December 14, 2016

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Wednesday December 14, 2016 vol. cxl no. 118

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } ACADEMICS

Keener ‘17, Osaka ‘17, Muir win Sachs By Simone Downs staff writer

Becca Keener ‘17, Shannon Osaka ‘17, and Holly Muir were named the recipients of the Daniel M. Sachs Class of 1960 Graduating Scholarship. Keener and Osaka, current University seniors, will be using their scholarship to further their education abroad, while Muir, a recent Oxford graduate, will be spending a year as a graduate student at the University. Keener expressed her excitement about the announcement. “I got a text saying ‘Come to Café Viv tomorrow at 8:30.’ I got there, sat down and they were like well … ‘You won!’ That was really shocking, because they’re very sneaky about it, so I didn’t expect it. It was a very exciting time,” she said. Keener will be studying at the London School of Economics, where she will continue the research that she has been pursuing at the University as a religion major. “My research is generally about the intersection of religion and law, looking at the effects of engagement with religion on foreign policy, particularly in Syria focusing on immigration, multiculturalism, minority rights and the policy of that,” Keener said. “With this program, I’ll be able to try and understand the re-

sponses to it which have been quite violent.” Keener expressed her gratitude for this scholarship in allowing her to attend graduate school as well as allowing her to spend more time in London. This scholarship, which aims to broaden its recipient’s world views via opportunities in international study, was made to commemorate Daniel Sachs ‘60, a University athlete and Rhodes Scholar. His death at age 28 ended his studies. This scholarship aims to give young students with the same drive and ambition to benefit the public as Sachs a chance to further their studies in a setting abroad, according to the scholarship’s website. Muir, having recently received an undergraduate degree in fine arts from Oxford University, thinks that this scholarship will help make her a better artist by making her work more accessible to the public world of art. “I have a fascination with storytelling, and I’ve always loved literature so that’s what I’ll be studying at Princeton,” she said. “I began interpreting literature with my art and began telling my own stories, more socially and politically motivated pieces, but now I really want to explore the side of the narrative of my love of literature. And being informed See SACHS page 2

ACADEMICS

COURTESY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY

Etskovitz ’17 awarded Marshall Scholarship By Marcia Brown associate news editor

Joani Etskovitz ‘17 was awarded a 2017 Marshall Scholarship for graduate study in the United Kingdom. “The Marshall is the impossible dream,” Eskovitz said. “It has been my impossible dream.” According to a University press release, in 2017 there will be 40 students who will join the program, up from the planned 32. Marshall Scholarships finance young Americans of high ability to study for a graduate degree at any

British university, according to the scholarship’s website. The website also notes that “Marshall Scholarships strengthen the enduring relationship between British and American peoples, their governments, and their institutions.” Etskovitz is concentrating in English with certificates in Humanistic Studies and European Cultural Studies. She plans to pursue a Master of Studies in English Literature at the University of Oxford, and a Master of Studies in English Literature at King’s College London. Etskovitz said

that she has wanted to pursue two masters, emphasizing her desire to be at Oxford and to use the Bodleian Library there. Etskovitz said that she had thought it very unlikely she’d be called back for an interview. “I realized in the application process I would be throwing my hat into a very [large??] ring full of extraordinarily beautiful hats,” she said. Etskovitz said that it hadn’t been intentional, but she’s always loved libraries, literature, analysis, and writing. “It just all kind of happened,” she said. “I was so See MARSHALL page 2

LECTURE

Referendum passed: What happens now?

By Audrey Spensley staff writer

NORMAN XIONG :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Low-cost carriers threat to legacy airlines By Norman Xiong staff writer

Established airlines will be increasingly jeopardized by newer, low-cost carriers in 2017 and as time goes on, according to Air France Joint Venture Performance Director Omar Jeroudi in a lecture on the afternoon of Dec. 13. Jeroudi emphasized the challenges that legacy carriers such as Delta, Air France, and United Airlines will and are currently

In Opinion

facing from low-cost airlines such as Ryanair and easyJet in terms of profitability and sustainability. Because the new low-cost airlines are able to provide similar air travel experiences and levels of service as older carriers, they cut into established airlines’ market shares and profit margins. “This is the tipping point for our industry, the airline industry,” Jeroudi said. “When you See LECTURE page 3

Columnist Liam O’Connor observes ways that the University can reduce waste on a daily basis, and columnist Annie Dao suggests greater respect in campus traditions like the annual practice of streaking through introductory classes. PAGE 4

An Undergraduate Student Government referendum proposing the release of demographic information about the members of each eating club and bickerees to selective clubs, sponsored by Leila Clark ’18, passed during the USG 2016 Winter Elections, securing 68.9 percent of the vote. The referendum directs the USG Senate to establish a standing committee which would work with the Interclub Council to release this information, including the race, gender, and academic major of club members and bickerees. Although the referendum received a large amount of support from the student body, the measures it outlines are not mandatory for the ICC to carry out. “Since the clubs are private, USG carries no authority over ICC. Information would only be released on a voluntary basis that would require the consent of each individual clubs’ membership, officers, management, and graduate board,” ICC and Colonial Club president Christopher Yu ‘17 wrote in an email to the Daily Princetonian.

Because of this separation, the referendum’s influence may only be symbolic. “I think it’s a great way to gauge the University climate, whether or not the referendum is successful, in that the ICC can only do so much. Since the eating clubs are private institutions, this is going to be on a voluntary basis,” UCouncilor Lucas Ramos ’19 said. “Regardless of getting data, I think it shows that students are interested in racializing eating clubs. They’re tapping a nerve that has always been thought but is being formed into actual words now.” Nonetheless, the student body has expressed strong support for the referendum and its implications. “It really became obvious to me how big a part of our lives eating clubs are. Even if you’re not in an eating club, it still affects you a lot because your friends are in eating clubs, and friend groups get split across eating clubs,” Clark said of her decision to sponsor the referendum. “I feel like we also don’t understand eatSee REFERENDUM page 3

Today on Campus 8:30 p.m.: Princeton Data Science (PDS) will host an Open House Study Break for students to learn about opportunities with PDS for the spring such as competitions. The open house will take place in Frist Campus Center Lecture Hall 302.

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

PPPD emails divestment petition By Hunter Campbell staff writer

Members of Princeton Private Prison Divest are asking University faculty members to sign a petition in support of divesting from private prisons, as well as from detention corporations. The petition has been circulated via email to many University faculty members. The student groups that make up PPPD include Students for Prison Education and Reform (SPEAR), the DREAM Team, the Muslim Advocates for Social Justice and Individual Dignity (MASJID), the Alliance for Jewish Progressives (AJP), the Black Justice League (BJL), the Princeton University Latinx Perspectives Organization (PULPO), and the Princeton College Democrats. The petition states that signers “call upon the Council of the Princeton University Community [CPUC] and the Princeton University Investment Company [PRINCO] to dissociate and divest from corporations that draw profit from incarceration, drug control and immigrant deportation policies.” It further notes that the specific divestments that the facSee DIVESTMENT page 4

WEATHER

STUDENT LIFE

HIGH

40˚

LOW

22˚

Mostly sunny. chance of rain:

10 percent


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