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Tuesday December 12, 2017 vol. CXLI no. 117
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } ON CAMPUS
COURTESY OF MATT MILLER
COURTESY OF RACHEL YEE
COURTESY OF RYAN OZMINKOWSKI
Election special: USG presidential candidate profiles By Audrey Spensley and Regina Lankenau senior writer and contributor
Elections for Undergraduate Student Government begin today, and all three USG presidential candidates encourage University students to vote. Matt Miller ‘19 As a first-year student, Matt Miller ‘19 did not envision himself running for USG President. “I got involved in USG on a whim a little over a year ago when I saw that there was an open spot for social media,” explained Miller. “I had a lot of experience in that area, and I had some extra time, so I thought, ‘Why not do something for the Princeton community?’” Miller, a former lightweight rower, says that he became more and more involved in USG as he realized that important student perspectives — for example, those of student-athletes —
were missing from the organization. “In a communications role, I got to see everything from the inside,” added Miller, “and I wanted a position where I could do more.” According to Miller’s website, his solutions for bridging the student-athlete and non-athlete divide includes summer study abroad financial aid for athletes, shifting event timing to avoid conf licts with 4:30 p.m. practice times, increased late meal times, and healthier late meal options. For Miller, the presidency would allow him to do more than he currently can because it would enable him to work from a position of increased visibility. “What the USG presidency really does is to give the president a microphone, a platform to be a voice for the student body,” Miller said. In an interview with the ‘Prince,’ Miller acknowledged that long-term reforms, such as changes to
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Princeton Counseling and Psychological Services, would be difficult. His biggest tangible priority is improvement to Lawnparties headliners, and his cultural goal is to be a voice for students. Miller spent a good portion of the USG debate discussing his plan for Lawnparties. “What the USG presidency needs is someone who can talk to the administration, fight for student perspectives and, if necessary, go public,” Miller noted. “I want to make myself public and available to the administration,” Miller said. Interviewed at the end of a long week of campaigning, Miller seemed enthusiastic about the process. “I love meeting new people, going door-to-door,” he said. “It’s great to hear support from so many segments of my life and the Princeton community.”
Ryan Ozminkowski ‘19 When asked to summarize his campaign in a single phrase, Ryan Ozminkowski ‘19 emphasized “ideals over ideas.” “Everyone proposes things that are basically all good. No one’s going to say, ‘I want worse mental health reform,’ or ‘worse athlete/non-athlete relationships,’” he said. “These have been the same ideas for 20 plus years on the platforms, no one disagrees with them, so you have to vote for the ideal. My ideals are just fun, they’re love, culture, community.” “The focus is to just, in a very genuine way, make people care and just share my love of the school with other people,” he added. Ozminkowski, a varsity track athlete, has started three organizations on campus: Princeton Tonight, the Princeton Tonight Festival, and an entrepreneurial club. His time at the University has been shaped by his desire to create or fix things that
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are not working, he said. “I’ve worked with USG so closely to start these groups (that’s the Student Group Recognition committee), to get funding through [the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students], [and] to get about $100,000 through them to make these clubs work, through projects and conference funding,” Ozminkowski added. “I’m very close with everyone in the Dean’s office from pulling off these giant events.” Rather than take sole advantage of school-sponsored funding opportunities, Ozminkowski hopes to share his knowledge of these resources with the student body. “Let’s tell people about these things,” Ozminkowski said. “It shouldn’t be something that’s elite and only if you know the ‘inside scoop.’” Ozminkowski’s campaign has drawn controversy over the past two weeks for what he terms “Domain-gate” — See CANDIDATES page 2
U . A F FA I R S
Likely finance violations U. students may dog USG campaigns consider head news editor
JACOB GERRISH :: CONTRIBUTOR
Matt Miller ‘19 and Ryan Ozminkowski ‘19 discussed campaign policies during a debate at Late Meal on Tuesday night.
