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(11/22/21 3:13am)
If you walk down into the Bloomberg Hall basement, there is a chance you might come across faint music emanating from behind a locked door, punctuated by mic breaks relaying the names of the songs and artists that have just played.
(11/19/21 12:14am)
Given that Princeton Camerata’s concert this past Sunday night sold out many days in advance, I can only imagine how many poor souls missed out on a truly incredible evening. I see it as my duty to share that evening with all those who were unable to attend and to immortalize it for anyone who could.
(11/16/21 2:36am)
Sometimes, on a cold November evening, Shakespeare is just what you need.
(11/16/21 2:04am)
The Princeton University Glee Club performed live for the first time in over a year on Oct. 29, singing alongside students from Harvard and Yale in the third Hand in Hand concert.
(11/16/21 3:37am)
Is it okay, as the world falls apart around us, to focus on the inconsequential? Is it okay to be selfish and think about sex and love and other beautiful, temporary things, ignoring the way our society’s many problems are growing ever-larger?
(11/12/21 3:30pm)
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(11/11/21 4:05am)
Warning: spoilers ahead!
(11/08/21 1:46pm)
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(11/09/21 2:28am)
After much teasing on TikTok this past month, Conan Gray finally released his newest single, “Telepath,” on Oct. 29. The techno/electro-pop track is Gray’s third pre-release single from his sophomore album and an upbeat contrast to his two previous songs, “People Watching” and “Astronomy.”
(11/08/21 2:35am)
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, Princeton’s a cappella groups couldn’t rehearse or perform together in-person and struggled to admit new members. After nearly two years, Blair Arch and 1879 Arch are once again being filled by their voices, old and new.
(11/05/21 2:00am)
There’s a scene from the 2014 anime “Your Lie in April” that I’ve always found awfully trite: In it, violinists are competing onstage in succession, playing Beethoven’s “Kreutzer Sonata.” The scene portrays the piece as banal, overplayed, and dull — your classic high school music competition! — until one of the show’s main characters, Kaori Miyazono, appears on stage.
(11/05/21 1:02am)
There may be no one on campus who complains about their language classes more than I do. Don't get me wrong — I love Russian, and it's a beautiful language. I have so much respect for my peers, my instructors, and everyone involved in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literature. But it's just so hard. And it is my fault, obviously, for taking a difficult language. It’s a decision for which I have oscillating cycles of contentment and deep, test-related regret. Language learning is difficult. It takes an enormous amount of time, work, care, and dedication, and that’s a difficult dedication to give when there is always something else that needs attention. Still, there comes a point when you know it was all worth it.
(11/05/21 1:54am)
Welcome back to Tiger Town Treats (TTT), a Prospect series where we compare delicious snacks-’n-sips from local businesses so you know where to go to satisfy your cravings and reward yourself after rough p-sets.
(11/04/21 2:56am)
Every semester, in the wake of midterm’s stress, there’s always one day that feels just like Christmas: the day the Office of the Registrar releases the course offerings for the upcoming semester. For me, it feels like the academic equivalent of running down the stairs on Christmas morning to discover what magically appeared under the tree overnight. There’s an element of surprise, of possibility, of newness, and even a bit of discovery shared between the two days.
(11/03/21 2:13am)
Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about Lamp. Active beginning in the early 2000s, Lamp is a Japanese band that draws on a number of disparate styles, including jazz, bedroom pop (insofar as the genre was conceived at the time), and pop rock. Blending all of these genres into something greater than the sum of its parts, Lamp writes minimally-produced songs over which the lead singer’s vocals can soar.
(11/02/21 2:53am)
The following is a guest contribution from the University’s Menstrual Products Task Force and reflects the authors’ views alone.
(11/08/21 3:04am)
Starring Sandra Oh of “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Killing Eve” fame, Netflix’s “The Chair,” is a witty and satirical campus drama consisting of six episodes that not only trace the challenges Oh’s character, Ji-Yoon Kim, faces as the new chair of a dwindling English department, but also highlights the importance of keeping humanistic areas of study alive.
(10/30/21 4:00pm)
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(10/29/21 1:45am)
In today’s society, being Asian can be great. Sometimes it seems like the days of small-eyed jokes and math nerd stereotypes are long behind me, boxed away in memories of silly primary school banter; nowadays, conversations have shifted towards the exciting action of Naruto, or how BTS’s new song was — as the Twitter stans say — a “cultural reset.”
(10/29/21 2:18am)
Near the halls of Brown and East Pyne, at the heart of Princeton’s campus, lies the acclaimed Princeton University Art Museum (PUAM). However, what has previously been a hub for the arts and humanities scene on campus is currently a site of never-ending construction. The renovation of the art museum, which has prolonged its initial temporary closure, began in the summer of 2021 and is slated to finish in 2024. This, in conjunction with the shutdown of the museum during the COVID-19 pandemic, has affected the ways that many students, faculty, and members of the local community interact with the arts and humanities on campus.