April 28, 2015

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Tuesday april 28, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 56

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ACADEMICS

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

27 high schoolers win Prize in Race Relations

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By Cassidy Tucker staff writer

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In Opinion Columnist Nicholas Wu wants the University to bring back TigerPAWW and columnist Kelly Hatfield argues why body image campaigns matter. PAGE 4

PHOTO COURTESY OF MISHA SEMENOV

AUSTIN LEE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Misha Semenov ’15 was named the valedictorian and Neil Hannan ‘15 was named the salutatorian.

Today on Campus 5:00 p.m.: The Graduate Student Government will host an open forum for students to discuss the divestment referendum.

Semenov ’15, Hannan ’15 to speak at graduation By Christina Vosbikian

The Archives

April 28, 1983 A group of 21 professors revived a proposal of the Princeton Alliance to Reverse the Arms Race that encouraged the University to endorse a nuclear arms freeze.

PRINCETON By the Numbers

$24,000 The estimated amount of money that Truckfest raised on Saturday at its second annual event.

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News & Notes Faculty discuss changes to curriculum at meeting on Monday

staff writer

Misha Semenov ’15 was named the valedictorian of the Class of 2015 on Monday, and Neil Hannan ’15 was named the Latin salutatorian. The valedictorian and salutatorian were announced at the faculty meeting on Monday, when Dean of the College Valerie Smith announced that the Faculty Committee on Examinations and Standing had recommended Semenov and

Hannan for the respective honors. Semenov, a native of San Francisco, is concentrating in architecture with certificates in urban studies and translation and intercultural communication. For his senior thesis, advised by Dean Stanley Allen of the architecture department and history professor Alison Isenberg, Semenov studied housing projects designed to accommodate residents’ expansion, and examined how

more flexible, rule-based architecture can help fulfill larger social goals. “Professor Isenberg describes him as the most talented undergraduate she has encountered in 20 years of teaching,” Smith said. Hannan is a classics major pursuing a certificate in finance. For his senior thesis, advised by classics professor Dennis Feeney, Hannan studied a number of disabled or constrained literary characSee COMMENCEMENT page 2

STUDENT LIFE

The eighth annual Princeton Prize Symposium in Race Relations honored 27 high school students representing 25 different regions across the United States. The students were f lown into campus free of charge after winning the Princeton Prize in Race Relations, an award that recognizes and reinforces the commendable work of high school students who have promoted better race relations within their schools or communities. The initiative was founded by Henry Von Kohorn ’66 in the fall of 2003 and the symposium is sponsored by alumni from the Class of 1966. All events, including conversations and workshops on race relations, took place at the Carl A. Fields Center for Equality and Understanding and Robertson Hall this past weekend. “The winners every year are amazing, and this year in particular, I think, because nationally there was so much confrontation about race,” said Pavithra Vijayakumar ’15, a former Princeton Prize winner. She added that this year’s prize winners all had enormous impacts in their communities as a whole.

Hannah Rosenthal ’15, a former Princeton Prize winner who attended her fifth symposium this past weekend, described the 2015 cohort of winners as exceptionally strong. She noted that the award is meaningful particularly because was around before the recent national uproar regarding racial issues, including in Ferguson and on the University’s campus. “Every single student was working on a project that stuck out to me,” said Debbie Scott Williams, the National Board Chair of the Princeton Prize in Race Relations. Williams said it is very empowering to see these students bringing so much positive change to their communities. “The prize-winners advocate for change, but most importantly, they advocate for interpersonal relationships with their classmates and with their community members,” Williams said. She noted that the change started small through interactions from person to person, then spread throughout a school and even throughout a community. “There were many projects that could be easily transferable here. It’d be really interesting for Princeton students and these high school See PRIZE page 3

STUDENT LIFE

Graduate students to vote on divestment referendum By Zoe Toledo staff writer

Less than a week after undergraduate students voted against a divestment referendum, graduate students will have the opportunity to vote on a similar referendum this week from Wednesday through Friday. The referendum calls upon the trustees of the University and the Princeton University Investment Company to “divest from multinational corporations that maintain the infrastructure of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank, fa-

cilitate Israel’s and Egypt’s collective punishment of Palestinian civilians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, or facilitate state repression against Palestinians by Israeli, Egyptian, and Palestinian Authority security forces, until these corporations cease such activities.” Graduate Student Government president Akshay Mehra GS said that Kelly Roache GS first approached the GSG at the April 8 graduate student assembly proposing a divestment referendum for graduate students. Roache said it is important for

graduate students to weigh in on meaningful issues of conscience. “In one sense, [the GSG divestment referendum] was an act to ensure our full student community was included in the decisionmaking process,” she said. Roache noted that the Resources Committee of the Council of the Princeton University Community has asked to see a consensus and sustained student interest regarding divestment. The results of the upcoming GSG divestment referendum will be used by University planners, See REFERENDUM page 3

HEATHER GRACE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Truckfest took place on Saturday. The event included 11 food trucks on Prospect Avenue and the proceeds were donated to charity.

