Browse the Inbox
1
in response toLooking for Photos
By Joseph Mezzanotte ’71 Keep reading
10
in response toEnemies, Foreign and Domestic
Gen. Mark Milley ’80 enters the final days of his unprecedented tenure as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
No Public Comments?
By Rick Mott ’73 Keep readingFeedback on ‘Fatwa’
By Jordan Reimer ’08 *12 Keep readingGen. Milley and ROTC
By Thomas Davison ’74 Keep reading
1
in response toThrough Archaeology, Diplomacy, She Brought America and Greece Together
Princeton Portrait: Mary Alison Frantz (1903-1995)
Alison’s Cat Sitter
By Peter Rupert Lighte *81 Keep reading
1
in response toThe Long Road to Paris
Kareem Maddox ’11 heads to this summer’s Olympics as a torchbearer for 3-on-3 basketball and the Princeton program
The Olympic Spirit vs. the Profit Motive
By Rocky Semmes ’79 Keep reading
1
in response toThe Whole Student: Can We Talk To Each Other?
During this spring’s campus protests, Jess Deutsch ’91 worried about the conversations that didn’t happen
On Students, Their Studies, and the Conflicts Around Them
By Norman Ravitch *62 Keep reading
1
in response toRemembering a Friend
By Hans Gruner Keep reading
18
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
My Resignation Letter
By Lynne Archibald ’87 Keep readingA Mixed Blessing
By Naran Burchinow ’75 Keep readingA Strange Reaction to Alumni Interviews
By Peter M. Carver ’72 Keep reading
2
in response toGuest Essay: Choosing Trustees Requires Greater Transparency
“Princeton wants alumni to think they have a voice, but the Board of Trustees is an opaque, largely undemocratic ladder”
Do Trustees Want To Keep Alumni in the Dark?
By Ken Jasko ’78 Keep readingMy Own Experience with the Alumni Trustee Election Process
By Richard Golden ’91 Keep reading
1
in response toReunions Panels Shine a Spotlight on Mental Health
“When mental health is on the fritz … every aspect of our health is at stake,” said Lucy McBride ’95