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Monday april 21, 2014 vol. cxxxviii no. 51
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Christopher Lu ’88: A top Obama advisor, ‘not totally uncool’
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In Opinion
By Jacob Donnelly
A student on a leave of absence from the University recounts their struggle with clinical depression on Princeton’s campus. PAGE 7
staff writer
On April 5, 1988, at 2:27 a.m., Christopher P. Lu ’88 put the finishing touches on his senior thesis, wrapping up the cover letter to his cheekily-titled research project, “The Morning After: Press Coverage of Presidential Primaries 1972–1984.” The subject of birth was evidently preoccupying him at the time. “In many ways, writing a senior thesis is like having a baby,” he wrote. “The idea for the paper is conceived one day unexpectedly and then gestates inside one’s head for nine months … I now submit this thesis like a proud father, confident that it will stand on its own two feet as a piece of scholarly research.” However, Lu, this year’s Baccalaureate speaker who is a former White House Cabinet Secretary and the current Deputy Secretary of the Department of Labor, had no idea then that his forays into politics and government, rather than over, were only in their embryonic stage. He would remain attached to Princeton as well, serving on the board of trustees of The Daily Princetonian and helping the University’s trustees navigate Washington.
Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: Cooper & Cooper Real Estate will offer a seminar and question and answer session on how to rent an apartment in New York as part of the Last Lecture series. McCosh 10.
The Archives
April 21, 1980 The University’s Board of Trustees announced the receipt of a $5 million land gift from Charter Trustee Laurance S. Rockefeller ‘32 to establish two residential colleges.
PRINCETON By the Numbers
1 The number of Hertz Fellowship winners this year.
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News & Notes 2014 Boston Marathon to expect high police presence
One year after the bombing at the Boston Marathon finish line, runners will take to the starting line for the 2014 Boston Marathon on Monday. Last year, two homemade bombs made from pressure cookers detonated near the marathon’s finish line on April 15, killing three and wounding more than 260 others. Dozens of University students, faculty, staff and alumni either ran the marathon or attended the celebrations that accompanied the marathon, and were confirmed safe shortly after the bombs were detonated. There will be a higherthan-usual police presence at Monday’s marathon, in addition to other security measures, Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick said on CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday. “Somebody said it may be the safest place in America tomorrow,” Patrick said.
NASSAU HERALD 1988
Christopher Lu ‘88 was an undergraduate at Princeton, where he worked at The Daily Princetonian and the Mathey College Council before he became White House Cabinet Secretary.
“We weren’t totally uncool:” At Princeton Jane Martin ’89, a former sports editor for The Daily Princetonian, remembers Lu as a senior news editor for the ‘Prince,’ a fellow member of Cloister Inn and a good friend. “It makes me laugh just to think about him,
just because he was always making me laugh,” she said. “He was the kind of guy who could argue with you all day long, completely skewer what you were saying and make you laugh at yourself while he was doing it.” At one point, Martin and Lu both lived in Cloister with a group of friends. Martin characterized Cloister at the time as a club for people who might have been comfortable in a bicker club but weren’t. “We weren’t totally uncool, let’s put it that way,” Martin said, laughing. “It was a fun group, we played mini golf, I have pictures of us going bowling. Chris was one of the more responsible of the group. He would cook.” She added that, when she was bedridden with flu once, Lu checked on her continually and offered to make chicken soup. It was as a fellow Wilson School student that Karen Bowdre ’88 first met Lu, and she also remembered him positively. “I remember talking with him about international affairs,” she said. “He was always very focused, had a great sense of humor.” Bowdre remembered, however, that Lu might have been less memorable to some of his classmates due to a matter of names and chance. “He was always very kind and very quickwitted when people would mix [him and Donald Lu ’88] up,” Bowdre said. “They both went to Princeton, they both graduated in ’88, [and] they both went to the Wilson School.” It so happened that Donald Lu was USG presSee PROFILE page 4
STUDENT LIFE
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Students to vote on separating Senate, Class Governments
