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(12/12/22 5:41am)
On the evening of Monday, Dec. 5, a group of Sexual Harassment/Assault Advising, Resource, and Education (SHARE) Peers watched as Delaney Callaghan ’23 lit a candle on the sidewalk of Prospect Street. As she placed it into a small bag adorned with the logo of Womanspace, a Princeton nonprofit that provides resources for those impacted by domestic and sexual violence, audible gasps went up from the group as they observed the creation of the first luminary for Communities of Light.
(12/14/22 4:59am)
Tucked away in a nook of Nassau Street, Say Cheez Café, owned and managed by Omar Delgado, has been a steady yet unassuming hallmark of the Princeton community for the last nine years. Self-proclaimed as the “best kept secret on campus,” the small business has seen a tumultuous journey to success.
(12/07/22 5:17am)
Dr. Nada Elbuluk ’04 is a board-certified dermatologist and founder of the Skin of Color Center and Pigmentary Disorders Program at the University of Southern California, Keck School of Medicine, where she also serves as an assistant professor. She graduated from the University with a degree in Psychology and certificates in Gender and Sexuality Studies and African American Studies.
(12/08/22 2:20am)
The Akan word ‘Sankofa’ means “it is not taboo to fetch what is at risk of being left behind.” Sankofa is often depicted as a mythical bird, with its neck turned backwards, even while it is flying forward. Naming the annual fashion event after this symbol encapsulates the experience of many people among the Black and African diaspora at Princeton: the metaphorical back-turned neck gives them a chance to look back at and engage in their cultures, even while in the Orange Bubble.
(12/06/22 5:32am)
In 2020, many businesses, particularly restaurants, were closing or struggling to stay afloat due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite this, Aliia Ulukbek took a risk and opened a small pastry shop on Spring Street in Princeton. Ulukbek remembers how fellow business owners thought she was “crazy to open [a restaurant] during this time.”
(11/30/22 3:07am)
“Poetry is ultimate expression. When we’re deeply hurt, we write in our little journals, right? A lot of magic comes out of those words. Much of that magic is poetry,” said Marilyn Chin, one of Princeton’s most recent faculty members in the Program in Creative Writing, where she serves as a Visiting Lecturer and Holmes Poet.
(11/17/22 3:23am)
Last week, they sat in a box outside Frist Campus Center — orange duct tape on the sidewalk marking seven by nine feet, the size of a solitary confinement cell. For 23 hours, student activists with Students for Prison Education, Abolition, and Reform (SPEAR) alternated sitting in the duct-taped rectangle for one hour at a time, and manning the information table to the side of the rectangle.
(11/09/22 2:41am)
“Nothing compares with live [courses.]”
(11/02/22 2:56am)
It takes a village to raise a child, and it takes several thousand staff and faculty members to educate and care for Princeton undergraduate students.
(11/01/22 4:44am)
Nearly sixteen years ago, a lucky find on eBay brought Nomad Pizza to life. Today, the pizzeria-on-wheels continues to operate out of the same eBay-bought truck and is a Princeton University staple.
(10/24/22 2:53am)
It takes a village to raise a child, and it takes several thousand employees to educate and care for Princeton undergraduate students.
(10/26/22 2:37am)
When Rabbi Gil Steinlauf ’91 learned that the position of Executive Director of Princeton’s Center for Jewish Life (CJL) was open, he was “thunderstruck.”
(10/14/22 3:26am)
On Sept. 29, the University released a statement announcing it would dissociate from 90 fossil fuel companies. The announcement came only a few days after Divest Princeton’s first protest of the year, held on Sept. 23 as part of the Global Climate Strike. The announcement left many longtime Divest activists feeling invigorated as they looked towards the future of climate activism on campus.
(10/10/22 3:48am)
For Gustavo Blanco-Quiroga ’25, a Princeton education presents first and foremost an opportunity: “I wanted to redirect the privilege and education I have to my community.”
(10/04/22 3:08am)
On Sept. 8, Queen Elizabeth II passed away at the age of 96. Upon her death, she was the United Kingdom’s longest reigning monarch, having served for more than 70 years. Over the course of her life, the Queen bestowed honors upon an array of Princeton professors who have made extraordinary contributions to their fields. The Daily Princetonian sat down with several professors to discuss their award ceremonies and reflections on the Queen’s life.
(09/29/22 1:37am)
In 2019, Josie Ziluca, then the part-time coach at Princeton’s women’s club rugby team, was driving across the country when she received a phone call from Princeton Athletics. On the side of the road, she was informed that her team was going varsity.
(09/22/22 1:54am)
It takes a village to raise a child, and it takes several thousand staff and faculty members to educate and care for Princeton undergraduate students once they begin their University careers.
(07/07/22 11:20pm)
Looking for a way to practice reading in Hawaiian, Travis Chai Andrade ’24 approached Firestone librarians about materials in the indigenous language. He learned that there were nearly 300 sources — books, old newspapers, artifacts — for him to explore.
(06/08/22 1:06am)
Hannah Faughnan ’23 is used to navigating Princeton as a disabled student. As someone with rheumatoid arthritis, she has had chronic pain for her entire life.
(05/12/22 5:10am)
For most Princeton students, even the worst thunderstorm just means a wet walk home or a flooded basement in their dorm. But almost seven years after graduating, Renata Diaz ’15 still remembers the struggle of setting up a field experiment for her classes at Kenya’s Mpala Research Center, only for her assignment to be washed away in the downpour.