Proud to be different
“Carving our own path through the world” requires that our path be different from others. The club system is Princeton’s different path.
“Carving our own path through the world” requires that our path be different from others. The club system is Princeton’s different path.
Ultimately, this is your page. This means that we wish to hear your ideas, to find you a place to write and to offer you compelling content day after day.
The annual onslaught of negativity against the selected Class Day speaker arises from the surprisingly large contingent of people who apparently believe the memory of their entire four-year Princeton experience rides on the quality of a brief address from a mid-level celebrity.
No student in ECO 100: Introduction to Microeconomics would ever suspect that the economics profession would be as unprepared and helpless to deal with the calamity as the profession has shown itself to be.
Financial aid for sign-in eating clubs facilitates elitist Bicker system; Undergradates’ eating-club aid concerns are unfounded; Poor statistics undermine column’s argument.
The pro-life movement, it turns out, is a youth movement.
Professor Stanley Katz’ proposed task force in Cuba would provide an important opportunity for students to broaden their horizons.
Michael Juel-Larsen, Cindy Hong, Mike Shapiro and Michael Collins discuss financial aid for eating clubs and the application numbers for the Class of 2013. Associate Editor for Opinion Michael Medeiros moderates.
Then Princeton happened: We felt the palpable expectation of a liberal, tasteful detachment between words and actions.
The administration's paternalism can be a good thing, though it sometimes fails to avoid seeming patronizing.
Statistics are like bikinis: What they reveal is interesting, but what they hide is vital.
In the coming weeks, a trillion dollars may be allocated toward economic recovery. In eastern Texas, far from the boom and bust of Wall Street and the marble halls of Congress, it’s taken months for funds to arrive, though the amount of money is much smaller.
The Daily Princetonian should stick to humor and ignore the ineffective USG. The revote isn’t actually a joke, though it may seem like one.
The College Board's new Score Choice policy is bad for high school students and bad for Princeton.
Let me clarify something: Princeton beginners are not your average beginners.