April 6, 2015

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Monday april 6, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 40

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STUDENT LIFE

STUDENT LIFE

Students vote ‘No’ on ‘Hose Bicker’ referendum

Partly cloudy skies throughout the day. chance of rain:

20 percent

In Opinion The Editorial Board encourages students to take the WeSpeak survey and guest contributor Barksdale Maynard ’88 highlights the benefits of majoring in art history. PAGE 6

By Jacob Donnelly news editor

Today on Campus 4:30 p.m.: The Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies is hosting a “Political Sources of Social Solidarity” with 2014-15 World Politics Fellow Peter A. Hall. A reception will follow. Aaron Burr Hall 219. COURTESY OF YOUTUBE

The Archives

April 6, 1995 The University’s Asian Pacific American Heritage Council celebrated Asian Pacific American Heritage Month by hosting speakers from a variety of careers over the course of the month.

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PRINCETON By the Numbers

1

The number of guest wristbands allowed for seniors at Reunions.

News & Notes Student accepted to all 8 Ivies

Harold Ekeh, a student at Elmont Memorial High School in Elmont, N.Y., was accepted to all eight Ivy League universities, as well as five other universities. He was born in Nigeria and moved to the United States at the age of eight. “We had a fairly comfortable life in Nigeria, but they told me we moved to America for the opportunities, like the educational opportunities,” he said in an interview with CNN. He wrote his college admissions essay on the challenges he faced while adjusting to life in America, including difficulties in his U.S. history class. Ekeh is planning on majoring in neurobiology or chemistry in college in hopes of becoming a neurosurgeon. Earlier this year he was named 2015 Intel Science Talent Search semifinalist for his research on acid DHA and its effects on Alzheimer’s disease progression. Outside of high school academics, he directs a youth choir, plays the drums and participates in Key Club and Model United Nations.

Members of Urban Congo performed in November at Princeton Varsity Club’s “Tigers Got Talent.”

Urban Congo videos spark student outrage By Jessica Li

staff writer

Students voiced their outrage over social media this weekend about videos featuring Urban Congo, a student organization funded by the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students. One of the videos shows a dance performance by members of the organization at the annual Princeton Varsity Club “Tigers Got Talent” talent show in November that was deemed inappropriate by many, citing disrespect for multiple African and Native American cultures. In response to growing U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S

Guest wristband policy causes distress

discontent, Urban Congo removed the video from its YouTube channel and deactivated its Facebook page. Michael Hauss ’16, the president of Urban Congo, noted that these decisions were a result of a discussion held among organization members and not from pressure from the University. Though its membership is mostly comprised of students on the men’s swimming and diving team, Urban Congo is in no way affiliated with or funded by the athletic department, Hauss explained. Urban Congo also performed this past weekend as

a guest performer for eXpressions Dance Company’s spring production. Achille Tenkiang ’17 said that Urban Congo’s performances disgusted and disappointed him deeply. “I’m ashamed that I share an affiliation, however tenuous, with a group like Urban Congo,” Tenkiang said. “I think this just calls for greater discussion on campus. I hope that my peers wake up and realize that things aren’t so pretty inside the FitzRandolph Gate, and there are a lot of things we need to address as a community.” See URBAN page 4

Students voted against the referendum calling for the end of Bicker this week, Grant Golub ’17, the Undergraduate Student Government’s chief elections manager, said. The referendum would have called on the Bicker clubs to end Bicker by the 2019-20 academic year and on USG to create an ad hoc committee to facilitate ending Bicker. Voting took place from Monday through Wednesday, and 1,988 students voted during that time. In comparison, 2,015 students voted on the referendum about the length of winter break earlier this year. Of the students who voted this week, 1,120, or 56.3 percent, voted against the referendum and 868, or 43.7 percent, voted in favor of the referendum. There are currently no plans for USG to examine the Bicker issue, Golub said. Golub is a former staff writer and former staff copy editor for The Daily Princetonian. Rene Chalom ’17 said the outcome of the referendum was surprising because it was reasonable to assume people who were against Bicker would have turned out more. He noted, though, that the number of people who voted in favor of Bicker shows how ingrained the system is at the University. “As someone who’s not in an eating club next year,” Chalom said, “I found the whole idea of dropping [$9,000-$10,000] to hang out with your friends a little silly, and that this institution is so popular that people are rushing to defend it

