November 10, 2016

Page 1

Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Thursday november 10, 2016 vol. cxl no. 98

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } S T U D E N T L I F E & U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

STUDENT LIFE & LOCAL NEWS

U. centers offer post-election processing space

By Emily Spalding

By Charles Min associate news editor

Audrey Spensley contributor

The Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding and the Office of Religious Life offered post-election processing spaces for students in response to the victory of President-elect Donald Trump’s victory in the U.S. Presidential election on Wednesday. The Women*s Center and the LGBT Center are also providing spaces similar to one that Field Center offered for undergraduate and graduate students on Thursday and Friday at noon respectively. The Field Center’s event, ti-

tled “Post 2016 Elections: Finding Community at the Centers,” brought together undergraduate and graduate students in need of discussing and sharing their concerns about the election and the future of the country. “I honestly have no words to describe the emotions I’m feeling,” said one student who attended the event, “What will happen to all my immigrant friends and family that will face the threat of deportation every second of Trump’s tenure?” Another student expressed concerns for how this election’s demonstration of “white-lash” has left her afraid and distrustful of white Americans. See SPACE page 3

STUDENT LIFE

Unidad Latina en Acción protest Trump contributor

Over 150 people gathered in front of Nassau Hall the night of Nov. 9 to support the Unidad Latina en Acción NJ protest against new President-elect Donald Trump. Featuring speeches, chants, and a campus-wide march, the event united a diverse range of students and residents of the area who connected over their shared trepidations for Trump’s forthcoming presidency. Jorge Torres, event organizer and executive director of Unidad Latina en Acción NJ, a nonprofit that fights and advocates for the rights of immigrants, explained that the goal of the event was to tell the community to be engaged in a national movement that is “against hate

and against racism.” He noted that while the night was successful, he believes there is ample room “to work harder with the students,” and to “start making those conversations, [making] this political environment,” adding that “if it doesn’t start [with] us, it’s going to be harder to make changes.” Torres explained that the results of the election are not necessarily indicative of the Princeton community. “People are coming outside, are coming on the streets. I think it is more important than what you see in the polls,” he stated. He offered a sense of hope for the future, explaining that while “this can shake us as a community… it can move us forward as one.” The event started with a slew of passionate speeches

highlighting concerns over Trump’s stances on topics including women’s rights, immigration, minorities, and race in America. Speakers shared personal narratives as well as pieces of creative expression. Participants held signs with phrases written on them including “No hate, no racism, no Trump” while calling out “love trumps hate,” and “hey hey, ho ho, Trump’s got to go.” The protest moved throughout campus, starting on Nassau Street in front of the Fitzrandolph Gates and culminating in a march through Frist Campus Center. Yousef Elzalabany ’20 attended the protest as a way to show his solidarity with minorities, noting that the best way to deal with the current situation is by remaining enSee PROTEST page 3

U. students call for optimism after election By Jessica Li head news editor

Samuel Oh contributor

College Democrats and Republicans, affinity group members, and other University students expressed their opinions on the landmark election on Tuesday that saw Donald Trump voted in as the 45th President of the United States in a jaw-dropping election. Amanda Glatt ’19, president of the College Democrats, expressed devastation, fear, and shock at the election results. “My reaction is one… of disbelief that so many Americans are motivated by anger, uncertainty, and hatred,” Glatt said. Glatt said that she expected Hillary to beat Trump in a close race on faith that “optimism and hope for a better

country would win out over fear and hatred.” Expressing resignation at the results, Glatt further noted that Trump’s election was part of a historical trend that matched similar expressions of fear across the world. “This is a fear not unique to the United States, but common across the world, as demonstrated by the rise of nationalistic, populist, anti-immigrant movements in Eastern Europe, for example, as well as Brexit,” she said. “The election of Trump, in many ways, seems inevitable to me as a result of the historical and social trends that I discussed.” Glatt said that she believed the election showcased something more than the candidates themselves. “It seems to me we are caught in an inescapable hisSee REACTION page 2

JASPER GEBHARDT :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Over 150 students holding signs marched throughout the campus in protest against President-elect Donald Trump.

LECTURE

Chen ’09, Jawaid ’10 discuss inclusion in campus iconography contributor

Isometric Studio partners Andy Chen ’09 and Waqas Jawaid ’10 discussed their recent graphic design projects in conjunction with the University and their effects toward inclusion and belonging in a lecture on Nov. 9. Chen and Jawaid are members of the Advisory Group to the Princeton Campus Iconography Committee. Chen and Jawaid were tasked by the University with graphically redesigning several virtual and physical spaces around the University. The lecture focused on their design work for the University’s Council of the Humanities, the Women*s Center, the LGBT Center, and the Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding. The redesigned Fields Center features several spaces that

represent values such as hope, love, and equality. In modifying the spaces, Chen noted that a primary goal for the renovation was to create spaces that not only projected images of safety and comfort for students, but actually elicited these feelings when in use. “There were questions about this idea of comfort, right?” Chen explained. “So, a lot of students said, ‘Well, I want a place that I feel like home in,’ and this was often misinterpreted as, ‘I want a place that looks like a home.’ These are two very different things.” The sense of belonging that Chen and Jawaid strived to foster in their graphic redesign of the Fields Center served as a unifying theme for their work on the Women*s Center and the LGBT Center as well, they noted. “If you look at the history, you see that women were admitted [to the University] but they

were excluded from prestigious fellowships like the Rhodes Scholarship on the left [of the screen],” Chen explained. “And the stuff on the right is what was in The Daily Princetonian [at the time] about women: you had images or words that were related to gardening or arts, because those were safe.” In designing the space for the Women*s Center, Chen and Jawaid worked to expose narratives of discrimination against women throughout the University’s history both in long-held traditions like the bicker process and informal, everyday experiences of women. Similar goals motivated their work on the LGBT Center, as well as the desire to move away from oversimplified portrayals of the LGBT community towards more inclusive and diverse representations. See LECTURE page 1

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Contributing columnist comments on the unexpected marginalization of certain groups in the election, and contributing columnist Leora Eisenberg issues a call to action in the aftermath. PAGE 4

4:30 p.m.: Joseph Sassoon, associate Professor at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service, will discuss the politics and political Economy of the Arab World. Dodds Auditorium, Robertson Hall.

JASPER GEBHARDT :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHE

WEATHER

By Norman Xiong

HIGH

57˚

LOW

42˚

Mostly sunny. chance of rain:

0 percent


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.