Complete coverage on

Princeton

With spring break nearing, my mother contacted my father and arranged for Paul and me to visit him again in Princeton. He suggested that we arrive on a Sunday, and since she had a class to teach the next day, she told us that she would drive us as far as New York and put us on a train the rest of the way. When we got to Penn Station, she bought us two tickets, and half an hour later Paul and I got off at Princeton Junction and started looking around the little station for my father.

Latest Stories

CNNMoney: Stocks: Look out when first guy blinksupdated: Fri Apr 08 2011 07:57:00

Joe Donohue was on Wall Street for over 20 years. He ran a successful hedge fund and now manages private accounts with a long/short strategy. He is also the author of the UpsideTrader blog.

SI.com: Paul Daugherty: Kentucky can win a title with ideal mix of blue-chip frosh, savvy vetsupdated: Thu Mar 31 2011 19:29:00

It's cool to be Brandon Knight: A-student, high school all-American, prolific provider of game-winning shots in March. He's a star freshman on the basketball team at the University of Kentucky. That's like being the only female at a Johnny Depp convention.

SI.com: Andy Staples: Young Kentucky team leans on vets to avoid upset against Princetonupdated: Fri Mar 18 2011 04:54:00

"You can't count on freshmen." -- John Calipari, March 16 ...

SI.com: Steve Davis: U.S. roster spots still up for grabs as Bradley mulls preliminary rosterupdated: Fri May 07 2010 15:39:00

There will be thousands of guesses but only one man truly knows.

SI.com: The Heisman Winners: The Honor Roll - 1930supdated: Tue Aug 25 2009 16:34:00

This article appears in the Sports Illustrated Presents 75th Anniversary of the Heisman Trophy issue.

Commentary: Latino in the Ivy Leagueupdated: Wed Jul 15 2009 14:44:00

Sixteen years ago, after I wrote a memoir about my experience as a Latino in the Ivy League, I got a call from a retired Jewish obstetrician who saw his reflection in my words.

Sotomayor's college yearsupdated: Wed Jul 15 2009 10:45:00

Former classmates and professors of Supreme Court Justice nominee Sonia Sotomayor speak about her years at Princeton and Yale.

Cricket, Ivy League classmates startled student Sonia Sotomayorupdated: Wed Jul 15 2009 10:45:00

Sonia Sotomayor spent her first week at Princeton University obsessing over the sound of a cricket. Growing up in New York City, her only notion of this insect was Jiminy from "Pinocchio." She tore her dorm room apart looking for the critter every night.

Fortune: Trading a white collar for blueupdated: Fri Jun 19 2009 12:04:00

Dear Annie: I just finished reading Matthew B. Crawford's new book, Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work, and it has really got me thinking. I always liked working with my hands, and I spend most of my free time woodworking (building furniture and cabinets for my family and friends) and tinkering with old cars. But like lots of other people, I got a college degree because I was told it would be the ticket to a lifetime of employment security. Ha! Pretty funny, right? Having been laid off twice in three years, I'm not laughing. Meanwhile, my wife's brother, who did an apprenticeship instead of college, owns a successful business as an electrician and has been urging me to come to work for him. It would be a complete career change but, having read Crawford's thoughts on how satisfying his motorcycle-repair shop is, I'm seriously considering leaving the corporate world behind. I'd be interested to hear what you and your readers think. -- White Collar Blues

Sotomayor says she was 'perfect affirmative action baby'updated: Thu Jun 11 2009 18:37:00

Supreme Court nominee Judge Sonia Sotomayor years ago said she was a "product of affirmative action" when she was admitted to prestigious universities, but defended the contributions she offered as a Hispanic woman to classroom and workplace diversity.

Four youths held after incident at Princetonupdated: Wed Jun 03 2009 12:10:00

Students at Princeton University were asked to remain indoors briefly Wednesday after a report of an armed man on campus, but police determined that there was no gunman, according to the university's Web site.

Court nominee on fast trackupdated: Wed May 27 2009 18:37:00

CNN's Jeffrey Toobin says Democrats will want hearings before the summer recess.

Fortune: The mystery of college costsupdated: Fri Apr 10 2009 07:25:00

My Rolls-Royce is a lot more expensive than your Buick. A pint of Ben & Jerry's costs double the A&P generic brand. That makes sense. But when it comes to college tuition, the difference between the Harvards and the Podunks is not nearly so great.

