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Thursday september 12, 2013 vol. cxxxvii no. 65
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In Opinion Lauren Davis reflects on her identity as an international student, and Susannah Sharpless advocates overcoming our laziness. PAGE 6
In Street Street tells you everything you need to know about this Sunday’s Lawnparties festivities.
Today on Campus 5:00 p.m.: The Art Museum will stay open late for Nassau Street Sampler, kicking off their Late Thursdays with local food.
The Archives
Sept. 12, 1991 The eating clubs ban first-year students from social events on the Street during Orientation Week following meeting with then-president Harold Shapiro about alcohol abuse.
On the Blog Seth Merkin Morokoff gives the Class of 2017 “14 Foolproof Ways to Bond with Your Roommate”
On the Blog Jarred Mihalik shares his summer musical discoveries from his time in Malaysia.
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
STUDENT LIFE
SHAB gives away red cups
Christie outpaces Buono in polls
By Anna Mazarakis staff writer
By Hannah Schoen staff writer
Gov. Chris Christie has continued to outpace his Democratic opponent, State Senator Barbara Buono, in the polls forecasting the outcome of the Nov. 5 gubernatorial election. Buono has slightly narrowed the Republican incumbent’s 24-point lead in recent months but has long been perceived as the underdog in the race for governor. Christie recently took to the road for a series of high-profile campaign events, including a Sept. 10 visit to a Camden elementary school and an Aug. 22 trip to Hoboken, to receive an endorsement from “Cake Boss” star Buddy See GOVERNOR page 5
MONICA CHON :: PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
In an effort to promote hygiene and moderation, UHS will distribute red cups.
LOCAL NEWS
Six locals file lawsuits against construction project By Patience Haggin news editor
Those who arrived on campus by train in recent weeks were dropped off at the new temporary Dinky station, located 1,200 feet south of the old station’s location and over 700 feet south of its future location. The station’s relocation is currently being challenged by six different pending lawsuits, each of which takes issue with different aspects of the University’s Arts and Transit Neighborhood construction project that prompted the station’s relocation, as well as with different aspects of the project’s current execution. The construction currently revamping the Alexander corridor is part of the Arts and Transit Neighborhood, a $330 million development that will
include several rehearsal and performance spaces dedicated to arts education on campus. It is scheduled for completion in fall 2017. Once the development is completed, the Dinky will be relocated 460 feet south from the location where it stood from the 1980s until August of this year. During the ongoing construction, the train will stop at the station’s temporary location. One suit contends that the University does not have the legal right to move the station at all. The University purchased the Dinky station from New Jersey Transit in 1984 and moved it 100 feet southward, according to attorneys representing both sides. But the plaintiff, a local citizens’ group called Save the Dinky, contends that the 1984 contract between the University and NJ TranSee DINKY page 2
JEFFREY WU :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The temporary Princeton station allows commuters to continue to utilize NJ Transit services.
9/11 MEMORIAL
LOCAL NEWS
Twist Yogurt explains change to “Sketch”
News & Notes Icahn ’57 calls battle against buyout “almost impossible to win” carl icahn ’57 announced thursday that he will not take further action to prevent an impeding buyout of technological giant Dell, of which he is a shareholder, The Wall Street Journal reported. In a letter directed to the company’s shareholders, Icahn wrote that it would be “almost impossible to win the battle” after the group promoting the buyout, which includes Dell CEO Michael Dell, upped its offer for the company to $24.8 billion. However, the revised offer will mean that Icahn will receive about $70 million from the sale, according to the newspaper. “No one will deny that shareholders would have gotten a lot less if I hadn’t shown up and done what the board should have been doing,” Icahn said. -Associate News Editor Cat Ku
9.12 news for LUC.indd 1
The Student Health Advisory Board has started a new initiative to combat bacterial meningitis by distributing reusable drinking cups to the student body in order to help avoid the spread of germs. The red cups say “Mine. Not Yours.” They are intended to remind students not to share the cup with other students. The Department of Public Safety’s phone number is also printed on the cups, along with three lines indicating 1.5 ounces of hard liquor, five ounces of wine and 12 ounces of beer. SHAB president Michael Kochis ’15 said the idea was to “kill two birds with one
stone” by printing the alcohol measurements and Public Safety’s phone number for risk reduction and management, both in terms of intoxication and hygiene. “Right now, with meningitis on campus, the best way to stay safe is to only drink from your own cup,” Kathy Wagner, senior health educator for University Health Services, said. “If the drink does contain alcohol, we recognize that it’s safer to know what an actual drink size is, to limit the number of drinks you have in one night and to be able to keep track of how many drinks you’ve had.” Wagner also noted that, contrary to popular belief, an alcoholic beverage will not See HEALTH page 3
By Michael Granovetter senior writer
MONICA CHON :: PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Members of the University community pay their respects at the Interfaith Prayer Service Tuesday afternoon. ACADEMICS
Original Fitzgerald novel manuscript digitizedmade accessible online By Patience Haggin news editor
The original manuscript of American author F. Scott Fitzgerald’s first novel, “This Side of Paradise,” has been digitized and made publicly accessible online, the Princeton University Library announced today. The digitization was timed to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the day Fitzgerald became a freshman at
Princeton on Sept. 24, 1913. The novel is based on Fitzgerald’s own experiences as an undergraduate. He famously completed the first draft of the novel, then under the title “The Romantic Egoist,” in the library of Cottage Club. Fitzgerald never graduated from the University, dropping out in 1917 to join the U.S. Army during World War I. Don Skemer, the University’s curator of manuscripts,
said he thinks “This Side of Paradise” documents will primarily be of interest to Fitzgerald specialists and to Princetonians themselves. The novel has not enjoyed the same widespread popularity as the ubiquitous “The Great Gatsby,” which is often assigned to high school students and has inspired several Hollywood films. “It’s just hard to put youself in the place of an allSee PARADISE page 4
Students returning to Nassau Street this fall were greeted by a few new eateries and another old favorite in disguise. Newcomers to Nassau include small-plates restaurant Mistral, from Elements chef Scott Anderson, which opened across from the Princeton Public Library, as well as the tapas restaurant Despana, which opened on Nassau Street in June in the space formerly occupied by Palace of India. A Princeton outpost of downtown NYC’s Mamoun’s Falafel will open at 20 Witherspoon Street in the fall. In a reversal of the New-York-to-Princeton expansion, the Manhattan location of House of Cupcakes closed this summer, after just two months in operation. In late July, the owners of Twist Yogurt changed the name of their business to “Sketch,” a move intended to distinguish the branch from others that shared its former title. Despana general manager Michael Dokovna said the restaurant has seen a large University clientele, including students as well as faculty and staff. House of Cupcakes owner Ron Bzdewka said that the
East Village location was a temporary deal, a test run to see how House of Cupcakes could do in New York. “It was just a very touristy area that didn’t really fit our model that we’re expanding to now,” Bzdewka said. Along with the original Princeton location, the shop continues to operate locations in the Bronx and East Brunswick. Bzdewka added that Princeton is a “very classic town” that is especially shop-friendly. “The people really take care of their own down here. It’s really a phenomenal place to have a business.” Sketch manager Catherine Whitman said the new name is intended to distinguish the shop from others. “A ton of places have the word ‘Twist’ in the name,” Whitman said in an interview in August. “We wanted to make the name our own.” The new name is derived from the shop’s recent changes to its seating area, which had already provided free Wi-Fi and board games. The eatery’s tables now include blank pieces of construction paper with chalk so that customers of all ages can “sketch” drawings that will be used to decorate the shop. While the business’s See NAME page 2
9/11/13 11:45 PM