OIT suggests students change their passwords
By Ray Mennin contributor
Students will vote on a referendum to separate the Senate and Class Governments in addition to voting for Class Council and UCouncil positions. The voting period begins on Monday and ends on Wednesday. The referendum, which was written by Class of 2014 Vice President Dylan Ackerman, ref lects nearly a year of work for members of both Class Governments and Senate. It was originally proposed in the fall as part of a set of amendments to the USG Constitution; however the Senate did not pass the amendments. The USG is comprised of a Senate and respective Class Governments, which work collaboratively to serve University students. The primary difference is that members of the Senate are elected to represent the undergraduate student body as whole, while the members of Class Governments are elected solely by members of their own classes to serve their class. The current system allows for the Senate to review and modify the ways in which Class Governments operate. The referendum, STUDENT LIFE
Katsevich ’14 earns Hertz Fellowship
if passed, will create a Class Government Constitution different from the Senate Constitution. It would eliminate the political hierarchy between the two governing bodies, as members of Class Governments will serve with members of Senate as political equals in USG. “I’m glad that the referendum was proposed, and I think it would be a good change for USG,” USG president Shawon Jackson ’15 said, adding that his role as president would not change. The amendment had two primary components when it was originally proposed in November after much discussion in Senate meetings: one regarding the separation of the two governing bodies and another advocating transparency and accountability. The latter part was unanimously approved in early December, and required that all four Class Governments hold monthly public meetings and report their respective budgets each semester, while the former was tabled indefinitely. “I really do not see this as creating a situation where the Senate loses any authority,” Ackerman said. ”The aim is to ensure that officers for one class remain beholden to See REFERENDUM page 4
By Paul Phillips associate news editor
The Office of Information Technology sent an email to students on Friday asking them to change their passwords in response to “Heartbleed,” a security flaw in software used to protect private information on the Internet. Vice President for Information Technology and CIO Jay Dominick said Heartbleed is a function of a particular version of OpenSSL, a piece of software that encrypts Internet traffic. He explained that a certain functionality had been added to OpenSSL that allows for some information from a server, a “heartbeat,” but due to poorly programmed code, the server would respond with information in excess of what had been asked of it. “With that vulnerability, somebody could actually read the memory of the SSL server,”
Dominick said. Dominick explained that OIT had been working on responding to Heartbleed since it was made public Tuesday morning. Anna Kornfeld Simpson ’14, a residential college adviser and computer science major who is writing her thesis on computer security, said this withdrawal of information does not leave any record. Information that could be read in this way includes usernames, passwords, content stored on the server and, most seriously, the private keys used to control the entire server itself, she said. The email OIT sent out asked that students change their Princeton passwords, especially if they use Gmail, Princeton Secure Remote Access or their Princeton passwords for other websites. The email also warned students about possible phishing attacks. Kornfeld Simpson explained See SECURITY page 6
THE DROWSY CHAPER-
By Sheila Sisimit staff writer
Gene Katsevich ’14 is one of 15 students nationwide to be awarded a Hertz Fellowship this year. Katsevich, a math concentrator, will use the fellowship to pursue a Ph.D. in statistics at Stanford University. According to its website, the Hertz Fellowship is awarded to “exceptionally talented individuals studying in the applied physical, biological, and engineering sciences.” Katsevich said he found out he was chosen as a fellow in Firestone Library at the end of March. He then proceeded to call his relatives in the US and in Russia. “I was going to work on my thesis, and when I sat down at my computer, I saw the email, and when I saw it, I was in complete shock and disbelief,” he said, adding that “The money is one thing, but what is more exciting is the prestige. I can’t believe that only 15 people get this fellowship, and I got it.” See AWARD page 4
LISA GONG :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The Princeton University Players and Theatre Intime put on a joint production of “The Drowsy Chaperone” this past weekend.