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(09/28/23 2:01am)
Every year as fall rolls around, East Asian and Southeast Asian communities gather to celebrate. Whether you know it as the Mid-Autumn Festival or Chuseok, September is a time to give thanks for the harvest and for harmonious reunions. This year, we asked our editors and staffers to see what this time of the year looks like for Princeton students and their families.
(09/21/23 2:37am)
Grammy Award-winning artist Solána Imani Rowe, better known as SZA, commanded the stage at Richardson Auditorium this past Tuesday as she discussed growing up in suburban New Jersey, being a Black woman in the music industry, and seeing her work as a form of activism.
(04/28/23 3:43am)
Michael Garcia ‘23 is a senior in the Computer Science department and the Program in Dance. He grew up in Pennsylvania, which is where he started dancing, primarily focusing on contemporary dance and ballet. Before starting at Princeton, he did the Bridge Year Program in China, where he began studying hip-hop. At Princeton, Garcia dances and choreographs for diSiac Dance Company. He has trained in New York and Los Angeles, and danced with the American Repertory Ballet this past winter. For his senior dance thesis, Garcia choreographed and performed his work, “Acero,” which explores the different stages of how we process stress in the body.
(02/15/23 3:24am)
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(12/31/22 4:25am)
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(12/07/22 4:58am)
On a Friday night, the Frist Film/Performance Theatre was buzzing with excitement. In the darkness, the dancers struck their starting pose. The crowd waited with bated breath. Soon enough, the bright lights came up and Michael Jackson’s “P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)” rang through the speakers. It was time to get down.
(12/29/22 6:09pm)
On this special episode of Daybreak, listen to Podcast contributor Lina Kim and Assistant Podcast Editor Kerrie Liang sit down with Lily Shangreaux ’74 and Dan Bigbee Jr, co-producers of the Emmy-award winning documentary “Osage Murders: Reign of Terror.”
(11/01/22 4:38am)
On the chilly night of Oct. 20, the world gathered around their devices. It didn’t matter whether you were a devoted Spotify user, an Apple Music enthusiast, or a Tidal stan (do those even exist?) — we all watched the minutes trickle into seconds, waiting for Taylor Swift to sweep us away from our mundane lives into a whirlwind of romance and heartbreak. But, just like Cinderella, when the clock struck twelve, the night took a turn for the worse.
(10/12/22 3:42am)
If there’s anything that will strike fear into the heart of a Princeton student, it’s the mere mention of midterms. Unlike finals, which have the buffer week known as the “reading period,” midterms are stacked on top of regular classes. Most students will agree that midterms and the week leading up to midterms are generally the most stressful part of any semester. Listen in to hear more about how to prep for midterms!
(10/10/22 3:10am)
Mitra Abbaspour is the Haskell Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Princeton University Art Museum. Her work features a diverse range of pieces from the 20th and 21st centuries, including Latin American art, Asian and Asian American art, and African American art. Since 2016, Abbaspour has been collecting contemporary Indigenous North American pieces, among others, for the University’s Art Museum.
(08/17/22 2:23am)
Dispatches at The Prospect are brief reflections from our writers that focus on their experiences during the summer break. This piece is part of the Dispatch summer 2022 series.
(05/12/22 3:42am)
Michael Pratt has been the Conductor of the Princeton University Orchestra (PUO) for 44 years and has served as the Director of the Certificate Program in Music Performance since its inception in 1991. He provided the original inspiration for and continues to direct Princeton’s partnership with the Royal College of Music, London. Throughout his career, he has conducted many esteemed ensembles — including the Boston Symphony Chamber Players and the Odessa (Ukraine) Philharmonic — and in 2018 he was awarded an honorary membership to the Royal College of Music, London by His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales.
(03/29/22 1:30am)
I don’t like math.
(02/03/22 1:48am)
The Lunar New Year can be a celebration that is at once intensely personal and introspective and also a deeply shared cultural experience. To better understand what this time looks like for students on Princeton’s campus, The Prospect solicited responses from our editors and staff, as well as staffers from The Daily Princetonian at large.
(01/26/22 4:17am)
The first time I read ‘The Alchemist,’ by Paulo Coelho, was in December 2020. Fresh out of high school, I spent that month grappling with a deceptively simple question: Now what? Despite being a liberating experience for most, life after graduation left me feeling hollow. As I traded in my childhood for a fancy diploma, I realized that I had no routine, no goals, and a great fear of the unknown.
(12/10/21 3:01am)
It’s reading period. You already know what that means: stress-induced tears, both internal and external, late night cramming, and a whole lot of — you guessed it — reading. With all the work that has to be done this week, it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. Whether it’s because you need an epic soundtrack to help you focus or simply because you’re sick of Lofi Girl, I’ve got you covered! Here are a few of my favorite classical bangers to help you get by until winter break.
(11/23/21 3:53am)
Nine dead. 25 hospitalized. And yet the show went on.
(11/09/21 2:28am)
After much teasing on TikTok this past month, Conan Gray finally released his newest single, “Telepath,” on Oct. 29. The techno/electro-pop track is Gray’s third pre-release single from his sophomore album and an upbeat contrast to his two previous songs, “People Watching” and “Astronomy.”
(10/29/21 1:45am)
In today’s society, being Asian can be great. Sometimes it seems like the days of small-eyed jokes and math nerd stereotypes are long behind me, boxed away in memories of silly primary school banter; nowadays, conversations have shifted towards the exciting action of Naruto, or how BTS’s new song was — as the Twitter stans say — a “cultural reset.”
(10/15/21 1:40am)
Sō is back! On Sept. 18, the percussion quartet and Edward T. Cone Performers-in-Residence at Princeton University performed their season opener in Princeton with a program featuring works from the late 20th and 21st centuries. From cymbals to voice to custom-made string instruments, the repertoire consisted of a diverse range of instrumentation that explored various textural sounds and experimental tones.