress if we don’t seek out thoughts, theories, and ideas from unexpected sources. We need variety in our opinions in order to escape the echo chamber and initiate innovation, whether that leads to reaffirming our beliefs or completely changing our perspectives.
To eliminate an unnecessarily expensive and inefficient voter registration system that often prevents many Americans from exercising their right to vote, the federal government should make automatic voter registration a nationwide requirement for states.
We should be willing to expand our horizons, and try to embody virtues beyond hard work. But of course, as long as the University continues to value needless rigor, students will too.
In a recent article published in the “Nassau Weekly,” writer Zartosht Ahlers misses a crucial detail.
The U.S. prides itself on being a free country, but when our own President and the administration with which he surrounds himself publicly accept and facilitate the mistreatment of the LGBTQ+ community, we are not making America great again.
If Kavanaugh cannot be removed from the Court, his voice can be drowned out by the addition of more justices.
Given that most Princeton students aren’t from the surrounding area, the large majority of eligible student voters will also be sending absentee ballots and ballot requests through the Frist mail center this month.
One day, Kavanaugh’s two daughters — like many children — will hold their father to account and ask him if he is the “good” man he now claims to be.
Jim Sanborn shows us that art and science, while distinct pursuits, often relate in intensely enriching and informative ways.
I might have enjoyed hurricane parties and days off from school, but I was lucky not to deal with challenges of infrastructure and accessibility, which many Panhandle residents are currently facing, in suburban Jacksonville.
Publicizing your intention to vote is exactly why your vote matters, even if your singular vote may not be the one vote that changes the outcome of a nearly tied election.