TruckFest raises about $24,000 in ticket sales

LECTURE Changes to the undergraduate and graduate By Nahrie Chung In its inaugural event last staff writer curriculum were proposed year, TruckFest raised over at the faculty meeting on $22,000 for the Send Hunger Monday. Approximately 4,500 stu- Packing program and attracted On behalf of the Facdents and community mem- around 5,000 people. ulty Committee on the bers attended TruckFest this TruckFest has become the Course of Study, Smith past weekend. largest annual student-run reported curriculum By Evan Washington phens said. He explained April, and is available in the While the organizing com- charitable fundraising event staff writer changes, in which some that the story Rolling Stone latest issue of Rolling Stone. mittee has not yet announced on campus, Lawrence Liu ’16, courses were added and published was not corroboThe report concluded final numbers, at least $24,000 outgoing community service others decommissioned, The mistakes in the con- rated by Jackie’s friends who that the Rolling Stone story from ticket sales has been chair of Tower Club, said.“[Last in the departments of Art troversial Rolling Stone ar- were quoted in the article, failed because it gave unraised so far, according to Kate year], all the funds from the and Archaeology, Astroticle, “A Rape on Campus,” the accused fraternity or due reverence to a single, Gardner ’16, co-chair of the event actually went directly to physical Sciences, Near were fundamental and any others involved in the uncorroborated source, and Community Service Interclub charity, which is what I think is Eastern Studies, Spanavoidable, Sheila Coronel, story. neglected to adequately Council. really special about this event,” ish and Portuguese Lanan author of the investigaThe story came into ques- check facts by finding the Every dollar spent on tickets Liu said. “All the overhead costs guages and Cultures, and tive report on the article, tion after the Washington accused. From writer to ediwas a dollar donated directly are covered through donations Religion. said at a conversation with Post interviewed the UVA tor to fact-checker, the failto TruckFest’s cause, accord- and grants … That’s why anyDean of the Graduate the report’s co-author, Steve students identified as Jack- ure of Rolling Stone was an ing to Stephanie Goldberg ’15, thing that we sell, ticket-wise, School Sanjeev Kulkarni Coll, on Monday night. ie’s friends, Stephens said, institutional and procedurco-chair of CSICC and another can go directly to our causes, reported new courses for Coll is the Dean of the Co- adding that people also al one. The report recomkey event organizer. Each par- and that’s something we aim to the departments of Archilumbia Graduate School of grew suspicious because of mended new policies, which ticipating food truck received do this year.” tecture and Quantitative Journalism and Coronel is the article’s loose threads. Coll said he doubted Rolling a flat compensation of $500 Truckfest 2014’s participants and Computational Biolthe Academic Affairs Dean. “It started unravelling Stone would accept. but donated all profits made had complained of long wait ogy on behalf of the CurThe November article by slowly, and then quicker “It was a collaborative that day. The total cost of this times for food, Goldberg said. riculum Subcommittee of Sabrina Rudin Erdely de- and more quickly, and with failure,” Coll said. “They did year’s event was approximated This year, the planning comthe Faculty Committee on scribed in what Coll called Rolling Stone’s reputation this together.” at $19,000. mittee asked vendors to pare the Graduate School. “molecular detail” the al- at risk, it did something Editors, fact checkers and Proceeds from the event down their menus to three to The faculty also apleged gruesome gang rape of that I think was wise — it Erdely were all at fault for benefit the Send Hunger Pack- four items, hoping to mitigate proved Misha Semenov ’15 the pseudonymous “Jackie” reached out to the Colum- the failure, Coll and Coronel ing initiative and the Meals on long lines and speed up the as the Class of 2015′ s valeat a University of Virginia bia School of Journalism,” said. Wheels of Trenton/Ewing. ordering process, Goldberg exdictorian and Neil Hannan fraternity house party. The he said. Coll said he and Coronel The Send Hunger Packing plained. Menus for each truck ’15 as the salutatorian. Both story called out the alleged For the report, Coronel wanted to puncture the Program provides supplemen- were released on the TruckFest students will speak at the systematic failure of UVA to and Coll spoke to nearly defense that Rolling Stone tal weekend meals to elementa- homepage the evening before, Commencement ceremony respond to Jackie’s case and everyone involved with the publicly offered, not to ry school students who qualify along with Saturday’s enteron June 2. other sexual assault cases. Rolling Stone story, Coronel shame the publication, but for free or subsidized lunches. tainment schedule and map of The meeting concluded However, Rolling Stone said. rather to make the failure a Meals on Wheels of Trenton/ Prospect Avenue. with no unfinished or new relied only on Jackie’s acThe Columbia investi- teachable moment. Ewing delivers hot meals to the The tickets were $2 each and business. count, moderator and jour- gative report on the arti“[Rolling Stone staff homebound, which includes were made available for earlier - Staff writer Kristin Qian nalism professor Joe Ste- cle was published in early See ROLLING STONE page 3 disabled and elderly recipients. See TRUCKFEST page 2

Failures of Rolling Stone UVA article were institutional, authors of investigation say


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