Commentary: Why it's good to have former senators in chargeupdated: Mon Nov 10 2008 08:45:00

Now is the time for a new beginning. And how it is approached may well turn on the often overlooked fact that both the president-elect and the vice president-elect are products of the U. S. Senate.

Time.com: Orson Welles' War of the Worldsupdated: Thu Oct 30 2008 16:00:00

Seventy years later, a look back at the notorious, panic-inducing, Halloween eve airing of Orson Welles' The War of the Worlds

SI.com: BP: Unconventional Wisdom: Call-ups worth keeping an eye onupdated: Wed Sep 03 2008 12:53:00

September 1 is the day that rosters expanded from 25 to 40, and hundreds of players from the minors get the call to spend the final month of the season in the big leagues. While plenty of top prospects won't get that call because such a move requires placement on the 40-man, there have still been many interesting names -- both new and old -- on the transaction wire over the last 48 hours, and here are ten story lines of note.

Princeton can keep its cops unarmed, OSHA saysupdated: Tue Jul 15 2008 10:46:00

Princeton University's policy of not allowing its officers to carry guns on campus doesn't hurt the officers' ability to do their jobs, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration ruled.

SI.com: George Dohrmann: The Unlikely Candidateupdated: Tue Jun 03 2008 11:40:00

On a drizzly afternoon in early May, Craig Robinson addressed about 100 Oregon State boosters in a large banquet room in Portland. He stepped to a podium next to an American flag and opened with a playful joke about the height of the school's athletic director, 5' 7" Bob De Carolis, the man who hired him in April to coach OSU's basketball team.

SI.com: Jon Wertheim: Reserving judgment on the U.S. Open's move from USA to ESPNupdated: Wed May 14 2008 16:51:00

For a riff on the news of Justine Henin's retirement, click here.

SI.com: Nina Mandell: Fourth time won't be the charm to knock off Northwesternupdated: Fri May 09 2008 11:35:00

Could the fourth time be the charm to knock off three-time defending national champion Northwestern? Perhaps. The Wildcats' 36-game win streak dating back to last season was broken by Penn when mental breakdowns and lackluster plays kept Northwestern from getting past the Quakers' tough defense.

Commentary: An 'average' American will never be presidentupdated: Tue Apr 15 2008 21:06:00

Can we all just stop the silly nonsense over who is an elitist and whether an "average American" will occupy the White House?

SI.com: Soccer America: Family pedigree has Bradley tearing up Europeupdated: Wed Mar 19 2008 10:54:00

For David Richardson, coach of the Sockers FC Chicago youth club, Michael Bradley serves as a perfect example for his current players.

SI.com: Alexander Wolff: Cut from the Same Clothupdated: Tue Mar 18 2008 09:13:00

To understand why Georgetown coach John Thompson III regards basketball the way he does -- as an accretion of details and small remediations -- it's worth revisiting a February night in Providence in 1988. Back then Thompson served as Princeton's senior co-captain, and the Tigers led Brown by two points with seconds to play. As he prepared to inbound under his own basket, Thompson began to experience what he calls "the loneliest feeling in basketball."

Elephant among odd college donationsupdated: Fri Mar 07 2008 15:17:00

Universities are always looking for cash from their alumni (or anyone else with a big enough checkbook). But sometimes colleges are offered donations of another variety. Here are stories of six rather unusual gifts given to universities across the world.

SI.com: Alexander Wolff: Passing a hoops program to offspring not a good ideaupdated: Wed Feb 06 2008 09:57:00

Maybe it's too many years of Bushes of one sort or another. Perhaps it's the prospect of too many years of Clintons of this type or that. But something has me thinking this way, and I can't be the only person who believes the legacy thing has gotten a little out of hand in college basketball.

Money Magazine: Rocky market, smart strategiesupdated: Mon Jan 28 2008 11:29:00

Volatility. That's the one thing that seems predictable in today's stock market. Share prices are swinging up and down more violently than they have anytime in the past five years. And that seems likely to continue.