is a little surprising.” The referendum was valuable for starting a wider conversation on Bicker, Ryan Low ’16, who proposed the referendum, noted. “If this referendum were held a week or two immediately after Bicker, the results would have been different,” he said. “Turnout would have been different. Conversations on campus would have been different. This is a controversial issue on campus that affects all of us and that we need to continue working on in the future.” While Low said he was disappointed by the results, he was not completely surprised. “The proponents of Bicker and the proponents of the status quo more generally have found a way to take away the voices of anyone who disagrees with them,” Low said. “If you take Bicker as a case study, … if you were in a Bicker club, you couldn’t oppose Bicker because then you’re being hypocritical, if you got hosed you couldn’t be hypocritical because then you’re just being salty, if you’re never bickered then you can’t be opposed because you don’t understand the process.” Underclassmen sometimes don’t express disapproval of Bicker because they don’t want their chances of getting into a Bicker club to be affected, Low said. He added that students should continue to challenge the system in the future. “At least people know that there is a substantial number of students at Princeton who think there is something wrong with Bicker,” he said. The conversation See BICKER page 3

FULL MOON

By Melissa Curtis contributor

Members of the Class of 2015 were upset last week when they were reminded in an email that all graduating seniors will only be allowed one guest wristband for Reunions. According to the April 2 email, graduating seniors can attend Reunions free of cost but can register one guest for $65, the same price as a wristband for students who are not guests of seniors. Last year, graduating seniors were given the opportunity to purchase two $60 wristbands for their guests, and the year before they were given the opportunity to purchase five. The Office of Alumni Affairs sent an email last year on April 2, 2014 to the then-senior and junior classes explaining that the number of guest wristbands would be reduced to two for the Class of 2014 and further reduced to one for the Class of 2015 and future classes. The wristbands are only required for activities that take place after 5 p.m. in the Reunions tents. Wristbands are not required for events before 5 p.m., including the P-rade and events after that time outside of the Reunions tents, including the orchestra lawn concert and See REUNIONS page 2

YICHENG SUN:: PHOTO EDITOR

After a few days of spring showers, students looked up to see a full moon this weekend over Blair Arch. STUDENT LIFE

USG discusses concerns regarding Big Sean By Katherine Oh staff writer

The Undergraduate Student Government discussed Lawnparties and the choice of Big Sean as the main act at its weekly senate meeting on Sunday. USG president Ella Cheng ’16 said that she and social chair Simon Wu ’17 care about making the process of choosing the main act more democratic than it has been in the past. “There was actually no possibility to make it more open

with this particular act because it came in January, even before our terms had officially started,” Cheng said. Cheng is a former staff writer for The Daily Princetonian. “We are never going to please the majority of the student body,” Class of 2016 senator Kristen Coke said. U-councilor Mallory Banks ’16 said that, in past years, students were surveyed in advance for their Lawnparties artist preferences. “The issue with that is that

you will get Beyoncé, Beyoncé, Beyoncé, Jay-Z, Kanye West,” Banks said. “Yes, the students will speak, but they will say things that are inconceivable given the budget.” The USG social committee works with an agent to get quotes and find out the availability of artists for the headliner act, Wu said, adding said that the social committee hopes to make the selection process for Lawnparties performances more transparent than it has been in past years, despite the

time constraint. “In terms of the contract, where we are now, it is both impractical and unbeneficial to end that, to renege on a very large contract with a big artist. The alternative would be no main act,” Wu explained in response to a question of how much cancellation would cost. “The conversation needs to be in the direction of how we can improve the selection process. I would love to hear suggestions on how we can make it better, See USG page 2


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