USG to test off-campus dining initiative for student meal plans
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Community Dining Task Force has introduced a new off-campus dining trial program that will offer select students free meals off campus.
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The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Community Dining Task Force has introduced a new off-campus dining trial program that will offer select students free meals off campus.
Leighton Newlin is running for a vacant seat on Princeton’s Town Council in the 2021 election. Previously, he served as chair of the Princeton Housing Authority Board of Commissioners. He is running unopposed.
Eve Niedergang GS ’85 is a member of the Princeton Town Council running for re-election in 2021. First elected in 2018, she has served one term on the council and is running unopposed to retain her seat.
On this episode of Daybreak, Francesca Block, Hope Perry, Jenna Elliott, and Jack Anderson visited Terhune Orchards, Stults Farm, and Lee Turkey Farm to review the activities and products offered by each of these local businesses. They also spoke with Tannwen Mount ’98 of Terhune Orchards about what it’s like to run a family farm — and about just what makes their apple cider donuts so good.
In a meeting on Oct. 25, which notably lasted over five and a half hours, the Princeton Town Council passed an ordinance banning gas leaf blowers within the municipality, alongside debating whether to allow Claridge Wine and Liquor to open on 102 Nassau Street and rezoning areas around the Hun School from residential to educational.
The Starbucks on Nassau Street has drastically decreased its hours due to staffing issues within the store. Its operating hours are now from 6 a.m. to noon on weekdays, and it is closed on weekends. The previous hours were as early as 5:30 a.m. and as late as 7:30 p.m.
During its biweekly meeting on Oct. 11, the Princeton Council continued its ongoing discussion of construction plans for Witherspoon Street to increase space for pedestrians.
This Thursday, People’s Organization for Progress (POP) led a demonstration in Princeton for police accountability. The protest was part of the Long March of Justice, a 67-mile march from Montclair, N.J. to Trenton advocating for reform in policing systems.
In Thursday’s Cannabis Task Force (CTF) Economic & Community Impact subgroup meeting, the Princeton Shopping Center was pulled from consideration as a potential dispensary zone because the owner was not interested in leasing to a dispensary.
Content Warning: This piece contains material related to sexual assault and harassment. If you would like to speak to a confidential University-based resource, please call the Sexual Harassment/Assault Advising, Resources, and Education office (SHARE) at (609) 258-3310.
On Monday, Sept. 27, the Municipality of Princeton’s Council held its regular biweekly meeting. The main items discussed concerned upcoming construction around Witherspoon Street, displeasure over parking difficulties by the high school, and implementing more crossing guards in school areas.
At a public meeting on Saturday, Princeton Cannabis Task Force Chair and Councilmember Eve Niedergang GS ’85 said the “consensus” reached by the 24-member task force is “overwhelmingly that the benefits of having a dispensary in town outweighed the bad points.”
After Princeton experienced severe weather on the evening of Sept. 1, widespread flooding and downed trees caused several classes to return to a virtual format on Thursday — after just one day of in-person classes.
The University is planning to relocate former eating club Court Clubhouse across Prospect Avenue, demolishing three Victorian-style homes in the process.
In a total of 21 vaccine clinics held between April 29 and July 7, the University administered 7,930 doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson (J&J) vaccines.
After a year of deliberation, research, and advocacy for possible namesake candidates, the school that once bore John Witherspoon’s name has been renamed “Princeton Middle School” following an 8–1 vote on June 15 by the Princeton Board of Education.
Last week, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signed Laura Wooten’s Law. Named after a former University employee who was the longest continuously-serving poll worker in the United States, the legislation requires that all middle school students in the state receive instruction in civics.
I love spicy food. The fresh spice of jalapeños in homemade pico de gallo, the buzzing heat of cayenne in Hungarian goulash, and the lingering sting of Jamaican jerk seasoning are the flavors of my childhood, and since my youth, my tolerance and appreciation for spice have been steadily growing.
The Princeton Dinky, the shortest scheduled commuter rail line in the nation, might have its days numbered. NJ Transit recently commenced a year-long study of the Princeton transit system, with an emphasis on the Princeton Branch transit corridor that unites Princeton with Princeton Junction.
Seated in popular Nassau Street restaurant Jammin’ Crepes on Monday, New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy signed a bill that will provide $15 million in federal relief to struggling small businesses throughout the state.