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Monday november 28, 2016 vol. cxl no. 107
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By Ruby Shao
news editor emerita
Leila Clark ‘18 started gathering petition signatures on Nov. 21 for a referendum to publicize the demographics of eating club members and bickerees. The referendum asks that the Undergraduate Student Government Senate establish a standing committee that collaborates with the Interclub Council to annually collect and release characteristics like race, gender, and major for each club.
After the petition received the necessary signatures from 10 percent of the student body, USG circulated an email about the referendum on Wednesday. Clark said she proposed the referendum because she realized by her sophomore spring that eating clubs massively affect every University student. “The first step to understanding the impact of eating clubs is to understand who is in the eating clubs,” she said. Clark, who chose Terrace partly to interact with a diverse See REFERENDUM page 2
YOSEMITE
DeVos P07 named as Secretary of Education President-elect Donald Trump nominated Betsy DeVos P07 as the Secretary of Education for his administration. DeVos previously served as the Republican Party chair in Michigan, and is married to Dick DeVos, who was the CEO of Amway, a consumer goods distribution company. Dick DeVos delivered the inaugural Doll Family Lecture in Religion and Money at the University in April 2007 entitled: “Philanthropy...It’s Definitely not for Wimps!: Reflections on Faith and Finance.” DeVos’ daughter, Elisabeth DeVos ‘07, graduated from the University with a degree in Architecture. Her senior thesis was titled: Thomas Demand: or an Encounter with Blankness, and was advised by School of Architecture Professor Stanley Allen GS ‘88. Elisabeth DeVos is married to Nathan Lowery ‘06. The couple reside in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Betsy DeVos and her husband have also donated to the University. According to public records, the Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation donated $50,000 to the University in 2004 and 2013, $1,000 in 2002, and $2,500 in 2003. In addition, the foundation donated $50,000 in 2005 to the University’s James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions. The donations were reported in 2014. DeVos is a Republican donor and philanthropist, and chairs the Wind-
Myesha Jemison ‘18 (left) and Rachel Yee ‘19 (right) are two candidates running for USG president.
Jemison ’18, Yee ’19 vie for USG president staff writer
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
staff writer
PHOTOS COURTESY OF CARL A. FIELDS CENTER (LEFT) AND LINKEDIN (RIGHT)
By Jason Fu
CHRIS FERRI :: PHOTO EDITOR EMERITUS
By Abhiram Karuppur
STUDENT LIFE
quest Group, which invests in clean energy and manufacturing initiatives in Michigan. She also chairs the Dick and Betsy DeVos Family Foundation and the American Federation for Children, which supports charter school expansion across the United States. DeVos served on the board of the Foundation for Excellence in Education, and is a supporter of school choice, school vouchers, and the Common Core education standards. The selection of DeVos triggered mixed responses from education advocates. In an interview with Politico, Lily Eskelsen Garcia, the president of National Education Association, described DeVos as someone who has “consistently pushed a corporate agenda to privatize, de-professionalize and impose cookie-cutter solutions to public education.” “By nominating Betsy DeVos, the Trump administration has demonstrated just how out of touch it is with what works best for students, parents, educators and communities,” an NEA statement reads. However, Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN), chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, praised DeVos’ selection as an excellent choice during an interview with The Washington Post. He further stated that he expects DeVos to halt the efforts of the Obama administration to “turn the federal government into a ‘national school board’.” Like most cabinet-level officials, DeVos would require Senate confirmation before assuming office.
