After worrying careers report, SPIA hosts first public service career day
“Why, if they’re pursuing a major in public service, aren’t they going into public service?”
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“Why, if they’re pursuing a major in public service, aren’t they going into public service?”
Dispatches at The Prospect are brief reflections from our writers that focus on their experiences during the summer.
President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 is “very proud” of University students’ commitment to free speech, he said at an event hosted on Saturday by the Princeton Progressive Law Society, .
As the University dining pilot program comes to a close at the end of the month, over 85 percent of dining pilot meals have been at dining halls or Frist late meal. Only 2 percent of meals taken have been at eating clubs, while none have been reported at co-ops.
“Needless to say, democracy: in Hebrew, we say ‘democratia,’” history professor Yair Mintzker said in his speech to protestors gathered in front of the Center for Jewish Life (CJL) on Monday, March 27. Over 70 protestors were present, voicing their opposition to a talk at the CJL given by Ronen Shoval, a visiting fellow at the James Madison Program, that evening.
A large orange banner hung from the windows of Blair Arch, with the words “Divest in the Service of Humanity.”
On Monday, Nov. 14, Daniel Ahn ’04 spoke to students as part of Princeton Entrepreneurship Club’s fireside chat series on his new financial technology startup Delfi and his prior experience working as the Chief Economist at the Department of State.
The University endowment stands at a value of $35.8 billion for the fiscal year of 2022, according to an announcement on Friday, Oct. 27 from the Office of Communications. This year’s endowment demonstrates a decrease of $1.9 billion compared to last year’s $37.7 billion endowment.
Coffee Club’s opening at New College West (NCW), originally set for Sunday, Sept. 25, has been delayed due to machinery issues. The delay stalls what would have been the opening of Coffee Club’s second location, as the student-run business currently operates its sole shop out of Campus Club.
After sundown on Tuesday night, nearly 100 students, faculty, and community members gathered in the Frist Multipurpose Room for the first community iftar during the month of Ramadan. Iftar is the evening meal during which Ramadan observers celebrate with friends and family after fasting from sunrise to sundown.
For the first time in recent history, Princeton has made the decision to not release statistics for accepted students for the incoming Class of 2026 — for both regular and early admissions cycles.
On March 14, the University lifted its indoor mask mandate in most University spaces. But the new guidelines include some exceptions: students must wear masks when “required by state or local agencies,” “instructed by Global and Community Health,” or “when faculty or staff conveners of a class, lab, gathering, or meeting require participants to wear a mask.”
On Friday Jan. 21, Ashley To ’22 tested positive for COVID-19 and was moved to the 1967 Hall isolation dorm. There, contrary to her expectations, she was met with three other roommates in a quad. By the time she left, a fifth student was isolating in their common room.
As flu season approaches, a substantial number of students have been visiting University Health Services’ (UHS) Outpatient Medical Services (OPMS). Both OPMS and Counseling and Psychological Services (CPS), two of UHS’s largest services, have seen “considerable activity during these early weeks in the semester,” said John Kolligian, the Executive Director of UHS.