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(11/15/22 3:55am)
Students on Princeton’s unlimited dining plan now have five new restaurants they can eat out at using the dining points established in an Undergraduate Student Government (USG) initiative at the start of the 2022–23 academic year: Chennai Chimney, Greek Bites, Junbi, Lan Ramen, and Thomas Sweet.
(11/15/22 3:17am)
On Sunday, Nov. 13, Marie-Rose Sheinerman ’23 was awarded this year’s Rhodes Scholarship. Sheinerman, Princeton’s sole Rhodes-winner, who serves as the Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Princetonian’s 146th Board, will begin graduate studies next fall at the University of Oxford.
(11/16/22 1:59am)
On Nov. 1, Princeton announced the first 10 research projects that will receive funding and support from the new Princeton Alliance for Collaborative Research and Innovation (PACRI).
(11/14/22 1:00pm)
Eisgruber names expansion of Engineering School top priority for coming 5 years
(11/16/22 4:58am)
On Saturday, Nov. 12, five guest speakers spoke on campus about game design and development at Games &&, a symposium organized by Tim Szetela, a lecturer in visual arts.
(11/14/22 5:00am)
Renowned Slovenian philosopher and public intellectual Slavoj Žižek visited campus early this month. His lecture attracted around 200 community members, as McCosh Hall 46 filled to capacity and attendees spilled out of the room.
(11/14/22 5:15am)
For the first time since 2018, The Daily Princetonian sat down for an interview with University President Christopher L. Eisgruber ’83. The exclusive 45-minute interview with Eisgruber will be published in a two-part series this week. The following article expands on a portion of the interview.
(11/11/22 1:00pm)
SPEAR 7x9 protest denounces solitary confinement
(11/11/22 5:13pm)
On Nov. 3, visual arts professor Joe Scanlan said the n-word while posing a question to students during his VIS321: Words as Objects seminar. He used the word during a discussion about a poem by Black poet Jonah Mixon-Webster’s poetic anthology “Stereo(TYPE).”
(11/11/22 4:26am)
Content warning: This piece contains mention of gun violence.
(11/11/22 4:19am)
The University launched a website on Thursday, Nov. 10, providing students with information and updates about the new upperclass dining pilot program, which is set to be launched this coming spring semester.
(11/11/22 3:18am)
On Nov. 2, the University announced the recipients of its most prestigious awards for alumni, with Christopher Cavoli ’87 receiving the Woodrow Wilson Award and Robert Kahn GS ’64 set to receive the James Madison Medal.
(11/11/22 3:14am)
Students for Prison Education and Reform (SPEAR) held their annual performance protest against solitary confinement titled “7x9” in front of Frist Campus Center this week. The protest lasted for 23 hours, starting at 2 a.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 9 and concluding the next day at 1 a.m., in a gesture to the 23 hours a day that individuals in solitary confinement must stay in their cells.
(11/10/22 1:00pm)
Judge Paul Matey critiques federal judges, Yale Law; arch named in memory of Princeton's sole Japanese student during WWII
(11/10/22 5:34am)
The archway leading through Lockhart Hall, located beside the University Store, was renamed to memorialize Kentaro Ikeda ’44, who was the only Japanese student at Princeton during World War II.
(11/10/22 5:11am)
Judge Paul B. Matey of the Third Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals critiqued fellow federal judges and discussed his views on the roles of originalism and natural law in constitutional interpretation at a campus event organized by the Princeton Federalist and Pre-Law Societies on Monday, Nov. 7.
(11/09/22 3:57am)
Alan S. Blinder ’67 is the Gordon S. Rentschler Memorial Professor of Economics and Public Affairs and currently teaches Introduction to Macroeconomics.
(11/09/22 5:13am)
On Tuesday, Nov. 8, voters throughout Mercer County made their voices heard in the midterm elections, as some University alumni vied for seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.
(11/09/22 4:37am)
On Monday Nov. 7, Professor Judith Butler from University of California, Berkeley gave a lecture entitled “Fury and Justice in the Humanities,” which centered around Aeschylus’s play “Eumenides,” the relationship between violence and the law, and prison abolition.
(11/09/22 3:36am)
The School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) hosted Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, President and CEO of Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (LIRS), to discuss migration, the refugee crisis, and her family’s experience with immigration on Nov. 3.