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(09/12/24 4:13am)
As the new semester begins, TigerTransit, which connects University buildings, parking, and public transit, has implemented route and schedule changes that ensure more frequent and direct late-night service, more service on weekends, and better access for students living in residential colleges furthest from classrooms and athletic facilities.
(09/12/24 4:07am)
For students seeking a study break without leaving Firestone Library, the Princeton University Library (PUL) is opening a new exhibit titled “Monsters & Machines: Caricature, Visual Satire, and the Twentieth Century Bestiary.” The exhibit examines bestiary, the use of animal motifs to represent human categories, in visual satire between World War I and the end of the Cold War.
(09/12/24 3:45am)
As Gaza solidarity encampments sprung up across university campuses last spring, students faced severe institutional repercussions for their activism. At Princeton, at least two students had their diplomas withheld and 15 were arrested. Across the country, over 3,000 students were arrested for participation in Gaza solidarity protests.
(09/12/24 2:49am)
On a given weeknight, the New College West (NCW) Ceramics Studio is alive with artistic creation. Spinning a pot dotted with flowers or crafting a handmade handle for a coffee mug, the space allows undergraduates to tap into their creativity and take a break from academic demands. Equipped with eight pottery wheels, stoneware clay, multicolored glazes and slips, molds, and other tools, there’s just one thing missing: graduate students — and they want in.
(09/12/24 2:00am)
On a warm night at Belson Stadium in Queens, N.Y., Princeton men’s soccer (1–2 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) picked up their first win of the season against the St. John’s University Red Storm (2–2–2 overall, 0–0–0 Big East). After starting the season with consecutive losses, the Tigers entered this matchup hungry for a positive result and ended up notching their first win of the season.
(09/11/24 6:02am)
While informal crowds of students huddled around various TV screens and laptops across campus to view Tuesday’s presidential debate, more than 200 students packed into multiple watch parties in Whig Hall — the traditional home of politics on campus — with friends, pizza, and snacks. The debate marks the first major event on campus concerning the 2024 Presidential election.
(09/11/24 12:00pm)
CJL undergoes dining hall renovations: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
(09/11/24 5:29am)
The 15 students and University community members arrested during pro-Palestine protests last spring will not have their cases dismissed following a hearing on Tuesday.
(09/11/24 3:30am)
This summer, a new array of advertisements began to flood my Instagram feed. The ads promoted college consulting services offered by incoming students at elite schools like Princeton. SAT tutoring, essay editing, research project mentorship — these services span the entire college application, facilitated through platforms ranging from professional websites to Google Forms. But this help is often not entirely borne of generous spirits. These services, and the exploding college consulting industry at large, is often driven by profit obsession, understanding that some will pay a great deal of money to gain a coveted “elite” education.
(09/11/24 5:32am)
Each week, Sports and Data writers analyze recent athletic competitions to provide analysis and insight on the happenings of Princeton athletics and individual players across the 38 intercollegiate teams at Princeton. Whether they are record-breaking or day-to-day, statistics deliver information in concise ways and help inform fans who might have missed the action. Read past By the Numbers coverage here.
(09/11/24 2:16am)
The following content is purely satirical and entirely fictional.
(09/11/24 2:41am)
Students who dine at Princeton’s Center for Jewish Life (CJL) are facing logistical barriers to accessing meals while the dining hall undergoes renovations, which are expected to be completed by early 2025.
(21 hours ago)
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.
(09/10/24 12:00pm)
Today is Tuesday, 10 September 2024. Here's the latest from The Daily Princetonian.
(09/10/24 3:52am)
Construction in Princeton is not limited to the University: While students grapple with blocked walkways and debate the merits of modern architecture, community members of the town are dealing with renovations along Nassau Street.
(09/10/24 3:59am)
Free speech is a topic of conversation on campus, but do administrators want students to speak?
(09/12/24 11:00pm)
Play the puzzle here.
(09/10/24 3:18am)
As an institution that values global service and cultural interconnectedness, the University must expand academic opportunities for students to study South Asia — a topical region for policy, economics, politics, and more. Although a South Asian Studies (SAS) minor exists, it is nowhere near as robust as other regional studies' programs. Princeton must expand SAS into one that is at least comparative in scope to others, or even designate the program as a major of its own.
(09/13/24 12:00am)
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(09/10/24 2:55am)
This past week, women’s volleyball and men’s water polo got their fall campaigns underway on the road. Meanwhile, men’s and women’s cross country stayed in the Garden State, competing in the annual New Jersey Jam.