October 5, 2017

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Thursday October 5, 2017 vol. CXLI no. 80

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } ON CAMPUS

NEHA CHAUCHAN AND KRISTIN QIAN :: PRINCETONIAN STAFF

The new Lewis Center fot the Arts has its grand opening this weekend, accopmanied by a Festival of the Arts.

Festival of the Arts to celebrate opening of new Lewis Center this weekend Contributor

The transformation of the former Dinky station’s location to a state-of-the-art performance center for the University is complete. The Lewis Center for the Arts, replete with 146,000 square feet of space for students in theater, dance, music, and the visual arts, will become a brand new arts hub. “We want the new buildings and the neighborhood around them to become a place where the University and the town and others intersect together, and we

expect that will be around artistic performance and around the open spaces that exist there,” said President Christopher Eisgruber ’83. Designed by Steven Holl Architects, the Lewis Center is composed of three buildings: the Wallace Dance Building and Theater, the Arts Tower, and the Music Building. Its opening celebration begins Thursday. The Festival of the Arts, which will take place Oct. 5–8, will cater to this spirit of collaboration between the arts. Several interdisciplinary performances will be featured, from a

ON CAMPUS

kinetic lighting installation The dance building in- dubbed the ‘Forum,’ an 8,000 accompanied by the Princ- cludes a black-box steel the- square-foot open space that eton Laptop Orchestra and ater which seats 150 people connects all three buildings. other music groups, to a and other dance theaters Pressing the elevator button sculpture tour accompanied within a concrete frame. starred and marked with an by Sō Percussion. The cylindrical concrete “F’ takes visitors there. The Featuring talented alum- and stone tower embedded Forum draws its light from ni, professionals from out- in the Arts Tower, according vast skylights set into the side the University commu- to Steven Holl Architects, is floor of the reflecting pool nity, and current students, a nod to Blair Arch, and the in the plaza directly above the festival will be a true music building boasts a sus- it. The dancing light “brings showcase of the limitless pension of resonant wooden a spirit of joy and creativity creativity that the Lewis practice rooms on steel rods. to that space that augments Center can help express. The latter exhibits wonder- what the different depart“I think [the Festival will] ful acoustics particularly ments are trying to do in also show people the differ- suited to instrumental mu- their programs,” said Yaffe. ent ways these spaces can be sic. Yaffe explained that the used,” architect Noah Yaffe The architects of the Lewis spirit of collaboration persaid. Yaffe was one of two se- Center also incorporated a vades the underground comnior partners on the project. spacious underground area See LCA page 2 BEYOND THE BUBBLE

U. affiliates win physics Nobel prize

COURTESY OF MIT.EDU

Reiner Weiss, former U. postdoctoral researcher ZACH GOLDFARB :: PRINCETONIAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Roxane Gay speaks about her comic for Marvel.

By Hamna Khurram and Regina Lankenau Contributors

Roxane Gay talks superheroes, social justice By Ivy Truong Contributor

Roxane Gay said in a talk on Wednesday that she broke tradition in writing the story of two black women who love each other for Marvel. As her lecture showed, however, she broke tradition long before that. “I knew what the rules were, I knew that whatever I was going to do, I was going to be breaking rules,” she

In Opinion

said. Gay, associate professor for English at Purdue, New York Times contributor, and best-selling author, published her first comic in November, “World of Wakanda,” a prequel to the “Black Panthers” series. Prior to that, she had written extensively on a variety of issues and across genres, including “Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body” that discussed fatness See GAY page 3

Guest contributor Noah Mihan suggests solutions for a broken bicker system and columnist Leora Eisenberg pleads for a more empathetic campus. PAGE 4-5

Rainer Weiss, who was a postdoctoral researcher at the University, and Kip Thorne GS ‘65 received the Nobel Prize in Physics on Tuesday. They received the award “for decisive contributions to the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory detector and the observation of gravitational waves” according to a press release by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Weiss will receive half of the prize money, while Thorne was jointly awarded the other half of the prize money with Barry Barish, another LIGO collaborator. “Early on, both Kip Thorne and Rainer Weiss were firmly

convinced that gravitational waves could be detected and bring about a revolution in our knowledge of the universe,” the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said in the press release. Both Weiss and Thorne spearheaded work at LIGO, a collaborative project that seeks to measure and understand gravitational waves. The observatory is a largescale physics experiment to built to detect gravitational waves. The first gravitational waves were detected at LIGO in 2015. While at the University, Weiss completed cosmological studies research under the mentorship of Robert Dicke. Thorne worked in a research group with John Archibald Wheeler, which is where he first became interested in the study of black holes. Weiss left the University to take a faculty position at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1964, where he is now a professor emeritus of physics. Thorne took a research fellow position at Caltech after receiving his doctoral degree, and eventually became Professor of Theoretical Physics. He is now The Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics, Emeritus at California Institute of Technology.

Today on Campus 9 a.m.: A Festival of the Arts at Princeton: Opening Weekend. Celebrate the opening of the new Lewis Center for the Arts complex by enjoying concerts, plays, readings, dance performances, and more. Lewis Center for the Arts.

U . A F FA I R S

McCarter Theatre receives $500,000 grant By Emily Spalding senior writer

In a substantial contribution to the performing arts community, long time New Jersey theater supporter Betty Wold Johnson gave the McCarter Theatre a $500,000 challenge grant on Sept. 28, according to an official McCarter Theatre press release. Johnson’s challenge grant, which requires that matching funds be raised, is a contribution to the ongoing Campaign for McCarter, a fundraising effort to support the future of McCarter Theatre with an ultimate goal of $15 million. “What’s significant is the sheer size of [Johnson’s] generosity… This is a big thing for McCarter, and it’s really a wonderful gift for her to give,” Tom Miller, the director of public relations for McCarter, said when discussing what this grant will mean for the future of the Princeton-based theater. The new Lewis Center for See MCCARTER page 3

WEATHER

By Neha Chauchan

HIGH

83˚

LOW

61˚

Partly Cloudy chance of rain:

20 percent


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