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(10/03/23 3:55am)
At an event hosted by The Effron Center for the Study of America on Sept. 19, Grammy Award-winning artist Solána Imani Rowe, better known as SZA, who gave the keynote address at the event, promised Princeton students free tickets to a concert in her then-upcoming tour.
(10/03/23 1:48am)
Meet the Class of 2027
(10/03/23 3:51am)
What does the word “great” accomplish in the expression, “The Great Class of 2027?” In my first two weeks at first-year orientation, I heard the phrase in impassioned speeches, incessant emails, and dinnertime conversations more often than I did my own name — an experience that I am certain is shared by other first-years. We are showered with this slogan so often that it almost gains a sort of religiosity. The word “great” instills people with a sense of certainty that their presence here is justified and deserved. But this pervasive Princetonian pride for being great is more insidious than it appears to be. It reveals that pursuing a more meritocratic admissions system, an aim that many progressives subscribe to, is based on a sense of intellectual superiority rather than a genuine desire for equality. The idea of a “great class” destroys our humility and obscures the fact that we are all here because of a force even greater than merit — luck. The solution is straightforward and radical: partially randomizing Princeton’s admissions process.
(10/03/23 2:35am)
The University will soon launch a Lyft voucher program to transport students to and from off-campus medical appointments. Run through the Office of Campus Life, it will serve both undergraduate and graduate students.
(10/03/23 2:58am)
It has been an eventful few years for Dr. Katalin Karikó. After pioneering the mRNA technology behind the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine with immunologist Dr. Drew Weissman in 2005 — over a decade before the COVID-19 pandemic — Karikó received an honorary degree from Princeton in May 2023 at Commencement.
(10/03/23 2:46am)
Frist Campus Center hosts various delectable spots for students to grab a bite to eat or drink, including cafes, a convenience store, and the much-esteemed late meal. Café Vivian, tucked into the back corner of Frist’s first floor, is a lunch spot that recently opened for the year. Attracted to the brightly-lit, retro-style entrance sign, I decided to check it out.
(10/02/23 12:00pm)
(10/02/23 3:19am)
On Wednesday, Sept. 13, all 15 players on Dartmouth men’s basketball team filed a petition to unionize. Since then, no athletic teams at Princeton — or the other Ivy League schools — have announced their own push for unionization. Dartmouth’s petition was filed to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).
(10/02/23 3:11am)
Following the release of The Daily Princetonian’s fourth annual Frosh Survey, Data editors break down some interesting crosstabs.
(10/02/23 3:41am)
From the Mid Autumn festivities to musical performances, another busy week continues.
(10/02/23 2:40am)
A new initiative established at Princeton aims to gather talent and devote resources toward the development of artificial intelligence (AI) for academic and research purposes.
(10/02/23 2:54am)
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) met on Sunday, Oct. 1 to discuss various ongoing projects, allocate projects board funding, and vote for Executive Committee Representatives for the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC) and U-Council Chairs.
(10/02/23 2:59am)
Following the recent extension of late meal hours to include standard lunch times, many students now regularly eat lunch at the Frist Food Gallery, resulting in crowding and long lines during peak lunch hours.
(10/02/23 1:50am)
Joining together with 75,000 other people, 60 Princetonians took the train up to New York City to tear our throats chanting, brandish hand-made signs, and connect with people who are just as terrified of the climate crisis as we are. As the largest national mass mobilization on climate change since 2019, organizers hosted the March to End Fossil Fuels to call on President Biden to fight harder against a fossil fuel industry that actively sabotages our chances for a liveable future.
(10/08/23 5:23pm)
Play the puzzle here.
(10/02/23 2:36am)
Once students pass the illustrious FitzRandolph Gate and enter the suburbia of Princeton, N.J., they are greeted by a town full of food and shopping. For the past 86 years, the town has been partly defined by one historic establishment: Conte’s Pizza and Bar.
(10/02/23 2:49am)
Facing rainy conditions for their third game in a row, Princeton football (2–1 overall, 1–0 Ivy League) emerged victorious in their Ivy League opener against the Columbia Lions (1–2, 0–1). The Tigers edged out the Lions with a final score of 10–7, giving Princeton a crucial head start in the Ivy League conference standings.
(10/02/23 1:16am)
Facing their first large field of the season, the Princeton women’s cross country team placed sixth at the Battle in Beantown 5k on Friday.
(10/01/23 6:21am)
"In this project, the staff of the ‘Prince’ trace power on campus through histories, data analyses, detailed profiles, and deeply-held opinions. It's an issue about personalities. These are personalities we have to be aware of, no matter what their role is."
(10/01/23 3:03am)
This week, the ‘Prince’ examined who runs Princeton, searching for the power players on campus. But today, Daybreak looks to answer a slightly different question: “Who’s really running Princeton?” We look at the day-to-day of facilities and dining hall workers, how facilities is structured, and whether or not their compensation reflects their impact on the campus community. Listen in.