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


Where a Nass writer considers how a new art museum might reconsider values of equity and inclusion.

Where a Nass writer urges us to explore the nearby natural world.

“Anyway, I’ve heard stories are supposed to have morals. I don’t know if this is much of a story, really, but I’ll give it a moral anyhow.”

“It was a chilling fragment of the 20th century hiding under the innocent guise of a sitcom, leaving me shaking in my little Gen-Z boots.”

“When I saw him again for the first time in nearly thirteen months, we chatted as though no time at all had passed, as though we were still standing there, waiting for the train to arrive.”

The Nass gives its lovelorn readers guidance for the greeting card industry’s favorite holiday.


A writer reflects on his home state’s political climate leading up to the 2020 Senate Runoff Elections.

This week, the Nass learns about the Menendez Brothers, makes friends over Zoom, and reviews the drinks of fall.

A visit to a meeting of the Anscombe Society, a conservative student group at Princeton.

An interview with journalist Robert Rand about his work on the infamous 1989 murders.

“I was never the kid to get tangled up in chatroom relationships and online communities like many of my friends in middle and high school. I repent now, for the way I invalidated, even in my own head, the authenticity of their attachments. Laughter over Zoom is still laughter.”

“the catching of blood / & buttercream pipes / around edges as the mattress coils / find a home in my ribcage.”

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