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(04/05/24 4:06am)
From Ethiopia to France, Princeton students can enroll in courses that offer an opportunity to travel abroad with their classmates over fall break. The courses are offered through multiple departments, each having a unique structure.
(04/05/24 3:38am)
As the days lengthen and flowers bloom around campus, spring is finally upon us.
(04/05/24 5:08am)
There was a time when Princeton’s undergraduate student body consisted of only two students of Asian descent. Though ethnic Asian enrollment at the University remained low throughout the 1950s and 1960s, students would come together to form the politically-minded Asian American Students Association (AASA) in 1971.
(04/05/24 3:58am)
As President Joe Biden is set to welcome Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’a Al-Sudani to the White House on April 15, the family of graduate student Elizabeth Tsurkov has called on the Biden administration to designate Iraq as a state sponsor of terror for allegedly failing to work for her release from captivity. Tsurkov was kidnapped in Iraq in March 2023 by Iran-backed Shiite militia Kataib Hezbollah.
(04/05/24 3:57am)
Princeton defines first-generation students as students who are the first in their families to attend college. Such students are a growing minority on campus. As their presence increases, so does their contribution to the campus community. Princeton’s Class of 2027 is 17 percent first-gen. We should celebrate this expansion as well as the increase in resources offered to these students. But these resources are not offered to all first-gen students.
(04/05/24 2:00am)
While Saturday mornings may be a quiet time around most of Princeton’s campus, the Lewis Center of the Arts is bustling with activity — and performers’ instruments. Every Saturday, buses congregate in front of the arts complex, dropping off Trenton middle and high school students for a morning of performances.
(04/05/24 2:43am)
Dear Sexpert,
(04/05/24 3:56am)
Each week, Sports and Data editors analyze recent athletic competitions to provide analysis and insight on the happenings of Princeton athletics and individual players across the 38 intercollegiate teams at Princeton. Whether they are record-breaking or day-to-day, statistics deliver information in concise ways and help inform fans who might have missed the action. Read the past By the Numbers.
(04/05/24 3:34am)
Rutgers head coach Steve Pikiell got his guy.
(04/05/24 4:30am)
One week ago, the No. 7 ranked Penn Quakers (8–2 overall, 2–1 Ivy League) marched into College Park, Maryland and upset then No. 1 ranked Maryland (10–2, 3–0 Big Ten).
(04/04/24 12:00pm)
Charter Club Backtracks After Guest Policy Controversy: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
(04/04/24 5:21am)
The guest policy changed at Princeton’s sole selective sign-in eating club. Days later, it changed again.
(04/04/24 4:19am)
The Class of 2024 Class Day chairs have announced that actor Sam Waterston, known for his role in NBC’s “Law & Order,” will be the 2024 Class Day speaker. In the video message announcing their pick, the Class Day chairs highlighted Waterston’s creative career and connections.
(04/04/24 3:30am)
In Montgomery County, Maryland, where I grew up, the federal government was the backbone of the local economy. Over 10,000 people work at each of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Naval Hospital, with another nearly 10,000 employed by the Food and Drug Administration. Over one in five jobs in the county are in the government at some level — federal, state, or local. Civil service is woven into the fabric of the community.
(04/04/24 2:08am)
On another rainy night at Sherrerd Field, the No. 14 ranked Princeton men’s lacrosse (7–3 overall, 2–1 Ivy League) defeated the Lehigh Mountain Hawks (4–6 overall, 2–2 Patriot League) 12–10 on Tuesday, April 2.
(04/04/24 1:39am)
As a member of the fall semester sequence, I joined Princeton’s Western Humanities (HUM) Sequence class trip to the opera “La Forza Del Destino” last Friday, the final performance of the 2023–2024 season.
(04/04/24 1:45am)
On Friday, March 29, the musical “She Loves Me” opened in Wallace Theater in the Lewis Center for the Arts. In lieu of a traditional paper program, QR codes on poster boards outside the theater led to a website. The welcome page opens to a note from Madeleine LeBeau ’24, the production concept and creative director, who explains, “Our updated portrayal of the Broadway classic ‘She Loves Me’ through a post-pandemic lens not only speaks to the unique “virtual” realities of the Class of 2024’s Princeton experience, but also transforms this golden-age Broadway musical into a modern commentary on our increasingly online world.”
(04/04/24 2:08am)
Nassau Street and the surrounding commercial district have its fair share of pizza options: Proof, Teresa’s, Nomad, Pizza Den — the list goes on. This semester, Jules Thin Crust, located on Witherspoon Street, was added to the University’s list of approved off-campus locations where Dining Points are accepted. This means that students now have the ability to use their $150 in Dining Points at the small, Pennsylvania-based chain specializing in flatbread pizzas and specialty toppings. But at $10+ for a small pizza that is a little over one square foot in size, is it worth it? To determine the answer to this, I decided to have a tasting of their menu last week.
(03/04/24 1:00pm)
Princeton Trustees adopt 2024-25 budget, increasing financial aid: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing.
(04/03/24 4:59am)
Dillon Gym is changing. The gym, first opened in 1947, has seen everything from the advent of group spin classes to a newly-renovated fitness center in the past three years.