Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998
Tuesday march 31, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 36
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UNRULY ART
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
Kemper ’02: A Triangle, Quipfire alumna, now a star on Netflix
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In Opinion
By Doug Wallack
Columnist Colter Smith questions Duke’s decision over broadcasting Adhan, a traditional Muslim call to prayer, and columnist Lavinia Liang argues why OA and CA should be voluntary. PAGE 4
contributor
Today on Campus 4:30 P.M.: Sister Simone Campbell, executive director of the NETWORK Catholic Social Justice Lobby, will present a talk titled, “Mind the Gap: Changing U.S. Income and Wealth Disparity.” A book sale will follow the lecture. Dodds Auditorium. Robertson Hall.
The Archives
JULIE GOLDSTEIN :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The exhibition UnrulyArt, which opened Monday, featured art made by children with developmental disabilities. U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
DPS seeks voluntary CALEA accreditation
Mar. 31, 1999
By Grant Golub
Former University President Harold Shapiro GS ‘64 spoke out in favor of a report by the Committee on the Nude Olympics banning the famed University tradition. In this event, students would streak in Holder Courtyard on the night of the first snowfall of the year.
The Department of Public Safety is awaiting word from the Commission on the Accreditation of Law Enforcement Agencies on whether it will receive accreditation from that organization. CALEA is a national organization that prescribes standards for law enforcement agencies and recognizes agencies that meet its standards by awarding them accreditation. Agencies may choose to seek accreditation to improve their internal processes through the accreditation process or to demonstrate that their practices are accountable to a respected organization It is a voluntary process and not necessary for the legal operation of DPS. “Good organizations get involved in
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News & Notes Rutgers student charged with attempted murder after taking LSD
An unclothed Rutgers student was arrested on Saturday and charged with attempted murder and other offenses after allegedly stabbing a fellow student, NBC News reported. The two had both allegedly taken LSD. A witness reported to police that the accused student, 22-year-old Kevin Huang, at some point had become aggressive with the other student and removed his own clothing. Huang allegedly stabbed the 23-year-old male student in the neck. The victim, bleeding from the neck, escaped the apartment. Police found Huang naked and on the second f loor of the apartment. A later search of the residence found 15 pounds of marijuana, a sizable amount of Xanax, cocaine and unidentified pills and a substantial amount of cash. The condition of the victim, who was not identified, was uncertain. Police also charged Huang with two weapons counts and several drug offenses.
staff writer
this,” CALEA executive director Craig Hartley said. “It’s a good tool to make sure they are holding themselves accountable to the public.” CALEA was started in the 1970s in response to questions about police authority and ethics, Hartley said. “People were asking questions like, ‘How can we professionalize law enforcement? How can we develop standards for reaching this goal?’ ” he said. “We created this organization to help ensure agencies are approaching the issues in the best way possible.” DPS has wanted to seek the accreditation for over five years, University spokesperson Martin Mbugua said. The agency began the accreditation process three years ago, he added. DPS Director of Operations Stefanie Karp deferred comment to Mbugua.
To begin the process, public safety agencies have to fill out an enrollment form to state their interest in the accreditation, Hartley said. Institutions seeking the accreditation have to be public or private police institutions that have “the lawful authority” to carry out law enforcement in their states or are made up of sworn police officers, he said. After agencies demonstrate they meet this criteria, they move into a self-assessment period in which they ensure they are meeting 188 different standards, Hartley said. The standards comprise topics like administrative structure, privacy, performance evaluations, communications, record keeping and emergency operations. DPS is applying for Tier I See DPS page 3
Before Ellie Kemper ’02 starred in the title role in “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” she had an interest in writing about weirdness for Triangle Club, David Turner ’02, who acted with Kemper in Triangle, said. “She was totally unique,” Turner said. “Not like a unicorn … But kind of like a unicorn.” Even for an actor so accustomed to the strange, Kemper’s new role as Kimmy Schmidt in the Netf lix series may represent new territory for her as an actor. Kimmy Schmidt is a woman who has been freed from a doomsday cult that kept her in an underground bunker for fifteen years. Viewers watch as the woman from Indiana fights to make a new life for herself: finding a job, navigating relationships and learning the intricacies of a world she had been told was destroyed. Having endured such a long absence from the outside world, Kimmy Schmidt perhaps inevitably retains the naivety of some of Kemper’s earlier roles, but there’s also a much greater depth of character. Kimmy has a far darker and more complex background than Erin Hannon of “The Office” or Becca of “Bridesmaids,” both of which are roles Kemper has played in the past. While the show is a comedy, it does not shy away from engaging with the traumas of Kimmy’s past, Kemper said. “[I have been] able to explore more about this character,” she said. “I know more about her than other characters I’ve played.” Outside of her work on the show, Kemper has contributed jokes and essays to The Onion and McSweeney’s, respectively. Ultimately, she would like to host her own talk show and would consider writing a book, she said, but for the time being, she said she is focused on her role as Kimmy Schmidt. “It’s like I won the lottery,” she said of the show. “It’s an amazing group of people to work with, and the finished product has been something that everyone has been very proud of.” At the University, as an English major and See KEMPER page 2
LOCAL NEWS
Concerns expressed over pipeline construction By Christina Vosbikian staff writer
Environmentalists and other local community members have expressed concerns over the Williams Transcontinental pipeline that will run through parts of Princeton and Montgomery. When the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission found in December that the proposed pipeline would not significantly impact the surrounding community, it permitted Transco to move forward with the project.
