The return of ROTC
Colleges across the country should allow ROTC programs onto their campuses and Princeton should continue to offer ROTC to the students of this campus.
Colleges across the country should allow ROTC programs onto their campuses and Princeton should continue to offer ROTC to the students of this campus.
Princeton University should treat marijuana as it does alcohol.
To amend these problems, the University should create a more liberal shopping period that permits students to enroll in as many courses as they like for the first two weeks of the semester.
Anthony Grafton examines the radical changes at Princeton since the mid 1970s.
Students who participate in ROTC are unfairly disadvantaged by the prohibition against using leaked diplomatic cables.
America should have offered full support to democrats in Egypt a week ago.
Reducing the pain of getting hosed is a fine idea, but the Durkee plan hurts members of sign-in clubs without fixing the problems at hand. At least in regards to getting hosed, multi-club Bicker is the solution the Street needs, not the Durkee Plan.
University professors and administration should take all possible measures to minimize the use of Pequods at Princeton.
Durkee addresses the article "University-town relations strained after meeting"
The 'Prince" would do well to appoint a public editor to examine the most serious concerns regarding coverage.
Economists’ continued stranglehold on political discourse is troublesome considering that the unanticipated rise of the Great Recession exposed deep-seated flaws in their theories. What we need is a way of empowering other disciplines and forms of knowledge within the political arena.
From the (relative) comfort of our fourth-floor conference room, we engage in challenging, passionate and intellectually stimulating debates that lead us to examine and confront the full range of issues that affect our lives at Princeton.
Despite our diversity in identity, Princeton students often choose their extracurricular activities and academic specialties for worryingly conventional reasons.
The undecided social-science-inclined students can’t go wrong with their major choice — but you can, and people do, pick a major for the wrong reasons.
There is a problem unless there is strong evidence of benefits to local food beyond taste, freshness and being organic that would justify paying a higher price for them than for equally tasty, organic food from farther away.