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(6 hours ago)
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.
(04/05/24 5:08am)
There was a time when Princeton’s undergraduate student body consisted of only two students of Asian descent. Though ethnic Asian enrollment at the University remained low throughout the 1950s and 1960s, students would come together to form the politically-minded Asian American Students Association (AASA) in 1971.
(04/03/24 2:37am)
Meredith Martin is an associate professor of English and serves as the Faculty Director for The Center for Digital Humanities (CDH), which she founded in 2014. She is also the inaugural Faculty Director of the first Graduate Certificate in Digital Humanities at Princeton and serves as an advisor for undergraduate students pursuing Certificates such as Applications in Computer Science, Statistics in Machine Learning, Journalism, or Technology and Society.
(03/26/24 3:05am)
Jeffrey Wright, star of the 2024 Academy Award-winning film, “American Fiction,” doesn’t think we Princeton students will take his advice. After all, as he said, we’re young. The celebrated actor is the father of two college-aged kids — he knows how stubborn young adults can be. However, it would be a mistake to not consider his words deeply. This is a man who has an impressive filmography: one that ranges from “Angels in America” to “The Hunger Games,” “James Bond” to “Westworld.” He has worked with the likes of legends such as Mike Nichols, Wes Anderson, M. Night Shyamalan, Sam Mendes, and Spike Lee; he was also cast in Lee’s remake of the Akira Kurosawa classic “High and Low” alongside Denzel Washington.
(03/25/24 8:50pm)
(02/21/24 5:12am)
“Film is the best artistic medium. It combines every aspect of art. It’s visual. It’s audible. But at its core, it’s human,” said Connor Odom ’26. Odom first got into film in fifth grade, when he acted in a small role in a short film. He transferred to Princeton in fall of 2022, after working for seven years full-time in the videography and film industry.
(02/20/24 7:08am)
Content Warning: The following article includes mention of student death.
(12/01/23 6:15am)
A political group terming itself the Princeton Coalition of Responsible Development has drafted a petition with nearly 1,000 signatures opposing the Municipality of Princeton’s Master Plan. Princeton’s Planning Board prepared the plan, which guides the municipality’s growth and development and informs its zoning, land use decisions, and infrastructure.
(11/27/23 11:17pm)
Less than a day into campaigning, one of two candidates for Undergraduate Student Government (USG) president withdrew from the race. This leaves only one campaigning candidate for president for the first time since at least 2013.
(10/27/23 8:59am)
After 25 years at Princeton, Keith Whittington, the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics, announced that he is leaving Princeton to teach at Yale Law School at the end of this academic year.
(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.
(09/20/23 5:19am)
Former Swedish Prime Minister and leader of the Swedish Social Democratic Party Magdalena Andersson spoke to Princeton students about geopolitics, leadership, speech, and equality on Monday, Sept. 18. Her comments reinvigorated ongoing campus discussions surrounding social media usage and concerns of infringing upon free speech.
(05/08/23 4:57am)
The Daily Princetonian sat down with Dean of the Faculty Gene Jarrett ’97 to discuss diversity and inclusion initiatives, undergraduate expansion, and administrative bloat. The full transcript of the interview can be accessed here.
(05/03/23 4:09am)
President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 is “very proud” of University students’ commitment to free speech, he said at an event hosted on Saturday by the Princeton Progressive Law Society, .
(05/02/23 5:34am)
More than 10 years ago, history professor William Chester Jordan GS ’73 was walking with a group of students in front of Nassau Hall. As the group approached FitzRandolph Gate, instead of walking straight through the center, the students split and filed out the two side gates, as students tend to do.
(04/21/23 3:34am)
Among a wide expanse of chattering undergraduates, enthusiastic graduate students, and a few elderly citizens listening while she sketches her likeness into the paper, the author Kyung-sook Shin sits in the front of Betts Auditorium, quiet and expectant.
(04/20/23 5:17am)
On Monday, April 3, students enrolled in COS 126 (Computer Science: An Interdisciplinary Approach), got a Canvas announcement from Professor David August entitled “Important Collaboration Policy Information.”
(04/19/23 3:24am)
Organized by the French and Francophone Society of Princeton University in collaboration with various local and international organizations, the Princeton French Film Festival will feature some of the most compelling films of recent francophone cinema. It will take place between April 16–28, 2023, and is open to the public. The film screenings will be held in McCosh 10 and Betts Auditorium.
(04/13/23 5:15am)
Last week brought warm weather and an explosion of flowers at Princeton. However, the hottest topic of conversation was not the seasonal shift. Instead, since mid-March, much of the student body’s attention was focused on room draw: the stressful and complex process where rising sophomores, juniors, and seniors pick their room for the upcoming year. Room draw is opaque, and the University has not provided enough reminders — nor adequate and accessible guidance about the process — especially about the group-selection aspect.
(04/12/23 4:21am)
A sunny day was perfect setting for what prospective new members of the Class of 2027 called the “warm and vibrant” environment created by University administrators, faculty, and current students as they got what was, for some of them, their first look at campus.