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(10/24/23 5:02am)
This past week, the No. 6 men’s water polo (21–4 overall, 5–0 Northeast Water Polo Conference) team traveled across California, playing seven games over seven days. The seven games included six against opponents ranked in the top 15. The team ended the trip 5–2, returning to the Garden State with the hopes that they would return a third time in early December to compete for a national championship.
(10/24/23 5:52am)
On Wednesday, Oct. 18, a truck with provocative images posted on it was seen on Nassau Street in Princeton falsely accusing the Dean of Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) of “coddling antisemitism” and failing to condemn the atrocities perpetrated by Hamas in Israel.
(10/24/23 3:42am)
Elite schools are commonly criticized for disproportionately funneling their graduates into the privileged professions of finance and consulting, fields which have been exposed again and again for unethical practices and corporate greed. Princeton is no exception, with nearly 20 percent of graduates in 2023 entering these sectors, a phenomenon which some Princetonians feel contradicts Princeton’s unofficial motto of being “in the nation’s service and the service of humanity.”
(10/24/23 2:48am)
The following content is purely satirical and entirely fictional.
(10/25/23 1:27am)
Coming from a frosh whose midterms hit them like a truck: how can Halloween be approaching so quickly when it feels like we just got to Princeton but also feel like we have been here for years?
(10/23/23 5:26am)
Five candidates emerged victorious from a crowded field of 23 candidates in the Class of 2027 Class Council election, nearly double the size of last year's field. The USG Fall Elections penalty report reveals that over the course of the campaign, nine candidates broke official USG election rules, with two candidates sanctioned. The most common violation was a failure to submit their expenditure report on time. While submitting late did not incur a campaign restriction for most candidates, penalties increased sharply, with a candidate submitting two hours late losing their ability to send electronic messages and a candidate being disqualified after submitting 12 hours late. Only four candidates reported any expenditures at all during the campaign, meaning at least some of the candidates submitting late were submitting no expenses.
(10/15/23 12:00pm)
Community in Diversity: Asian life on campus
(10/24/23 3:16am)
For many, Halloween elicits nostalgia as a yearly invitation to look back on your childhood when you could dream without any constraints. Halloween is the one night a year when fantasy is reality, when ghosts and ghouls freely roam the streets.
(10/23/23 12:00pm)
Princeton students: condemn Hamas’s ‘pure, unadulterated evil’
(10/23/23 4:31am)
This Saturday, thousands of Princeton alumni and parents flocked to see the Princeton football team reach a surprising victory over longtime nemesis Harvard. To the Undergraduate Student Government (USG), this victory came with a significant achievement for their programming. At the start of their October 22 meeting, USG President Stephen Daniels ’24 spoke about the success of the USG-sponsored Homecoming football game event which included a J.Crew pop-up shop and free food. He estimated that attendance was around 300–400 students. Daniels also stated he was “preparing for the Yale game,” mentioning the potential bonfire that would occur if Princeton also wins the game against Yale on Nov. 11. USG currently has $10,000 budgeted under their bonfire reserve.
(10/28/23 3:37pm)
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(10/28/23 3:36pm)
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(10/23/23 2:14am)
The following content is purely satirical and entirely fictional.
(10/23/23 1:51am)
The following is a letter to the editor and reflects the author’s views alone. For information on how to submit a piece to the Opinion section, click here.
(10/23/23 2:57am)
Following a tough loss at Cornell (8–3–2 overall, 2–1–2 Ivy League), the Princeton men’s soccer team (4–6–2, 1–2–2) returned home for a divisional bout against Brown (4–4–6, 1–0–4) on Homecoming weekend. After an intense 90 minutes of play, the Tigers and Bears drew, 0–0, in a tough defensive stalemate.
(10/23/23 2:33am)
On a windy Saturday afternoon, a crowd of more than 8,000 people saw Princeton (3–3 overall, 2–1 Ivy League) extend their winning streak, stretching back to 2017, against Harvard (5–1, 2–1) to six games, as the Tigers sealed the victory late in the fourth quarter of their Homecoming game.
(10/23/23 1:38am)
When the first-year class descends upon Princeton’s campus each fall, they are ready to begin the next chapter of their lives. Their first steps include attending events with hundreds of new faces, completing dozens of orientation sessions, and embarking upon orientation trips. These experiences help students acclimate to the Princeton community, but after orientation programming, first-years are faced with an entirely new campus landscape: in their absence, nearly 4,000 sophomore, junior, and seniors have moved back onto campus. Many students find this new landscape overwhelming; yet for some, the transition seems less drastic, thanks to prior connections to upperclassmen, which often resulted from privileged upbringings. To provide a more even playing field for all students, the University should create opportunities for all first-year students to build comparable connections with upperclassmen.
(10/23/23 12:43am)
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.
(10/23/23 1:56am)
In Drapkin Studio, the stage is blue-lit — the elegant performance space is empty but crackling with creative energy in preparation for the first reading of the 2023–24 Althea Ward Clark W’21 Reading Series.
(10/20/23 5:24am)
As night fell over the University chapel last Thursday, about 50 students, faculty, and community members gathered to commemorate the lives lost during the mass exodus of over 100,000 ethnic Armenians from the breakaway state of Nagorno-Karabakh following Azerbaijan’s recent invasion. Until this month, upwards of 120,000 Armenians lived in the contested region and their departure in the face of fears of ethnic cleansing has been referred to as a cultural genocide.