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(04/26/24 5:00am)
“I don’t want student athletes on our rosters who are only here because we’re paying them,” athletic director John Mack ’00 told The Daily Princetonian in an interview.
(04/26/24 4:05am)
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 past By the Numbers coverage here.
(04/25/24 5:38pm)
Early Thursday morning, the Department of Public Safety arrested two graduate students for taking initial steps to establish encampments in McCosh Courtyard. Princeton authorized arrests within six minutes of the first tents being set up.
(04/25/24 1:45pm)
The live updates on day one of the sit-in have concluded. Follow live updates of day two here.
(04/25/24 11:13am)
About 100 undergraduate and graduate students began a sit-in on McCosh Courtyard early Thursday morning, joining a wave of pro-Palestinian sit-ins across the country. After student organizers first began to erect tents, Princeton Public Safety (PSAFE) issued its first warning to protesters. At least two student arrests have been made. After the initial arrests, students folded them away.
(04/25/24 5:27am)
Confrontations at Columbia, Yale, and other campuses around the country have highlighted the importance of “time, place, and manner” regulations to universities’ academic and educational missions. Because the enforcement of these rules is essential to our community as well, I wanted to offer some observations about their role at Princeton and their relationship to other free speech principles.
(04/25/24 12:00pm)
In preemptive move, U. says encampment protestors will be arrested and barred from campus: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
(04/25/24 5:53am)
Students participating in an “encampment, occupation, or other unlawful disruptive conduct who refuses to stop after a warning will be arrested and immediately barred from campus,” Vice President for Campus Life W. Rochelle Calhoun wrote in an email to undergraduates on Wednesday morning.
(04/25/24 4:43am)
On Wednesday April 24, an email sent to students announced that Dr. Johanna Rossi Wagner will be the next dean of New College West (NCW).
(04/25/24 3:51am)
This semester, the Undergraduate Student Government (USG) election cycle brought no new referenda to a student body vote. This formalized process for reform, however, has a long history of students bringing issues to the Princeton community.
(04/25/24 3:03am)
After a packed month of Ivy League play, No. 39 Princeton women’s tennis (15–6 overall, 6–1 Ivy League) were crowned Ivy League champions for a fifth consecutive season this weekend. This win marked the 18th conference title in program history and punched the Tigers a ticket to the NCAA Tournament.
(04/25/24 2:10am)
The Amazon Prime movie “The Idea of You” is best known for its origin story — the narrative is thought to be based on fanfiction about Harry Styles. Pre-screened by USG Movies at the Princeton Garden Theater at 9:45 p.m. on Apr. 18, the film takes its premise and plot from a 2017 book of the same name written by American author and actress Robinne Lee. While Lee has never publicly mentioned “fanfiction” and “Harry Styles” as the inspiration for the book, she admitted that the fictional leading man, Hayes Campbell, was her vision of a “dream guy,” partially derived from Prince Harry, Harry Styles, Eddie Redmayne, an ex-boyfriend, and her own husband.
(04/25/24 1:22am)
April is National Poetry Month, a time to honor poetry in all forms and poets from all backgrounds. In honor of the celebration, Princeton Professor of Poetry Lynn Melnick offered reflections on the art form — from reading and writing, to students’ misconceptions about poetry, and its prevalence in our most significant life moments.
(04/26/24 8:00am)
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(04/24/24 4:43pm)
Princeton students are preparing to set up their own “Gaza Solidarity Encampment,” according to documents first obtained by the National Review and independently verified by The Daily Princetonian, following high-profile encampments at Columbia University, Yale University, and other college campuses that have resulted in student arrests. No tents have been erected in the Nassau Hall area — a focal point for previous sit-ins on campus — at time of publication. The documents did not specify a timeline for when the encampment might begin.
(04/26/24 4:16am)
Play the puzzle here.
(04/24/24 7:36am)
While I am only a first-year photographer for The Daily Princetonian, I have already taken dozens of photos of Nassau Hall. Frequently I have passed by a print copy of the ‘Prince’ or opened the app only to be greeted by one of my own stock photos above an Opinion column or a News article. Indeed, the building has become a stand-in for a photo of the school administration, or more abstract events such as an antisemitism investigation, the admission of the Class of 2028, or even the recent earthquake that struck campus. These stock photos can be used as a visual shorthand for Princeton as a whole, including the school’s reputation of existing within an “Orange Bubble” that separates campus from the “real world.” By this logic, if nothing worth photographing ever happens on campus, another photo of Nassau Hall will do.
(04/26/24 9:45pm)
While Princeton has a reputation of apathy towards activism, how activism is practiced on campus cannot be distilled to a monolith. This special supplement from The Daily Princetonian examines the full spread of assumptions about activism on Princeton’s campus. Together, these stories explain how Princeton has balanced two identities — a hub for activist energy and a culture of indifference.
(04/24/24 4:56am)
An April 23 email from Dean of the Graduate School Rodney Priestley informed graduate students that the University had entered into a stipulated election agreement with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE), marking the official first step towards a graduate student union. Princeton is the only Ivy League school that does not currently have a recognized graduate student union.
(04/24/24 12:00pm)
Princeton Pro-Life experiences resurgence in the 2023-24 academic year: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing