Princeton’s discourse on Palestine and Israel should be rooted in historical reality
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The following is a guest submission and reflects the author’s views alone. For information on how to submit a piece to the Opinion section, click here.
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 last week‘s By the Numbers.
As Mia González Guerrero sees it, she has two jobs. The first is what Campus Dining pays her to do — serve coffee and pastries at Frist Campus Center. And the second? To “give love.”
While current union drives for graduate students and postdoctoral workers have yet to be recognized by the University, Jeff Coley, the president of Service Employees International Union-175 (SEIU-175), reminded attendees of the Young Democratic Socialists of America (YDSA) Labor Unions Panel of the five unions already operating on campus.
A new exhibit at the Milberg Gallery in Firestone Library celebrates the work of Mexican modern artist Ulises Carrión Bogard, focusing on his reimagination of what a book could look like, mean, and do. According to a post on X from @PULibrary, the “exhibition [is] the largest U.S. retrospective exhibition of [Carrión]’s work to date.”
Nobody likes the SAT. It’s long, it’s tedious, and it’s stressful. Millions of high schoolers were surely relieved when, in the 2020–2021 admission cycle, the majority of four-year colleges decided not to require SAT or ACT scores — Princeton among them. At the time, Princeton and others announced “test-optional” policies as a temporary policy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Years after the pandemic, however, Princeton has kept the policy in place.
You don’t have to go too far back in time to find the moment that senior guard and captain Kaitlyn Chen became the star of the Princeton women’s basketball program. On Mar. 30, 2022 — the Ivy Madness final — Princeton faced their rival Columbia at the Lavietes Pavilion in Cambridge, Mass., with an NCAA Tournament berth at stake. The then-rookie Chen dropped a career-high 30 points in the battle and was named the Ivy Madness Tournament’s most valuable player. Postgame, Chen earned effusive praise from Tigers’ great Abby Meyers ’22.
This weekend, under cloudy skies in Orlando, Fla., Princeton softball (5–4 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) competed against four teams in the University of Central Florida (UCF) Knights Classic. The Tigers won their first game, but failed to keep that momentum going and lost their next four games.
The Princeton University Orchestra (PUO), the African Music Ensemble, and the Dafra Kura band presented the world premiere of “Be Kūnū” during the PUO’s “Concerto Concert” in Richardson Auditorium on Mar. 1 and 2. Three soloists — Wesley Sanders ’26, Kaivalya Kulkarni ’26, and Daniel Lee ’27 each had impressive performances during the first half of the concert. Sanders played Ralph Vaughan Williams’ Tuba Concerto, while Kulkarni played Robert Schumann’s Cello Concerto in A minor. After a short intermission, Lee performed Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto.
There are Firestone loyalists who, year-round, prefer the six-level behemoth that serves as the University library system’s headquarters. However, when exam season comes, hordes of Princetonians overtake the stacks. Everyone wants to “lock-in” on their work, and popular study spaces may often be occupied by the time you arrive. Luckily, campus is full of other places where you can get your work done without having to battle over the last cubicle. Here are five spots where you can finish those midterm papers and p-sets.
Though basketball is not what Ivy League schools with low acceptance rates and mandatory senior theses are typically known for, over the past decade, the Tigers have made a name for themselves on the court in both men’s and women’s basketball.
Though analysts may hail the coaching systems of Carla Berube and Mitch Henderson ’98 as the driving forces behind the women’s and men’s basketball team’s recent success, it could be argued that star power that has propelled Tiger basketball into the national spotlight.
USG allocates funding and introduces new event registration format: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
Editor's Note: This article has been updated significantly to further acknowledge the housing options available to graduate students and to include student testimonies. A previous version of this article can be found here.
70–25 is a score you usually see in a video game.
In this episode, Brains, Black Holes, and Beyond sits down with Dr. Thalia Gigerenzer on the impact of technology and dating apps on modern interpretations of intimacy as well as exploring love as a research field. Dr. Gigerenzer's research as an anthropologist has focused on Muslim communities in India, including deep dives into the impacts of technology on relationships and courtship.
The No. 10 Princeton women’s water polo team (12–2 overall, 4–0 Collegiate Water Polo Association) defeated four teams this past weekend in a CWPA conference showdown at DeNunzio pool, sweeping the weekend slate.
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Senate gathered for its fourth meeting of the spring semester on Sunday, March 3, introducing a new event registration format and allocating more Project Board funding.
In a message to the University community sent Friday, Vice President for Campus Life W. Rochelle Calhoun announced the creation of a university Hazing Prevention and Response Task Force, which will work alongside the national StopHazing Hazing Prevention Consortium.