Follow us on Instagram
Try our daily mini crossword
Subscribe to the newsletter
Download the app

Street

TruckFest Logo on white profile pic

Truckfest: An alternative Prospect 11

April 25 will be a far cry from your typical Charter Friday. For the first time in recent history, all 11 eating clubs have united to organize a fundraiser aimed at fighting food insecurity in Mercer County, N.J.,by selling — quite fittingly — “street food.” Dubbed TruckFest, the event will feature 11 food trucks from the surrounding area, including New Jersey, Philadelphia and New York.

FEATURES | 04/16/2014

ADVERTISEMENT
The Daily Princetonian

Street takes PUB 102

Seth I spotted a crowd of people sporting various dance group gear and trailed them up the stairs to the Dillon Gym Multipurpose Room, where Princeton University Ballet would host PUB 102: a ballet class for beginners! I chose to wear a Daily Princetonian pullover to show my lack of dance affiliation, some throwback regulation Boy Scout shorts to show some leg and some orange high tops to show some sass.

NEWS | 04/09/2014

The Daily Princetonian

Headliners and Headshakers

1.Wawa temporarily removes class banners, students moved to tears over unrequited love 2.Dartmouth students stage sit-in at president’s office; Malkiel posits student body has too much free time, suggests grade deflation 3.Passes for Late Meal shut down, freshmen forced to return to awkward interactions with upperclassmen 4.Class of 2014 Pub Night rescheduled due to rain; Tilghman scoffs at undergraduates’ weakness in the face of inclement weather 5.Breaking: USG announces Lawnparties headliners, students show brief but intense stint of interest in campus affairs 6.Class of 2018 assigned summer reading, Eisgruber hopes to introduce ambitious prefrosh to a long tradition of procrastination

NEWS | 04/09/2014

The Daily Princetonian

On the record with Off the Record

Question: What group is Princeton’s oldest, youngest and only coed hip-hop and R&B a cappella group? Answer: It’s Off the Record! Founded in the spring of 2011, Off the Record now comprises about 15 members who meet twice a week to rehearse their renditions of everything from Blackstreet’s “No Diggity” to Ariana Grande’s “The Way.” The group features the standard soprano, alto, tenor and bass vocal roles found in most choral groups, but also likes to highlight its rappers and beatboxers. The group was formed to fill a previously unfilled niche in the campus performing arts scene. “As far as I know, [the founders] started out that spring and were kind of frustrated, I guess, about the lack of an outlet for doing R&B and hip-hop performance in singing in general, not even just in a cappella,” Caleb Negash ’15 said.

FEATURES | 04/02/2014