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


A Nass writer looks to two books as scholarly introductions to the occupation.

“There is something glorious waiting for you on the other side. Keep moving, and try not to look back.”

A rumination on the dos and don’ts of moshing.

“Your clothes are spilling from their drawers / It seems I’d rather stay indoors / When I’m in Princeton with you.”

“There are three types of curlers: the competitive, the prepubescent, and the beer-drinking. I have played with all three types in roughly equal measures.”

This week, the Nass reads Sontag, sprains an ankle, and learns how to curl.


Upon a visit to the Met, a Nass writer considers the notion of experiencing art without analyzing it.




“All / Cicero said we need is a library and a garden, so I’ll keep / little brown pots on the windowsills.”

Four underclass students reflect on beginning and continuing college.

“The sharp tenderness of Night’s long sigh / leaves the drunken hawk moths / dizzied from delight.”
Recruit who dropped their sport: Can I work in?
Regular student: Work in Stone? Frist? Campus Club? Work in where?