November 16, 2015

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Monday november 16, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 104

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } BEYOND THE BUBBLE

ACADEMICS

SINSI to add new separate internship program next year

By Shuang Teng contributor

PHOTO COURTESY OF YAHOO NEWS

People left flowers and lighting candles at a memorial in Paris following the terrorist attacks on Friday.

U. students in Paris recount Friday attacks

contributor

In the aftermath of terrorist attacks in Paris on Friday, at least 10 University students have been identified as studying abroad in the city this semester, and some said they have been impacted from living in the city during the attacks. At least 129 people have died

as a result of Friday’s attacks in Paris as of Sunday. Six locations — including the Bataclan concert hall, the Stade de France and two restaurants — were attacked. French President François Hollande declared a state of emergency in response to the attacks. Students currently in Paris come from a number of departments including French and Italian, comparative liter-

STUDENT LIFE

USG senate discusses changes to new elections handbooks By Katherine Oh staff writer

The Undergraduate Student Government senate discussed changes to the elections handbook during the weekly meeting on Sunday. The senate voted to split the elections handbook into two separate handbooks, one governing candidacy and the other governing referenda specifically. The senate then approved voting and passing thresholds for referenda, making it necessary that at least one-third of the student body vote on a referendum for that referendum to be on the ballot and that of those students, more than 50 percent must vote in favor for the referendum to pass. Some members of the senate said that it would be desirable to have referenda only during regular USG election cycles instead of allowing students to vote on referenda at any point during the year. “I think this is a reasonable action to take,” U-councilor Ethan Marcus 18 said. “We have limited resources. We have one elections manager, who has to deal with two elections.” Other members disagreed, saying that pressing issues should be addressed quickly and effectively, regardless of the time of the year. “As leaders of the university, us as a USG, it’s our job to facilitate conversations,” U-councilor Dallas Nan ’16 said. “If we choose this option, I think we’re doing a disservice to our peers. It should not be our job to decide what is and isn’t a pressing issue to

them.” Nan added that rather than taking into account what peer institutions do regarding referenda, we should support and give voice to students who wish to discuss topics affecting them here and now. In past elections, 200 signatures during elections cycle and 500 signatures off-season were required for a petition to be considered. The new referenda handbook contained a tentative clause requiring 400 signatures to be on the ballot. U-councilor Jacob Cannon ’17 said that the number of signatures required for a petition should be a percentage of the school’s population, as the population of the school changes every year and a percentage would better reflect how much support the petition has. He noted that he thinks this percent should be 10 percent specifically. USG president Ella Cheng ’16 noted that during the Hose Bicker referendum, those seeking to petition had been actively impeded and had a hard time reaching the required number of 500 signatures. People had ripped the paper ballots, Cheng noted. Cheng said that she was afraid something similar could happen with more controversial referenda. Cheng is a former staff writer for the Daily Princetonian. After extensive discussion, the senate passed the 10 percent amendment. Princeton Perspective Project chair Mary Manning ’17 presented a brief overview of the direction the project is heading this See USG page 4

ature and the Wilson School. Director of Study Abroad program Mell Bolen did not respond to a request for comment. Department representative for the Wilson School Christina Davis, Wilson School Associate Dean Nathan Scovronick, French and Italian department representative Efthymia Rentzou were unavailable See PARIS page 3

DIWALI

HEATHER GRACE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The Diwali celebration in the University Chapel included worship and spiritual reflection on Saturday. LECTURE

Treuer ’91 lectures on Native American experience in inaugural Speaker Series By De Vann Sago senior writer

The University’s Native American inclusion and recruitment efforts have improved since 1991 but still fall short, Dr. Anton Treuer ’91 argued in the inaugural lecture for the Native Leaders Speaker Series on Friday. Treuer said that the Native American experience is usually one of marginalization and invisibility. He explained that what people think of Native

Americans is often imagined rather than real, noting the “noble savage” and the “ignoble savage” as examples of stereotypes that Native Americans face. “Even today some people think Indians are all rich from casinos and some think Indians are all living in squalor on reservations, and of course the truth is actually complicated,” Treuer said. He noted that Native Americans are often perceived as people of the past, which contrib-

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Columnist Sarah Sakha discusses identifying as a person of color despite being perceived as white, and columnist Colter Smith argues that sometimes there is no binary answer to certain controversial issues. PAGE 5

8 p.m.: Death row exoneree and activist Anthony Ray Hinton will give a public lecture on the death penalty, hosted by Students for Prison Education and Reform. Frist Campus Center Lecture Hall 302.

utes to the invisibility. “I think it’s important to remember, too, that most of the stories that pop up going to school K-12 or in the mainstream media are stories of loss and tragedy, and they’re also stories that happened before 1900,” he said. “So it’s really easy for people to think that Indians are something that happened in the past. It’s important to remind people we’re still here.” He then discussed the bigotry See LECTURE page 2

WEATHER

By Maya Wesby

The Wilson School’s Scholars in the Nation’s Service Initiative program will be broken up into two programs, Dean of the Wilson School Cecilia Rouse said. Rouse explained that the first would be a summer internship program open to rising sophomores, juniors and seniors, and the second component would be the SINSI graduate program, which is open to seniors and will involve two years of the Wilson School’s Master of Public Administration program and two years of federal service. The program is currently a six-year commitment, and accepts students in their junior year. Selected SINSI scholars complete an internship the summer before their senior year, and upon graduation finish the Wilson School’s MPA program for two years and do two years of federal service fellowship. The changes resulted from a review by Wilson School faculty that took place last year, Rouse said, explaining that the faculty wanted to make the SINSI experience available to more students. Rouse explained that the faculty felt that the SINSI program is a big advantage to students since having the direc-

tor of SINSI place students into internships would give them better opportunities than what students might find on their own. She added that the faculty felt having students apply to the program in their junior year was too early. “It’s very early to be asking students who’ve just barely six months after selecting a college major on making a six-year commitment in terms of what they want to do going forward,” Rouse said. The changes will be initiated in the 2016 fall semester, SINSI Director Hilda Arellano said. “We really wanted to make sure that all of this was done in the proper sequence and what we intend to do, as of probably the second semester, early 2016, is have the revised website up that explains both the changes, and also have the process that people would follow starting in the fall of 2016,” Arellano said. According to Arellano, this was the first review of the program since its conception nine years ago. “I think usually programs are reviewed more frequently. I think it was because it was a new program and a relatively small program,” she said. Rouse noted that in the review, faculty looked at how current See SINSI page 2

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November 16, 2015 by The Daily Princetonian - Issuu