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Monday December 12, 2016 vol. cxl no. 116
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } STUDENT LIFE
LECTURE
Panel discusses activism for U. conference By Ruby Shao News Editor Emerita
People in relationships form the heart of social movements, Hali Lee ‘89 said at a Saturday panel in the first Asian in America conference hosted by the University. Lee founded and directs the Asian Women Giving Circle, the first and largest giving circle in the United States led by AsianAmerican women. She noted that early AsianAmerican activists sought to connect as allies with other civil rights advocates. The collaborations allowed Asians to transition away from the isolated areas or ghettos, like Chinatowns, that initially housed them. “Humor and levity and connectedness even in face of bad, dire things is really important,” she said. Such lightheartedness propels social movements ahead. Recently, she noted, some mobilizers have been knitting cat-eared hats, which they will wear to mock President-elect Donald Trump’s comment that women should be grabbed “by the pussy.” Lee defined activism as doing something to affect change. The question for everyone is what that change should be, she added. “People, all of us, have power — multiple levers of power. Use that power to be the change you want to see,” Lee said.
Activism can come in many forms, including resisting, being a warm body at a demonstration, writing emails and sending letters, showing more kindness, volunteering more, and giving more money, she explained. Donating money represents a common American form of activism, drawing seven out of ten Americans — more than the number who volunteer or serve in the military. They just need to channel that practice into the right causes, Lee said. Fundraising may prove harder in some Asian-American contexts. When she worked at the Korean American Family Services Center, which helps victims of domestic violence, many leaders in the community denied that such abuse existed there. Others refused to speak about it to avoid embarrassment. Some supported the Center privately but never publicly. The Center acquired most of its money from the government and wealthy white foundations, Lee said. She encouraged the audience to help change the perception of philanthropists as a rich white man or family. Comedian Negin Farsad urged activists to avoid taking offense too easily. “One of the worst things that’s happened since Twitter is the growth of rage,” she said, referencing the assumption that See PANEL page 2
STUDENT LIFE
COURTESY OF CARL A. FIELDS CENTER
Jemison ’18 wins USG presidency By Audrey Spensley Class of 2018 Undergraduate Student Government Senator Myesha Jemison ’18 won the 2016 USG presidential election, securing 51.6 percent of 2,410 votes, according to USG Chief Elections Manager Sung Won Chang ’18. Her opponent, Rachel Yee ’19, received the remaining 48.4 percent of the vote. According to Jemison’s candidate biography, released by Chang through email, her goal is to “work to increase transparency, communication, and student input so that your voices aren’t just heard, but are met with concrete action.” “I wanted to focus on a wide
variety of topics so that all students would be impacted, but also that all students would feel that their voices are heard,” Jemison said in an interview with the Daily Princetonian regarding her platform. “In my first couple of weeks in office, I want to bring a lot of student voices and speech back in,” she said. “I’ll also focus on establishing the committees and positions laid out in my platform. I want to bring students in and bring in feedback, so the policies in my administration will follow what students want.” Jemison said the campaign process was a new experience for her. “It was interesting to get to know different members of
STUDENT LIFE
STUDENT LIFE
staff writer
the student body,” she said. “I’m looking forward to more relaxed engagement with the student body in the coming months.” The referendum, sponsored by Leila Clark ‘18, calling for eating clubs to release demographic statistics also passed. The USG Senate will be directed to form a standing committee and work with the Interclub Council to collect and report information such as gender, race, and academic major, on both eating club members and bickerees. Dan Qian ‘19 was elected vice president, Alison Shim ‘19 was elected treasurer, Patrick Flanigan ‘18 was elected Academics Committee chair, Christine See JEMISON page 3
USG Senate Yearbook to feature 3D Bathroom locks to be deactivated in pilot program disscusses effects, more portraits staff writer