Time.com: The Tale of an Ivy-League Hoaxerupdated: Tue Dec 18 2007 17:15:00

In the latest in a disturbing string of campus fakes, a Princeton student's assault and death threats turn out to have been a hoax

SI.com: Frank Deford: Readers outraged over comparisons of sports and artupdated: Wed Nov 14 2007 11:47:00

A few weeks ago, I offered up the thoughts of Gary Walters, the distinguished athletic director at Princeton, that sport should be held in the same high regard as art. I thought it was a rather interesting and cogent opinion for someone to posit ... but in the fabled words of the longtime football announcer, Keith Jackson: "Whoa, Nellie!"

SI.com: Fame, by the numbersupdated: Wed Jul 04 2007 22:53:00

Long before he became the 38th president of the United States, Gerald Ford was better known as No. 48, an All-America center at Michigan and a star on the school's undefeated 1932 and '33 national championship teams. Here's a sampling of the uniform numbers of some well-known figures before they suited up for Hollywood and Washington.

Money Magazine: Take your (pension) lumpsupdated: Tue Jun 26 2007 21:12:00

Question: My wife and I are planning to retire next year when I'll be 59 and she'll be 60. Together we have about $600,000 in a 401(k), plus I have a pension that I can take as a lump sum of approximately $1 million or as an annuity that will pay $60,000 a year to me or my wife as long as one of us is alive. I'd prefer to take the lump sum and invest the money myself. I'm thinking of laddering bonds plus investing in some mutual funds to hedge inflation. What do you think of my plan? - Peter, Princeton, New Jersey

Time.com: The Courage Primaryupdated: Mon Jun 18 2007 13:45:00

For this election, Joe Klein offers an agenda of five issues for judging just how serious the candidates are

CNNMoney: Top colleges get more affordableupdated: Thu Mar 22 2007 11:20:00

A college education may be getting less expensive at some of the most prestigious schools.

Fortune: Giver's remorseupdated: Mon Mar 12 2007 06:20:00

It is a sign of poor relations between donor and charity when the donor's heir takes a hacksaw to the charity's filing cabinets.

Money Magazine: Is it time for a New New Deal?updated: Mon Jan 29 2007 17:33:00

So how are you doing? Money-wise, that is.

CNNMoney: Princeton won't raise tuition; other costs soarupdated: Mon Jan 22 2007 09:57:00

Princeton University said it will not raise its tuition for the 2007-2008 school year, holding it steady - at $33,000 - for the first time since 1967.

SI.com: Dumb 'n' dumber updated: Wed Jan 17 2007 14:45:00

In the interest of full disclosure, I think cheerleading is absolutely stupid. Also in the interest of full disclosure, I dated a girl in college who'd been a high school cheerleader. She still thought it was super rad. I didn't, and I couldn't pretend. I even had her read Rick Reilly's fantastic October 1999 column that wonderfully elucidated the frivolity of cheerleading. She and I only dated about two more months. I guess we just couldn't see eye to G-double-O-D E-Y-E.

Money Magazine: Who Needs a Hedge Fund Anyway?updated: Fri Sep 01 2006 00:01:00

With the market struggling to eke out even meager gains this year, you may be tempted to look beyond traditional investments for something, anything, to fatten up your retirement account.

Money Magazine: The best retirement plan...is simpleupdated: Mon Aug 21 2006 09:30:00

With the market struggling to eke out even meager gains this year, you may be tempted to look beyond traditional investments for something, anything, to fatten up your retirement account.

Who needs Harvard?updated: Sun Aug 13 2006 08:21:00

It's the summer before your senior year, and you're sweating.

CNNMoney: Million dollar homesupdated: Tue Nov 01 2005 13:09:00

Million-dollar homes are not exactly a novelty in some parts of the United States, according to real estate brokerage giant Coldwell Banker.

CNNMoney: Bernanke: A path to the Fedupdated: Mon Oct 24 2005 11:37:00

Ben Bernanke currently serves as the chairman of President Bush's Council of Economic Advisers, which provides the president with analysis and advice on economic issues.

Students filibuster against Frist at his alma materupdated: Tue May 10 2005 17:19:00

Princeton University students are showing support for the filibuster by staging their own.

Health considered in companies' building designs updated: Tue Jul 27 2004 15:29:00

In some ways, Mary Still is a typical weight-loss success story. She changed her eating habits, started working out and dropped 82 pounds in a year.

