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In Response ToBrowse the Inbox
2
in response toEssay: Between the Airlock Doors
“This is something that an app cannot provide — a skill irreplaceable“
Medical Professionals Should Advise on Guidelines
By Helen M. Hunt *71 Keep reading
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in response toThe Role of Professors in Shaping the Senior Theses
By Swati Bhatt *86 Keep readingOn the Thesis, and Later Lessons
By Patrick Bernuth ’62 Keep readingAdding Berg ’71 to the List of Thesis Notables
By Jay Paris ’71 Keep reading
2
in response toLate to the Table
By Jane Hatterer ’83 Keep readingInternet Brain vs. Dad Brain
By David B. Siebert Jr. ’81 Keep reading
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in response toColumn Kudos
By Arthur Dicker ’70 Keep reading
2
in response toOrange and Black Oasis
By Kristine De Jesus Keep readingAn AA Haven tribute
By Doug ’81 Keep reading
9
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”
What’s in a Name?
By Edward G. Bernstine *72 Keep readingThoughtful and Intelligent
By Carol Kaplan Keep readingA Call for Productive Understanding
By Eve Gendron ’88 Keep reading
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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
Interviewers as Ambassadors for Princeton
By Gene Dougherty *80 Keep readingEnvisioning a Better Role for Alumni
By Chuck Bethel ’68 Keep readingRemembering My Princeton Interview
By George Chang ’63 Keep reading
1
in response toRalph Nader ’55 Finds Corporate Leaders Who Did Ethics Right
Nader says he is proud of changes he’s helped to enact but sees problems now with corporations gaining more power
Nader’s Service to the Nation and the World
By Aaron Harber ’75 Keep reading
1
in response toArt Museum, Sans Panels
By Henry Abernathy *73 Keep reading
1
in response toPAWcast: How to Make People Care About Climate Change
John Marshall ’87 and Jessica Lu ’17 say our most urgent global crisis has a public relations problem