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Tuesday october 20, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 92
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In Opinion Columnist Sarah Sakha discusses her concerns over arming Public Safety and columnist Marni Morse explains why Colonial Mansion is an offensive theme. PAGE 4
Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: Former chairman of the Federal ReserveBen Bernanke will deliver “A Historical Perspective on the Financial Crisis” as a Bendheim Center for Finance Lecture. McCosh 50.
The Archives
Oct. 20, 1966 The Students for a Democratic Society asked the university to bar representatives of the Dow Chemical Company from interviewing graduate students on campus on the grounds that Dow is one of the largest manufacturers of napalm in America.
STUDENT LIFE
13 hand, foot and mouth cases diagnosed By Maya Wesby contributor
Thirteen students have been diagnosed with hand, foot and mouth disease since the beginning of this academic year as of Thursday — a stark increase from last year’s single case, University Spokesperson Martin Mbugua said. University Health Services Director John Kolligian deferred comment to Mbugua. “The cause of the rise in cases at Princeton is unknown,” UHS Health Educator Kathy Wagner said. “We don’t really know why there might be a cluster like this, it just happens occasionally. So the cause in the rise of cases at Princeton isn’t something we’re going to know.” Hand, foot and mouth disease is a viral illness that usually affects children under 5 years old. Symptoms include a sore throat, reduced appetite, fever and malaise. Sores may appear in the mouth and a skin rash, sometimes with blisters, may develop on the palms of hands and the soles of feet.
Adults may not experience any symptoms yet still pass the disease on to peers and children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The disease is spread from close contact with an infected person, and contact with contaminated objects such as a doorknob. The CDC website says an infected person is most contagious during the first week of infection and should stay at home. According to CDC Health Communications Specialist Ian Branam, hand, foot and mouth disease is a clinical syndrome, meaning that one can be diagnosed only if he or she has symptoms. He explained that the illness is typically mild, and nearly all patients recover in seven to 10 days without medical treatment. “There’s no vaccine for hand, foot and mouth disease, and there’s really no [disease-specific] treatment,” Wagner said. She added that treatment would consist of symptom management, including taking pain relievers to reduce a fever and using mouthwash to numb mouth pain. See DISEASE page 3
FALL GALA
TIFFANY RICHARDSON :: SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Princeton Latinos y Amigos’s Fall Gala featured Joe Hernandez-Kolski ‘96, Ellipses and more.
LECTURE
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Entrepreneurial Hub launches on Chambers St. By Christina Vosbikian staff writer
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News & Notes NJ Transit begins #RudeZone campaign
NJ Transit will debut its #RudeZone campaign over the next six weeks to encourage passengers to mind their manners during their commutes, Planet Princeton reported. The campaign will be centered around postcards placed on train seats that read “Greetings from the #RudeZone! You’ve heard this person before during your commute” or “Don’t be that person, keep it down.” The postcards are accompanied by cartoons of nightmare passengers.The campaign will focus on six specific types of “rude” passengers. A “Phone Booth” passenger is one who loudly and publicly holds phone conversations. The “Potty Mouth” passenger is one who utters profanities while riding transit. “Excess baggage” passengers are ones who carry with them so much baggage that it obstructs walkways. The “traveling DJ” is one who plays his music loudly enough for other passengers to hear. The “coastline clipper” is one who grooms himself or herself while riding transit. A “foot loose” passenger is one who lounges in the seat.
GREG UMALI :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Donald Treiman lectured about the lasting social impact of family labels in China on Monday.
Treiman lectures on class labels left over from Communist China By Paul Phillips news editor
Family class labels assigned by the Chinese Communist government in 1950 still affected levels of schooling and job status in 1996, even though the labels were abolished in 1979, Donald Treiman argued in a lecture on Monday. The lecture was the first
hosted by the new Center on Contemporary China. Treiman is a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. Treiman said that when the Communist Party took control of China, it assigned family class labels to people living in China based on family status in the years just before liberation. He explained that although
there were 14 labels in total, they could be grouped in four basic categories: red, working, middle and bad. ‘Red’ was given to party members or orphans of war veterans who fought on the Communist side, ‘working’ was given to poor peasants or workers, ‘middle’ was given to middle-class or small businessmen and ‘bad’ was See LECTURE page 3
The Princeton University Entrepreneurial Hub, a new incubator space to advance entrepreneurial initiatives and education for faculty, students and alumni, launched this summer. The Hub resides in a University-leased building at 34 Chambers Street in downtown Princeton. Associate Director of the Keller Center Cornelia Huellstrunk said the University established the Lab to respond to tremendous interest in entrepreneurship among students, faculty and alumni. The Hub aims to foster entrepreneurial collaboration within the Princeton community. The Hub’s main purposes are to provide a shared working space for students and faculty startups and significant learning opportunities through workshops, roundtables and networking events. Users have access to meeting rooms, classrooms, office hours and information technology support. Office spaces are available for license to faculty and alumni startups. Both the semester-based eLab incubator program and the summer eLab accelerator program are housed in the same building. Stephanie Landers, Program Administrator of the Keller Center, explained that the creation of the Hub was part of a much larger entrepreneurship initiative on part of the University. She noted that administrators realized the need for programming and support on campus. “The way that Keller Center is involved is that we, for the past four years, have had the ELab accelerator program and also the incu-
bator program during the fall and spring semesters where students can work on their startups or very, very early stage ideas that they might want to turn into a startup company,” Landers explained. ”In the summer, the ELab is for students who have a startup and want to accelerate, to work on it over the summer and hopefully launch and properly find investors, gain customers and succeed. At the end of summer they give a demo-day to a large audience.” While these programs took place before in the engineering quad, the Keller Center now has a whole building to support them, she said. “We have a lot of space for workshops that are all focused on entrepreneurship, innovation and design.” According to the Keller Center website, the Hub aims to help students, faculty, and alumni develop their creativity and make important contributions to society. Huellstrunk said the organizers are looking for faculty who might be interested in this type of arrangement. She noted that the Hub has a very robust calendar of office hours with accountants, legal experts and entrepreneurship faculty. “The programming that happens at the Hub is really for everyone on campus, and includes talks by entrepreneurs, design thinkers and social entrepreneurs,” she said, adding that tours happen at the Hub at all times. Students interested in getting involved in the Hub do so by contacting Landers, who has been overseeing the dayto-day activities at the Hub, according to Huellstrunk. Landers said the Hub is funded by the University as part of the University’s ongoing efforts to support of See EHUB page 2