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(04/07/22 3:18am)
The Classes of 2020 and 2021 will be returning to campus for the first in-person Reunions since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic and their respective graduations. As of an announcement on Wednesday, April 6, the University will be covering their cost of attendance.
(03/18/22 1:49pm)
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(03/18/22 1:50pm)
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(02/21/22 5:34am)
Maria Ressa ’86 is the CEO of Rappler, a news organization in the Philippines that has been lauded by journalists across the world for its incisive and critical reporting on the corruption of the President Rodrigo Duterte administration. Ressa has endured continued persecution in the Philippines, including currently facing seven counts of cyber libel. In 2021, she was the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize.
(02/17/22 2:32am)
In an event titled “Black Activism, Then and Now,” hosted by the Princeton Public Library on Tuesday, Feb. 15, panelists discussed the local, national, and international activism of Paul Robeson, a musician, athlete, and prominent activist for racial equality. Robeson was born in the town of Princeton and his legacy of sustained student activism at the University is still salient today.
(02/04/22 2:54am)
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(01/27/22 3:20am)
The Princeton Theological Seminary (PTS) announced that its main chapel will no longer bear Samuel Miller’s name after a unanimous vote on Jan. 25 by the PTS Board of Trustees, just over a week after a demonstration held on Jan. 18 by the Association of Black Seminarians (ABS) at PTS asking trustees to remove Miller’s name.
(01/15/22 8:45pm)
At a Wednesday, Jan. 12 town hall about COVID-19 policies for graduate students, University administrators explained plans for the start of the semester. During the virtual event, several graduate students expressed concerns about how the University plans to handle a predicted increase in COVID-19 cases.
(12/08/21 5:50am)
During the week of Nov. 27–Dec. 3, isolation housing on campus for COVID-19 reached its peak at 98.3 percent during the week. This number included 86 undergraduates and 15 graduate students. As is reflected on the dashboard, this total reflects students isolating both on and off-campus.
(11/27/21 8:11pm)
The University will increase COVID-19 testing frequency, introduce a cap on non-academic gathering size, and double down on its mask mandate in an effort to avoid a post-Thanksgiving surge in COVID-19 cases.
(11/15/21 3:03am)
After taking place virtually in both 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19, Reunions 2022 is planned to take place in-person on campus from May 19–22, 2022.
(11/12/21 5:00am)
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(11/12/21 5:00am)
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(10/15/21 1:19am)
This year’s edition of the annual Forbes 400 list, which was released on Oct. 5, lists the 400 wealthiest Americans, nine of whom graduated from the University.
(09/08/21 1:15am)
In June 2021, Andrew Bruck ’05 was named acting Attorney General for the state of New Jersey — the first member of the LGBTQ+ community to hold the position.
(08/05/21 8:04pm)
Partially backtracking on guidance issued last month, the University will require unvaccinated students, faculty, and staff to wear masks indoors on campus this fall.
(07/01/21 5:16pm)
The University will eliminate multiple public health guidelines related to COVID-19, including the requirement that students, faculty, and staff wear face coverings, beginning July 4. Most other restrictions will be lifted by the start of the fall semester.
(06/23/21 12:55am)
An investigation is underway regarding a noose found last week on a University construction site by a contractor, according to an email sent by Vice President for Campus Life Rochelle Calhoun to all students residing on campus for the summer.
(05/29/21 11:07pm)
Gene Andrew Jarrett ’97 was named the new Dean of the Faculty as well as the William S. Tod Professor of English in a University announcement on Thursday afternoon.
(05/06/21 11:28pm)
249 students have faced disciplinary action for violations of the Social Contract between the start of the 2020-21 academic year and April 22, according to a report released by the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students (ODUS).