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Thursday april 8, 2016 vol. cxl no. 43
{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } STUDENT LIFE
CHVRCHES to headline Lawnparties
By Hannah Waxman staff writer
The musical group CHVRCHES will be headlining the spring 2016 Lawnparties, Undergraduate Student Government President Aleksandra Czulak ’17 announced in the Lawnparties website Thursday. USG Social Committee Chair Rachel Park ’18 noted that the Social Committee has not yet determined the performer for the opening act, and she added that the committee plans to determine the opening act performer within the next few days. CHVRCHES is a Scottish electronic band that was formed in 2011 by lead singer Lauren Mayberry, Iain Cook and Martin Doherty. Their most recent album, “Every Open Eye,” was released on
Sept. 25, 2015. The group will be headlining at Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, Governors Ball Music Festival and Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival this spring and summer. The Glasgow-based band received fifth place in the BBC Sound of 2013 list of promising new talent and was recently nominated as the British Breakthrough Act of the 2015 Brit Awards. Cook and Doherty attended University of Strathclyde together, and both have been involved in film and music before. Mayberry received an undergraduate law degree and a Masters in Journalism from the University of Strathclyde. She was a member of two local bands prior to joining the group. Mayberry has spoken out against misogynist See CHVRCHES page 2
STUDENT LIFE
COURESY OF THE GUARDIAN
CHVRCHES, an electronic band from Scotland, will be headlining spring Lawnparties on May 1. U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U. community shares its reactions to Wilson report By Andie Ayala staff writer
Princeton Clay Project to assist Syrian youth By Kevin Agostinelli staff writer
Avigail Gilad ’19 and Mariachiara Ficarelli ’19 recently co-founded the Princeton Clay Project, a fundraising and awareness initiative dedicated to sending Syrian refugee youth to Al Albayt University in Jordan through the Amal Scholarship Fund. The group has so far raised upwards of $3,000, according to Ficarelli and Gilad. Ficarelli is an associate photo editor for the Daily Princetonian. The Amal Scholarship Fund was started by Julie Whittaker GS of the Wilson School, who also co-founded the Princeton Refugee Project. The Amal Scholarship Fund was named for “amal,” the Arabic word for hope, and offers needy students four-year university scholarships to study at Al Albayt, a public Jordanian university located ten minutes away from Za’atari Refugee Camp, according to the Amal Scholarship Fund website. The website notes that the cost of a four-year bachelor’s degree in Jordan – including tuition, books and living stipend – is $19,000. The Clay Project is work-
ing in close conjunction with the Princeton Refugee Project, the Nassau Presbyterian Church and the Social Justice Committee of the Center for Jewish Life, with the goal of raising $10,000 – enough to support two years of study at Al Albayt University for one student. The groups are continuing to seek partners to be able to provide matching funds of $10,000 to be able to support the final two years of higher-level education for Syrian students, according to Gilad. Whittaker said that her work at the Za’atari Refugee Camp in Jordan inspired her to found the Amal Foundation and then the Princeton Refugee Project at the graduate college. “I met so many talented and ambitious youth who had interrupted university educations… In the camp, these youth were truly community leaders, organizing service initiatives, cultural activities and awareness events,” she said. Students granted scholarships by the scholarship fund are able to attend Al Albayt University, but are expected to also have the time to lead communitySee CLAY page 2
ciding to shut the door on renaming any of the buildings on campus was a huge step in the wrong direction, she added. Payton said she felt as though the report downplayed the egregious moral failures of Wilson. That’s not to say that anyone who has had moral failures shouldn’t be honored, but we should be more honest about the positive and negative legacies of the people that statues and buildings in the University are named after, she added. She said that this might be done practically by including accurate narratives about these figures in college tours or in plaques around See WILSON page 5
ACADEMICS
{ Feature }
The Integrated Approach: Studying Science without Borders By Kristin Qian staff writer
Since its formation, Integrated Science Curriculum has undergone several subtle changes, the most notable being the elimination of the two-year sequence and the addition of two 300-level courses for upperclassmen, according to Professor of Physics Joshua Shaevitz. ISC Curriculum Changes The change in curriculum largely came about in response to student comments, Shaevitz said. The original two-year sequence consisted of an intensive double course in physics and chemistry in the first year with a bit of biology motivation, and then a single, less intensive course in the second year covering molecular biology, biochemistry and organic chemistry, using tools developed in the first year, he explained. For the students who completed the two-year track, it was very successful, he said. However, the main complaint from students for many
years was that the first year did not seem very integrated, because there was essentially no biology until the second year. Additionally, a two-year track was not very compatible with some majors, he added. It locked in students in the AB program and was also difficult to schedule for engineers. Given this feedback, for the 20142015 school year, the biology component was incorporated into the freshman year courses, Shaevitz said. This was in part challenging, he noted, since the curriculum now became four semesters worth instead of six, and the material had to be even more compressed than before. As of last year, students who take both semesters of the freshman year courses — ISC 231/232 in the fall and ISC 233/234 in the spring — will receive credit for two semesters of introductory chemistry, two semesters of physics, one semester of molecular biology and one semester of computer science. This new curriculum is now more engineer-friendly and the ad-
In Opinion
Today on Campus
The editorial board encourages that Princeton follow the footsteps of Harvard and provide a grant to low-income incoming freshman, and columnist Marni Morse makes a case for banning hate speech on campus. PAGE 7
4:30 p.m.: The contested legacy of Wilson will be the focus of a panel discussion in Dodds Auditorium, Robertson Hall.
dition of biology into the first year has overall been a positive change, Shaevitz said. To that end, starting in the fall of 2015, the sophomore courses in the sequence were also removed and instead replaced by two semesters of 300-level ISC courses, ISC 335/ CHM 335: Organic Chemistry of Metabolism in the Fall and ISC 326: The Past, Present, and Future of the Human Genome in the Spring. These courses are not limited to sophomores or students who have taken ISC previously, he added. ISC 326 is co-taught by Associate Professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics Peter Andolfatto, Professor of Computer Science Mona Singh and Assistant Professor of EEB and the LewisSigler Institute Julien Ayroles. Andolfatto and Singh did not respond to requests for comment. “I love the idea of ISC classes. This is my field — I’m a quantitative geneticist, so the integrated approach is how my field works; See ISC page 6
WEATHER
MARIACHIARA FICARELLI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR
Avigail Gilad ‘19 and Mariachiara Ficarelli ‘19 pose with their mugs.
Following Monday’s release of the Wilson Legacy Committee’s report, many members of the University community expressed that the decisions of the University Board of Trustees, especially the decision to keep the name of Woodrow Wilson, Class of 1879, on the Wilson School and the Wilson College, were not a surprise. Anchal Padukone ’16 said she thought it was necessary to have a conversation about Wilson’s legacy and what we encourage when we honor figures by naming a building or program after them. “While there were some
people who were vocal about the importance of the name change, there were many others who were indifferent,” she said. Briana Payton ’16, a previous board member and a current senior advisor of the Black Student Union, said that she was disappointed, but not surprised, by the recommendations in the report. “I think it would have been amazingly progressive and noble to rename the [Wilson] School; it would have been a huge symbolic victory,” Payton said. She said she understands why the University cannot feasibly rename every building that was named after a historic figure. However, de-
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