Lives: Eberhard Faber IV ’57
A Life as Complex as the Pencils His Family Made
A Life as Complex as the Pencils His Family Made
An Architect Whose Vision for Washington, D.C., Lives On
He Fought to Protect Oceans and Ecosystems in Hawaii
Princeton’s First Woman Ph.D. in Economics, She Revolutionized the Airline Industry
‘The Girl in the Locker Room’ Who Changed Journalism
A ‘Techie’ Who Helped Create Ethernet
He Was a ‘Cyclone’ on the Playing Field and Throughout Life
One of Princeton’s First Black Students, He Found Connection in the Community
A Climate Scientist Who Helped People Near and Far
A Prolific Artist Who Found Joy in Creating
He Survived the Holocaust, Fought in WWII Before Coming to Princeton
Princeton has been an incubator of right-wing talent over the past 60 years, yet students and alumni say conservative life on campus is endangered
Eric Pedersen ’82 wants to revolutionize the seafood industry and forge a new way to farm fish out of his one-of-a-kind factory in Waterbury, Connecticut
How did Jesse Marsch ’96 get in the middle of this?
Are different names on buildings and spaces part of an evolving campus or blurring University history?
Attorney Alinor Sterling ’89 is winning judgments for Sandy Hook families and changing the gun-violence debate
Maitland Jones, an emeritus professor of chemistry at Princeton, has thoughts about the state of teaching after his controversial dismissal from NYU
Walter Kirn ’83’s long search for America
Why Adlai Stevenson 1922 matters a century after he graduated from Princeton
Dan Porter ’88’s latest project, Overtime, is changing the way teens play and watch sports and perhaps upending an entire industry
Céline Gounder ’97, an infectious-disease specialist, moved into the spotlight during COVID — and remains there
A Princeton education in the ‘new normal’
Princeton astronomers say a new telescope could answer their deepest questions about the early universe