Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998
Tuesday april 26, 2016 vol. cxl no. 55
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Cameron Platt ’16 named valedictorian, Esther Kim ‘16 selected as salutatorian By Maya Wesby senior writer
On Monday, Cameron Platt ’16 was named valedictorian for the Class of 2016. Esther Kim ’16 was named the Latin salutatorian. Platt will give her valedictory address at the Commencement ceremony on May 31, and Kim, per tradition, will deliver the salutatory oration in Latin on the same day. University faculty accepted nominations from the Faculty Committee on Examinations and Standing in a meeting on April 25. Platt, an English concentrator with a certificate in theater, noted that she was incredibly excited and honored to be named valedictorian. She explained
that she was first notified that she had been named valedictorian a week prior to the official University announcement. According to a University press release, Platt is the former president of Princeton University Players, the only studentrun musical theater company on campus. She is currently working on a show that will debut at the New York Fringe Festival, and she will soon attend the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. She is originally from Santa Barbara, Calif. “I know I want writing to be a part of my future, so right now journalism looks interesting,” Platt said, adding that writing fiction would also be a suitable career path. “I don’t know exSee VALEDICTORIAN page 5
Cameron Platt ‘16
STUDENT LIFE
Esther Kim ‘16 LECTURE
U. faculty couples discuss intersection of work, family life By Amber Park staff writer
COURTESY OF THE UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Vincent Po ‘18 shoots a portrait during an afternoon photo session for his project The Other Side of Me.
Photo campaign seeks to show different perspectives By Catherine Wang staff writer
The Other Side of Me, a photo campaign spearheaded by the Princeton Undergraduate Student Government University Student Life Committee, held photo sessions on Friday and Sunday from 4 to 6 p.m. each day. The campaign seeks to encourage students to share an aspect of their lives which they would otherwise not typically discuss or share.
USLC Chair Jenny Zhang ’18 and photographer Vincent Po ’18 organized the campaign after Zhang came up with the idea in February. Po is a staff photographer for the Daily Princetonian. Zhang explained that after being elected the chair of USLC, she had the idea to do a photo campaign, originally called Love Yourself. From its inception, the campaign was focused around students’ insecurities or struggles. Zhang explained that
after bringing Po on board as the photographer two months ago, the campaign’s name was changed to The Other Side of Me. Both said the reason for this change in theme was to make the campaign more inclusive, since focusing on a specific issue like self-love might have limited the number of students who would have participated in the campaign. Po and Zhang explained that they wanted to See CAMPAIGN page 2
Two couples, all professors at the University, reminded students of the importance of and challenges in balancing careers with family at a panel discussion on Monday. The panel centered on a conversation between Nannerl Keohane, president emeritus of Duke University and Wellesley College and visiting professor at the Wilson School; Robert Keohane, professor of international affairs; Andrew Moravcsik, professor of politics and international affairs; and Anne-Marie Slaughter, president and CEO of New America. Slaughter, a professor emeritus at the Wilson School, emphasized the importance of work in the household. According to Slaughter, household work is as essential and should be valued as equally as the work done for income. Slaughter emphasized this message by using the example of her experience working at the United States Department of State in 2011, a position she described as having been her “dream job.” She explained that during her time work-
ing at the State Department she began to reevaluate her conceptions of what it means to balance career and family. She realized that, as a parent, she wanted and needed to come home and be with her family. Thus, it was during her experience at the State Department that she came to understand what the balance between work and family should look like for her, she said. Robert Keohane spoke about the unexpected ways life offers couples different opportunities at different times. To explain this point, he drew on his own experiences of adjusting and changing his personal choices in conjunction with his spouse’s career. Moravcsik, Slaughter’s husband, added emphasis to the idea that “men need to play a much greater role at home.” Moravcsik referenced an article that he wrote earlier this academic year in The Atlantic titled Why I Put my Wife’s Career First. Moravcsik concluded that though many people generally want egalitarian marriages, not all marriages work that See COUPLES page 4
LECTURE
Activist Arafat Mazhar discuses legal punishments for blasphemy in Pakistan senior writer
“Simply put, you blaspheme, you die,” said activist Arafat Mazhar in a talk on Monday. Mazhar is the founder and director of Engage Pakistan, a nonprofit organization in Pakistan that aims to reform Pakistan’s blasphemy law. Before speaking, Mazhar clarified that when he spoke of
“blasphemy,” he was referring to any insult or criticism of the Prophet Muhammad. According to Mazhar, there are a number of blasphemy laws in Pakistan, but one of the most controversial is the one regarding statements towards the Prophet. Mazhar began by discussing the current situation in Pakistan with regard to legal punishment of blasphemy.
He explained that, in his view, Pakistan’s blasphemy law is a deliberate perversion of Islamic tradition. The blasphemy law was passed in 1986, and at the time there did not appear to be significant debate surrounding what constituted blasphemy and what the punishment would be. The consensus was that there could be no punishSee LECTURE page 3
AMBER PARK :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Panelists discussed their personal love and work relationships.
In Opinion
Today on Campus
Members of the Princeton Private Prison Divestment Coalition respond to the Editorial Board’s stance against divestment, and cartoonist Emily Fockler offers a tribute to the late artist Prince. PAGE 6
4:30 p.m.: Palestinian diplomat Maen Rashid Areikat will deliver a lecture as part of the “Conversations about Peace” series. Robertson Hall, Dodds Auditorium.
WEATHER
By Zaynab Zaman
HIGH
75˚
LOW
44˚
Scattered thunderstorms. chance of rain:
60 percent