Blair and Schroeder on Iraq
Upon first glance, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have much in common.
Upon first glance, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and British Prime Minister Tony Blair have much in common.
AIDS is a beautiful killer. There is something romantic about tens of millions of people around the world united in death even though they speak different languages.
Few can argue that student government has the potential to achieve meaningful changes and benefit the entire campus.
His head tilted back, his nose pointing straight up at the ceiling. His eyes closed, and his mouth opened.
"Lives of great men all remind us / we can make our lives sublime, / and, departing, leave behind us / footprints on the sands of time." These mighty lines of our great and neglected Longfellow eloquently state a commonplace human longing for ethical role models, people we can look up to, people we can hope to follow in making our own difficult life choices.
University should stop funding The Tory, ending biased 'Rant'I met with President Tilghman over a week ago to discuss what could be done about the callously homophobic and neo-colonialist statements made in the November issue of The Princeton Tory.
Professor Richard Falk's lecture Monday evening on the topic of "Force, Violence and Terrorism: Israel v.
A few weeks ago, I attended a dinner at the Fields Center, at which Cornel West discussed his thoughts on social progress in American society.
Taking time to 'do the reading': Improving the 'intellectualism' of the editorial pageI am writing in response to the two Op-Ed pieces that appeared in the Nov.
Something's been bothering me for quite a number of weeks now, but I've kept my mouth shut. I felt there were more relevant issues to write about, but now I find myself with nothing to rant about except the general state of the world.
Being 22, I don't think about death very often. This past month, however, I feel like I've encountered it wherever I turn.
Amidst the holiday celebrations of last week came some surprising news: The longshoremen of California, the folks who handle the mighty flow of cargo that passes into the U.S.
Yesterday was World AIDS Day, and this week the Princeton chapter of Student Global AIDS Campaign (www.fightglobalaids.org) is cosponsoring World AIDS Week.
I wonder how many of us, the freshmen class, truly feel like college students. It seems like a ridiculous question to ask, but when you think about it, college students are so different from high school students that the change might not happen overnight.
Today, most of us will leave the campus to join family and friends in a day of thanksgiving. This is one of the few holidays that has survived the swamp of commercialization and the convenience of long weekends, retaining its core purpose year after year.
I would like to issue an apology to Mr. Elliot Ratzman and the rest of the Princeton University campus.
Response to an evaluation of campus intellectualism debateThis Monday marks the beginning of a dialogue about intellectualism on campus.
Firearm homicides: Germany ? 381, France ? 255, Canada ? 165, U.K. ? 68, Australia ? 65, Japan ? 39 and U.S.
Misplaced attack against Whig-ClioCarlos Ramos-Mrosovsky's blast of criticism against Whig-Clio last Wednesday, Nov.
I was dismayed last week to hear about a group of students organizing to confront President Tilghman and demand that the University cut off funding to the Tory.