February 26, 2015

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Thursday february 26, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 20

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LIGHTS, PIANOS, ACTION!

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

Simpson GS ’60 donates new center for macroeconomics

Snow showers before noon. chance of rain:

60 percent

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In Opinion Avaneesh Narla stresses the importance of untying the eating clubs from “The Princeton experience” and Reva Abrol examines the role that professors should play outside the classroom. PAGE 4

By Pooja Patel staff writer

In Street This week in Street, Street profiles Princeton students who have been on national TV, Contributor Joy Dartey goes behind the scenes of “TIP: Black Lives Matter” and Contributor Carolyn Beard and Senior Writer Caroline Hertz review PUP’s “Hair” and Theatre Intime’s “The Little Dog Laughed,” respectively. PAGE S1-4

Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: Thomas M. Siebel, the founder, Chair, and CEO of C3 Energy, will speak on the subject of New Business Ideation in the tecnhology industry for the Gilbert Lecture. Friend Center Convocation Room 113.

The Archives

Feb. 26, 1951 Two University students, Sherman T. Brown III ‘51 and John W. Noble Jr. ‘51, were arrested by the Princeton Borough Police for shooting out six street lights on Prospect Ave. with a Winchester rifle.

News & Notes Two Princeton residents charged in connection to crash

Two Princeton residents have been charged in connection to a car crash on Saturday in which the pair’s vehicle allegedly struck two houses on Hamilton Avenue after flipping over, the Times of Trenton reported. Kyle Froehlich, 18, the driver of the vehicle, was charged with filing a false police report in relation to the accident, which took place at 2 a.m. on Saturday morning. The passenger, Otto Gramajo, 26, was charged with hindering apprehension of Froehlich. Both men allegedly fled the scene of the accident, according to the Princeton Police Department. Froehlich allegedly lost control of the vehicle while driving on Hamilton Avenue toward Chestnut Street, town police spokesperson Sgt. Steven Riccitello told the Times. The car supposedly drove onto the curb, continued onto a residential lawn, hit two trees, flipped over and slid on the snow before crashing into a house and stopping against another. Both men were uninjured from the accident, and only minor property damage was reported. The crash is still under investigation.

THEO DIMITRASOPOULOS :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Princeton Pianists Ensemble presents Lights, Pianos, Action! performing music from movies.

{ Feature }

Louis Simpson GS ’60 donated $10 million to the University to establish the Louis A. Simpson Center for the Study of Macroeconomics, the University announced on Monday. The center will be formally dedicated in October with a lecture featuring Ben Bernanke, former chair of the Federal Reserve, who chaired the University’s economics department from 1996-2002. “We already have an excel-

lent [macroeconomics] program,” economics professor Gene Grossman, chair of the economics department and director of the International Economics Section, said. “But this is a very nice infusion of resources that will allow an expanded set of activities including postdoctoral scholars, visiting fellows during the year, conferences, summer workshops maybe.” The economics department has a number of research sections and centers organized See ECONOMICS page 3

BEYOND THE BUBBLE

Black History Month: Looking back at the 1980s and 1990s By Shriya Sekhsaria staff writer

Affirmative action was the political backdrop of African-American student life on campus in the 1980s, with some students and alumni questioning its place. In the 1990s, the University began examining race relations on campus, while both the Alumni Council and the Alumni Association selected the same person to be each of their first African-American leaders. 1981: The label of “products of affirmative action” The year 1981, beginning with President Ronald Reagan’s budget for fiscal year 1982, brought new budget cuts to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the civil rights division of the Department of Justice, heightening public scrutiny of both affirmative action and hiring and admission decisions perceived to be the result of affirmative action. Faculty members and students were also still uncomfortable having AfricanAmericans on campus at the beginning of the 1980s, Eric Holmes ’85 said. Holmes said that on one of his first days at the University, a stranger from his residential advising group told him, “I understand about affirmative action, but you’re here and my friend isn’t. And that’s just not fair.” The assumption about gaining admission through special privileges predated the 1980s, Melvin McCray ’74 said. “There was always an as-

sumption that the reason you got in was because of a quota or because of some affirmative action,” he said. An “undercurrent of otherness” marked a large part of the experience of Karen Ruffin ’86 at the University, she said. “As a black student, I can’t speak for everybody but for me,” Ruffin said. “I always felt like everyday, I was being asked to prove that I belonged there.” While affirmative action was a hot-button issue in the 1980s, Nneka Nwosu Faison ’05 said affirmative action was still featured in the news frequently during her time as a freshman. Whenever affirmative action was brought up in her politics precept where she was the only black student, her classmates looked at her as if affirmative action was the only reason that she was admitted to the University, she said. “I felt kind of put under the microscope,” Faison said. “When you’re trying to create an identity for yourself, you don’t really want everyone questioning whether you belong there.” 1982: A diaspora of the community into the Residential Colleges A major change that affected the University was that the class of 1985 was the last class to arrive on campus without the residential colleges, Holmes said. The residential college system made each residential community more representative of demographics on campus, he explained. See FEATURE page 2

ROCHELLE FORNI :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Former Texas gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis spoke on campus about women’s rights.

Davis discusses women’s rights, gubernatorial campaign at lecture By Do-Hyeong Myeong senior writer

Politicians need to stop damaging women’s lives in their political games and instead design policies to support women’s rights and true gender equality, former Texas state senator and former Tex-

as Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis said at a lecture on Wednesday. Davis gained nationwide attention for her 11-hour filibuster in June 2013 to block a bill restricting abortion rights that was ultimately signed into law by Texas Governor Rick Perry.

Gender equality, despite some remarkable advances during the past century, is currently losing ground in the U.S., Davis said. More than 60 percent of minimum wage jobs are occupied by women and women’s reproductive rights are being restricted by See LECTURE page 3

Q&A

Q&A: Former Texas state senator, gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis By Ruby Shao associate news editor

in Texas and stereotypes women face when entering politics.

Former Texas state senator and former Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis gave a public lecture on campus on Wednesday addressing her recent campaign and women’s rights. Before the lecture, Davis sat down with The Daily Princetonian to discuss her famous filibuster, abortion laws

The Daily Princetonian: To start off with, what were you like as an undergraduate? Wendy Davis: I was working and raising children so I had a unique experience as an undergraduate but I was very, very focused on getting my degree and making my way to law school. So I didn’t do a

lot of the typical things that a student would do. I didn’t participate in the student community really, I was more like a commuter student who came to campus each day and put my head down and did what I needed to do to graduate. I started in community college and I did two years there in a program to become a paralegal before I decided to shift my focus and try to become a lawyer

instead.

environment.

DP: What motivated you to want to become a lawyer? WD: I felt like it was a skill that I was suited for. I enjoyed writing, I consider myself to be a fairly analytic person and this was in the day of California… in the day of L.A. law. You probably don’t even remember that, but it was really exciting to think about being in that

DP: What is your most unusual habit? WD: Goodness. Most unusual habit. I can’t think of anything unusual I do. I must be so boring. I like to watch the same movies over and over and over again. I’ve watched “Out of Africa” at least 20 times. So if I’m inspired by a movie or See Q&A page 4


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