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(07/29/24 5:08am)
Dean Amaney Jamal of the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) spoke about campus protests and the war in Gaza on a podcast with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace on July 18. Jamal was in conversation with her friend and former colleague Keren Yarhi-Milo, the current Dean of Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA).
(07/29/24 5:25am)
In the opening weekend of the 2024 Paris Olympics, Princeton athletes have officially gotten into the swing of things. As of July 28, 11 out of the 25 Tigers competing have begun participation in their respective events.
(07/29/24 3:35am)
The ordeal began when I had run the dishwasher on a Friday night — the same dishwasher that had relentlessly scrubbed my blender, plates, and pans for weeks without fail — and let myself drift off to sleep.
(07/29/24 3:54am)
One tip on traveling to the Silver State: it’s “Neh-VAD-uh,” not “Neh-VAH-duh.” During the nine days I spent there for fieldwork, I got some strange looks for using the latter pronunciation. Not necessarily offended looks, but ones that light-heartedly suspected me to be a non-local — a belief confirmed when I would inevitably reveal myself as a lifetime New Jerseyan.
(07/29/24 4:30am)
“I went up. I probably should have prepared a speech … I think I started by saying, ‘I never win anything,’ to express my surprise,” recalled Ed Park, a Lecturer in Creative Writing at the Lewis Center for the Arts.
(07/27/24 1:02am)
This year, a record-high number of Princeton students, past and present, will be competing on the world's biggest stage in Paris. The Daily Princetonian looked at the stories of these Olympians, when to watch them compete, and Princeton's long history at the Olympic Games.
(07/26/24 2:24am)
Now a veteran on the national team set to earn her 54th cap, rising junior Beth Yeager will be representing USA Field Hockey in her first Olympics. Team USA, ranked No. 24 in the world and the lowest in their preliminary pool of six nations, is riding high off of a somewhat surprising qualification to the Olympic Games.
(07/26/24 4:18am)
The 2024 Paris Olympics begin on July 26. With a record-high 25 current and former Princeton students competing in the Games, who should Tiger faithful keep an eye on this summer?
(07/27/24 1:01am)
The American team almost missed the first Olympics. The Americans claimed it was the Greek’s antiquated reliance on the Julian calendar, yet some have argued that the near-miss was intentions.
(07/26/24 3:16am)
In Claire Collins’ senior year Ivy Championships in 2019, her boat soared to a first-place finish in the varsity eight event by a margin of just under four seconds — yet she had no idea how her teammates had done in the second varsity boat. The moment she found out they too had won, Collins burst into tears.
(07/25/24 9:04pm)
When Carol Brown ’75 arrived at Princeton in 1971, she was not an athlete. Five years later, Brown would go on to row for Team USA in the Montreal Olympics, becoming the first of 16 female Princetonian rowers to do so.
(07/29/24 4:29am)
Regan Crotty ’00 will serve as Princeton’s new dean of undergraduate students, according to a University announcement made July 15. Crotty will now lead the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students (ODUS), which is responsible for co-curricular and extracurricular aspects of student life.
(07/26/24 3:49am)
The Modern Olympics began almost thirteen decades ago in the spiritual home of the Games — Athens, Greece. Since then, 53 Olympic games have been held, with Princetonians representing both their home countries and the Orange and Black from the very first games through this summer in Paris.
(07/25/24 12:55am)
Kareem Maddox ’11 last stood on the court of a televised American basketball game over a decade ago.
(07/25/24 12:46am)
As a record-high 25 current and former Princeton students gear up to compete in the 2024 Paris Olympic games, the cohort of current students — in the city for internships, classes, and research — have had to navigate bustling Paris amid its Olympic preparations. While these Tigers won’t be found competing for Olympic glory, their work and studies will still be significantly impacted as hundreds of thousands of visitors descend on the French capital.
(07/15/24 4:26am)
Before 2021, Indigenous students did not have an affinity space at Princeton. Natives at Princeton (NAP), in their search for a space, first requested a room in the Carl A. Fields Center, the renovated eating club on Prospect Ave. home to many of the campus’s affinity spaces. However, their request was denied due to a lack of room.
(07/15/24 2:57am)
Seven alumni have been elected to serve on the 2024-25 Board of Trustees, the University announced Friday, June 28. With seven other trustees having completed their terms on June 30, the size of the Board remains at 37 members.
(07/15/24 1:15am)
The sun never sets in Greenland — not over the summer, at least. They call it the “midnight sun”: a natural phenomenon of 24-hour sunlight caused by the tilting of the Earth. At its lowest point, the Arctic sun stays a few fingers above the horizon, setting the water afire like molten gold and outlining the silhouettes of the icebergs. It hovers there, and if you stick around long enough into the morning hours, it rises again.
(07/29/24 4:40am)
As we plunged deeper and deeper into the dense rainforest of Madagascar, there was little that could prepare me for the trek that lay ahead. Atop the mountains of Betampona Natural Reserve, the air was refreshing and clean. As was routine with constant downpour of the region, the plants glistened as beads of rainfall bore signs of the earth washed anew with this morning’s rain.
(07/11/24 3:48am)
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents entered Princeton on Wednesday morning to arrest undocumented residents and circled town for several hours in unmarked vehicles. Members of local government and nonprofit representatives allege that multiple individuals were detained, though ICE stated that only one arrest was made.