April 5, 2016

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Tuesday april 5, 2016 vol. cxl no. 40

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

Motto will change, name will stay

Despite moves toward diversity and inclusion, students are concerned about a lack of actionable language. By Amber Park contributor

COURTESY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY LIBRARY

The controversy on Woodrow WIlson’s legacy amplified last November.

The University Board of Trustees announced Monday morning that it had approved recommendations from the Wilson Legacy Committee’s report. Included among the decisions was that the Wilson School and Wilson College will continue to be named after Woodrow Wilson, Class of 1879, and that the University will change its informal motto. Other approved recommendations include establishing a pipeline program to encourage more underrepresented students to pursue doctoral degrees and diversifying campus art. The committee also recommended designating a Special Committee on Diversity and Inclusion within the board’s Executive Committee to oversee these actions. Brent Henry ’69, vice chair

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

of the board who chaired the committee, explained that the committee collectively decided on its recommendations and the board later voted to approve them, but he did not specify the number of votes in favor of the recommendations. University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83, who notified the members of University community about the board’s recommendations via email on Monday morning, noted in an interview with the Daily Princetonian that the approved initiatives are ways for the University to affirm and energize its commitment to diversity and inclusion. “The board strongly endorsed the committee’s report and recommendations, including its call for a renewed and expanded commitment to diversity and inclusion, and for much greater transparency in representing Wilson and his legacy, as well

as the rest of our history, on our campus,” said Chair of the Board Kathryn Hall ’80. Long-term conversations surrounding Wilson’s legacy amplified last November following a sit-in by the Black Justice League in Nassau Hall. The protestors requested removal of Wilson’s name from buildings, creation of a diversity distribution requirement, a mandatory cultural competency training for faculty and staff and creation of University affinity spaces. In early December, the University Board of Trustees designated the ten-member committee to consider these requests. The committee collected 635 responses from members of the University community and scholars who have studied Wilson by late March. It also hosted 11 on-campus group discussions, with more than 80 participants in total. See REPORT page 2

BEYOND THE BUBBLE

Planet Princeton sues U., town over ORPA denial contributor

Local community news site Planet Princeton filed a lawsuit in Mercer County Superior Court last Tuesday, seeking the records of the policing agreement between the town of Princeton and the University, after the municipality of Princeton denied prior requests for access to the agreement. University Media Relations Specialist Min Pullan noted that the University is unable to comment on active or pending cases. The agreement sets the jurisdiction of the University’s Department of Public Safety, which is larger in size than the police force of Princeton township. The complaint notes that there are 97 DPS officers, in contrast to the 60 members of the

Princeton Police Department. DPS’s sworn officers currently have the authority of commissioned police officers, with the full power of arrest and the right to carry a gun in specific circumstances, according to Krystal Knapp, the plaintiff in the case and the founding editor of Planet Princeton. According to the article released by Planet Princeton, the policing agreement was approved in 2013, and it is currently unknown if there are additional amendments. As the article notes, on Feb. 10, Planet Princeton filed the initial request that the town make the agreement public, citing the state’s Open Public Records Act. However, after consulting the University’s legal team, on Feb. 12 the municipality of Princeton denied Planet Princeton’s request.

According to the article, in its denial, the town cited an exception under OPRA, which exempts from public access any security information that might create a risk to the safety of people or property. In an emailed statement, Princeton Mayor Liz Lempert said the town’s denial of the OPRA request followed the “advice and direction issued to us in 2013 by the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office, which is the chief law enforcement agency for the county.” The Prosecutor’s Office did not respond to request for comment. A copy of the advice that the Mercer County Prosecutor’s Office gave in 2013 was attached to the town’s official denial in February. “The release of detailed information regarding police response to See POLICE page 4

