Letters to the Editor: P/D/F
P/D/F change would stifle explorationRegarding 'A call for P/D/F reform' (Friday, Sept.
P/D/F change would stifle explorationRegarding 'A call for P/D/F reform' (Friday, Sept.
Wilson School panels biased toward BushRegarding 'Rice: U.S. must not waver' (Monday, Oct.
After trying the new iPod nano, David Pogue of The New York Times warned it was so great that customers would have to "lash [their] credit cards to [their] wallets like Odysseus to the mast" if they wanted to avoid buying it.
In her remarks on Friday to an audience of more than 3,000 students, faculty, alumni and townspeople, U.S.
A recent email chides me for avoiding controversial topics in my latest columns, so here's one of a boldness unparalleled in the history of campus journalism.
Looking back on the columns that I penned over the past year, the overwhelming majority of them contain significant criticism, usually directed at individuals in places of authority.
Hardly a day goes by on this campus without someone lauding the value of a "broad liberal arts education." From opening exercises to commencement, the speeches our administrators deliver encourage us to expand our horizons by taking courses and actively seeking out knowledge beyond our comfort zone.To encourage this sort of exploration, Princeton has instituted two separate and strikingly different policies.
As the door opened, a cloud of smoke billowed from the room, and I knew I had made a terrible mistake.
Moral values may reign supreme in some circles, but blogs across the country are gushing about a new way to legitimize pornography.
Leaders of the antiwar movement have wasted no time in adding Katrina to the list of reasons we shouldn't be in Iraq.The protests in Washington this past weekend featured Katrina-themed wordplays such as, "Make Levees, Not War." The Washington Post quoted one protester who claimed that the hurricane had helped solidify her opposition to President Bush's agenda: "[Hurricane Katrina] made clear that while we spend all this money trying to impose our will on other countries, here at home in our own country, we can't take care of each other."Sen.
Public Safety plays vital role on campusRegarding 'Public Safety should protect, not party-crash' (Wednesday, Sept.
When I asked a friend how to begin a column on dating at Princeton, his response was simple: "Good luck." Those who have seen freshman week's most popular program, "Sex on a Saturday Night," will remember the various representations of dating on campus.
Living and working in a tranquil environment like Princeton can cause us to forget that crime and other problems can plague us just as they do communities outside the gates of the University."So begins the message from the Director of Public Safety, Steven J.
I walked out of "March of the Penguins" this past July and couldn't help but marvel at the fact that for two excruciating months during which they did not eat, the male penguins ? the fathers ? guarded their eggs from the extreme cold until they hatched, while the female penguins went out to replenish their own exhausted and malnourished bodies.
As soon as freshmen set foot on campus, they are inundated with a flood of mandatory activities, speakers and flyers.
Perhaps I do not deserve the privilege of eulogizing Campus Club. I did not belong to it; yet, I felt that Campus belonged to me.