Money Magazine: John Bogle Practical idealismupdated: Thu Jul 01 2004 00:01:00

John Bogle was an idealistic Princeton economics major in 1951 when he wrote a thesis on the performance of a handful of actively managed mutual funds. His argument: It is almost impossible to cons...

Money Magazine: Briefly...updated: Fri Aug 01 2003 00:01:00

LIFE AND DEATH It's official: People are living longer, according to the American Academy of Actuaries. Based on newly approved mortality tables used by the life insurance industry, the maximum the...

FSB: A Wall Street Revolutionupdated: Tue Oct 01 2002 00:01:00

If you know anything about investing, you'll probably be surprised to learn that John "Jack" Bogle was a subpar college student. Even though Bogle would eventually create the first index mutual fun...

Fortune: Outsmarting the Streetupdated: Mon Oct 29 2001 00:01:00

It seems as if the best minds on Wall Street are actually at the nation's top universities. The schools with the five biggest endowments in the U.S. have all made the grade, beating the S&P 500 by ...

Money Magazine: The Market Maker Princeton may be one of the oldest and most privileged of American universities, but when it comes to financialupdated: Mon Oct 01 2001 00:01:00

If the financial aid arena is a marketplace, then Princeton University "is the market mover," says Dan Lundquist, dean of admissions and financial aid at Union College. With its $8.5 billion endowm...

Money Magazine: Is Relief From College Debt On The Way?updated: Tue May 01 2001 00:01:00

With college aid increasingly coming in the form of loans, not grants, student debt levels are higher than ever. The Department of Education's most recent survey found that students at private scho...

Fortune: Is Harvard Worth It? Conventional wisdom says yes. But with the price of a degree from America's most famous university and otheupdated: Mon May 01 2000 00:01:00

For America's high school seniors, April is the cruelest month. That's when colleges flood the postal system with news of who has won a place in next fall's freshman class. For more than a few fami...

Fortune: This Washington Job Really Matters The next President's most crucial appointment will be his Treasury Seupdated: Mon Jan 24 2000 00:01:00

All over cable TV, commentators are yapping with speculation about presidential running mates. Mostly they speculate about the same old names. But play that parlor game with a presidential appointm...

Fortune: Retiring Well Is The Best Revenge You'll retire. Then what? Think big! Collect racecars, airplanes, trains. You'll updated: Mon Aug 16 1999 00:01:00

You can imagine it already: retirement day. Fond farewells, a new watch, confetti in your hair. Then, time to relax forever! No alarm clocks, no morning meetings. Why, with all that new freedom, yo...

Money Magazine: Flavor Of The Month Are enhanced index funds (and 184% returns) too good to be true?updated: Mon Mar 01 1999 00:01:00

Even a dart-throwing chimpanzee can select a portfolio that performs as well as one chosen by the experts." That devastating verdict from Princeton finance professor Burton Malkiel's classic book, ...

Money Magazine: The New Face Of Financial Aid You want your kid to go to a good school but you need a little financial help? Join updated: Thu Oct 01 1998 00:01:00

At 16, Katherine Haynie put together a car stereo and fell in love with audio engineering. So when she applied to college, she set her sights on the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technolog...

Money Magazine: Think Your Kid Is Ivy Material? Here's How To Put Money On Itupdated: Wed Jul 01 1998 00:01:00

Are you confident that your two-year-old is Princeton caliber? If so, you'll soon be able to indulge in the ultimate act of parental hubris by paying your toddler's tuition at that Ivy League schoo...

Fortune: Readers Sound Off On Sleep Disorders, Messy Desks, Office Pests,... And Moreupdated: Mon Apr 27 1998 00:01:00

Friends, let's start with the really important stuff: This is an urgent medical bulletin to anybody out there who falls asleep in meetings, or knows someone who falls asleep in meetings, or just ge...

Fortune: PRINCETON LIKES JUNIOR. NOW WHAT? YOUR DREAM COLLEGE NEED NOT COST AN ARM AND A LEG. A NEW KIND OF PROFESSIONAL updated: Mon May 13 1996 00:01:00

Congratulations. Junior just got accepted to Princeton. All that remains is for you, proud parent, to take up the not-so-small matter of the bill: some $121,385 over four years, thank you, not incl...

