The new American taboo
If you had heard the names Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer one year ago, what would have popped up into your mind?
If you had heard the names Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer one year ago, what would have popped up into your mind?
Student inputRegarding 'The hidden decision,' (Friday, Nov.
I was disappointed to see and hear about the reactions of some students to the "blackface" controversy that engulfed the campus over the past weekend.
This past week, I had the opportunity to get my first real sense of how politics really works, particularly concerning Princeton's undergraduate student body.In now USG presidential-electJosh Weinstein '09's to quest to gain the office, I decided to help my friend by acting as a liaison of sorts to the black community, partly because of his uncontested run for VP last year and also because many of my peers returned blank faces when I mentioned his name.Things looked great, until I received an email directing me to an article on a blog called IvyGate regarding photos of Weinstein in black face paint, especially addressing a caption in which he says that he and friends portrayed prominent black historical figures.I was shocked when I initially saw it, yet immediately expressed my support for him as a candidate and a person despite the egregious and insensitive nature of his actions as a freshman.
In light of the revisions to the University's policy regarding residential college advisers and alcohol, the administration's recent announcement of a broad coalition on high-risk alcohol use might appear as a belated response to student concerns. This cynicism is not entirely merited.
Policy undermines Princeton ethosRegarding 'University tightens alcohol enforcement policy,' (Thursday, Nov.
As Palestinian and Israeli leaders were meeting in the Annapolis Naval Base last week for yet another attempt at peacemaking, I remembered how my journalistic career led me to cover the Madrid peace conference back in 1991.
So here I am, up before dawn in the Palo Alto Sheraton, recovering from two days at a first-rate conference.
When, in the fall of 2009, Harvard students take their final exams before winter recess, Princeton students will be the only undergraduates enrolled at one of the country's top institutions of higher education who will return home with the end of the semester still looming more than a month in the future.
This is a column about columns; if you were trying to impress a comp-lit preceptor, or have a philosophy preceptor toss you out a Marx Hall window, you might even call it a "meta" column.
Last week, science gave this country and the world a wonderful reason to give thanks. As reported in these pages two days ago, biologists in Japan and the United States have developed a method for morphing adult human stem cells into units capable of replicating the capabilities of their embryonic counterparts.Stem cell research lies at the always perilous intersection of science and politics.
An effective USG president must balance several considerations, including responsiveness to student concerns and constructive engagement with the University administration.
Farm subsidies in the United States and the European Union benefit few and hurt many. These are government payments that increase the income of some farmers.
A recent guest column from Shana Weber, the University's sustainability manager, listed many longterm goals for the University to become a greener campus.