Princeton Breaks, Changes Name of Woodrow Wilson Dining Room

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 8, 2017

Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson Hall was a site of a big BLM controversy back in 2015. They held fast and refused to change the name.

Now they’ve changed the name of a different, smaller building (I think just a room). Which implies they’re ready to do the big one as well, in due time.

Heat Street:

The prestigious Princeton Club, a home for alumni of the Ivy League school, has scrubbed the name of President Woodrow Wilson from its elite dining room.

The society has renamed the venue, part of their Manhattan clubhouse, “Nassau 1756” instead.

It follows a high-profile campaign on Princeton’s campus deriding Wilson as a white supremacist and demanding that the establishment’s School of Public and International Affairs be named after somebody else instead.

Club officials quietly replaced Woodrow’s name in the last few weeks on their website. A note made the change clear, but did not offer an explanation.

Nassau 1756, the innocuous new name, refers to the year the university moved to its present location.

If Woodrow Wilson is a “white supremacist” so extreme that he has to be erased from our history, that means that the same fate faces the Founding Fathers and pretty much anyone born before 1980.