Fortune: DON'T LET COLLEGE COSTS RAIN ON YOUR RETIREMENT THE $150,000 NIGHTMARE FACING EVERY PARENT IS HOW TO GET JUST updated: Mon Jul 24 1995 00:01:00

Ever wake up in the wee hours with your mind churning along the following lines: Your kids are now how old? Boy, college isn't that far off. Assuming an annual inflation rate of 3% or 4%, within te...

Money Magazine: Now that you feel safer, you want to be richer too updated: Mon Aug 01 1994 00:01:00

June's article about crime and violence in America, "You're Safer Than You Think," provoked a strong response from MONEY readers. You seemed most surprised by three findings: 1) The risk of being a...

Fortune: AN UNFAIR TAXupdated: Mon Jul 11 1994 00:01:00

It was bad enough that the budget bill enacted last year raised taxes on well- heeled married couples relative to unmarried individuals with the same income. Tax consultants to the wealthy made sur...

Fortune: ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE THE POWER OF COMPUTERS updated: Mon May 17 1993 00:01:00

College graduates in 1991 earned over 50% more than high school grads, up from 33% in 1979. Why the rise? One answer comes from Princeton economist Alan Krueger. Analyzing government surveys, he fo...

Fortune: ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE WHY A TAX ON THE RICH IS UNFAIRupdated: Mon Mar 08 1993 00:01:00

While politicians from Western states loudly decry any proposal to lift gasoline taxes, nary a peep has been heard from states about to be hammered by an income-tax rate hike -- from 31% to 36% -- ...

Fortune: OFFICE BUILDINGS FOR THE 1990s Architects have shifted from glitzy skyscrapers to sensible suburban complexes. Wise companies arupdated: Mon Nov 18 1991 00:01:00

IN ARCHITECTURE as in so much else, the 1980s was the decade of excess. It was an era of overbuilding -- in both senses of the word: Not only did developers put up too many office structures, but a...

Fortune: TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR CAREER Keeping your job has become a job in itself, as thousands of laid-off managers know too well. You caupdated: Mon Nov 18 1991 00:01:00

SO THEY STOPPED inviting you to the quarterly meeting, the one where they talk about everyone who isn't there. Then you got a new office, smaller than your last one and not on the floor where the b...

Fortune: A cop-out in Hollywood, the pillowcase debate, staying in bed in Sweden, and other matters. ONLY IN AMERICA (Cont'd)updated: Mon Nov 18 1991 00:01:00

PRINCETON, N.J. -- Joining the nationwide trend toward a multicultural curriculum, Princeton University is offering a course on American Indian religions for the first time this semester. But no on...

Money Magazine: HOW FAMILIES CAN NAB MORE COLLEGE AID THAN THEY THINKupdated: Sun Sep 01 1991 00:01:00

As college students get set to crack the books for the 1991-92 school year, their parents might like to know the best-kept secret about financial aid: it's often negotiable. That's one of the impor...

Fortune: THE NEW EXECUTIVE UNEMPLOYED Their ranks are growing, and not just because of recession. To some, the loss of a job is devastatiupdated: Mon Apr 08 1991 00:01:00

IN HIS LATE 40s, Larry Keough was on a roll. After ten years with Pitney Bowes, the office equipment manufacturer, he made over $100,000 a year, typically winning an annual bonus amounting to 35% o...

Fortune: WHO'S HOT -- AND WHO'S NOT -- ON THE RUBBER-CHICKEN CIRCUITupdated: Mon Dec 17 1990 00:01:00

''The flash of the 1980s is gone. Corporations want speakers with substance and ethics, or at least speakers who are not tainted.'' So says Don Epstein, president of Greater Talent Network, a New Y...

Fortune: WHY UNIVERSITIES ARE SHRINKING Facing lower enrollments, colleges are scrimping. But students and their future employers will gaupdated: Mon Sep 24 1990 00:01:00

YOU WOULDN'T GUESS it by looking at the monstrous tuition bills, but when parents drop off their kids on campus this month, they'll be driving through the gates of Shrinking U. Even the most presti...

