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Wednesday september 25, 2013 vol. cxxxvii no. 74
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In Opinion Lauren Davis tries not to over think things, and Barbara Zhan discusses the bright side of making mistakes. PAGE 4
Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: Hodder fellows Katy Didden and Adam Ross will read as part of the Althea Ward Clark Reading Series. Berlind Theatre.
The Archives
Sept. 25, 1972 Gay Alliance holds first meeting in an effort to gain recognition on campus.
By the Numbers
44,871
Total number of donations to University Annual Giving campaign.
On the Blog Intersections reviews “How I Met Your Mother” season nine.
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News & Notes Prosecutor’s Office downgrades drug possession charge in ecstasy case
The Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office has transferred the case of the freshman charged with drug possession back to the Princeton Municipal Court, Casey DeBlasio, a spokeswoman for the Prosecutor’s Office, said Tuesday. The Prosecutor’s Office downgraded the charge against Joseph Gauvreau ’17 from possession of controlled dangerous substances — the initial charge made by the University’s Department of Public Safety earlier this month after searching the student’s Holder Hall room — to failure to dispose of CDS. The new charge is considered a disorderly persons offense under New Jersey law. The Municipal Court had originally elevated the case to the Prosecutor’s Office because of the nature of DPS’s initial charges. DeBlasio also released a copy of the complaint against Gauvreau that indicates he was allegedly found with “Molly,” a name for ecstasy usually found in powder or crystal form.
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STUDENT LIFE
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Aquinas Institute moves By Ella Cheng staff writer
The Aquinas Institute, a local Catholic chaplaincy that provides services to Princeton students, relocated to a newlybought house on 24 Charlton St., north of the Friend Center, on Aug. 17. The move was made in order to address student and ministry concerns about the distance of the old house from the University campus, chaplain Father David Swantek said. The Diocese of Trenton sold the Aquinas Institute’s historic old house on 65 Stockton St., the former home of German novelist Thomas Mann, for around $4 million to a private developer, Swantek added. He explained that funds from the sale were used to buy the new house for $1.8 million. The Stockon Street house is still listed by real estate company Cassidy Turley at an asking price of $4.2 million. A Cassidy Turley representative could not be reached as of press time to confirm that the house has in fact already been sold. The new four-story house is currently undergoing repairs and renovations, including the installation of new furnishings as well as a new security system to allow students access using their PUID cards, Swantek said. He added that the house is not projected to be fully operational until the spring semester and is now being used as his private residence, as well as providing office space for the Catholic campus ministry and a space for limited ministry activities, including Thursday fellowship nights. When the renovations are completed, the house will perSee HOUSE page 3
JAMES EVANS AND EMILY TSENG :: STAFF WRITER AND MANAGING EDITOR
This year’s Annual Giving campaign raised $57,019,138, the second-highest total in the program’s history. Source: Annual Giving.
Highest contributions come from undergraduate alumni By James Evans staff writer
The University’s last Annual Giving campaign raised $57,019,138, the second-highest total in the program’s history in nominal terms, just short of the $57,246,302 mark set the previous year. The 44,871 total donations set an all-time record, with 36,825 coming from undergraduate alumni. “The remarkable thing about Annual
Giving is that it starts from zero every year. It starts from zero in one class after another, and every single one of those classes has to perform in order for annual giving to be successful,” University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 said in an interview with The Daily Princetonian last week. Eisgruber also attributed some of this year’s success to a particularly strong final month of giving. Annual Giving is measured on a year-to-year basis according to
the University’s fiscal schedule, which begins July 1. “Different classes tend to have different patterns, almost like distance runners,” he said. “Some get out of the blocks early … and some have a tendency to really turn it on at the end,” he said. “The numbers were very good as we hit June 15, but from June 15 to July 1 they went from very good to amazing.” See CAMPAIGN page 4
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
Candidates stress ties to U. By Hannah Schoen staff writer
While Gov. Chris Christie and New Jersey State Sen. Barbara Buono seek to emphasize their differences in the run-up to the Nov. 5 gubernatorial election, they have at least one thing in common: Both are closely connected to the Princeton area, and, in Christie’s case, to the University. As governor, a role which entitles him to an ex-officio seat on the University’s Board
of Trustees, Christie has supported the University’s efforts on the Arts & Transit Neighborhood, according to Vice President and Secretary Robert Durkee ’69. “When we presented [the Arts & Transit] project to the community, we had a very strong statement of endorsement from him,” he explained. “[He] appreciated the importance of that project for the state and particularly for this region.” Christie has also appreciated the University’s efforts
LILIA XIE :: FILE PHOTO
Gov. Christie attended a home Princeton baseball game against Columbia in April of this year.
to further economic development in the state of New Jersey, Durkee said. He added that Christie comes to and participates actively in the meetings that he is able to attend. “I would say that Governor Christie has been actively involved. His schedule is such that he certainly can’t make every meeting, but he makes meetings when he can,” Durkee said, noting Christie’s presence at the special meeting on April 21 when Christopher Eisgruber ’83 was elected as the University’s 20th president. That week, Christie also spent time on campus watching his son Andrew Christie ’16, who is a catcher for the University’s baseball team, play in the team’s game against Columbia. “He loves the team, and he loves the school,” Christie said of his son in an interview with The Daily Princetonian during his visit. “So it’s been a great first year.” Christie, who said at the time that he had been attentively following his son’s first season, analyzed the Tigers’ biggest challenges. See ELECTION page 2
SETH MERKIN :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
BuzzFeed president Jon Steinberg ’99 spoke in Whig-Clio Tuesday.
BuzzFeed president assesses media trends By Monica Chon senior writer
“If someone says they don’t like the cute animals on BuzzFeed, you should turn to them and ask if they are a robot,” Jon Steinberg ’99, the president and COO of BuzzFeed, said jokingly during a lecture he delivered on Tuesday night. But it was not just a joke. BuzzFeed has become known for its posts involving ani-
mals, which are often widely shared through social media. Animals are part of the company’s plan, he said. To explain this rationale behind BuzzFeed’s strategy, Steinberg asked the audience to look to the history of The New York Times. Many years ago, The New York Times rolled out “leisure” sections such as Style, Arts and Home next to its hard news in order to capture a See LECTURE page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
First female editor of the Times’ editorial page discusses women’s rights By Carla Javier senior writer
The birth control pill, the economy of the 1970s and the civil rights movement were the three factors that made the boom of women’s rights between
1964 and 1972 possible, New York Times columnist and former editor of the Times’ editorial page Gail Collins said in a lecture on Tuesday. Discussing her 2009 book “When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American
Women from 1960 to the Present,” Collins shared anecdotes from various women who were part of the women’s rights movement. “A vision about the way things should be that had existed for millennia, ever since the begin-
ning of Western civilization, with women in the home taking care of kids while men were outside running the public world — that vision changed overnight,” Collins said. In 1960, women faced social pressure if they weren’t engaged
by their junior year of college, Collins said, adding she believes this expectation existed because effective birth control was not available. Once the birth control pill became available to women, female See COLUMNIST page 4
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