April 1, 2016

Page 1

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Friday april 1, 2016 vol. cxl no. 38

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

6. 46 percent of U. applicants offered admission By Caroline Lippman staff writer

The University has offered admission to 1,894 students out of an applicant pool of 29,303 candidates, marking a record-low acceptance rate of 6.46 percent. This year’s applicant pool is also the largest the University has seen to date, breaking the record number of 27,290 set by the class of 2019. Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye explained that the Office of Admission has been making efforts to recruit students from every socioeconomic background, which might have contributed to the large applicant pool this year. “We’re doing more outreach to students,” she added. Of the 1,894 admitted students, 785 were accepted in the early application process. The singlechoice early action acceptance rate was 18.6 percent from a pool of 4,229 candidates. The number of students admitted from regular admission was 1109, and the acceptance rate for regular decision candidates, including those who were deferred in early action and accepted in the regular pool, is 3.8 percent.

“The admit rate is reflecting the fact that we’ve had this large applicant pool,” Rapelye noted. She added that the expected class size for the Class of 2020 is 1,308 students. Of the admitted students, 49.5 percent are women and 50.5 percent are men. 50.6 percent of students have identified themselves as students of color, which includes biracial and multiracial students. Rapelye noted that admitted students come from 49 out of the 50 U.S. states. International students comprise 11.7 percent of the accepted students, representing 66 different countries including Armenia, Bhutan, Uganda, Guatemala, Morocco and Bosnia, Rapelye said. This is a decrease from last year’s 13 percent. Legacy students make up 11.2 percent of the admitted students. Athletes recruited for varsity sports comprise 11.9 percent of the admitted students. Students who are the first in their families to attend college make up 17.5 percent of the admitted students, which marks an increase from last year’s 15 percent, See 2020 page 3

LECTURE

KEVIN AGOSTINELLI :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Activist and scholar Angela Davis delivered the keynote speech for a U. conference on gender and violence.

Angela Davis discusses erasure of women’s activism By Kevin Agostinelli contributor

Political activist, scholar and writer Angela Davis said that violence is an indication of the impossibility of imagining livable futures in a lecture Thursday. Davis described several harrowing experiences of gender and sexual violence in the United States, including both instances that she has witnessed firsthand and others that were experienced by victims for which she has worked to defend and raise awareness. “I … remember, as a child, a late night walk on our front door by a woman who was

f leeing a man, who I later found out had raped her,” she said. Recalling whispered conversations in elementary school about children who were the victims of sexual assault, Davis said she found it strange that these children were perceived as partly responsible for the sexual assaults. Davis noted that she also picked up a woman from the side of the road who had been raped in another situation. “A police [officer] had come by, and she thought that she was going to get help from the police officer, but he had also sexually assaulted her and left her there,” she said.

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

A Professor Emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Davis was closely affiliated with the Black Panther Party through her participation in the 1960s Civil Rights Movement. She has also worked as a prominent prison reform activist with Critical Resistance, an organization which she helped found. One of the many examples of Davis’s work to advocate for the rights of sexual assault victims featured Joan Little, an African-American woman from North Carolina who was initially charged with the murder of a prison guard while she was in jail. See VIOLENCE page 2 LECTURE

Layden U. to reconfigure remote printer access discusses staff writer

for Information Technology Policy Nick Feamster said that the attacks were a consequence of how many printers on campus are configured. “It’s not something that was a new vulnerability or anything like that. In fact, it wasn’t even a software vulnerability as much as printers have this feature that if you send data to a particular port, they will print it out,” Feamster said. “The issue is basically that the Princeton network is also connected to the internet, so just as you or I would be able to send a file to a printer on the network, there was no protection in place to prevent someone who wasn’t on the campus from doing the same thing.” Sather said that printers across campus are connected to the network in two ways. Some can be accessed from anywhere on the internet, and some can only be accessed from campus. “[The system is] much like how www.princeton.edu can be accessed from anywhere in the world and a device connected to your home network can only be accessed when you are at home,” Sather noted. The attacks were conducted though the first type of printer, he said. See PRINTER page 3

Grasses of Alexander Beach turned green over the warm weekend.

The Office of Information and Technology and other departments are in the process of limiting printer accessibility to users on campus in order to improve security against attacks, according to Associate Chief Information Officer for Office of Information Technology Support Services Steven Sather. Sather added that this reconfiguration has been occurring throughout this academic year and that the transition is scheduled to be completed over the summer. Last week, anti-Semitic posters were sent to printers at University, as well as several other colleges throughout the country. These posters were the work of Andrew “weev” Auernheimer, a known white supremacist and computer hacker. In an earlier interview with The Daily Princetonian, University Assistant Vice President for Communications Daniel Day said that Auernheimer’s actions did not constitute hacking in the sense that they did not breach security. Acting Director of the Center

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Columnist Zeena Mubarak argues for a compulsory, but shorter, We Speak survey, and the Editorial Board tackles freedom of expression and the University’s response to anti-Semitic posters found on campus. Page 4

5 p.m.: HackPrinceton will take place for 36 consecutive hours. Friend Center Convocation Room 113.

COURTESY OF THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS

The Office of Admissions staff posed in front of a mail delivery truck just before it was loaded with acceptance letters for the Class of 2020.

ALEXANDER BEACH

ATAKAN BALTACI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR

pornography

By Annie Yang news editor

In a lecture Thursday, Mary Anne Layden said that pornography, which is a visual invasion of a person’s body, is not a victimless crime. Layden is a psychotherapist and author based at the University of Pennsylvania, where she directs the Sexual Trauma and Psychopathology Program as well as the Social Action Committee for Women’s Psychological Health. According to Layden, selling the body is considered sexual exploitation and stealing the body is considered sexual violence. “Sex is now a product, and the body is now a commodity,” she said. She added that sexual exploitation and sexual violence are a seamless, interconnected continuum. Layden said that there are many studies that provide scientific evidence of the negative consequences of porn. According to Layden, brain images of porn users look similar to those of See ANSCOMBE page 2

WEATHER

By Betty Liu

HIGH

75˚

LOW

51˚

Thunderstorms! chance of rain:

40 percent


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April 1, 2016 by The Daily Princetonian - Issuu