Class of 2018 Senator Myesha Jemison ’18 and former Class of 2018 vice president Rachel Yee ’19 have entered the race for USG president. Yee said she wants to improve student perception and awareness of USG’s policies and activities. She explained that while the current USG has passed important policies, it has not been effective at communicating the results to the student body. “I think that they have a disconnect between what they actually do, and how they communicate that. People do so much behind the scenes work, but it doesn’t get publicized very well,” Yee said. Yee further explained that because of the general lack of communication, many students are not aware of USG’s work beyond certain “feelgood” events such as Lawnparties or free class gear. This,
in turn, hurts both students’ perceptions of the student government’s efficacy as well as USG’s own ability to achieve its goals. “I really see this as a selfperpetuating cycle where people don’t think USG does anything, then they don’t want to invest their time into USG because they don’t think it’s a meaningful use of their time. Then if more people don’t invest their time, the same couple of people are bogged down all the time, which makes USG less efficient,” Yee said. Similarly, Jemison said she wants to increase USG’s involvement with student groups as well as more farreaching social issues. Jemison said she planned to add a committee to USG that would focus on current social issues. The committee would be comprised of students with a diverse set of backgrounds, and it would provide an environment where students could discuss important topics re-
gardless of their viewpoint. She added that she hoped to expand the scope of conversation provided by USG to beyond topics only relevant on campus. “USG is just a small contingent within the wider Princeton area, within New Jersey, within the United States, within the world... We should be engaging in issues that aren’t just specific to our campus, but also apply to the wider communities that many students come from,” Jemison said. “I want to really branch out USG to not be just this smaller body of 30 to 100 voting members, but a much larger part of the population that is really engaged policy-wise,” Jemison added. Yee also said she wants to address the overcrowding and lack of availability of counselors at Counseling and Psychological Services by adding satellite offices in each of the See USG page 3
Q&A
Q&A: Sandra Clark, vice president for news and civic dialogue at WHYY By Katie Petersen contributor
Sandra Clark is the vice president for news and civic dialogue at WHYY. Before she took the role in August 2016, she was a managing editor at Philadelphia Media Network, publisher of the Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily News and Philly.com. She spoke about diversity in journalism on a panel last week, then sat down with the Daily Princetonian to continue the conversation and discuss where journalism is headed. The Daily Princetonian: What were some of your highlights that you got to talk about during the panel today? Sandra Clark: Well, we talked a lot about diversity in journalism, or the lack thereof, in many ways. Diversity is a big problem for the news media. We write about the lack of diversity in many companies, but we fail to address it in our own sometimes. Particularly, post-election, some of the things we learned were about how diversity could have been better: one of the things in the elections was there was a lot of generalizations about various groups, so there were questions about, you know, which way is the black vote going
to go, which way is the hispanic vote going to go, and ironically, no one really thought about which way is the white vote going to go? DP: Do you think there are other kinds of diversity that need to be addressed more? SC: I think there are so many different kinds of diversity. I think the fact that many of us don’t know each other, and this also includes our own neighbors, for example, is a problem. We don’t always as a society seek out credible information and so you know it’s important for all of us to be knowledgeable about various parts of our country, regardless of what our party is or what our political views are. I think we should seek more understanding of each other than just kind of going to our corners and just kind of shouting assumptions about each other. And journalism plays a role in the knowledge that people have, and if we don’t get it right, then we haven’t done a service to our readers. And I think some people did very, very good coverage, so it’s not all journalism that didn’t get it right. We’re in a cable environment now, so obviously there’s just a lot of ratings pushings by the controversy. And most people watch television
In Opinion
Today on Campus
The Editorial Board argues against the proposal to add “identity and power” and “international” requirements, while four Board members dissent. Associate opinion editor Newby Parton dissents separately. PAGE 5
7 p.m.: Screening of “All the Difference,” a film that follows two young African American men from the South side of Chicago and subsequent panel with producers. Dodds Auditorium, Richardson Hall.
every single day, I mean, that’s just a fact. So it’s incumbent upon us to try and create understanding by listening to people rather than assuming what we know or don’t know. DP: Absolutely. Congratulations, by the way, on your recent new position [as vice president for news and civic dialogue] at WHYY. What are you excited about in this new role, and what are some of the challenges that you see your outlet facing moving forward? SC: Thank you. I mean, it’s two different playing fields; I moved from print to radio, which is just another distribution model. I oversee the NewsWorks’ website as well as our radio coverage, and we have several programs throughout the day, and we do news reporting and radio as well. And then we have some news coverage on television as well. So it’s interesting, I mean, there’s all these different, you know, distribution platforms for us. But the key is the same, no matter where you are: you have to write stories that serve your readers, stories that reflect that you understand the needs of your audience, stories that reflect your communiSee CLARK page 2
WEATHER
Referendum calls for club demographic release STUDENT LIFE
HIGH
54˚
LOW
42˚
Mostly sunny. chance of rain:
10 percent