Abdelhamid Arbab ’23 named Marshall Scholar
Abdelhamid (Hamid) Arbab ’23 has been named as one of this year’s 40 recipients of the Marshall Scholarship, which will fund him for two years of graduate study in the United Kingdom.
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Abdelhamid (Hamid) Arbab ’23 has been named as one of this year’s 40 recipients of the Marshall Scholarship, which will fund him for two years of graduate study in the United Kingdom.
Sustainability, No Communication Orders updates in CPUC meeting; New Jersey’s minimum wage to increase to $14.13/hour
As of Jan. 1, the statewide minimum wage in New Jersey will increase to $14.13 per hour, according to the New Jersey Department of Labor & Workforce Development. This change marks the latest part of a multi-phase plan to increase the statewide minimum wage to $15 per hour by 2025. This legislation was signed into effect by Gov. Phil Murphy in 2019.
On Monday, Dec. 12, the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC) heard a preview of the University’s annual Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) report, updates related to campus sustainability, and a report from the Ad Hoc Committee on Sexual Climate, Culture and Conduct.
Attendees at a Dec. 9 event titled “Crime, Safety and Justice in the 2022 Elections” heard presentations and participated in discussions about how the perception of crime in the United States affected the 2022 midterm elections.
On Thursday, Dec. 8, students received an email from their residential college dean which included an announcement of a new pilot policy that allows professors to give 24-hour extensions on Dean’s Date assignments.
On Wednesday, Dec. 7, scholars discussed Native American displacement, the disproportionate effects of COVID-19 on Natives, and the effects of the residential school system at an event on campus titled “The State of Indigenous Americans.”
Early Saturday morning in Qatar, the world lost one of its premier soccer journalists — and Princeton University and The Daily Princetonian lost a beloved and brilliant alumnus.
Stephen Daniels ’24 was elected president by a nearly 40 point margin in this year’s Undergraduate Student Government (USG) winter elections. The Senate-initiated referendum on gender-neutral bathrooms in dorms passed with 58 percent of the votes, with 27 percent voting no and 15 percent voting to abstain.
'This is hate speech': Students harassed by extremist protestors on campus
The University approved Chinese international students’ continuous housing requests on Dec. 5 after initially denying a number of requests for housing over winter break.
The Office of Campus Engagement (OCE) will host Princeton’s third annual Wintersession on Jan. 16-29, offering 525 free courses taught by administrators, faculty members, students, and community members.
Content Warning: This article includes mention of violent hate speech.
Rev. Dr. Jonathan Lee Walton will begin his term as the first Black and the first Baptist President of the Princeton Theological Seminary (PTS) on Jan. 1. Walton is also an alum of the Seminary, earning a Ph.D. in 2006 and M.Div. in 2002.
Anthony Grafton is a historian of Renaissance Europe and the Henry Putnam University Professor of History at Princeton, where he has taught since 1975. His most recent book, co-authored with Maren Elisabeth Schwab of the University of Kiel in Germany, is “The Art of Discovery: Digging into the Past in Renaissance Europe,” published by Princeton University Press in November.
The Spring 2023 course catalog features 23 new courses in or cross-listed with the African American Studies Department (AAS), spanning a range of disciplines including theater, poetry, and journalism. This is the most new courses of any department, barring Freshman Seminars, according to the catalog.
In the final meeting of the term, the Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Senate heard updates on security cameras, budget, and committee activities in Betts Auditorium on Sunday, Dec. 4. The Senate also approved minor adjustments to the language of the Honor Committee Constitution and a resolution regarding USG transparency.
On Dec. 1, high school students across the country were admitted to the University via the QuestBridge National College Match. In keeping with an announcement made earlier this year, the University has not released admissions statistics about the Class of 2027, according to an email from University Spokesperson Michael Hotchkiss, including the number of QuestBridge recipients.
Professor Imani Perry honored with National Book Award for nonfiction; Town Council hears community thoughts on master plans
On Nov. 16, Professor Imani Perry of the Department of African American Studies received the National Book Award for Nonfiction, honoring “South to America: A Journey Below the Mason-Dixon to Understand the Soul of a Nation.”