Recruit who dropped their sport: Can I work in?
Regular student: Work in Stone? Frist? Campus Club? Work in where?


“but roots are live wires, and you never saw / that I’m more brick than concrete…”


An opinion piece exploring the ideological basis of vocal pushback against “wokeism” on campus.

“Looking back at it now, it feels like that iPhone 6s was like an omnipresent eye throughout my adolescence, there to capture and see it all, completely unfiltered.”

A Nass writer dives into the stories and science behind pop culture icons.

his brush-stroked / countenance / and plaster-backed / powder blue / dress coat / dragged down / into the crypt




A senior looks back on his time at Princeton, as it comes to an end.

In the final issue of the semester, the Nass telescopes “echo,” critiques optimism, and considers what it means to leave this place.

To telescope, we begin with 300 words, then slice the word count in half for each successive section. We stop when the numbers stop dividing evenly. This week, eight Nass writers telescope the word “echo” (echo, echo). Lucia Brown At some point, the wrought iron fence that trapped the house disappeared, leaving behind a crumbling…


Recruit who dropped their sport: Can I work in?
Regular student: Work in Stone? Frist? Campus Club? Work in where?