Browse the Inbox
6
in response toReasons for Concern
By Janice Stultz Roddenbery *77 Keep readingCriticizing Israel Is Not Necessarily Antisemitic
By Richard M. Waugaman ’70 Keep readingCondemning Genocide
By Glenn Castro ’71 Keep reading
1
in response toI Couldn’t Agree More
By Chuck Bethel ’68 Keep reading
4
in response toGuest Essay: A View of Princeton’s Encampment from a Counterprotesting Alum
“I did not feel any fear, just discomfort and deep disappointment at the portrayal of a historic and complicated conflict in a simplistic, ‘us or them’ fashion”
Important Questions for Protesters, Supporters
By Mark C. Biderman ’67 Keep readingThank You for Being Thoughtful
By Augustus Rush ’64 Keep readingOn the Need for Intellectual Discourse
By James Corsones ’75 Keep reading
1
in response toOn Site and Online, Protesters Find Pockets of Alumni Support
“I’m inspired by their courage,” said Bob Herbst ’69, who donned his Reunions vest at the encampment
Interviews with Israeli Supporters?
By Francis Allen ’76 Keep reading
41
in response toAn Imperative for Diversity
By Alan Wohlman *66 Keep readingRemembering Danny Kahneman
By Yuchen Zhang ’10 Keep readingPAW’s Food Issue and Global Food Issues
By Elena Nikolova *11 Keep reading
39
in response toCOVID Denialism at Princeton
By Andrew J. Lazarus ’79 Keep readingEnding Test-Optional Admissions
By Greg Schwed ’73 Keep readingRecruiting Low-Income Students
By Donald Clarke ’77, professor, George Washington University Law School Keep reading
2
in response toThe Whole Student: Building a ‘Culture of Connection’ on Campus
TigerWell’s innovative projects can show us the way
Professors, Administrators Have a Role to Play in Helping Students
By Norman Ravitch *62 Keep readingThis Could be a Perfect Time for Yoga
By Robert Watts Keep reading
3
in response toAddressing Antisemitism at Princeton
By Michael Goldstein ’78 Keep readingSpeaking Up About Hazards in Higher Education
By Bill Hewitt ’74 Keep readingUniversities as Mediators, not Partisans
By Howard Sereda *78 Keep reading
11
in response toThe Alumni Interview Endures
28,917 interviews offered, 7,330 volunteers, 161 countries: The numbers get bigger, the world gets more complicated, but this tradition is going strong