December 14, 2015

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Monday december 14, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 121

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } WINTERFEST

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

U. recognizes BJL demands, but no decisions By Andie Ayala staff writer

HEATHER GRACE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The Princeton Student Events Committee hosted Winterfest in Frist Campus Center on Friday. BEYOND THE BUBBLE

Protests highlight racial issues By Caroline Lippman staff writer

The protests of the University’s Black Justice League in late November have received national attention, including discussions of renaming campus buildings and speculation on the possibility that the protests may impact a future Supreme Court decision. Michael Dorf, law professor at Cornell University, noted that campus protests across the nation have sparked a conversation about race and rights. “To my mind, the protests are

effective from the perspective of a university committed to the freedom of speech, even if the protestors don’t get what they want,” he said. He added that if people are chanting or occupying an office, that is free speech, but it is also a way of sparking free speech. Students on college campuses across the country have engaged in similar protests to remove the names of racist benefactors from school institutions, noted Evan Draim ’16, a member of the Princeton Open Campus Coalition.

STUDENT LIFE

Colloquium examines discrimination at U. By Linda Song staff writer

While the University has come a long way since its beginning in terms of addressing issues of discrimination on campus, the initial bar was very low and it still has a long way to go, panelists and members of the community said in a public colloquium Saturday hosted by the Black Justice League. The event featured panels and presentations by African American studies professors Joshua Guild, Eddie Glaude, Ruha Benjamin, Tera Hunter and Cornel West GS ’80. Guild and Wilglory Tanjong ’18 began with a joint presentation, titled “Why Here? Why Now?: BJL Demands and Black Student Activism at Princeton,” looking at the BJL’s demands and where they fall in the history of black student activism at Princeton. Tanjong noted that the Uni-

versity’s first two black students graduated in 1947, even though Harvard and Yale had offered their first degrees to black students in the 1870s. She also noted that many of the demands by the BJL are the same demands asked by black students at other institutions in the past. Guild explained that in the 1960s and 1970s there was a demand for moving away from an entirely western Eurocentric canon in University courses. He added that many of the battles African-Americans fought for in those eras are still being fought for today, noting the recent affirmative action debates in the Supreme Court this past week. “Part of what we want to think about is the continuities between that earlier moment and today and why is that black students in many respects are still fighting the same battles and are still asking many of the same See TEACH IN page 2

University of Kentucky President Eli Capilouto decided to cover a mural depicting scenes of African-American laborers working in a tobacco field, explaining that the mural inaccurately conveyed the nation’s past with respect to race and equality, and University of Oregon President Michael Schill ’80 agreed on Nov. 21 to discuss potential changes to the names of buildings on campus named after benefactors with reputations for racism. Draim also noted that the formation of the POCC was met See NATIONAL page 2

Although several actions were taken by the administrators in order to address the agreement between University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 and the Black Justice League, there is no set deadline for final decisions regarding the demands of the BJL, Eisgruber said. According to Eisgruber, the modified demands of the BJL have been delegated to key administrators and departments who will ultimately assess the issues at hand and consult the greater University community to determine a concrete course of action. He added that the administration has established multiple platforms intended to facilitate conversation between University members representing different interests, including open meetings with the Task Force on General Education, a committee on the legacy of Woodrow Wilson, Class of 1879, and meetings between him and student groups. Members of the BJL declined or did not respond to requests for comment. Eisgruber explained that

QUIPFIRE!

he wrote to Chair of the University Board of Trustees Katie Hall ’80, Head of Wilson College Eduardo Cadava and Dean of Faculty Deborah Prentice the evening that the protests ended. “What we have done in response to the protests is to take the requests and proposals that the BJL wanted to discuss and put them in processes where the community has the chance to deliberate about them and decide fairly, and that’s what we’re going to do with these requests and requests coming from other groups,” Eisgruber said. According to Associate Dean and the Director of Programs for Access and Inclusion Khristina Gonzalez, the Office of the Dean of the College has invited members of the BJL, Latinx, the Princeton Open Campus Coalition and other student groups to participate in a Task Force on General Education meeting that discussed the value of a diversity requirement. She added that three different curricular conversations have been held in each of the residential colleges during which all students were invited to discuss the goals and See LOCAL page 3 LOCAL NEWS

Princeton files plan for affordable housing By Hannah Waxman staff writer

NOSHIN KAHN :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Quipfire performed their winter formals shows on Saturday and Sunday.

Princeton filed a plan this week for affordable housing, after a New Jersey State Supreme Court ruling in March dictated that municipalities provide housing opportunities for people earning moderate to low incomes, according to the New Jersey State League of Municipalities. The ruling instructed that Princeton and other towns in New Jersey present their plans for approval by judges. A judge will present a ruling on the plan sometime within the next year, Princeton Mayor Liz Lempert said. The plan allots 446 units of affordable housing, according to an affordable housing litigation See HOUSING page 2

STUDENT LIFE

USG discusses ways to increase student voter turnout during elections senior writer

The Undergraduate Student Government will be implementing efforts to increase student turnout at USG elections, chief elections manager Sung Won Chang ’18 said at the senate meeting on Sunday. Chang said that he would be setting up tables before future

elections to encourage students to vote and might also look into implementing a single transferable vote system which would eliminate the need for runoff elections. “We could do much better in increasing the turnout, including increasing publicity,” Chang added. “Something I could work on in the future is reaching out more to candi-

dates. Next will be spring elections.” Chang noted that in the winter USG elections that ended Dec. 1, 1,727 students cast ballots in the first stage of the elections for a fairly standard turnout of 33 percent. The turnout dropped somewhat for the presidential runoff election, with 28 percent participation, he said. Chang added that mem-

bers of the Class of 2017 and the Class of 2018 voted in larger numbers than other classes. “This does seem natural given that people that know candidates are more likely to vote,” Chang explained, adding that the freshman turnout was unusually low compared to other years. U-councilor Ethan Marcus ’18 said that he, USG president

In Opinion

Today on Campus

The Editorial Board discusses USG referendum reform and the Alliance of Jewish Progressives argues for accepting Syrian refugees. PAGE 6

7:30 p.m.: A performance of the Bach Brandenburg Concertos by the Chamber Music Society of the Lincoln Center. Richardson Auditorium.

Ella Cheng ’16 and Class of 2018 senator Paul Draper ’18 met this past week to discuss the referendum handbook changes. Cheng is a former staff writer for The Daily Princetonian. Marcus explained that the proposed changes require potential referenda sponsors to be in touch with the elections manager at least five weeks in See USG page 3

WEATHER

By Katherine Oh

HIGH

66˚

LOW

55˚

Clouds with period of rain. chance of rain:

70 percent


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