Why gender-inclusive language is important
Marni MorseTake a moment to answer this riddle: A father and son have a car accident and are both badly hurt.
Take a moment to answer this riddle: A father and son have a car accident and are both badly hurt.
Princeton needs to fix some seriously absurd rules. I think most students agree that the new $200 ($200!) fine for propping a dorm door is ridiculous.
As we were all packing to either first arrive or return to Princeton, fall semester had already begun at most other colleges.
This Olympic season was very much one of firsts — ranging from the to-be-confirmed retirement of the most decorated Olympian in history (Phelps may yet attempt another resurgence), to the first U.S.
Editor’s Note: This article does not representthe views of the ‘Prince’.The deeply anti-intellectual character of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has ample precedent in American history.
The discussion of cultural appropriation seems to have hit a fever pitch in American cultural discourse, with a flurry of outrage prompted by every alleged transgression.
Dear freshmen,The day you were accepted and chose Princeton was a defining moment in your life.
The first time I was given a trigger warning was as an admitted student during the SHARE-sponsored “Not Anymore” module focused on sexual consent.
As I sat down in front of the television and prepared to watch the start of the Democratic National Convention with my family, I was worried.
One of the most striking speeches at the Democratic National Convention was delivered by a group called the “Mothers of the Movement,” some of the mothers of black Americans killed at the hands of law enforcement, official or otherwise.
It is one thing to take to the streets in protest of social inequality, but another to advocate for change using existing institutions.
On the right wall in Courtney Banghart’s office is a framed article: Fortune Magazine’s 50 Greatest Leaders from 2015.
As I stood in the middle of the Wilson School’s Fountain of Freedom after submitting my senior thesis, I could not help but feel, hidden beneath the watery surface and among the cold stone tiles, a lurking sense of self-doubt.Was this the best work that I could have turned in?
When I first stepped on Princeton’s campus four years ago, I could not imagine all the ways I would grow before walking out of FitzRandolph Gate again.
The Office of International Programs at Princeton University posts lots of post-graduate fellowships.
Editor’s note: The author of this column was granted anonymity due to the intensely personal nature of the events described.During room draw last month, many students developed strategies to draw into their dream rooms for next year.
April’s referenda came and went with no great shock to the University community. Neither the appeal to divest from private prisons nor the call to create a taskforce to reevaluate disciplinary action around the Honor Code succeeded.
This year, the University elected to make either Outdoor Action or Community Action mandatory components of pre-orientation for incoming freshmen – except for athletes.
And when these walls in dust are laid,With reverence and aweAnother throng shall breathe our song,In praise of Old NassauAs soon as I leave Princeton, these centuries-old walls will forget me.Well that’s not strictly true.
Many seniors spend their time, especially during the glorious month of May that came too fast or not fast enough, reminiscing on what we did at Princeton.