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

“I remember thinking, wow, isn’t this so picturesque, isn’t this so magnificent, isn’t this so exquisite.”

“I ran away from home because I thought I wasn’t special and my parents were trying to make me special.”



“Regardless, an aquiline parasite lived inside me, compelling me violently with its bald-eagle talons to wage psychological Revolutionary Warfare against my own best friend.”

A Nass writer reflects on her family’s connection to a recent film.

“Sometimes it would end with go to your room but sometimes it would end with why are you so angry? and that hurt a lot more.”

“When we pull up to Auntie’s in our blood-colored minivan, Olly is definitely gone.”

This week, the Nass highlights a range of voices across the Princeton community in celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.

An introduction to the Nass’s APIDA issue written by the Asian American Students Association.

“My name exists in a space that holds a history so long I can barely fathom it, all glossed over with a nice coat of Americanization.”

A Nass writer profiles the bestselling author of Pachinko and Free Food for Millionaires.

“I slipped my sleeves up my arms and stared out the window: no view except for myself, and no warmth except for the burn of the water.”

“Brought back to the smooth oil, our skin so platonic in the bathroom light. / Enough secrecy for love, enough ugliness for comfort.”

A California native reflects on the cold and bleak of New Jersey winters.
Recruit who dropped their sport: Can I work in?
Regular student: Work in Stone? Frist? Campus Club? Work in where?