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Friday April 28, 2017 vol. CXLI no. 53
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YDS marches for campus workers’ rights By Claire Thornton staff writer
On Thursday, April 27, the Young Democratic Socialists of Princeton hosted a Students for Workers’ Rights march in support of campus workers affected by snowstorms this winter. The YDS clarified in a Facebook post that individual workers approached the group and that they coordinated with these workers to plan the march. Dining hall workers also wrote a letter to the editor of The Daily Princetonian regarding their concerns about how campus workers were treated by University administration as a result of severe weather during the winter season. On Facebook, the YDS stated that it demands the University back-pay workers who worked anytime on February 19 or March 14 during the snowstorms on those days but did not receive overtime pay because their shifts were outside the “emergency period” of 5 a.m. to 5 p.m. In the post, YDS noted that workers had to drive through severe weather to arrive at the University for work, but they still were paid their normal hourly rate. Workers who stayed on campus during these hours and slept on cots in the multipurpose room of Frist Campus Center or Forbes College, were, however, paid overtime. The YDS also demanded that the University guarantee its workers comfortable private accommodations in hotels in future emergency events. During the events of this winter, managers were put up in hotels, two people to a room, while entry-level workers slept on campus in cots. Approximately 100 people attended the march that began on Alexander Beach outside Richardson Hall and ended in the Frist Gallery. Protestors carried red signs displaying messages such as “Demand back pay now!” and “In the service of who?” David Hungerford, a retired high school math teacher, came all the way from Montclair, N.J., to attend the protest and support Princeton’s workers. “I heard about this and I’m always glad to see students
doing what they should do,” said Hungerford. Speaking about the need to support issues of social justice and civil rights, Hungerford said, “There’s always something. It’s like, what I do.” At the start of the protest, a student leader from YDS led students in chants of “What do we want? Back pay! When do we want it? Now!” Other chants included “Princeton admins are no good, pay the workers what you should.” Tashi Treadway ’19 spoke to the ‘Prince’ about the importance of the work that dining hall staff do for students on a daily basis. “They do a lot for us and we should definitely be appreciative,” said Treadway. “We live in this perfect bubble because of them.” Treadway is the Cartoon Editor for The Daily Princetonian. Casey Waterman, a librarian at the Princeton Public Library, put it even more simply, saying, “It’s a labor action. I stand for workers’ rights.” Two graduate students at the protest noted that they had been following events relating to the March 14 snowstorm closely, and that the YDS had helped them to stay informed about developments. Marcus Johnson, a sixthyear graduate student in politics, noted that he had also stayed involved through a petition following the snowstorm that encouraged students to send supportive cards to dining hall workers. Johnson said that when he learned details of the University’s treatment of workers, he was shocked. He saw a big disparity between the resources available to the University and its students and the resources that were made available to its campus workers. “I thought it was egregious, given the resources you see on the daily,” said Johnson. Mochi Liu, a graduate student in quantitative and computational biology, gave an additional perspective. Having received his undergraduate education at Berkeley University, he said the YDS protest seemed relatively
ON CAMPUS
ALLIE SPENSLEY :: DAILY PRINCETONIAN
Students protest outside of Alexander Hall during Princeton Preview on April 27.
PPPD Coalition holds protest during Princeton Preview By Allie Spensley staff writer
The Princeton Private Prison Divest Coalition held a demonstration outside of Alexander Hall on Thursday. The protest, which follows a PPPD walkout at a Council of the Princeton University Community meeting on March 27, was aimed at showing prospective freshmen that the University community is concerned about mass incarceration and antiimmigration polices, as well as reminding administrators that the coalition will continue to organize for full private prison divestment. Participants in the protest held up signs and handed out papers outlining PPPD’s mission. In these handouts,
Humanities Sequence covers Western canon
Eisgruber sees higher attendance at office hours
By Katie Petersen staff writer
In Opinion
Today on Campus
Guest contributor Crystal Liu explains why Princeton should disinvite the notorious Martin Shkreli, and the Editorial Board opposes part of an Honor Committee amendment. PAGE 4
See PPPD page 2
U . A F FA I R S
Protestors marched from Alexander Beach to Frist Campus Center.
