April 24, 2015

Page 1

Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Friday april 24, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 54

WEATHER

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } HIGH

LOW

56˚ 36˚

ACADEMICS

NEU majors optimistic, voice concerns

Sunshine with a few clouds. chance of rain: none

Follow us on Twitter @princetonian

In Opinion The Editorial Board advocates for a more robust club sports program on campus, and Ryan Dukeman argues against opting to view admissions files. PAGE 6

By Zaynab Zaman staff writer

Today on Campus 8 p.m.: Student groups, including Triple 8, Nassouls and Fuzzy Dice, will perform at the University’s annual Night Market. East Pyne courtyard.

The Archives

April 24, 2001 Researchers at Princeton and Columbia University completed the first portion of a $17 million study titled “The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study.”

PRINCETON By the Numbers

93.9

The percentage of active students who have built a course plan on TigerHub.

got a tip? Email it to: tips@dailyprincetonian.com

News & Notes Princeton High School students stage walkout to support teachers’ union

Hundreds of Princeton High School students supported teachers in a contract dispute by walking out of class on Thursday, according to the Times of Trenton. The contract dispute is between the local school board and the teachers’ union Princeton Regional Education Association. Andrea Spalla, the school board president, said that the issues in dispute could not be publicly talked about and that progress has been made to address them. On December 1, PREA members responded to the contract dispute by deciding to end voluntary participation in uncompensated extracurricular activities that extend beyond the school day. PHS student Harrison Bronfeld, who helped organize the walkout to support the teachers, said that the students desired a resolution to the issue. “Discourse and respect for a diversity of opinions is valued in the PHS community,” PHS principal Gary Snyder said regarding students’ decision to participate in the walkout. The PREA and the school board are scheduled to meet on May 4.

TOMI JOHNSON :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

In the first year of the neuroscience concentration, 17 sophomores joined the department this week. STUDENT LIFE

TigerHub, ReCal aid course choices By Kristin Qian contributor

During the course selection period for fall classes, many University students have moved away from defunct course-scheduling applications like the Integrated Course Engine and easyPCE and have started using newer applications like TigerHub and ReCal instead. As of Thursday, Polly Griffin, the University registrar, said that 93.9 percent of active students had built a course plan on TigerHub, the University’s course-scheduling portal. She added that designing the application, which contains a calendar to arrange the cours-

es and the portal to add and drop courses, was a very large undertaking but that it has proved useful and easy to use. ReCal is a new course-scheduling tool that was launched on April 3 by Maxim Zaslavsky ’17, Dyland Xue ’16 and Naphat Sanguansin ’16. ReCal is different because it also consists of a mobile app component. Being able to select courses from a phone is important to them because it is “what we want as users,” Sanguansin said. In general, the whole system and user interface is faster, sleeker and more efficient than TigerHub, the creators explained. One third of University See COURSES page 4

ACADEMICS

Princeton Medical Institute conducts Alzheimer’s clinical trial By Nahrie Chung contributor

Researchers at the Princeton Medical Institute, as well as at other institutions, are investigating a novel drug to fight Alzheimer’s disease in a phase-II clinical trial called the NOBLE study. Alzheimer’s is a neurodegenerative illness that affects more than five million adults in the United States. The last drug to have entered the market, memantine, was introduced more than a decade ago. The study explores the potential of T-817MA, a compound that may prevent neuron loss in the brain and even promote the regeneration of neurites. The study is ongoing

across 51 research sites in the United States and currently recruits qualifying patients with mild to moderate cases of Alzheimer’s. There are currently only four FDA-approved drugs for Alzheimer’s treatment, Jeffrey Apter, the principal investigator for the clinical site in Princeton, said. “There are drugs on the market currently for Alzheimer’s, but they don’t prevent progression of the disease — purely symptomatic,” Apter said. “We’re trying to determine how safe and efficient [T-817MA] is in delaying or altering the decline in memory in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.” See STUDY page 5

The curriculum for the new neuroscience major is noticeably different from the curriculum for the certificate, students interviewed said. Those interviewed said they were excited about having the option for a neuroscience concentration but noted that it has been difficult to prepare for the concentration since they have only known about its existence for less than a year. Seventeen members of the Class of 2017 have decided to major in neuroscience this year, according to Co-Director of the Program in Neuroscience Asif Ghazanfar. He said that students who may have signed into a wide range of departments in the natural sciences, technology, engineering, mathematics and social sciences, as well as those who may have declared independent concentrations, instead chose neuroscience. The number of students concentrating in the department is high, considering that there was no option of majoring in neuroscience when these students entered the University, Ghazanfar said. The requirements for the

new major are heavy in the areas of physics and math, according to Emily Avery ’17, who declared the neuroscience concentration. Avery originally intended to have an independent concentration in neuroscience, rather than only getting a certificate in the subject. She said she is pursuing the pre-medical track and is looking to go further into the field of neuroscience after graduation, perhaps by going into neurology or neurosurgery. “I was super excited because I had wanted to do this originally, but it was going to have to be my own thing,” Avery said. “I was working on my proposal, and I heard that I didn’t have to anymore.” Lauren Berger ’17, a pre-med neuroscience concentrator, noted that the major is much more computational than the certificate. The certificate is targeted toward students who are interested in the biology or psychology side, while the major is far more comprehensive, Berger said. Avery noted that other students have done independent concentrations in neuroscience before, but that often they do interdisciplinary See NEUROSCIENCE page 4

DODGEBALL

TOMI JOHNSON :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Students groups competed for a $1000 prize at the annual Dodgeball Tournament on Thursday. LECTURE

McDermott discusses changing depictions of Hindu goddess Durga By Jacob Donnelly news editor

The changes in the face of the goddess Durga during the Bengali festival Durga Puja are reflective of changes in the broader face of Indian society, Rachel McDermott, professor of Asian and Middle Eastern cultures at Columbia, said at a lecture on Thursday. The Durga Puja is the Bengali version of Navratri, or the nine nights festival, in which the slaying of the demon Mahishasura by the goddess Durga is celebrated, McDermott explained. The festival is marked by building devotional shrines which typically depict a statue or other creative depiction of Durga spearing the animal form of Mahishasura. The depiction of Durga is

highly instructive, because it has changed dramatically over the centuries and continues to vary based on local custom and individual ingenuity, McDermott explained. Almost uniformly before the 1920s, the goddess’s eyes were elongated to her ears, her mouth was very small, her chin was square, her nose was hooked and her arms large, McDermott said. The ceremony was also different, with it being held in private residences for one’s family instead of in the streets for the general public. However, in the 1920s, Indian artists who traveled to Italy started to adopt more human-like forms of depiction of gods in the Mediterranean style, and Indian artists also learned a naturalistic perspective from

British colonialist artists in India, McDermott said. Although the ceremony had primarily been held in wealthy households since around the 16th century and wealthy families used it as a status competition, the decline of the fortunes of wealthy Indian landowners under colonial India led to the formation of popular Durga Puja associations, which brought the festival to the streets, McDermott added. As a result, the modern form of the depiction of Durga has evolved to be sexualized and attractive, McDermott said, adding that the changing role of women in Indian society has also shifted the depiction of the goddess away from an unrealistic depiction of the See LECTURE page 5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.