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(11/02/23 3:40am)
With students from 140 countries and all 50 states, Princeton’s student body hails from all corners of the globe. For many students, returning home may pose financial challenges. The University states within the ‘cost-of-Princeton’ breakdown that “the cost of transportation … may range between $300 and $5,000.” Princeton’s financial aid, however, does not specifically cover travel for returning home for all breaks, including Thanksgiving break. The Daily Princetonian broke down where the Class of 2027 lives and analyzed types of travel and prices to different locations.
(11/01/23 2:49am)
Ten years after the creation of the Princeton and Slavery Project, recent events affecting the University and the state of New Jersey have renewed conversations surrounding the project, with a focus on exploring new possible applications.
(11/01/23 4:25am)
During the COVID-19 pandemic, many top universities, including Princeton, paused their standardized testing requirement because of difficulty accessing the test. However, even after the pandemic, many schools have permanently eliminated the requirement to submit a standardized testing score. Princeton has extended its test-optional policy through 2025 while it “assesses the role standardized testing should play in our admission process.” Advocates of a test-optional policy for college admissions claim that doing so increases socioeconomic diversity in incoming classes because lower-income students don’t have the same access to test prep resources that wealthier students do.
(11/01/23 3:06am)
For senior Jalen Travis, football is just one of his many passions. Hailing from a town less than two miles away from where George Floyd was murdered in May 2020, advocacy and activism were central to his upbringing.
(11/01/23 12:17am)
(10/31/23 4:31am)
How well did you follow this week in news? Play our news quiz!
(10/31/23 5:36am)
At a pro-Palestine protest organized primarily by two off-campus groups in Palmer Square on Saturday, Oct. 28, between 100 and 200 protesters from Princeton and surrounding areas repeated calls for a ceasefire in Gaza. A University staff member who took issue with the message of the protest assaulted a student.
(10/31/23 12:00pm)
Princeton Board of Education approves superintendent resignation after tumultuous tenure
(10/31/23 12:00pm)
SPECIAL: Halloween
(10/31/23 6:00am)
Dr. Carol Kelley resigned from her position as Superintendent of Princeton Public Schools on Friday after two years on the job. She will take an immediate paid leave of absence until her resignation takes effect on Sept. 1, 2024.
(10/31/23 4:56am)
(10/31/23 5:05am)
The Halloween of my childhood began with the sound of rain. Soft at first, then steady, it tapped on my windowsill at night, a Morse code translating to one word: fall. In the morning, it was there in the smell of the wet sidewalks, the adventurous worms strewn across the cracks, and the damp leaves pressed into the concrete by the shoes of kids traipsing to school.
(10/31/23 4:49am)
Editor's Note: This piece has been updated with comment from University administrators.
(10/31/23 3:04am)
The drizzly, blustery evening of Oct. 29 set the tone for Sinfonia’s Halloween performance, an hour-long program held in Richardson Auditorium. Sinfonia is a symphony orchestra that is composed of undergraduate students, the graduate population, and members of the local community.
(10/31/23 6:06am)
CAMBRIDGE, Mass — 759 days. That’s the last time the No. 6 Princeton men’s water polo team (23–5 overall, 7–1 Northeast Water Polo Conference) lost a match to a conference opponent.
(10/31/23 3:26am)
The following is a guest contribution and reflects the author’s views alone. For information on how to submit a piece to the Opinion section, click here.
(10/31/23 2:51am)
Princeton’s campus is known for its history, beauty, and art. Scattered throughout our main campus’s nearly 600 acres are dozens of hidden (or not-so-hidden) gems, pieces of art that make campus a museum in its own right.
(10/31/23 4:54am)
After a fervent weekend of Ivy League play, Princeton women’s volleyball solidified a second-place standing within the Ivy League Conference. On Friday evening, the Tigers fell 0–3 to the undefeated Yale Bulldogs. Last season, Princeton and Yale ended the Ivy Conference with a matching 13–1 record, only having lost to each other. The following day, on Saturday afternoon, Princeton responded by promptly defeating the Brown Bears 3–1.
(10/31/23 3:52am)
One of the most surprising things I’ve found about Princeton culture is its strong dance community: newbies and veterans alike join together to grow and share their love of dance. Some of the most eye-catching flyers I’ve seen around campus have come from dance company promotions: When promotions for the Black Arts Company’s Fall Showcase “Verified” started, I was instantly taken in by the paparazzi-esque, trendsetter style that set the tone for the Fall Showcase.
(10/31/23 4:19am)
The following content is purely satirical and entirely fictional.