Late meal debate held between USG candidates By Jacob Gerrish contributor
Ryan Ozminkowski ’19 invited his opponents in the Undergraduate Student Government presidential race, Rachel Yee ’19 and Matt Miller ’19, to an impromptu “Late Meal Debate” via a Facebook video posted on Thursday, Dec. 7. While Miller accepted the invitation, Yee declined to attend. “I will not be attending on principle since USG is not sponsoring this,” Yee wrote in an email. The Miller campaign, however, appealed to Yee
In Opinion
to make an appearance. “As Ryan has made it clear he will use late-meal as a platform either way, we would like to make this as productive and informative as possible to all candidates, and believe the only useful discussion will occur if all candidates are present,” explained Shea Minter ’19, the moderator chosen by the Miller campaign, in an email sent to various members of the campaigns and the ‘Prince.’ During the debate, Miller differentiated himself from Yee and OzminkowsSee DEBATE page 3
Both campus and alumnus communities weigh in on the Honor Code referenda, columnist Thomas Clark defends the baker who would not make a cake for a same-sex couple, graduate students condemn the diversity of the Wilson School, and the Editorial Board weighs in on the upcoming USG election. PAGE 4
In a campaign season that has seen its share of outside inf luence, including an endorsement from La La Land director and Princeton native Damien Chazelle, the campaign of Ryan Ozminkowski ’19 for Undergraduate Student Government president denied any violations of the Elections Handbook after a ‘Prince’ report on Dec. 7 about campaign domain buyouts and the recently established “Super PAQ” Liberty Meets All Opportunity (LMAO). The ‘Prince’ requested campaign expenditure reports from each of the candidates, as well as proof of purchase in the form of photos or screenshots of receipts. Each of the candidates and the LMAO Super PAQ sent detailed responses regarding their spending, as well as that of third party candidates. According to USG Election Handbook rules, campaign expenditures from candidates and third parties are limited to a total of $50, and only half may be spent on printing costs. In an email, USG presidential candidate Rachel Yee ’19 sent a spreadsheet of her campaign expenditures which showed a total of $33.86 for print-
ing and “Candy Wonka Party Favs.” She wrote in the email that she will also be spending $5-8 on a Snapchat filter, while using the rest of her allowed money on Facebook ads. USG presidential candidate Matt Miller ’19 also reported his expenditures to the ‘Prince,’ emailing a spreadsheet and attaching screenshot proof of his purchases. His expenditure report detailed a total of $36.90 that included both printing and the costs of his domain and website purchases. Miller added that he will spend the rest of his allotted money on printing. “I’ve been militant about following the current rules as written,” Miller wrote. “Also, per [Section] 8.4 of the elections handbook I have had no third party spending on behalf of my campaign, which I also would need to report.” Ozminkowski forwarded a ‘Prince’ request for campaign expenditures to Halem, his campaign manager. In a statement emailed to the ‘Prince,’ Ozminkowski’s campaign manager Zach Halem ’18 wrote that “the Ozminkowski campaign can unconditionally confirm that it has not violated the expenditure limit.” Halem added that the he See FINANCE page 3
Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: Renowned scholar Burl Kylen will present a lecture in three parts entitled, “The Last Lecture before Kingdom Come: A Brief Genealogy of Sunset Studies.” Frist Campus Center, Room 302.
Honor Code referenda By Ivy Truoung contributor
Four binding referenda on the ballot this week aim to fundamentally reform the University’s 124-year-old Honor Code. The referenda include a reduction to the standard Honor Code violation penalty from a one-year suspension to disciplinary probation, a requirement that two pieces of evidence are presented to bring a case to a hearing, an assurance that cases will be dismissed if professors testify that a student’s action did not violate the course policy, and a new policy that Honor Committee investigators must disclose a student’s status as either witness or accused at first contact. Chair of the Undergraduate Student Government Academics Committee Patrick Flanigan ’18 spearheaded a subcommittee this fall that submitted the referenda to the elections manager after weeks of deliberation. Flanigan cited the experiences of members of his subcommittee, which includes USG members as well as both former and current Honor Committee members, in shaping the contents of the referenda. A task force charged by See REFERENDA page 2
WEATHER
By Marcia Brown
HIGH
45˚
LOW
19˚
Scattered Showers chance of rain:
40 percent