Features
Features content overview
Who's Afraid of Jonathan Mayer?
How a young alum has taken on some of the biggest names in digital advertising — and won
A Rabies Primer
The Marshal Plan
Keeping the P-rade moving requires discipline, patience, and a poufy hat. PAW senior writer Mark F. Bernstein ’83 writes about the experience.
Writing with the Master
For Princeton journalists, praise from John McPhee was — and is — the ultimate reward
Will Your Thoughts Always Be Private?: Q&A - Joshua Greene *02
Q&A: Joshua Greene *02
From Murphy's Lab: Sex Kills
PAW’s Annual Reader-Photo Contest
Conversation: What’s College For?
Amelia Thomson-DeVeaux ’11 and William Deresiewicz, on Excellent Sheep
Big Data? Big Brother? Big Questions
The privacy discussion we should be having
Survival Story
Ten years ago, Dr. Rodney Willoughby ’77 treated a teenager who had rabies, long thought to be fatal in all cases. She lived. But Willoughby’s methods remain under fire.
The Soundtrack of Reunions
For four favorite tent bands, the standards rule
At Play in the Fields of Math
Manjul Bhargava *01 finds the magic in numbers
Lives Lived and Lost: An Appreciation
A War Brought Home
In his photographs of the Civil War, Alexander Gardner proved the power of an art form coming of age
Dean of Deans
First in the Family
What is it like for first-generation college students to attend Princeton? Here are some who know.
Lives: Bruce G. Dunning '62
He let the story tell itself
Life on the Run
A rising star in sociology chronicles the human costs of America’s penal system
Their Princeton: 1914
A century ago, the University was at a turning point
Not Black and White
If Branden Jacobs-Jenkins ’06’s plays make you uncomfortable, well, that’s the point
Lives: John ‘Bud’ Palmer ’44
From basketball to broadcasting, he leapt to the top with grace
Universities on the Defensive
In an excerpt from his Alumni Day talk, a national education leader lays out the challenges facing higher education