Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Princetonian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(04/19/24 4:04am)
The newly admitted Class of 2028 received a warm welcome to Princeton for this year’s Princeton Preview, with temperatures reaching 70 degrees. The annual celebration, held this year on April 9 and 16, serves as an opportunity for accepted students and their families to gain a deeper understanding of what the university has to offer.
(04/19/24 6:58am)
Only eight players in NCAA history have averaged over 30 minutes and 12 points per game while shooting at least 50 percent from the field, 40 percent from beyond the arc, and 90 percent from the charity stripe.
(04/19/24 4:20am)
Each week, Sports and Data editors analyze recent athletic competitions to provide analysis and insight on the happenings of Princeton athletics and individual players across the 38 intercollegiate teams at Princeton. Whether they are record-breaking or day-to-day, statistics deliver information in concise ways and help inform fans who might have missed the action. Read past By the Numbers coverage here.
(04/19/24 6:26am)
Three floors under Firestone Library in Special Collections, a group of Princeton first-year students are translating a collection of largely untouched documents from Nahuatl — an endangered, indigenous Mesoamerican language — into English.
(04/19/24 6:35am)
Bletchley Park is a student indie rock band consisting of Ian Liu ’27 (keyboard), Nicholas Manetas ’27 (guitar), Leah Shefferman ’27 (drums), Rohan Sykora ’27 (guitar, vocals), and Sydney Tyler ’27 (bass, vocals). The ‘Prince’ sat down with Bletchley Park to talk about their performances, inspirations, and goals.
(04/19/24 7:33am)
The No. 17-ranked Princeton women’s lacrosse team (8–5 overall, 4–1 Ivy League) fell to the No. 8 ranked Maryland Terrapins (12–4, 4–2 Big Ten) on Wednesday night at home at Sherrerd Field.
(04/19/24 7:07am)
This week in Sports news: Transfer portal and world championships
(04/18/24 12:00pm)
University to extend passing time between classes: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
(04/18/24 5:33am)
After Andrei Iosivas ’23 completed his first season at Princeton, he met with football head coach Bob Surace ’90.
(04/19/24 6:14am)
Room draw came to a close on April 10 after upperclass draw ended. After the draw, only quads remained, leaving many groups unable to draw into a room. This year, only 20 room draw groups for the Class of 2026 stayed exactly the same. The Daily Princetonian examined how draw groups changed from last year to this current one.
(04/18/24 6:00am)
Princeton’s campus hosts a diverse range of classroom environments, from lecture halls with projection technologies to seminar rooms with round tables. With course selection occurring this week, students are in the midst of planning their Fall semester schedules — including the rooms where they will be learning. We broke down the classrooms on campus, analyzing occupancy, technology, and location.
(04/18/24 4:06am)
Effective Fall 2025, passing times between classes will be extended to 15 and 20 minutes, replacing the current 10 minute period. The plan also suggests opening more room in the course grid for precept and course times.
(04/18/24 4:41am)
The Opinion section is thrilled to introduce named columns at the ‘Prince,’ starting with six columnists this semester and more to join in coming semesters. Our columnists will publish regularly and, we hope, become consistent voices in the campus conversation.
(04/18/24 2:10am)
As April marks Autism Awareness and Acceptance Month, the AccessAbility Center hosted its second-annual Sensory Fair on Wednesday, April 17. The event sought to help community members to “get a sense of what kind of sensory inputs there are and how heightened it is for individuals within the autism spectrum disorder,” Asha Nambiar, the Director of Accessibility and Disability Services, told The Daily Princetonian.
(04/18/24 1:13am)
On the eve of my twentieth birthday, a heavy knot of emotions — along with hunger — burdened my stomach as I rode the 30-minute train ride to Edison, N.J. The feeling was an aggregation of bottomless nostalgia and fluttering excitement. After getting off at the Edison train station and walking for 10 minutes through a residential neighborhood, I soon approached an expansive strip mall. Storefronts of Asian restaurants, shops, cafes, and other commercial spaces catered to the nearly 50 percent Asian population residing in Edison defined this shopping center called Festival Plaza.
(04/18/24 2:53am)
If not redirected, click here.
(04/17/24 12:00pm)
In light of preview days, religious groups ramp up new-student outreach: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
(04/17/24 4:29am)
Ella Weber ’25 was named as one of 60 recipients of the 2024 Truman Scholarship, a $30,000 award given to college juniors to “recognize and reward their commitments to careers in public service.” Weber, a SPIA major, hails from Crookston, Minn. and is a member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation.
(04/17/24 3:45am)
As the end of the semester approaches, so too do I approach the end of my University-allotted printing quota. This is a testament to the hefty reading loads often expected in Princeton classes, much of which is uploaded online. As an iPad-less student who values annotating her readings, this means that I am a frequent patron of the various campus printers. While virtual access to course materials is useful, allowing students to practice diverse study methods at no added cost, the academic advantages of reading on paper — to ourselves and our academic community — are too great to ignore. In recognition of this truth, Princeton should encourage professors to return to disseminating their reading through Pequod course packets.
(04/17/24 4:00am)
When prospective Princetonians visited campus for the Class of 2028’s Princeton Preview, many faith-based organizations on campus welcomed them, hosting events and distributing information to welcome the next class to the campus community. The Daily Princetonian spoke to several faith-based organizations on campus to hear what prospective students look for in a faith community, and how student leaders are promoting their organization to the incoming class.