Thursday, November 6

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Opinion

The Daily Princetonian

Think you can vote on Nov. 4?

In President Tilghman's opening address to the Class of 2012, she challenged the freshmen to "take as [their] first class project the goal of registering every single eligible voter and ensuring that he or she votes on Election Day." Tilghman's ambitious and laudable goal will no doubt be made more achievable by the work being done by the University and student groups like P-Votes to facilitate the registration process and educate first-time voters.

OPINION | 09/25/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Princeton makes its move

The Wall Street collapse has left Princeton at a critical juncture. Many business-minded Princetonians, who until recently savored the riches to come after graduation, are desperately concerned about what is now an uncertain labor market.

OPINION | 09/24/2008

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The Daily Princetonian

The band and the culture war

The culture wars are raging, and now Princeton has been implicated in them. As the fallout from the Princeton University Band's (PUB) clash with Citadel cadets last weekend further attests, "The War between the States" did not end with the surrender at Appomattox.

OPINION | 09/24/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Shop till you drop

Rejoice, for the end of shopping period is upon us! Now we have one fewer thing to stress over, and let's face it, shopping period can be monumentally stressful.

OPINION | 09/23/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Wanted: a job

Have you noticed? The world is imploding. Britney makes a comeback, military cadets attack our school band - what's next, cloning?

OPINION | 09/22/2008

The Daily Princetonian

The precept lie

Princeton thinks it's special and is very good at coming up with weird ways to show it. We start school later than almost everyone else.

OPINION | 09/22/2008

The Daily Princetonian

Our moral obligation to bail out bankers

In the wake of the Bush administration's announced $700 billion bailout of the banking industry - which has already enhanced the banking executives' personal stock portfolios by multiple millions - we must ask who got the bankers into the deep doo-doo in which they now find themselves.To blame the bankers themselves implies that free markets do not work as advertised by The Wall Street Journal's editorialists and by the economics profession, whose hallowed doctrines are incompatible with that thesis.

OPINION | 09/21/2008