Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Princetonian's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Nearly a year ago, as I scrolled mindlessly through the Google search results prompted by “Princeton,” I stumbled upon none other than The Daily Princetonian’s website. Seeking information for my “Why Princeton” essay, I decided to read through recently published opinion and news articles. To my dismay, I found article after article slamming Princeton for its investments, lack of mental health support, construction, and other institutional problems. After about an hour of reading, I wasn’t even sure if I should still apply.
A mile north of campus lies 400 acres of forests and streams, stretches of public land filled with hickories, flowering dogwood, and boulders. 75 of these acres constitute the Billy Johnson Mountain Lakes Preserve, which is only partially a misnomer: the relativity flat woodlands encircle a lake banked by beaver dams and blueberry bushes.
Many Princetonians understand photosynthesis and can calculate the pH of soil, but few have knowledge of what occurs before food reaches their fork. With a 3.5-acre seed farm just a short drive from campus, more and more students are learning about the science behind native crops, as well as the cultural significance of the University land to the Lenni-Lenape peoples.
Big Block of Cheese Day
Aaron Sorkin is on the record in favor of plagiarism, so I am going to plagiarize him without worrying about it too much.
“The single idea of Big Block of Cheese Day is still more important than ever: who gets heard, and about what?”
The ‘Prince’ staff sat in Wawa for 24 hours, observing the rotating cast of characters who enter and exit its doors, and the stories of those who work behind its counters. Reporters switched off hour by hour, each observing a part of the Wawa tapestry.
Everybody loves a secret space. From rumors of a shrine to Danny DeVito hidden behind laundry machines in Little Hall to whispers of a network of underground tunnels darting across campus, there's a certain allure about little known spaces on campus.
After a competitive vice presidential election, Srista Tripathi ’25 secured the position against Chase Magnano ’25 and Warren Shepherd ’27. The results of the Undergraduate Student Government (USG) winter election were released on Friday, Dec. 8 in an email sent to the student body by current USG President Stephen Daniels.
When you ask people what they love about Princeton, we almost always hear similar responses. For these interviews, we wanted to go a little deeper to see what made people really fall in love with Princeton.
How well have you been following the news? Play this week's news quiz!
Response rate falls in first We Speak survey on sexual misconduct in five years
The University has issued an outright ban on the use, storage, and parking of personal electric vehicles (PEVs) on most of campus. This is an update to the less aggressive time-based PEV restrictions announced in August and is the result of low compliance with that policy, according to an email shared with the community on Monday, Dec. 4.
A redeveloped Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), slated for release by the end of the month, will significantly shorten the process for applicants, including those to Princeton. As reports speculate that this may lead to students receiving less aid than previous iterations, the University says its financial aid program will not be impacted.
As we begin reading period, the Princeton community is entering our semesterly sprint to the finish. Many resources are offered to mitigate our inevitable stress — emails about Counseling and Psychological Services (CPS) and various study-break activities chief among them. While the University and student focus is often on expanding student support during exam periods, the overall health of students throughout the semester deserves more attention. Further, our current dialogue on advocating for increased mental health resources should also consider implementable changes that more holistically approach and mitigate the causes of mental health issues.
Will Aepli ’26 spent the summer after his freshman year working at Hungry Jack’s, a general store in Wilson, Wyo. that sits near the base of Teton Pass. Bounded on both sides by Fish Creek, the store is both a “supply hub and neighborhood checkpoint” for the surrounding community. A sign on its exterior from 1954 reads, “Pop: 35, Elev: 6146,” though now it serves more than a thousand people with food, alcohol, holiday cards, and fresh-roasted coffee.
As the tallest and shortest guys, respectively, in the Princeton Footnotes, Rupert Peacock ’24 and Koda Gursoy ’26 might not have much in common at first glance. But what brings the two singers together is their unconventional childhood performance careers.
On Wednesday night, the women’s basketball team (6–3 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) beat the Quinnipiac Bobcats (2–5 overall, 0–0 Metro Atlantic Athletic) in comfortable fashion at Jadwin Gymnasium.
Princeton advertises its “commitment to undergraduate education” extensively on its website, but the level of access that students have to professors and instructors varies widely across subjects. The Daily Princetonian analyzed 500 Fall 2023 course syllabi — broken down into humanities, social science, natural science, and engineering disciplines — from the Syllabus Library to see how the hours Princeton faculty offer for drop-in differs across disciplines.