Fortune: Shortsightedness pays off, how to not learn much at Princeton, high-risk horses, and other matters. GREAT TRIUMPHS OF LAISSEZ FAupdated: Mon Sep 10 1990 00:01:00

Conservatives . . . hailed deregulation on free-market . . . grounds. A few laissez-faire stalwarts went further, enjoying the discomfort of established . . . business-government relations . . . Th...

Fortune: Shortsightedness pays off, how to not learn much at Princeton, high-risk horses, and other matters. ONLY IN AMERICA (Cont'd)updated: Mon Sep 10 1990 00:01:00

MINNEAPOLIS -- A doctor who performed a blood-alcohol analysis of three Northwest Airlines pilots accused of flying while intoxicated testified . . . that the results, showing elevated levels, were...

Fortune: Shortsightedness pays off, how to not learn much at Princeton, high-risk horses, and other matters. DIFFERENCESupdated: Mon Sep 10 1990 00:01:00

Soon after this article is printed, it will take up residence in the Nexis database and, apparently, become the only verbiage in disk memory whose author is unenthusiastic about diversity in educat...

Money Magazine: Dates you don't want to miss The College Countdownupdated: Mon Sep 10 1990 00:01:00

Meeting deadlines is a small but important part of the college admissions process. Failure to file the right form at the right time could conceivably hurt your chances of getting financial aid or a...

Fortune: Shortsightedness pays off, how to not learn much at Princeton, high-risk horses, and other matters. LAMENT IN THE WINNER'S CIRCLupdated: Mon Sep 10 1990 00:01:00

We had definitely planned not to mention the $12 ticket on which your servant won $11,225 at Belmont this summer, since an earlier column (February 1, 1988) on an even heftier ($13,458) hit evoked ...

Fortune: HOW MUCH DOES CLASS MATTER? Quite a bit to the old elite and to some who made big money in the Eighties. Less and less to the reupdated: Mon Jul 30 1990 00:01:00

THE DECADE that just wound down has tweaked awake an old ganglion most Americans prefer to leave at rest: class consciousness. Unprecedented numbers of people got rich, and many are eager to conver...

Fortune: WHERE THE CEOs WENT TO COLLEGE A FORTUNE survey of the nation's top bosses shows that the Ivies and Big Ten schools rank high. Bupdated: Mon Jun 18 1990 00:01:00

IF YOU WANT to become chief executive of a FORTUNE 500 company, where should you go to college? Judging by past performance, you'd better practice singing ''Boola Boola'' and tune up your Whiffenpo...

Fortune: SENIOR PROJECT MAKES GOODupdated: Mon May 28 1990 00:01:00

Just over a year ago, Wendy Kopp, 23, had a breakthrough idea for her senior public policy thesis at Princeton. Why not create a program that took graduates from top colleges who wanted to teach bu...

Fortune: Why the Soviet economy works so well, pragmatism in Nexis, role models for tax evaders. BARBARA FRIETCHIE: THE 1989 VERSIONupdated: Mon Dec 18 1989 00:01:00

PRINCETON, N.J. -- Quick thinking by a . . . co-ed dampened the impact of a flag-burning by two fumbling Princeton University student protesters. Alexandra di Campi . . . snatched a flag Wednesday ...

Fortune: A kind word for Thom McAn, female equality in Michigan, Ford Foundationism, and other matters. THE SPEECH SUPPRESSION MOVEMENTupdated: Mon Jun 19 1989 00:01:00

Hey, remember the Free Speech Movement? That was the great crusade at Berkeley in 1964 -- the New Left uprising that initiated the great student revolution of the Sixties. It seems hard to credit t...

Fortune: THE UNCOMMITTED CLASS OF 1989 This year's college grads aren't into permanence. They show no loyalty toward their corporate emplupdated: Mon Jun 05 1989 00:01:00

WHILE THEIR baby-boomer counterparts of the 1960s sat in at universities, + stood up for civil rights, and danced to the music of Sly and the Family Stone, the college class of 1989 was just learni...

Fortune: FUSION'S FUTURE: IT AIN'T DEAD YET Despite much-publicized problems, the dream of almost unlimited cheap power could someday comupdated: Mon Jun 05 1989 00:01:00

WHY IS this scientist smiling? Because he may have won a small prize in the cold fusion lottery. No, not those $25 boxes of pennies -- the pennies are there to shield his instruments from any gamma...