On Monday, Dec. 5, the University Student Life Committee, in conjunction with Vice President for Campus Life W. Rochelle Calhoun, announced a pilot program which would deactivate all keypad locks on residential bathrooms for the spring semester. In a USG-hosted forum on the
subject Wednesday, Director of Housing and Real Estate Services Dorian Johnson said that this decision had been officially discussed since 2014, although talks “without the same focus” were being pursued as early as his arrival at the University in 2011. Johnson added that the problems presented by the current system, in which all bathrooms See LOCKS page 3
MARCIA BROWN :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
U. groups, elections By Samuel Oh staff writer
The Undergraduate Student Government held its last senate meeting of 2016 on Sunday, Dec. 11, to prepare for the next semester and debrief the recent student election. Student leaders discussed the recognition of new, incoming student groups, updates on the student election, as well as the selection of the new members of the Women’s Leadership Task Force. Presented by the Student Groups Recognition Committee Chairs Julie Chong ‘17 and Paul Yang ‘17, USG recognized the following groups as new student organizations with no objections: Commit2Change, Contrapunctus XIV, the Princeton Language Housing Association, the Princeton Open Campus Coalition, the Poet’s Guild of Princeton, Progressive Christians at Princeton, ReModels, Student Film and Television Network, Tangerine Magazine, and the Young Democratic Socialists. See USG page 2
By Charles Min Associate News Editor
The 2017 yearbook will reflect new and upgraded improvements in an attempt to better encapsulate the University experience for all members of the undergraduate class, according to Vojislav Mitrovic ’18, executive director of Princeton Yearbook Agency. Some of the changes include student portraits for every class carand a 3D animation effect that allows viewers with smartphones and tablets to access unique videos linked to particular photos in the yearbook, according to Mitrovic. “The 2017 yearbook will be the first yearbook in the last 153 years to have portraits of every class. We want this yearbook to be a yearbook of all undergraduate students,” Mitrovic said. “We want to encompass the experiences of all four class years.” Past yearbooks have only included portraits of seniors, but the 2017 yearbook intends to include members of all class, a decision which has been approved by members of College Council. The 3D animation effect is also unique to the upcoming yearbook, as users with smartphones and tablets are to merely put the camera above an image to view the animated clip associated with it. “Videos of Lawnparties, P-Rade, Commencement, and other big events on campus will be combined into one animated video,” Mitrovic said. Mitrovic added that drones with attached cameras will be flying at events to capture clips for the year-
In Opinion
Today on Campus
Senior columnist Marni Morse discusses the Clery Act and its boundaries at the University, and the Editorial Board debates the merits of unlocked bathrooms.
4:30 p.m.: Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of the Asian Studies Program at Tulane University will give a talk entitled the Evolution of Popular Contention in Reform-Era China. Woodrow Wilson School Bowl 002.
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book. Jovan Jeremic ’17, marketing director for the Princeton Yearbook Agency, said that the agency is working to publicize this to as many students as possible, so that first years, sophomores, and juniors will be motivated to take a portrait for the yearbook. “We were reaching out to RCAs, DSLs, and College Councils in order to reach to the students. It’s kind of difficult to get the word out to all four years,” Jeremic said. “The yearbook is completely changed and completely redesigned, and we want to entice students to come take pictures.” The agency is working towards developing strategies to get more students to take pictures, one strategy being an inter-collegiate competition to get first year students to take pictures. “We’re going to promote competition between the colleges. Some people look back and the first real memory of Princeton is walking into Dillon gym for Clash of the Colleges. We want to use that same idea,” Jeremic said. He added that the yearbook agency’s goal is to get 70 percent of the students’ photos taken. “Time really flies when you’re at Princeton and it’s hard to enjoy the small moments,” he said. “We want to help preserve that for students.” The student portraits for first year students along with sophomores and juniors who are studying abroad in the spring will take place this Monday and Tuesday. The rest of the sophomores and juniors will take their portraits in the spring.
WEATHER
By Kirsten Traudt
HIGH
51˚
LOW
28˚
Rain. chance of rain:
100 percent