Features
Features content overview
Play a song for me
In the golden age of concerts, celebrated artists made Princeton a stop on their tours
Fly me to the moon
Princetonians compete for a lunar landing – and the $20 million that comes along with it
Bittersweet farewell: A diary
Hidden Princeton
Dig of the century
Princeton’s Antioch expeditions astonished the world by unearthing lost mosaic treasures — often overlooked on today’s campus
Panels: More than just fun and games
“I can’t put my life on pause”
Writer Suleika Jaouad ’10 stares down her cancer from the pages of The New York Times
Altered paths
Spared the worst of the Great Recession’s toll on young people, recent Princeton grads still had to adjust to a new reality
Commencement Voices
Life, Interrupted: Posting Your Cancer On Facebook
Freddy Fox goes to war
How a favorite son took his talent for theater to the battlefields of Europe
Inquiring mind
America’s soundtrack
As Librarian of Congress, James Billington ’50 safeguards treasured moments in U.S. culture
Designing in green
Alumni architects see sustainability as part of the job
Septuagenarians and barbarians
A 30-something visits the 5th and 50th
‘Pay attention to your life’
Is an Israel-Palestine peace deal still possible? Dan Kurtzer says yes
The joint was jumpin’
A world in a grain of sand
Paul Steinhardt’s long, improbable search for a natural quasicrystal
Before Turing, there was Veblen
Computing’s early days at Princeton
Beer for intellectuals
Warfare under the radar
Peter W. Singer ’97 explains how we can be at war and hardly notice
Daybreak of the Digital Age
The world celebrates the man who imagined the computer