Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Princetonian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
541 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(11/16/22 4:20am)
During the Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC) meeting on Nov. 14, Nakia White Barr, the assistant vice president in the Office of the President and the secretary of the CPUC Committee on Naming, announced that the Committee is considering a proposal to remove or replace the statue of John Witherspoon.
(11/15/22 5:50am)
If not redirected, click here.
(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 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).”
(11/10/22 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.
(11/09/22 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.
(11/01/22 8:48pm)
Content Warning: The following article includes mention of student death. University Counseling services are available at 609-258-3141, and the Suicide Prevention Lifeline is available 24/7 at 988 or +1 (800) 273-TALK (8255). A Crisis Text Line is also available in the United States; text HOME to 741741. Students can contact residential college staff and the Office of Religious Life for other support and resources.
(10/27/22 3:51am)
On Oct. 20, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) arrived in Princeton to provide students with an immersive virtual reality (VR) experience. The VR experience, called “Abduction,” is part of a traveling exhibit currently touring college campuses across the country.
(10/26/22 3:38am)
In recent years, many higher education institutions, including Princeton University, have begun publicly acknowledging the fact that they exist upon and benefit from the land of Indigenous peoples.
(10/24/22 4:15am)
On Thursday, Oct. 6, the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions hosted a panel about free speech controversies on- and off-campus. Former American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) president Nadine Strossen and Assistant Professor of Politics Greg Conti discussed, among other topics, the partisanship associated with free speech and the specific role of universities.
(10/14/22 3:22am)
In the wake of Hurricane Fiona hitting the Caribbean on Sept. 18, the Princeton Caribbean Connection (PCC) came together on campus to support and help rebuild their community.
(10/14/22 3:01am)
On Oct. 12, Professor of Mathematics June Huh and Melanie Matchett Wood GS ’09 were announced among the recipients of the 2022 MacArthur fellowship — colloquially known as the “Genius Grant.”
(10/14/22 2:59am)
On Oct. 7, University Professor of History Kevin Kruse announced on Twitter, that at Princeton and Cornell, investigations into alleged plagiarism in his work had been resolved.
(10/06/22 2:46am)
On Sept. 29, the University announced that its Board of Trustees voted to dissociate from 90 companies in the “thermal coal and tar sands segments of the fossil fuel industry,” which included ExxonMobil. Thermal coal and tar sands oil were identified by a “panel of expert faculty” as producing especially high carbon dioxide emissions compared to other fossil fuels.
(10/06/22 4:00am)
The University sold the majority of its stake in the Lithium Americas Corporation during the second quarter of 2022, according to Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings released over the summer. As of last filing, the University’s holdings in the company are around $4.5 million, down from $92 million earlier this year.
(10/05/22 2:26pm)
A coalition of student leaders released a five-point proposal for the expansion of upperclass dining in an email to residential college listservs on Tuesday, Oct. 4. The plan is being put forth as an alternative to the pilot program the University plans to run in the upcoming spring semester.
(10/03/22 3:06am)
Content warning: The following article contains mention of rape and sexual violence.
(09/29/22 4:25pm)
On Sept. 29, Princeton University announced that its Board of Trustees voted earlier in the month to dissociate from Exxon Mobil Corp., NRG Energy Inc., and 88 other corporations “active in the thermal coal or tar sands segments of the fossil fuel industry.”
(09/29/22 3:20am)
In July, the University informed students that the majority of those who test positive for COVID-19 would need to isolate in their dorms, as opposed to in designated isolation housing. But one month into the fall semester, some students — particularly those who have had roommates test positive — expressed confusion and concern about the policy.