December 15, 2016

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Thursday December 15, 2016 vol. cxl no. 119

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } STUDENT LIFE

USG pilots program for free menstrual products in nine Frist bathrooms

By Katie Petersen staff writer

The Undergraduate Student Government launched a free menstrual product pilot program on Dec. 4 in Frist Campus Center. The program will run until Dec. 16 and aims to address issues of accessibility and financial hardships associated with menstrual products. The program has involved placing one basket of courtesy tampons and pads in each of the nine bathrooms in Frist: four women’s, four men’s, and one gender-neutral. “USG works on different projects every year, and we choose those projects based on feedback from students,” Cailin Hong ’17 said. Hong, a Class of 2017 sena-

tor, is leading the initiative with U-Councilor Wendy Zhao ’19. As Hong explained, USG launched the program to “get the conversation [regarding freeing menstrual products] started.” Hong added that USG hopes this program is taken up by the University administration. “It’s also a conversation that’s happening on a lot of other campuses,” Zhao added. Zhao and Hong spoke with student government leaders from other universities who have been successful in implementing similar projects on campuses including Brown, Cornell, and Columbia. Response data from pilot programs appeared to be what prompted administrative support at those

other institutions, Zhao noted. Hong added that multiple conversations conducted with Vice President for Campus Life W. Rochelle Calhoun, University Health Services, University Facilities, and others who would be responsible for continuing a long-term, free menstrual products project reinforced the need for this pilot program. “We will take the data to the Office of Campus Life and Vice President Calhoun in the next semester,” Hong explained . That data will include feedback from a USG anonymous survey as well as information about how many products students actually use, based on numbers collected at the end of each day by USG members. See USG page 2

F E AT U R E

KATIE PETERSEN :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

News & Notes U. to participate in ATI to expand collegiate access to low-income students By Sarah Hirschfield staff writer

PHOTO BY WILLIAM F. BURROW JR. DAILY PRINCETONIAN ARCHIVES

U. professors reflect on Castro’s legacy By Rose Gilbert staff writer

In a 1959 letter sent from the Mudd Manuscript Library, the University’s chapter of the American Whig-Cliosophic Society invited Fidel Castro to speak at the University during his upcoming visit to the United States.

Fidel Castro, the Cuban revolutionary who governed Cuba as Prime Minister from 1959 to 1976 and then as President until 2008, while simultaneously serving as First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba between 19612011, died on Nov. 25, 2016. Jack A. Ossorio from the American Affairs office quickly replied by telegram, “gratefully

FIRESTONE

acknowledge[ing]” the invitation and adding that he hopes Castro will be able to accept despite his “extremely busy schedule.” Ultimately, Castro accepted the invitation and spoke at Wilson (now Corwin) Hall on April 20, 1959. His speech was strictly invitation-only. In his speech, See CASTRO page 2

The University will partner with 30 other colleges and universities in the American Talent Initiative, which aims to expand collegiate access to talented lowincome students, according to a University press release. Members of the ATI “are enhancing their own efforts to recruit and support lower-income students, learn from each other, and contribute to research that will help other colleges and universities expand opportunity,” according to the program’s website. The University plans on reaching its goal by increasing outreach to students from different socioeconomic backgrounds, retaining low-income admits, prioritizing need-based financial aid, and eliminating discrepancies between graduation rates among students from different socioeconomic backgrounds, according to the press

release. “We have made it a priority to increase the socioeconomic diversity of our students,” President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 said in a statement, noting that the University has tripled the number of Pell Grant eligible freshmen since 2008. The ATI plans on graduating 50,000 lower-income students from the top 270 colleges in the country over the next eight years, according to the press release. The “top” universities are defined as those having graduation rates above 70 percent. Eisgruber serves on the Initiative’s Steering Committee along with President Ana Mari Cauce of University of Washington, President Michael Drake of Ohio State University, and President Dan Porterfield of Franklin & Marshall College, among others. The participating institutions alongside the University include Harvard, Yale, and Stanford.

LOCAL NEWS

Rider U. to sell Westminster campus associate news editor

MARIACHIARA FICARELLI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR

Rider University’s decision to consolidate the Westminster Choir College’s Princeton campus with its main Lawrence campus has been met with significant backlash from Rider students and faculty. Last week, Rider University President Gregory Dell’Omo came out with a statement addressing the members of the Rider community on the need to sell the Princeton campus and consolidate all students, faculty, and staff onto the Lawrence campus. Rider is projected to have a $13.1 million deficit by the year 2019, and is in a position where the New Jersey university would have to increase enrollment by 114 students by next fall, and another 46 by Fall 2018, according to Princeton Patch.

This statement follows a budget cut announcement last October in which the university proposed to cut 13 majors and one minor as well as 20 jobs, including 14 full-faculty members, from the school. This motion was denied after students rallied against administrators, offering up a petition with 4,100 signatures, which amounts to a quarter of the school. The proposal would have forced over 300 students to change academic paths. Thousands of university members have signed an online petition and joined a Facebook group protesting the selling of the Westminster Choir College campus. The petition states that selling the campus would be “eliminating the history and musicality that Westminster has provided for generations and continues to provide for us, the current stu-

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Columnist Maha Al Fahim reflects on the vehicle of time as the new year approaches, and Columnist Liam O’Connor offers a critique of pushing for sanctuary campus status. PAGE 4

4 p.m.: Christopher Monroe, professor of physics at the University of Maryland, will present new approaches to quantum computing in a lecture titled “Building a Quantum Computer, Atom by Atom.” Jadwin Hall, Room A10.

dents.” As of 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 14, the petition has 2,515 signatures, and the Facebook group titled “Keep Westminster Choir College In Princeton” has 2,086 members. Other members of the university expressed separate concerns, claiming that the removal of the Westminster Choir College would significantly hurt the university’s image in terms of attracting students to the school. The teacher’s union of Rider University has offered to take concessions in their compensation that would allow the school to save $5.5 million annually until 2020, but officials claimed that the amount was insufficient. The decision to consolidate campuses and sell the Princeton campus is still under consideration, according University officials. The final decision is likely to be made in early 2017.

WEATHER

By Charles Min

HIGH

25˚

LOW

15˚

Windy. chance of rain:

0 percent


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December 15, 2016 by The Daily Princetonian - Issuu