Daily Newsletter: September 16, 2021
Campus cafés reopen; Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony win Grammy
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Campus cafés reopen; Conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and the San Francisco Symphony win Grammy
First in U.S. News Rankings, Dining hall staff shortage, Special RCA training, USG Meeting, Woodrow Wilson Honorary Debate Panel
Power and privilege in the climate change movement, Triangle Frosh Week show
Students attend in-person classes, Tornado warning
Welcome to the Great Class of 2025! As students quickly find out, Princeton has an abundance of resources, advice for navigating academics to tips for managing relationships with peers. With all that the University has to offer, it’s easy to feel like you’ll forget something.
Over 200 students face disciplinary action for COVID-19 related violations; CPUC Resources Committee to recommend conditional divestment to Trustees
Princeton students releasing demands on University's mishandling of Katz case; media desensitizing Black deaths
Princeton Preview begins online; new center for gender and sexuality to open in Fall 2021
The perpetrator of anonymous bomb threat identified; classes and office hours can be held in-person and outdoors
Poets frequently pay homage to nature — whether it be to the single sprouting cherry blossom or the blade of grass that bends toward the sun. Words, much like nature, glisten with the beauty and surprise of life. So, this Earth Day, celebrate the environment around you by delving into some modern poems which inspire and enlighten — poems that remind us of the reliable rhythms and spontaneous movements of nature.
Professor, University alumnae appointed to Supreme Court Commission; Dean Dolan sends faculty-wide memo addressing student mental health
Trevor Noah will be 2021 class day speaker; University partners with Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research
Candace Jackson-Akiwumi ’00 will be the 2nd Black woman to serve on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago
As Women’s History Month comes to an end, we want to highlight literature curated by some of the University’s incredible female faculty. So many women at the University are not only advancing breakthroughs in their respective fields, but also translating their lived experiences into words that inspire, move, challenge, and encourage others.
As Women’s History Month came to a close, we wanted to highlight literature curated by some of Princeton’s incredible female faculty. So many women at Princeton are not only advancing breakthroughs in their respective fields, but also translating their lived experiences into words to inspire — to move, challenge, and encourage — others.
Proposal for the Princeton Community Center (PCC) ; Truex ’07 on America's scientific exchange with China
As Women’s History Month comes to a close, we wanted to highlight literature curated by some of the University’s incredible female faculty. So many women at the University are not only advancing breakthroughs in their respective fields, but also translating their lived experiences into words that inspire — that move, challenge, and encourage — others.
As Women’s History Month comes to an end, we want to highlight literature curated by some of the University’s incredible female faculty. So many women at the University are not only advancing breakthroughs in their respective fields, but also translating their lived experiences into words that inspire, move, challenge, and encourage others.
USG referendum changes; addressing sexual violence at Princeton; the value of studying Classics
‘Prince’ announces 4-day publication schedule