November 20, 2015

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Friday november 20, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 108

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

Eisgruber, BJL compromise after 2 days of sit-in protests

By Do-Hyeong Myeong associate news editor

DO-HYEONG MYEONG :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Students occupied Nassau Hall for the second day, urging administrators to sign a list of demands.

University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 agreed to the modified demands of student protestors on Thursday evening. He signed the document at about 8:20 p.m., approximately 32 hours after students in the Black Justice League began a sit-in in his office and after significant negotiations over the content of the demands. Around 20 student protestors had been occupying Eisgruber’s office since Wednesday. The “Walkout and Speakout” protest, organized by the BJL,

began with a walkout from classes on Wednesday morning, then featured a march to Nassau Hall and a sit-in in Eisgruber’s office. Students who occupied the office stayed there overnight. Some other students camped outside the building. Eisgruber declined to comment. Student protest leaders Destiny Crockett ’17, Wilglory Tanjong ’18 and Dashaya Foreman ’16 read out the agreement in the Nassau Hall atrium shortly after the signing. Protestors cleared the building later in the evening. See PROTEST page 3

STUDENT LIFE

KERITH WANG :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Aleksandra Czulak ’17, Grant Golub ’17 and Simon Wu ’17 are the three candidates for Undergraduate Student Government president. Voting begins at noon on Monday.

Aleksandra Czulak Grant Golub ’17: Simon Wu ’17: ’17: seeks to unite former chief artist, designer, student body elections manager social chair By Nahrie Chung

By Caroline Lippman

By Shuang Teng

staff writer

contributor

contributor

Undergraduate Student Government presidential candidate and current vice president Aleksandra Czulak ’17 said she wants to increase USG’s collaboration with various on-campus organizations and students not involved in USG. Czulak said she is seeking to improve collaboration between various constituencies on campus, bringing them together to advance policies and programs that most effectively serve the student body. These span See CZULAK page 3

Undergraduate Student Government presidential candidate Grant Golub ’17 said he is centering his campaign on three core issues: mental health, pass/D/fail policies and underclassman advising. “I decided to run because I think that USG has not done a good job of putting students’ issues first,” he said. Golub served as the chief elections manager of USG from last February until this October, explaining that See GOLUB page 4

Undergraduate Student Government presidential candidate Simon Wu ’17 said he seeks to improve communication and efficiency in USG through an artist and designer’s perspective. “I come from a very different background of working in organizations than people who are studying policy,” he said. “I came into USG as chief designer, which has been very much a position of communications and marketing and dealing with the external part of USG, and I See WU page 2

U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

U. childcare facility to begin construction BJL protest targeted in bomb and firearm threat staff writer

A new childcare facility for University NOW Day Nursery, the daycare program for children of University faculty, staff and students, has been approved by the Regional Planning Board of Princeton and will begin ini-

tial construction activities within the next month. The new daycare center is set to open in September 2017 and will be located on Broadmead Street, directly south of the existing childcare facility. The Office of Information Technology, which shares the current building with UNOW, will remain in

the existing Broadmead facility, according to University spokesperson Martin Mbugua. OIT deferred comment to Mbugua. University Architect Ron McCoy GS ’80 explained that the current facility was quite old and designed as a school See CHILDCARE page 4

By Ruby Shao news editor

A bomb and firearm threat on campus on Thursday night made reference to the ongoing Black Justice League protest, according to University spokesperson Martin

In Opinion

Today on Campus

The Editorial Board urges the University to expand summer savings replacement grants in its financial aid packages, and Columnist Marni Morse explains her position on the role of administrators in campus free speech. PAGE 6

8 p.m.: University Organist Eric Plutz performs an organ concert, BACH from A to G. The Nave of the University Chapel.

Mbugua. The Department of Public Safety sent a campus safety alert via email to members of the University community on Thursday at around 9 p.m, calling the threat non-specific. See THREAT page 2

WEATHER

By Myrial Holbrook

HIGH

54˚

LOW

31˚

Breezy with clouds. chance of rain:

3 percent


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November 20, 2015 by The Daily Princetonian - Issuu