April 17, 2015

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Friday april 17, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 49

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EISGRUBER GREETS FIREFIGHTERS

ACADEMICS

HUM to eliminate applications

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In Opinion

By Zoe Toledo

The Editorial Board discourages the student body from voting in favor of divestment, and columnist Christian Wawrzonek differentiates dissent from racism. PAGE 4

contributor

Today on Campus 11:30 a.m.: Manna’s Open Small Group will be hosting a lunchtime talk with Princeton professors on the Christian worldview. Frist Campus Center Lecture Hall 302.

The Archives

Feb. 17, 1947 The Association of Northeastern Flying Clubs, founded as a forum for flying enthusiasts, had its first gathering at Yale. “The formation of the club should result in cheaper flying rates for universities and lead to the purchase of new airplanes” said Princeton representatives Bill Tiernan’44 and John Jessup’ 45.

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News & Notes Stanford announces it will not participate in divestment from companies in Israel

Stanford will not divest from companies operating in Israel, according to the Stanford Daily. The announcement was made on Tuesday afternoon by the Stanford Board of Trustees in response to a request from the Stanford Students for Justice in Palestine, who had asked Stanford to divest from a list of companies that allegedly profited from human rights abuses in Palestine. According to the statement, the Board believed that any action to divest would create deep divisions among the Stanford community. It read that the University’s mission and responsibility of allowing and encouraging diverse opinions on campus would be compromised by taking a position on such a complex issue. Earlier this year, there had been two separate votes by the Associated Students of Stanford University Senate regarding divestment. The conf lict was so significant that several students shouted, and one was reportedly moved to tears.

CHRIS FERRI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR

The Princeton Student Firefighter Association met with University President Christopher Eisgruber ‘83 at Nassau Hall. STUDENT LIFE

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

Yik Yak to consider disabling U. campus posts from local area By Olivia Wicki staff writer

After an unknown individual emailed Yik Yak with a request to showcase posts from the University on the application’s “Peek” feature, a Yik Yak support agent replied that the company is considering banning all future posts in the area. Yik Yak is a Twitter-like application that allows users within a certain area to share anonymous posts from their phones. Though users can only comment on posts from their area, they can “Peek” at other locations to see what is being

said there. In the April 7 email, the agent explained the company’s position by citing a trend of harassment at the University. “We have received an unusually large number of reports from this area, in the past few days, which has gotten our attention,” the agent wrote. “We are currently considering implementing manual submission approval or possibly disabling submissions from this region completely.” Yik Yak representatives did not respond to requests for comment. See YIK YAK page 3

LECTURE

Prager discusses antiSemitism, politics of religion in lecture By Jacob Donnelly news editor

A moral compass can be determined to be valid or invalid based on whether Jewish people are treated fairly, and Islam may not pass this test, Jewish radio host Dennis Prager said at a heavily attended discussion moderated by jurisprudence professor Robert George on Thursday. Prager drew an analogy between the few number of Germans who were actually mass killers during the Nazi era and the few number of Muslims who are actually terrorists, adding that just as a few Germans were Na-

The Humanistic Studies Program will no longer require prospective freshmen students to apply to the intensive year-long Humanities Sequence. Students, including nonfreshmen, can instead reserve a spot by emailing Lin DeTitta, the program manager for Humanistic Studies and Journalism. The Humanities Sequence is a year-long sequence of courses that is designed to represent an interdisciplinary approach to examining Western literature from antiquity to the 20th century. Originally, the emphasis on faculty-led precepts forced limits on the number of students who could enroll, said Kathleen Crown, executive director of the Council of the Humanities. The program has evolved over time in regard to the number of faculty and students involved with the program, she added. “There is nothing in the origins of the sequence to indicate that the HUM Sequence should be limited to a select group,” Crown said. “The goal

was to reach as many students with diverse disciplinary interests as possible and bring them together.” Kelly Rafey ’16, an alumna of the Humanities Sequence, said the decision to move away from an application would ultimately allow more people to take the class. “On another level, having the application is a clear indicator that course requires a bit more than a standard course, due to the incredible work load,” she said. Rafey said her experience with the Humanities Sequence inspired her to take Latin, to be able to read texts in their original language and continue to learn additional languages. She said the Humanities Sequence aided in her decision to independently concentrate in linguistics. Both Luke Gamble ’18 and Robert Marshall ’18, who are currently in the program, said the application process was fairly easy and short. The application itself consisted of a prompt to write a one-page analysis on a book of their choosing. The faculty-led precepts are one of the defining aspects of the Humanities Sequence, See HUMANITIES page 2

zis did not excuse Germany from having a Nazi problem, few Muslims being terrorists does not excuse Islam from having a terrorism problem. Israel is now a target of annihilation just like Jewish citizens in Germany once were, Prager said. Prager also said he believed that Jewish and Christian conservatives have more in common now than with liberals in their own religions. Prager recalled an incident in which a caller was giving a rabbi who was a guest on a radio show a hard time about the chosen staSee LECTURE page 3

Gender gap in disciplinary committees sparks discussion By Ruby Shao associate news editor

The current 2014-2015 Faculty-Student Committee on Discipline has six male and two female undergraduate members. Over the past decade, there has only been one year in which more female students than male students were represented on the committee. A related group, the Undergraduate Honor Committee, does not keep such records of past rosters, but currently has ten male and two female members. “I definitely had this criticism going in. I noted that there is a very obvious gender disparity and I brought these

concerns to Jesse [Fleck ’15, the Honor Committee chair] directly and in conversation,” said Ella Cheng ’16, Undergraduate Student Government president and member of the Honor Committee’s selection committee. “He gave some honest and great feedback in response to what they’ve been trying to do to address that.” Cheng is a former staff writer for The Daily Princetonian. Fleck declined to comment. The Committee on Discipline has consisted of five undergraduate students during each of the academic years encompassing 2005-2014. Throughout this period, only one or two undergraduate members have been female,

with the exception of 2011-12, when there were four female members on the committee. Cheng said the committee has not been idle in encouraging female applicants. She explained that efforts have included additional publicity efforts to reach out to women’s groups specifically, such as the Women’s Center and the Women’s Mentorship Program. However, she added that even with the extra recruiting effort, more women are not necessarily applying. “I think to some extent women are less inclined to want to apply to that. I think it requires you to be able to See GENDER page 2

AUSTRALIAN CHAMBER ORCHESTRA PERFORMANCE

YASH HUIGOL :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Clarinetist Charles Neidich and the Australian Chamber Orchestra performed Thursday evening at Richardson Auditorium as a part of the Princeton University Concerts Series.


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