What I didn’t do at Princeton
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.
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.
The shadows of the discipline processThe Honor Code rules this campus, from when we enroll in this University to the very first performance we see of the Triangle Club to the statement of honor we write on our theses.However, the disciplinary system is far from perfect, and this is why Justin Ziegler ’16 proposed a referendum to consider its reform.
There’s an unwritten rule about small talk as March tips into April: do not ask seniors about their theses.
It would ask me questions, it would give me answers and it would forgive me for procrastinating. If my thesis could talk, it would be proud of me, of you, of us.
As a freshman, I started keeping a journal to compile advice from my friends who were graduating.
There are supposedly a lot of reasons to believe in climate change, but honestly, none of them ever really sold me.
As some Princeton students have called for the changing of the name of the Woodrow Wilson School of International and Public Affairs and Wilson college, others have argued that this would be an erasure.
When hip-hop artist T-Dubb-O gets on stage, it’s like he was born there. The stage is where he proclaims his truth in verse as he makes eye contact with each and every fan and he tells us, “I don’t want a Trap Queen/I’d rather have a Coretta.” T-Dubb-O is one of the leaders of Hands Up United, a collective of politically engaged minds building toward the liberation of oppressed Black, Brown and poor people through education, art, civil disobedience, advocacy and agriculture.
He made us laugh and made multicolored sweaters cool. He donated to universities and loaned his art collection to the Smithsonian.