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Tuesday april 14, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 46
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U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U. accused of animal negligence
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In Opinion Columnist Newby Parton warns against sidestepping dialogue and shaming others into conformity, and columnist Matthew Taitano discusses his sense of “homelessness” on campus. PAGE 3
By Cassidy Tucker contributor
Stop Animal Exploitation Now, an activist group that monitors U.S. research laboratories, filed a complaint last week against the University with the Department of Agriculture for violations of the Animal Welfare Act. Negligence at a University laboratory in March 2014 resulted in the injury of two marmoset monkeys, SAEN alleged in its complaint. Two marmosets, one male and one female, escaped from their cages, according to Dean for Research Pablo Debenedetti’s report of the incident that was obtained by The Daily Princetonian. The female marmoset was recaptured and sustained no injuries. The male marmoset, however, fought with a male from another cage. Debenedetti did not respond
Today on Campus 12 p.m.: Women’s Meditation will be open to female students, faculty and staff. The topic is family relationships. Lunch will be served. Murray-Dodge East Room.
The Archives
April 14, 1998 The Sam’s Club of West Windsor closed to exterminate mice that had been chewing on products. The closure was expected to affect the Brown and Lockhart coops, which shopped there.
PRINCETON By the Numbers
137
The number of students who have followed through with viewing their admission files after submitting a FERPA request.
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News & Notes
Penn students protest closing of Africa Center
Students at the University of Pennsylvania protested the closing of the school’s Africa Center in front of prospective undergraduates, The Daily Pennsylvanian reported on Monday. The students also protested the merger of the school’s African studies department and Center for Africana Studies. The protest was led by students majoring in African studies, as well as members of the Penn African Students Association and of Students Organizing for Unity and Liberation. Students said the merger doesn’t make sense because Africana studies concerns itself with the African diaspora, while African studies focus on the African continent. Penn, in an email to students, said the changes were precipitated by a number of eliminations in federal funding. Some students, however, questioned the school’s motives, since the Africa Center employed only three staff members and Penn is in the process of opening a new center in Beijing.
to requests for comment. The incident was reported as required to the federal government and will be reviewed by a Department of Agriculture veterinary medical officer during the next inspection, media relations specialist Min Pullan said. The last routine inspection in September 2014 found no violations, she added. The Department of Agriculture did not respond to requests for comment. As a result, SAEN filed a complaint with the Department of Agriculture, alleging unqualified personnel and improper enclosures at the University’s laboratory. SAEN is seeking that the University pay the maximum penalty of $10,000 per infraction per animal. “The documentation which we have obtained relevant to Princeton indicates that there See MONKEYS page 3
STUDENT LIFE NATALIA CHEN :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR
Admitted students peruse different campus organizations as part of Princeton Preview on Monday.
{ Feature }
Requests to view admission files surge since January By Ruby Shao associate news editor
Over 300 students have filed requests to view their admission files under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act since Jan. 15, according to Senior Associate Dean of the College Claire Fowler. FERPA became a federal law in 1974 to guarantee students a right of access to their educational records and to protect those records from disclosure to third parties. The flood of requests began after an anonymous satirical newsletter at Stanford University called the Fountain Hopper publicized a process for requesting admission files under FERPA. Members of the Fountain Hopper did not respond to requests for comment. The number of students who followed through with viewing their files as of April 13 was 137, according to a WASS calendar maintained by the Of-
fice of the Dean of the College called “FERPA File Review.” In March, when the first appointments began, 97 students did so. Students have one hour to view their files at West College. The file includes an introductory statement entitled “The Admissions Process,” a packet called “Joint Statement for Candidates on Common Ivy League Admission Procedure,” emails related to the student’s FERPA request, the reader scorecard, the alumni interviewer’s report, test score summary sheets, a copy of the high school transcript and recommendations that the student did not waive his rights to. Interviewed students said they heard about the phenomenon from online articles and friends, and requested their files to gain insight into an opaque admission process and to learn why they were accepted to the University.
Emily Tu ’16 and Jacob Scheer ’15 said they wanted to revisit their high school trajectories by reviewing copies of their applications as well. Anna Leader ’18, who lives in Luxembourg, said she hoped to help her sister, a junior at a school that rarely sends graduates to American colleges. “I wanted to go find out if there was anything I could find out from records which would tell me what helped me get in so that I could tell her, since she’s starting to panic about applications,” she said. The admission process begins with a randomly selected first reader who summarizes everything he or she sees in the file, Dean of Admission Janet Rapelye explained. The file then passes on to a second reader, the regional admission officer, who takes a broader perspective of how the student appears in the context of their educational backgrounds. The most promising files go See FERPA page 4
USG launches ‘As I Am’ body campaign By Katherine Oh staff writer
The Undergraduate Student Government’s Undergraduate Student Life Committee launched its “As I Am” campaign for eating disorder awareness on campus on Saturday. Students can participate in the program in a variety of ways, including registering at a “Wellness Walkthrough” to learn about ways to eat nutritiously in the University’s dining halls, consulting with campus nutritionist and eating disorders specialist Victoria Rosenfeld or having their photos taken in the USG office. Rosenfeld did not respond to a request for comment. “In the beginning, I don’t think we really envisioned it as a campaign,” USLC chair Kathy Chow ’17 said. “We were like, ‘How can we help?’ because it’s a problem on campus, especially since Princeton has such a perfectionist culture, and we often socialize over food.” Ashley Hatcher ’15, a USLC member working on
the campaign with Chow, said she has realized eating and body issues are bigger problems than she previously thought. “I think it’s important to raise awareness so that other students realize that this is a problem that a lot of students have encountered, and for people to realize how they might be contributing to the problem, or how they could solve that problem,” Hatcher said. Hatcher added that, as long as issues like eating disorders are stigmatized, people will be discouraged from actively seeking help when they need it. Hatcher likened “As I Am” to Mental Health Week in that both initiatives show problems to be more common than people think, as well as encourage open discussion of issues among students. After identifying concerns with eating and body image on campus as a problem, USLC reached out to University Health Services and the Women’s Center to discuss ways to effectively address the issue. See USG page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
Muslim comedian talks anti-Arab sentiment By Jacob Donnelly news editor
Only 21 percent of Americans view Muslims favorably, and the media narrative needs to begin reflecting Muslims’ positive contributions to society, Muslim comedian Dean Obeidallah said at a lecture on Monday. “Before 9/11, I was a white guy,” Obeidallah said. “I used to get comments, sometimes nice, sometimes not, but never the same as before 9/11. Before 9/11, if I said I was Arab, people were like, ‘Whatever.’ Now it’s like, ‘Oh you’re Arab, I love hummus.’ It’s like, ‘Oh you’re Arab, you look normal.’ ” Much of the worsened attitude toward Muslim Americans has been due to the media fo-
cus on al-Qaeda, ISIS and Boko Haram, Obeidallah said, noting that only .02 percent of all Muslims have any affiliation with ISIS. Most prejudice against Muslim Americans isn’t the product of historical racism, he added. “[My hometown, Lodi, N.J.,] was a very Italian town,” Obeidallah, who is half-Sicilian and half-Palestinian, said. “My mom’s Catholic, my dad’s Muslim; we were raised with both faiths. It was never an issue there, ever.” Politicians, however, continue to capitalize on 9/11, which explains why anti-Muslim bias shows up most in polls around elections, Obeidallah said. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal See LECTURE page 2
CHRISTOPHER FERRI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR
Muslim comedian Dean Obeidallah talked about religious prejudice and media sensationalism on Monday.