Money Magazine: Breaking the Myths of Admissions Much of the angst that grips both students and parents is based on bunk. An ex-director of admiupdated: Mon May 01 1989 00:01:00

Marketing is the M word that creates confusion in college admissions. But that's not the only problem. An atmosphere of half-truths and rumors has settled like a fog around the process, contributin...

Money Magazine: The Agony of College Admissions The slings and arrows of marketing are confusing the admissions process. Who's getting hurt? Stuupdated: Mon May 01 1989 00:01:00

; In a better world, we would not put our children through this. Every high school senior would know precisely what he or she wanted out of higher education; college admissions directors would hone...

Money Magazine: What Colleges Don't Tell You -- but Should It's a big investment. But do you know enough about what you are buying?updated: Wed Jun 01 1988 00:01:00

Every year, colleges publish viewbooks teeming with four-color pictures of lawns, lakes and lolling students. Some facts are available too, such as home states of students and the number of volumes...

Fortune: Bob Dole and Sigmund Freud, Bob Bork and Cary Grant, Passing the Calculator, and Other Matters. Honor on the Campusupdated: Mon Apr 11 1988 00:01:00

The late word from central New Jersey is that Princeton University is still not ready to put its Social Honor Code into practice, and yet the present writer has not removed the code's controversial...

Fortune: HOW THE RICHEST COLLEGES HANDLE THEIR BILLIONS Some of the brightest investment pros in the U.S. work with them. ( Here's a lookupdated: Mon Oct 26 1987 00:01:00

ONCE UPON A TIME, late in the dizzy bull-market party of the Roaring Twenties, the chairman of Princeton University's investment committee, a banker named Dean Mathey, decided that the level of sto...

Money Magazine: Lights! Camera! Economists! The paladins of economics are scrambling for camera time and not a little fortune -- but something'supdated: Thu Oct 01 1987 00:01:00

Near midnight on a cool Tuesday evening in May, Lester Thurow, American economist, slumps before a dish of German chocolate ice cream at Steve's ice cream parlor in Lexington, Mass. Breakfast that ...

Fortune: BOOMING AMERICAN CITIES From coast to coast and in between, communities are spiffing up their downtowns, creating jobs, and makiupdated: Mon Aug 17 1987 00:01:00

AS THE SERVICE SECTOR continues to outshine manufacturing, as tomorrow's technology replaces today's, U.S. cities are fast learning to adapt. Some have emerged from the process as veritable boomtow...

Money Magazine: HOW TO GET INTO A TOP COLLEGE . . . AND PAY FOR ITupdated: Mon Sep 01 1986 00:01:00

If you are the parent of a high school senior, what has come to be among life's most passionate quests begins in earnest this month. It is the search for the perfect college -- the one that you can...

Money Magazine: WHEN FINANCIAL AID IS NOT ENOUGH Families are making up the difference by hocking their homes and putting students to work.updated: Mon Sep 01 1986 00:01:00

As a child, it was obvious to Tim Forshey that his father, a now retired farmer and construction worker, would not be able to give him money for college. But Forshey's father taught him a trade tha...

Fortune: Only in America (cont'd) Jobs for Angola, In Defense of Vitamin A, The Future of Coed Basketball, and Other Matters.updated: Mon Nov 25 1985 00:01:00

The students at the little rural high school in Princeton, California, might not exactly fit the definition of struggling family farmers, but they collected $7,087 in federal farm . . . subsidies l...

Fortune: ALIENATED IN THE EIGHTIES Novels by and for the well-to-do young portray a world many businessmen wouldn't recognize.updated: Mon Oct 28 1985 00:01:00

On an evening last winter, six of us happened to be leaving my office at the same time. The three editors, all in their early 30s, were dressed normally in down parkas and sporting backpacks. But t...

Fortune: WHY COLLEGE BILLS DON'T LEVEL OFF U.S. colleges say they're making up for faculty raises they didn't give and maintenance they dupdated: Mon Sep 30 1985 00:01:00

AS COLLEGE STUDENTS head back to campus, they leave behind parents pained and baffled by the ever higher cost of higher learning. Though U.S. inflation has been hovering around 4% for more than thr...

We recommend

From around the web