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Thursday october 6, 2016 vol. cxl no. 81
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
U. committee to look MacArthur into dining options Fellow Subhash { Feature }
contributor
A new University committee is hosting a series of focus groups to generate student input on meal plans and dining options on campus in an effort to recommend more efficient and more flexible options that best suit the University’s diverse student body. The Princeton University Board Plan Review Committee was created last semester as an extension of the University’s strategic planning process and the strategic planning task force on the residential college model. The committee is co-chaired by Executive Director of Campus Dining Smitha Haneef and Dean of Rockefeller College Oliver Avens and consists of staff and two undergraduate students, Undergraduate Student Government President Aleksandra Czulak ’17, and Michael Zhou ’19. Haneef said that the University employed “a nomination
process to identify key administrators and leadership members” who would be best suited to develop recommendations for campus dining options. While describing how the committee would inform their recommendations, Aven noted that they were analyzing data from different dining sites to determine how and when they were used. He said that he hoped student input from focus groups and online comments would better help PUBPR understand how dining options fit into students’ lives and schedules. “We’re taking a look at both qualitative and quantitative data,” Haneef added. “PUBPR is split into three subcommittees with specific focuses: space and usage, student experience, and financial modeling. Each subcommittee is charged with specific facets of PUBPR’s initiative.” “For example, the space and usage subcommittee would be entrusted with gathering and
analyzing data from dining halls while the student experience subcommittee is more closely involved with the undergraduate members of the committee and centers more on student feedback,” he said. According to Avens, one reason for the committee’s formation is that the University “hasn’t had a careful look at its dining and meal plan options” since 2005, when a Universitywide committee chaired by faculty and staff reviewed dining options on campus as a part of the planning for the 2007 expansion of residential colleges. Avens said that now, twelve years later, “history requires” PUBPR to do a similar sort of indepth review in search of ways to enhance the student experience, just as the 2005 committee’s report led to the creation of two free meals per week for upperclassmen. Haneef said that another inspiration for PUBPR is to supSee PUBPR page 3
LECTURE
LeBlanc ’99 discusses privacy and protection in telecommunications By Norman Xiong contributor
Chief of the Federal Communications Commission’s Bureau of Enforcement Travis LeBlanc ’99 discussed the necessity of privacy and consumer protections in a lecture and Q&A session on Wednesday afternoon. LeBlanc’s talk underscored the need for both preventative and enforcement measures against violations of rights for American consumers online and in telecommunications. He proceeded to explain how he addresses those issues in his capacity as FCC Enforcement Bureau chief and clarified the misconceptions surrounding the role of the FCC in the eyes of Americans. “Most people… if you were to
ask them what they knew about the FCC, they would probably say something along the lines of Janet Jackson at the Super Bowl. They thought of the FCC as an agency that dealt with indecency,” LeBlanc said. “And really what the FCC does is regulate, essentially, the industries of broadcast television, radio, telephones, both landline and wireless, cable, satellite, and now Internet Service Providers, or ISPs.” Following his description of the roles of the FCC, LeBlanc then identified and explained some of the most prominent issues consumers today face surrounding privacy and protections in telecommunications. “The risk of privacy today, and personal data, given how much we all use our electronic devices
ROBERTSON AT NIGHT
is not just financial harm. It’s not just that someone is going to steal your credit card information and go out and run up a bill,” he noted. “The risk is really to your personal reputation, and there are dignitary harms that people now really do risk in these privacy and security breaches.” LeBlanc drew on examples from his work, including cases he has pursued against ISPs regarding issues such as cramming and limiting net neutrality in order to emphasize the dangers to consumers’ privacy and rights in the telecommunications arena. The discussion drew a sizable audience which consisted of both University undergraduates and listeners from outside the UniverSee FCC page 2
COURTESY OF NSF
By Alexander Stangl contributor
Mashad Arora contributor
Subhash Khot GS ’03, an alumnus of the University’s graduate computer science program, has received the MacArthur Fellowship for his pioneering work in computational complexity. Khot is currently a professor at New York University’s Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences. In 2010, he won the Waterman Award, which is awarded for “exceptional individual achievement in scientific or engineering research” of “significant impact on the field so as to situate him or her as a leader among peers.” In 2014, he was awarded the Rolf Nevanlinna Prize by the International Congress of Mathematicians “for outstanding contributions in Mathematical Aspects of Information Sciences.” Khot’s dissertation, as well as much of his subsequent research, expands greatly on the
Q&A
discussion of P versus NP problem, an open question in computer science regarding the existence of efficient algorithms for general problems. Khot’s work builds upon that of his doctoral advisor, University professor Sanjeev Arora, and that of Johan Håstad, professor of theoretical computer science at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden, with whom Khot worked very closely as a graduate student. “The next question was whether you can compute approximation solutions, and there’s also been a body of work, and Khot’s work fits in that body [...] whether or not many of these problems have good algorithms for computing approximations of solutions,” Arora noted, given the difficulty of approaching the P vs NP problem and doubt in the field that a positive resolution exists. When it comes to researching bounds on computational complexity, algorithms have See KHOT page 3 ACADEMICS
Q&A: Travis LeBlanc ’99, chief U. professor of FCC Bureau of Enforcement denounces exiled preacher By Ruby Shao
News Editor Emerita
Travis LeBlanc ’99 has advised President Obama’s administration as a Department of Justice attorney, and currently serves as Chief of the Bureau of Enforcement at the Federal Communications Commission. He sat down with The Daily Princetonian before his Wednesday lecture to discuss his education, prevention of crimes, and regulation in the Digital Age.
MARIACHIARA FICARELLI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR
Khot GS ’03
The Daily Princetonian: You crafted an independent concentration of philosophy, politics, and economics at the University. How have your studies here influenced your career? Travis LeBlanc ’99: I wanted to create an independent concentration in philosophy, politics, and economics because I thought those three disciplines were the basis for how to analyze a public policy issue. The
three questions that you almost have to ask for any public policy are “What should we do?”, which is the philosophical question; “Do we have the authority to do it – what’s our power?”, that’s the politics question; and “How much does it cost?”, that’s the economics question. For me, the independent concentration was very much intertwined with a career… I knew I wanted to be both a lawyer and someone working on public policy issues… It wasn’t necessarily a desire to prepare for a career exclusively in government, but it was definitely a desire to have a role in public policy and in public discourse. DP: What inspired that desire to affect public policy and public discourse? TL: I would probably say that there is a part of me that is inherently empathetic, and wants to help. I feel blessed, truly, to have had the education, the faSee Q&A page 2
In Opinion
Today on Campus
Contributing columnist Jack Bryan reflects on having a one-track mind at Princeton, and columnist Marni Morse supports a more inclusive debate around freedom of speech on college campuses. PAGE 4
4:30 p.m.: Latin American Studies will host the PLAS Fellows Series featuring University visiting lecturer Antonio José Ponte and Spanish writer Enrique Vila-Matas through a panel discussion. Green Hall 0S6.
By Samuel Oh contributor
Associate Professor of Near Eastern Studies Michael Reynolds GS ’03 published an article on the Foreign Policy Research Institute on Sept.26 that accused supporters of Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen of allegedly orchestrating the attempted Turkish coup in Jul. Reynolds further called for Gülen’s expulsion from the United States. Reynold’s essay outlined the existence of a struggle between pro-government forces led by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğ an See REYNOLDS page 2
WEATHER
By Rose Gilbert
HIGH
74˚
LOW
47˚
Sunny. chance of rain:
10 percent