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Friday december 12, 2014 vol. cxxxviii no. 125
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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
Group petitions U. to consider sustainable investment
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In Opinion
By Jessica Li contributor
Julia Case-Levine emphasizes the efficacy of protesting, and the Editorial Board argues for internal eating club evaluations. PAGE 4
The Archives
Dec. 12, 1978 More than 70 students marched to the house of former University President Bill Bowen GS ’58 in belowfreezing temperatures. Sponsored by the People’s Front for the Liberation of Southern Africa, the march was in protest to Bowen’s connection to the NCR corporation, which does business in South Africa.
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PRINCETON By the Numbers
Several
The number of TI members charged with violation University policy. It’s more than one, said University spokesperson Martin Mbugua.
News & Notes Rush Holt bids adieu to the House of Representatives
Representative Rush Holt (D-NJ) gave his farewell address on the floor of the House of Representatives on Wednesday. The congressman, who represents Mercer County and is former assistant director of the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, argued against those who are cynical toward government, saying that democracy is working in the House of Representatives. “I present a vision for a government, not that vanishes, but works for its citizens,” Holt said during his 8-minute speech. “Of course, not all problems can be fixed by government. But it can be reassuring and uplifting to people to know that other people have their backs and can help.” He also noted some of the bills he supported while in office, including laws for science education. After his retirement from Congress, Holt will become the CEO of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a nonprofit organization that publishes Science Magazine. Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-NJ) was elected to replace Holt in November after he announced he would not be seeking reelection last spring. See NOTES page 2
BEN KOGER :: PHOTO EIDTOR
Several members of Tiger Inn were charged with violating the University’s sexual discrimination and sexual misconduct policies.
TI members charged with violating U. policies By Christina Vosbikian contributor
Several members of Tiger Inn, a private eating club on Prospect Avenue, have been charged with violating University policies regarding sexual discrimination and sexual misconduct, University spokesperson Martin Mbugua
said Thursday. The students will now have a chance to respond to the charges. A University student had photographed a female student performing oral sex on a male student in October. The photo was then circulated to the whole of the TI membership by then-club vice president Adam Krop ’15.
Krop was fired from his position about six weeks after the photo was distributed to the membership and after the case received considerable media attention. Krop did not respond to requests for comment. The University announcement comes a few days after the See TI page 2
A petition proposed by the Princeton Sustainable Investment Initiative “asking the University to manage its endowment in a manner that reduces its financial support of environmental degradation” was accepted for review by the Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community during its monthly meeting on Thursday afternoon. Undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff and alumni compose the committee, which reviews general policy concerning procurement and management of the University’s financial resources. The Resources Committee will explore the issues raised in the proposal and will likely invite the PSI leadership to have a conversation in the near future, University spokesperson Martin Mbugua said. The petition circulated by PSI gained nearly 1,300 signatures when presented to the Resources Committee, including 950 undergraduate students. Alumni, faculty and staff also expressed support. The petition was also endorsed by the student groups Students United for a Responsible Global Environment, Students for Prison Education and Reform, the Princeton Wilderness Society, the Princeton Animal Welfare Society, Greening Dining, the Whitman Book Club, the International Student Association at Princeton and The Princeton Progressive. “The urgency of climate change, the severity of biodiversity loss and water pollution issues calls for colleges to do something,” Dayton Martindale See PETITION page 2
STUDENT LIFE
Diehl ’15, Beacom ’15 named Sachs Scholars By Paul Phillips associate news editor
William Beacom ’15 and Brett Diehl ’15 have been named Sachs Scholars, the University announced Thursday. The Daniel M. Sachs Class of 1960 Graduating Scholarship is an award given to seniors who are considering careers in public affairs. Recipients study at Worcester College at the University of Oxford to pursue a specific degree program. The Global Scholarship
in particular supports an independent project at an institution abroad. Beacom, a concentrator in the Wilson School from Calgary, Alberta, has received the Sachs Global Scholarship. After attending the Middlebury Language School to study Russian, he will spend a year in five Central Asian nations — Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia — studying the way in which China has influenced authoritarian regimes there. He will be looking at
ACADEMICS
Princeton University Press releases Einstein’s papers By Zaynab Zaman contributor
The Princeton University Press recently released digital editions of thousands of crucial papers by Albert Einstein that span the first 44 years of his life, director of the press Peter Dougherty said. He explained that the approximately 5,000 documents include crucial scientific papers, as well as professional, personal and administrative correspondence. There are currently 13 print volumes, with a 14th volume scheduled to be published in January, Dougherty said, adding that many of the volumes
published over the last 30 years are in their original German script. “All these documents are now available on a digital platform, accessible globally by anyone with Internet,” Dougherty said. He said that although there are already 14 published print editions of Einstein’s papers, science researchers all over the world who need Einstein’s works cannot access any of the print editions due to location. The aim of last week’s digital release, Dougherty said, was to make the collected papers available to researchers, historians of science, physicists and See EINSTEIN page 3
the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, a political, economic and military organization founded in Shanghai by the leaders of China, Kazakhstan, Russia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Beacom explained that he first received exposure to Asian politics when he received a scholarship to study at Li Po Chun United World College of Hong Kong in high school, where he began taking Chinese. His focus on Central Asia, he said, came from a paper he wrote for a Chinese class, which
made him realize that connotations of key terms in the English translations of official declarations differed from those of the Chinese versions. He also noted that he spent a month in Central Asia during summer 2014. “I realized how difficult it was to do research in that part of the world, and I realized I needed more time,” he said. Another strong influence, he said, is his position as a research assistant in the EUROFORT project, a partnership between the
University and the Berlin School of Social Sciences at Humboldt, for which he conducted economic research in Southeast Europe. This internship, he said, allowed him to learn more about how economic integration can happen and the general problems associated with it. “The European Union is often seen as a template for regional organization,” he said, “and some of that knowledge I brought to my understanding of the Shanghai See SACHS page 2
WINTER SOLSTICE
MONICA CHON :: PHOTO EDITOR EMERITA
Princeton University Ballet performed its winter show, Winter Solstice, on Thursday in Frist Campus Center.
LECTURE
Panel discusses recent African-American deaths, grand jury decisions By Corinne Lowe staff writer
Professors applauded the protests in the wake of Michael Brown’s and Eric Garner’s deaths in recent weeks, and clarified the practices and legal processes that help explain their deaths and the
lack of indictment in a panel discussion on Thursday. Associate Professor of African American Studies Naomi Murakawa, Director of the Program in Law and Public Affairs Kim Lane Scheppele and sociology professor at the Institute for Advanced Studies Didier Fassin were on the
panel. Fassin noted the significance of public discussion and protests that have occurred in past weeks that he contrasted with the “moral anesthesia” typical of the United States. “The most remarkable fact is that, for the first time for many years, the death of a
black man has not remained buried in the news and public consciousness,” Fassin said. Fassin offered three major observations about the response to Brown’s and Garner’s murders: that the wave of protests is a rupture in the indifference to what police call “justifiable death,” that
recent protests have been almost exclusively peaceful, and that the response is national, crossing color lines and social classes. Fassin also discussed how racial criminalization compares in other nations, comparing this incident to an See RACE page 3