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(11/27/23 7:17am)
“We are confronting a crisis, and it is not just possible, but likely, that absent significant aid from our alumni, Cloister will close its doors,” reads a email by the Board of Governors of Cloister Inn to Cloister alumni with the subject line “CRUCIAL: SAVE THE INN.” According to the email, with membership struggling to return to pre-pandemic rates, the club has had to use 90 percent of its reserve savings to stay open.
(11/28/23 5:32am)
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(11/27/23 5:03am)
On Wednesday, the student body received an email: more than half of the elected positions for the upcoming USG winter elections were uncontested, meaning that either the position had the exact number of candidates running as there were positions to fill or, as was true in at least one case, no candidates were running at all.
(11/27/23 3:04am)
Princeton’s Community Care Day had everything from yoga to coffee to canoeing. Hosted by the Office of Campus Life, the soon-to-be annual event sought to encourage “the entire campus to focus on rejuvenation, mindfulness, and community-building” by organizing 24 free events for campus members to choose from. The day of events was framed as a relaxed way to bring about health and well-being on campus, especially during a stressful time of the semester. Though the event aimed to improve the mental health situation on campus, it fell flat due to disorganization, and, moreover, exposed the goal of sufficiently changing the state of campus mental health with a single day as overambitious and inadequate.
(11/28/23 5:19am)
On Wednesday, Nov. 22, Princeton men’s basketball (6–0 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) continued their red-hot form with a dominant display on the road against the Old Dominion Monarchs (2–3 overall, 0–0 Sun Belt). On Saturday, they followed up this victory with another win over the Northeastern Huskies (3–4 overall, 0–0 Colonial Athletic Association Conference) during their first home game of the season. These wins bring the Tigers to 6–0 for the season, their best start since their 7–0 start in 1997–98.
(11/27/23 5:06am)
On Thursday, Nov. 23, the Princeton Tigers (4–2 overall, 0–0 Ivy League) defeated the No. 20 ranked Oklahoma Sooners (5–2 overall, 0–0 Big 12) by double digits, 77–63. As the Tigers emerged victorious in their first game of the Fort Myers Tip-Off tournament, it marked just the fourth win ever for the Tigers against Top-25 ranked opponents in program history, and the third win against ranked opponents in the last three years.
(11/27/23 2:43am)
Although Princeton Football did not come away with a share of the Ivy League title, the Tigers still managed to have success in the end-of-season All-Ivy football team honors, with a total of 10 players recognize.
(12/06/23 2:15am)
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(12/06/23 2:17am)
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(11/27/23 6:06am)
For Kennedy Omufwoko, the Mpala Research Center represents opportunity.
(11/27/23 3:45am)
Under golden lights, the crisp opening notes of “I See the Light” reverberate in a full Richardson Auditorium — starting from one piano, and ending with five concert grand Steinways. For the next hour and a half, the Princeton Pianists Ensemble (PPE) enraptured, entertained, and elated both classical and pop fanatics in the audience with music from Mozart to Super Mario Bros.
(11/27/23 4:48am)
Yana Prymachenko helped her 67-year-old mother flee her home in Chernihiv as Russian forces advanced through Ukraine in March 2022. They packed into a car with complete strangers, bringing only important documents, a laptop, and their cat. “I left all my life behind,” Prymachenko said. She arrived at Princeton six months later after receiving help from the organization Scholars at Risk. Prymachenko is now a visiting research scholar in the Department of History, having left the Institute of History of Ukraine.
(11/27/23 2:38am)
Amid the blink of the occasional strobe light, eXpressions Dance Company took to the stage on Friday, Nov. 17 with their Fall 2023 show. The evocative performance presented its viewers with a series of vignettes, many of which seemed to cope with remembrance, which fit nicely with the performance’s title, “Memento.”
(11/25/23 3:40am)
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.
(11/21/23 10:17am)
Next to the philosophy building, the 1879 Arch stands as the gateway between the core academic center of campus and Prospect Avenue.
(11/21/23 9:49am)
The Undergraduate Student Government (USG) Academics Committee publicly announced Princeton’s Syllabus Library on Nov. 8 in an email to students, advertising it as a way to preview courses students may be interested in without actually enrolling. While many students welcomed the library as a new way to explore course offerings, the University has actually maintained the syllabus library since fall 2021.
(11/21/23 5:14am)
As I write this essay, the despicable poison of Jew-hatred has taken a firm hold at so many college campuses, Princeton included. The current climate seems to have provided the perfect conditions for pure, unadulterated religious and ethnic bigotry to show itself and flourish. Here at Princeton, activists proudly chant “Intifada” and demand the complete eradication of the world’s only Jewish state; elsewhere, from Cornell, Harvard, and the University of Pennsylvania to Ohio State and Cooper Union, frightening (and sometimes violent and illegal) exhibitions of anti-Jewish attitudes abound. As my Jewish friends tell me, now is — to put it exceedingly mildly — an alarming time to be a Jew on a college campus.
(11/21/23 4:50am)
The winds of change are starting to blow on Prospect Avenue.
(11/21/23 3:10am)
Among fall foliage, Thanksgiving arrives on campus.
(11/21/23 12:00pm)