CLAIRE THORNTON :: DAILY PRINCETONIAN
“Primarily [the protest] is to show the campus community that this is an issue that people continue to care about,” Micah Herskind ’19 said. “Part of this is to show that there are still people on the ground who really care and are going to continue to spread the message as we also pursue other channels.” “There are a lot of administrators in [Alexander Hall] right now and a lot of students that might be coming here next year, and I think we want to show them that Princeton can be a place where people care about issues and justice and human rights,” Herskind added. “Unfortunately, by 2019, 25 percent of black Americans who are going to be
ACADEMICS
“One of the great tragedies in Russian literature,” Chloe Kitzinger said recently to a lecture hall full of students and professors in HUM 217: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Western Culture I: History, Philosophy, and Religion, “is that Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy never met, although they had several acquaintances in common and even close friends.” Kitzinger is a member of the Princeton Society of Fellows in the Liberal Arts, specializing in Slavic Languages and Literature. One of the great strengths of the HUM sequence (short for the Humanities Sequence, encompassing HUM 216: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Western Culture I: Literature and the Arts and 217) is that there the two authors meet, as Kitzinger enlightens her students by comparing the impulses, focuses, interests, and conditions of the Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy. And it doesn’t stop there — in this 21st-century Princeton classroom, the 19th-century Russian contemporaries also meet the classical, medieval, and Renaissance writers whom the students have studied over the past year, Kitzinger explained. According to the Universi-
See YDS page 2
PPPD listed a meeting with the University’s Board of Trustees as its primary goal and also noted that they seek “formal divestment and dissociation from private prison and detention corporations.” The handouts also provided general information on private prisons and faulted private prisons for incentivizing incarceration and posing issues to inmate and public safety. They stated that PPPD believes “that conditions in both private and public prisons are often degrading, inhumane, and unconstitutional” and that “the problem is exacerbated with private prisons, which are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, and thus do not have to provide public records of prison operations.”
ty’s Humanistic Studies website, the sequence “is a teamtaught, double-credit, super course that examines Western history, philosophy, and literature from antiquity to the 20th century.” This year, it celebrates its 25th anniversary. Put simply, “the HUM sequence is sort of like an emergency recovery plan,” according to Will Nolan ’19, who took the sequence during his freshman year. Nolan said that some, but not all, high schools give a foundation in classical texts in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome. “HUM is sort of a catch up course for people who didn’t get that in high school,” he noted. “Before you can begin to answer questions about where we are today, what direction our society is headed, those kinds of things (which are super pertinent, and present, and relevant), you sort of have to get the foundation first. And I think that’s what HUM’s trying to accomplish,” Nolan said. Yelena Baraz, an associate professor of classics at the University who has taught the course since 2012, said that the course gives students a synoptic overview of the Western tradition —“a slice of it.” Baraz is an incoming BehSee HUM page 3
1:30 p.m.: Eric Schurenberg, president and editor-in-chief of Inc., will deliver the keynote address for the second annual UPitchNJ, a statewide collegiate business model competition, in Friend Center, Room 101.
By Jeff Zymeri staff writer
22 students gathered in the Class of 1998 Rectangular Private Dining Room in Whitman College to converse and have lunch with University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83. According to the Office of the President’s website, “The purpose of these meetings is to give students an opportunity to discuss with the president issues that affect them and the University.” These “Conversations with the President,” as they are called, are hour-long informal meetings, and they are held at the residential colleges and also at the Graduate College. Once per semester, the Office of the President also allows students to sign up for “individual meetings with the president during scheduled office hours” at Frist Campus Center, specifying that topics must be provided in advance. “It’s best for the president to know the topic in advance so that he can gather relevant background and be prepared to have a substantive conversation with the student,” Daniel Day, the University’s assistant vice See EISGRUBER page 3
WEATHER
ON CAMPUS
HIGH
83˚
LOW
60˚
Cloudy chance of rain:
10 percent