The project would include 30 miles of a new natural gas pipeline loop through Mercer, Somerset and Hunterdon counties in New Jersey and in Monroe and Luzerne counties in Pennsylvania. A portion of the 42-inch-diameter pipeline will run through an area of the Princeton Ridge as part of the 6.36-mile Skillman Loop. Environmentalists’ main concerns have included protecting freshwater wetlands, anti-degradation streams and water quality; construction’s impact on rare and endangered species; the pipeline’s
addition to the cumulative effect of pipelines on New Jersey’s ecosystem. Transco has already revised its plans for the $650 million natural gas pipeline through the environmentally-sensitive Princeton Ridge to include tunneling under wetlands and bodies of water this March. Transco’s plans for the pipeline affecting parts of Princeton and Montgomery originally proposed open trenching throughout the 1.3-mile section of the ridge, which contains boulders and bedrock. Adding a new pipeline re-
lieves bottlenecks that can occur in the course of the transportation of natural gas, Christopher Stockton, a Transco spokesman, said, adding that Transco is putting a new line next to the old line. “At the end of the day, you’ll have two lines with flowing gas, and that relieves some of those bottlenecks that you may have in the system,” he said. Increased demand for natural gas is the reason for the project, Stockton said. “This particular project has been in the works for about
three years,” he said. “That’s about how long it takes to permit an interstate transmission pipeline project.” Construction is expected to begin around May 1. Some environmentalists said they doubt FERC’s effectiveness as a regulatory agency, adding they don’t believe claims of eminent domain are justified in the pipeline construction. “What New Jersey needs to do is to create a plan to examine all of the pipelines that are coming through and see what See TRANSCO page 2
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
Stossel speaks on the efficiency of free markets By Charles Min senior writer
The free market is the only meaningful alternative to government programs, which create inefficiency and have unintended harmful effects, John Stossel ’69, Fox Business channel host and libertarian pundit said at a lecture about his political philosophy on Monday. “It doesn’t help people,” Stossel said. “It just slows them down.” The economy works best when there is a free market and people continue to selfregulate, he said, adding that it is important to be skeptical of claims that the government knows who all of the the experts are and the best
solutions. “Government’s someone who jumps in front of a parade and says, ‘I led the parade,’ ” he said. In the war on poverty since the early 20th century, the government has perpetuated poverty with anti-poverty programs, Stossel said. He showed a graph depicting the gradual rise in government spending since the 20th century, calling it unsustainable and harmful for America’s future. He offered Social Security as an example of such unsustainable spending. When Social Security legislation was passed, most people were not living until they were 65, so the system can’t be paid for now that lifespans have in-
creased, he said, adding that people receive two or three times the amount they paid into Social Security. Although many argue that poverty decreased with the government’s sudden involvement with a variety of social programs in the seventies, poverty levels in fact were going down even before the interventions, Stossel said. He asked the audience why the United States is so prosperous compared to other countries in the world and offered two answers: rule of law and economic freedom. Government is important in establishing rule of law and maintaining peace, but suggested that its involvement in the market See LECTURE page 3
RACHEL SPADY :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
John Stossel ’69 expounded on his libertarian philosophy on Monday.