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Wednesday january 7, 2015 vol. cxxxviii no. 127
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BEYOND THE BUBBLE
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Gilbert ’09 charged with murder
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In Opinion Jonathan Lu discusses the responsibilities that come with Princeton privilege, and Azza Cohen talks about how a 2-week winter break is too short. PAGE 4
By Pooja Patel contributor
Thomas Gilbert Sr. ‘66 was found dead in his home on Sunday. Thomas Gilbert Jr ‘09 was charged on Monday.
Thomas Gilbert Sr. ’66 was found dead in his Manhattan home from a gunshot wound on Sunday, and his son Thomas Gilbert Jr. ’09 was charged with murder on Monday. Gilbert Jr. has pled not guilty to charges that include second-degree murder and criminal possession of a weapon. He is due in court on Friday and Feb. 2. Gilbert Jr. was allegedly in debt, and the two had allegedly been arguing over Gilbert Jr.’s allowance, according to the Associated Press. Gilbert Sr. had allegedly been giving his son $2,400 a month for rent and $600 for spending money and planned to cut the sum to $400 a month, the New York Post reported. Gilbert Jr. had allegedly asked his mother to get him a sandwich so she would be out of the apartment before he allegedly fired a shot at Gilbert Sr.’s head, the New York Post said, adding that Gilbert Jr. al-
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
CPUC launches task force to improve diversity, inclusion
Eisgruber ’83 addresses Jewish life, divestment
Today on Campus 6:30 p.m.: A “Mindful Stress Management Workshop” will be taking place at The Graduate School. Participants will learn stress reduction and meditation techniques. Old Graduate College, Coffee House (Entryway 12)
The Archives
Jan. 7, 1976 Faculty members approved and adopted legislation banning students from publishing or selling lecture transcripts and other course related material.
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News & Notes UMCPP loses funding for excessive number of infected patients
Over one-third of New Jersey hospitals, including the University Medical Center of Princeton at Plainsboro, will lose some federal funding because too many of their patients were infected during treatment, NJ Spotlight reported. Medicare payments will decrease by one percent for the federal fiscal year, which started on Oct. 1, 2014, and will end on Sept. 30, 2015. The penalty is based on a score that factors in the number of patients with centralline-associated bloodstream infections, the number of patients with catheter-associated urinary tract infections and a combination of eight different conditions. Funding will be revoked from the quarter of hospitals that scored lowest nationally. Twenty-three of 62 state hospitals, or 37 percent, were affected by the one percent Medicare payment reduction. New Jersey had the fourth highest penalty percentage, trailing only the District of Columbia, Utah, Connecticut and Nevada, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis. “There has been significant progress in reducing these hospital-acquired conditions both in New Jersey and nationally, and that’s what makes this penalty program very unfortunate,” New Jersey Hospital Association spokesperson Kerry McKean Kelly said. Other local penalized hospitals include Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital and Saint Peter’s University Hospital in New Brunswick.
legedly arrived at his father’s apartment carrying a gun and fled the scene after the shooting. Gilbert Jr. had allegedly slipped past the doorman wearing a hoodie, according to the New York Daily News. The police were notified of the incident by Gilbert Sr.’s wife, Shelly, who returned and discovered his body. Gilbert Jr. was arrested on Sunday at his Chelsea apartment after New York Police Department officers dressed in riot gear took down his door and found him hiding inside. He was taken to the 17th precinct in midtown. Police recovered a .40-caliber Glock semi-automatic handgun from the scene, according to the New York Post. The gun’s original packaging, as well as magazine clips and loose rounds, were found in Gilbert Jr.’s apartment. It remains unclear whether the gun was bought legally. Gilbert Jr. attended The Buckley School on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. He went See GILBERT page 2
COURTESY OF ABC NEWS
By Katherine Oh contributor
The Council of the Princeton University Community Executive Committee has launched a Special Task Force on Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, University Provost David Lee GS ’99 announced in an email to all undergraduates on Dec. 12. The task force will consist of a steering committee and three working groups for pol-
icies and transparency, academics and awareness, and structures and supports. The task force was launched after University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 asked the CPUC Executive Committee to develop recommendations to improve University policies and practices on diversity, inclusion and equity, as well as events to promote constructive conversations about racial equality and diversity on
campus and beyond. The formation of a separate task force was necessary to ensure that a representative group was working together on the issue, Lee said, adding that it is important for students of all backgrounds to have adequate representation on campus. “This is brought on by heightened attention and awareness of events that have happened across the country See CPUC page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
3 alumni named in Forbes’ 30 under 30 By Christina Vosbikian contributor
Forbes Magazine’s 2015 Venture Capital 30 under 30 list features two University alumni, Ryan Shea ’12 and Nikhil Basu Trivedi ’11, and former University student, Kevin Petrovic, who was a member of the class of 2016. The annual list was released on Monday.
Shea co-founded OneName, a company that allows users to share bitcoins and personal data easily, with Muneeb Ali GS ’11 in June 2013. Shea received his B.S.E. in mechanical and aerospace engineering and a certificate in applications of computing from the University, while Ali received a master’s degree in computer science. Shea and Ali first met
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Repairs made on steam leak outside of Wu Hall By Zaynab Zapon contributor
Significant repairs were done on a steam leak outside Wu Hall over winter break, according to Sean Gallagher, manager of Facilities Civil Engineering and Construction. The steam tunnel that runs underneath the bluestone plaza had a relatively small leak that was discovered a few months ago, Gallagher said. Construction began shortly after winter break and
concluded with the complete replacement of the bluestone on Dec. 30. The hole in the bluestone, which was necessary to allow repairs of the steam leak, was created a few weeks before break began. After proceeding with the investigation to locate the leak, Gallagher said, the construction group covered the hole with plywood and monitored the whole area for safety. Although there was a clear odor surrounding the construction area, particularly See REPAIRS page 3
through the University’s computer science department and the University’s Entrepreneurship Club. The two were living in New York when they decided to start a company together. OneName users create an account, and their data is then stored in a decentralized database. Users have unique keys that require them to prove their identities before logging in to See FORBES page 2
By Shriya Sekhsaria contributor
University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 addressed Israeli alumni and guests about Jewish life on campus and the petition advocating the University’s divestment from companies with relationships to the “Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the continued siege of Gaza” at an alumni gathering near Tel Aviv, Israel, on Dec. 30. Eisgruber said the two main objectives of this gathering included updating the alumni about what was happening on campus and bringing the alumni community together. A question arose from an alumnus about reactions on American campuses to Israel, according to Eisgruber, who expressed disapproval of the divestment petition. “I mentioned the petition to make sure people were aware of it in response to that [question] and also indicated that I thought it was quite clear that the petition failed to meet our standards or social policy decisions about endowment investing,” he said. However, Eisgruber added
that the University does not have a stand on the Israeli-Palestinian topic as a university. “We have a number of different professors who take different views about that subject,” he said. ”It is a topic about which there is disagreement, as there should be disagreement on university campuses.” Eisgruber said that an alumnus from the 1940s had said that he remembered a time when there were almost no Jewish students on campus. The alumnus had recalled organizing gatherings, including one in which Albert Einstein spoke to the small number of Jewish students who were on campus at the time, Eisgruber said. In March 2008, Eisgruber discovered that he had Jewish ancestry when he was assisting his son with an elementary school project, he told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz in 2013. “Understanding myself as Jewish helps me understand who I am, what the experiences of my family are and the set of cultural traditions from which I emerge,” he told See DIVESTMENT page 3
FIRST SNOW
KINGSTON XU :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Patton hall showing off the first major snow of the year, a nice backdrop for Reading Period, see p. 2