Play the Tuesday crossword, ‘Prep Talk’
If not redirected, click here.
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
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
If not redirected, click here.
For Kennedy Omufwoko, the Mpala Research Center represents opportunity.
Under golden lights, the crisp opening notes of “I See the Light” reverberate in a full Richardson Auditorium — starting from one piano, and ending with five concert grand Steinways. For the next hour and a half, the Princeton Pianists Ensemble (PPE) enraptured, entertained, and elated both classical and pop fanatics in the audience with music from Mozart to Super Mario Bros.
Yana Prymachenko helped her 67-year-old mother flee her home in Chernihiv as Russian forces advanced through Ukraine in March 2022. They packed into a car with complete strangers, bringing only important documents, a laptop, and their cat. “I left all my life behind,” Prymachenko said. She arrived at Princeton six months later after receiving help from the organization Scholars at Risk. Prymachenko is now a visiting research scholar in the Department of History, having left the Institute of History of Ukraine.
Amid the blink of the occasional strobe light, eXpressions Dance Company took to the stage on Friday, Nov. 17 with their Fall 2023 show. The evocative performance presented its viewers with a series of vignettes, many of which seemed to cope with remembrance, which fit nicely with the performance’s title, “Memento.”
The following is an open letter and reflects the author’s views alone. For information on how to submit a piece to the Opinion section, click here.
Next to the philosophy building, the 1879 Arch stands as the gateway between the core academic center of campus and Prospect Avenue.
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Academics Committee publicly announced Princeton’s Syllabus Library on Nov. 8 in an email to students, advertising it as a way to preview courses students may be interested in without actually enrolling. While many students welcomed the library as a new way to explore course offerings, the University has actually maintained the syllabus library since fall 2021.
As I write this essay, the despicable poison of Jew-hatred has taken a firm hold at so many college campuses, Princeton included. The current climate seems to have provided the perfect conditions for pure, unadulterated religious and ethnic bigotry to show itself and flourish. Here at Princeton, activists proudly chant “Intifada” and demand the complete eradication of the world’s only Jewish state; elsewhere, from Cornell, Harvard, and the University of Pennsylvania to Ohio State and Cooper Union, frightening (and sometimes violent and illegal) exhibitions of anti-Jewish attitudes abound. As my Jewish friends tell me, now is — to put it exceedingly mildly — an alarming time to be a Jew on a college campus.
The winds of change are starting to blow on Prospect Avenue.
Among fall foliage, Thanksgiving arrives on campus.
The guttural hum of a singing bowl kicked off a Thanksgiving celebration hosted by the Office of Religious Life (ORL).
Living close to New York City, I’ve always considered myself a bagel connoisseur. I’ve tried all the popular spots in the city, from top-rated establishments to small, local businesses around the boroughs. However, I barely ventured off into New Jersey to try bagel shops, as I assumed the best were only found in the city. I was proven wrong when I stepped foot into Princeton gem, Bagel Nook.
Content warning: The following article contains links with graphic imagery.
Prior to the hiring of head coach Dustin Litvak in 2018, No. 6 Princeton men’s water polo (27–5 overall, 9–1 Northeast Water Polo Conference) had won just four conference championships in its 22-year history. Fast forward five years and the Tigers are in the midst of a dynasty under Litvak, successfully completing a three-peat and winning the conference title in four of the last five seasons.
Princeton men’s hockey (3–2–1 overall, 3–2–1–1 ECAC) hoped to continue their two game-win streak with another weekend sweep, but ultimately split the weekend after falling short in Friday night’s faceoff against the Colgate Raiders (4–6–2, 2–3–1) before rallying back for their dynamic Saturday overtime success over the No. 10 Cornell Big Red (4–3–1, 2–3–1).
Moments in Princeton’s Black history
Award season begins as Princeton student wins Rhodes scholarship
The University needs more transparency in how it funds religious life