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The Department of Public Safety (PSAFE) is investigating small flyers found on campus reading “Nuke Gaza” and “Kill Roaches” as a bias incident, the University told The Daily Princetonian on Friday.
Today is Monday 9, September 2024. Here's the latest from The Daily Princetonian.
Head Copy Editor Nathan Beck contributed reporting.
For the second semester in a row, Princeton’s Lawnparties — held on Sunday — was greeted with sunshine, bright blue skies, and temperatures in the low to mid seventies. Students flocked outside of Robertson Hall to splash in the SPIA fountain, danced outside the eating clubs lining Prospect Ave., and assembled on Frist North Lawn in support of this year’s guest performers.
This fall will be the first full semester of Opinion columnists, following the pilot last semester. This semester, we are proud to announce six columns, all continued from the spring. Each columnist will publish every other week or every three weeks.
Two days away from Lawnparties, the Undergraduate Student Government (USG) has yet to announce a student opener. A long-held tradition for the concert event, a student ensemble performs an opening act for the celebrity guest(s), bringing a slice of Princeton’s art scene to the star-studded affair.
The Black Student Union (BSU), the Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding (CAF), and the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students (ODUS) hosted the annual B(l)ack Together event on Thursday, Sept. 5 in the University Store Courtyard.
As the weather cools and fall settles in, the 2024 general election in November is increasingly becoming a topic of focus across the country, and the town of Princeton is no exception. On Monday, Aug. 26, Princeton Town Council passed a local elections reform resolution expressing support for state-level ranked choice voting legislation.
The following content is purely satirical and entirely fictional.
On Sept. 5, the University retracted its decision to ban protests on the front lawn of Nassau Hall. Cannon Green and the Prospect House grounds remain off-limits locations to protest.
Princeton enrollment untouched by affirmative action ban: Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
Beginning this semester, students will purchase textbooks and other required course materials through the new eCampus Online Bookstore platform. Students have reported experiencing order delays from the new online bookstore and expressed concern over potential long processing times in the mailroom at Frist Campus Center.
Based on the pre-frosh experience alone, Princeton would get Regina George on any Buzzfeed “Mean Girls” personality quiz. We are the ultimate ice queen: beautiful, popular — #1 on U.S. News for 13 years, in case you forgot — and can sometimes feel less than friendly. We have the cold part down, with a curt and succinct acceptance letter and a short and an arguably trivial admitted students day. Choosing Princeton is like choosing Regina as your best friend. You’re drawn toward undeniable prestige, unattainability, and lore, and you probably also have a masochistic streak.
The first Princeton class admitted following the Supreme Court decision banning race-conscious affirmative action has experienced little change in racial diversity, according to enrollment statistics released by the University on Wednesday.
Following tightened protest regulations, pro-Palestinian organizations hold protest : Your Daily ‘Prince’ Briefing
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Following the first day of classes, pro-Palestine organizers held the first protest of the academic year. Around 150 demonstrators attended, touring many of the major sites of Princeton’s “Gaza Solidarity Encampment” from the spring semester, starting the march on McCosh Courtyard before moving to the front of Clio Hall and Nassau Hall.
A few months ago, I went to hear Linda Sarsour speak at the Princeton encampment. She had garnered considerable attention, and I was curious to hear what she had to say. Her speech was, in a word, inspiring. She called for justice, equality, and human dignity, urging students to stand on “the right side of history.” She made listeners feel fired up and energized to do something.