LOCAL NEWS

U. technician Pierce donates books to Nicaraguan library to foster literacy By Maya Wesby staff writer

William Pierce, theater operations technician at Richardson Auditorium, sent books collected from his book drive at the University to Puedo Leer Library in Granada, Nicaragua last Wednesday. The book drive took place on Mar. 18. The library’s goal is to spread a love of reading to those who live in Nicaragua, particularly the nation’s children, according to the mission statement on its website. Pierce said that he discovered the library in January of this year while on vacation in Nicaragua. He added that he was impressed by — and shared — the library’s passion for books and literacy, particularly children’s literacy. Donating books to the library, Pierce notes, was a positive and constructive

application of his personal interest in literacy. “It was interesting. It was a lot of fun for me because I love books. From what I’ve gathered, and I’m by no means an expert, the need for more books — for more children’s books, in particular in Nicaragua, is very significant because they’re very expensive there,” he said. Pierce collected 21 books during the drive, among which were Spanish-translated children’s books and young adult novels. According to Puedo Leer Library’s website, many Nicaraguan children have never had a story read to them by parents or other adults by the time that they begin school. “Reading for pleasure in Nicaragua is almost nonexistent,” the website states. “Schools lack storybooks and even reading for learn-

ing is severely limited since most schools rarely have textbooks for their students.” Pierce said the library was created to foster a love of reading, particularly among children from low-income communities. He added that the library might be the only lending library in the city of Granada. Helen Korengold and Carol Rea, members of the library’s Board of Directors, did not respond to a request for comment. Pierce said that setting up the book drive, which took place in Frist Campus Center, was simple. He received help from the University’s Campus Venue Services, which provided the expertise and resources necessary to complete this personally fulfilling task. Nick Robinson, director of University Campus Venue See BOOKS page 4

COURESY OF VIEWS FROM THE EDGE

Li has served as Class of 2012 president for eight consecutive years.

Lindi Li ’12 to drop Congressional race By Kevin Agostinelli contributor

Democrat Lindy Li ’12 has withdrawn from Pennsylvania’s sixth District Congressional race, following a verdict from the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania last Friday. Li had been contesting Chester County businessman Mike Parrish for the Democratic nomination in order to face Republican incumbent Ryan Costello in the 2016 November election. As a 25-year-old, she would have become the youngest female representative in Congress if she were to have been elected. However, after Parrish filed a challenge against Li’s nominating petitions, the Commonwealth Court decided in a threeday hearing that Li did not meet the minimum number of valid signatures needed. In the state of Pennsylvania, each Congressional candidate must submit 1,000 signatures in order to appear on the April 26 primary ballots. Each petition, which contains 30 signatures, has to be signed and stamped by a notary public in order to be considered valid in the court of law. It is common for nomination

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Columnist Imani Thornton likens the status quo to a manipulative lover, condemning the decision to keep Wilson’s name, and senior columnist Bennett McIntosh argues the trustees’ decisions are a slow step in the right direction. PAGE 6

5 p.m.: Intersections Working Group presents “Beyond Spike: NYC Black Independent Cinema,” a screening of Kathleen Collins’s Losing Ground and Ronald K. Gray’s Transmagnifican Dambamuality. McCormick Hall Lecture Hall 101.

petitions to contain many errors, which is why most candidates work towards attaining as many as two or three times the 1,000-signature minimum. According to Li, she had collected 2,740. However, the notary public’s failure to both stamp and sign a number of petitions, along with the accumulation of those small errors, placed her nomination below the legal requirement. “We summoned [the notary public] to court in hopes that he would be able to use evidence that he was actually there, but he did not keep a proper notary log…thus dooming a couple hundred lines,” Li said, “It’s just devastating that [my campaign] had all been decided on a technicality.” Li immigrated to the United States from China when she was five years old, moving to the sixth District of Pennsylvania, where she lived for 15 years. She commented that she had always planned on running for office in her home county before allies of Mike Parrish requested that she instead campaign in the seventh district of Pennsylvania. However, leaders in Washington, DC and across See ELECTION page 5

WEATHER

By Catherine Wang

HIGH

44˚

LOW

24˚

Sunny skies. chance of rain: none


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