What the Civil War Cost Princeton
A Northern school with Southern ties, the College suffered from on-campus strife, declines in enrollment, and student and alumni deaths
A Northern school with Southern ties, the College suffered from on-campus strife, declines in enrollment, and student and alumni deaths
Professor James M. McPherson writes on the pivotal battle of the Civil War.
A Noted Civil War Historian Takes a Critical Look at His Profession.
Has the 20th century really done better in civil rights than the 19th century did?
An Uncelebration compiled by Brooks Jones ’56
A summary of the contributions and experiences of the University
An alumnus tracks down, in Tokyo, a Japanese member of his class
Lt. Comdr. Greey (1920), veteran of Wake, tells the story of his experiences
Implications of the atomic bomb are discussed by faculty members
A series of bulletins helps them chart future educational course
Miscellaneous observations tell the story of the closing days
A chain of three circumstances linked carrier to its fate
An expected air-raid materialized, but Sicilian invaders beat it off
Basis of solution is less nationalism, more unified and democratic world
Princeton Round-Table Reaches Agreement on Major Premises
A Challenge to Educators
An Address by James V. Forrestal (1915), Undersecretary of the Navy
An Address by President Dodds
What We Must Do if We Are to Insure Ultimate Victory and Peace
One out of Every Three Men Is Aiding in Defense Preparations