Reader Comments

You shouldn't have to bicker your major

Written by , Guest Columnist
Published: Friday, March 7th, 2008
"The Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs." When we hear that phrase what should come to mind is the embodiment of Princeton's motto to serve this nation and all nations. That is how the school began, and that ...(back to the article)

Viewing 4 comments...

  • 9:56 p.m. on March 7th, 2008
    Posted by
    woodrow

    I totally agree. Having a selective major undermines the merit of being accepted into Princeton in the first place. Once accepted you should be allowed to study whatever you want. As the richest department, the argument that there are not enough resources for more students is wrong, especially given the above point that fewer students would opt in to a non-selective WWS. Princeton should lead from the front to eliminate from academics the exclusivity that it so depises in the social scene.

  • 9:56 p.m. on March 7th, 2008
    Posted by
    woodrow

    I totally agree. Having a selective major undermines the merit of being accepted into Princeton in the first place. Once accepted you should be allowed to study whatever you want. As the richest department, the argument that there are not enough resources for more students is wrong, especially given the above point that fewer students would opt in to a non-selective WWS. Princeton should lead from the front to eliminate from academics the exclusivity that it so depises in the social scene.

  • 8:57 p.m. on March 7th, 2008
    Posted by
    i didn't apply either

    great article, very well written. i completely agree with you

  • 7:12 p.m. on March 7th, 2008
    Posted by
    dydy

    Excellent I hope they take not of it

Post your comments on this article

Comments:

:

Captcha

For security reasons, please enter the word in the image above.

The Daily Princetonian reserves the right to monitor and delete inappropriate comments.

 


< Back to the article


The opinions expressed here are those of the individual commenters and do not necessarily represent the views of The Daily Princetonian Publishing Company, Inc. We do not take responsibility for the opinions, facts, or claims presented by individual commenters, and reserve the right to moderate or delete inappropriate comments.