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Monday may 4, 2015 vol. cxxxix no. 60
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In Opinion The Editorial Board discusses the University’s sexual health orientation program, and Erica Choi argues for a reform for room draw. PAGE 6
STUDENT LIFE
Educational charities funneled clubs millions to pay for social facilities Eating clubs and their affiliated foundations A handful of charities have funneled $20 million in tax-deductible funds to the eating clubs in the past five years, spent mostly on renovating social facilities at the clubs. The charities allowed the clubs, which earmarked the funds for educational purposes, to offer donors tax deductions. Clubs have negligible educational expenses.
Breakdown of amount received by eating clubs from foundations
not including money received from the Princeton Prospect Foundation, amounting to
TI
$5,550,107
Ivy
$5,511,879
Cap
$5,249,416
Cottage 1886 Foundation paid at least $468,056 to two restoration The
firms and an interior design firm to renovate the clubhouse facilities since 2008. Not counting construction costs,
Cottage
$1,502,709
Other Clubs $2,063,876
Ivy 1879 Foundation has spent $17,810 on two separate the
Total money from affiliated foundations $20,043,625
The Archives
“Lectures of Leadership” events, in the past two years. In 2013, the Foundation also gave
$9,535 for a henley regatta competition.
May 4, 1967 Operators of the University’s student center announced plans to operate an ice cream store within the student center.
PRINCETON By the Numbers
$20 M
The approximate total amount of money from affiliated foundations received by the eatings since 2008.
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News & Notes Former aide to Christie pleads guilty to two counts of conspiracy
David Wildstein, a former aide to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy on Friday in connection to the Bridgegate scandal, according to a press release by the Department of Justice. Christie is an ex officio trustee of the University. Wildstein faces up to 15 years in prison and fines. Bill Baroni, former deputy executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and Bridget Anne Kelly, a former Christie chief of staff, have also been indicted in connection with the scandal. Alan Zegas, Wildstein’s attorney, said on Friday that Christie had knowledge of the George Washington Bridge lane closures before they happened, according to NJ Advance Media, which is contrary to what Christie has said on multiple occasions. Wildstein’s guilty plea could indicate that he may be cooperating with prosecutors, according to Bloomberg.
4.3% of
what the club received in educational grants.
Today on Campus 6 p.m.: A new student ensemble, Princeton Brass, will perform a concert with music from Verdi, Copland, Gabrieli and other composers. It is conducted by Wayne Dumaine, Chris Comer, Brian Brown, and Ben Herrington. Frist Campus Center South Lawn.
Highlighted Facts: From 2008 to 2013, Cap raised a total of $227,820 in direct donations,
AUSTIN LEE :: DESIGN EDITOR
By Marcelo Rochabrun editor-in-chief emeritus
When board members of the Cap & Gown Club sought town approval to build an addition to the clubhouse six years ago that would cost around $5 million, town officials raised half-hearted concerns about a proposed
tap room. At a Princeton Regional Planning Board meeting in 2009, they asked: Why would Cap want to build a tap room if it lacked a liquor license? Board members responded that club members “are allowed to bring their own alcoholic beverages.” Concerns about the tap room
STUDENT LIFE
were short-lived. Overall, the 5,175 square foot project seemed like a great addition to Cap’s social facilities, and the Planning Board approved the project unanimously, happy that the rear addition “harmoniously related in style and material” to the existing building and left the club’s historic facade un-
touched. The two-floor addition consisted of a large dining hall with a vaulted wood ceiling on the first and a new tap room in the basement with a “custom millwork bar” and a refrigerating room, labeled “KEG” in the architect’s plans. Expanded patio and terrace areas for “outdoor
entertainment events” would also be built. The purpose of the new dining hall, the club said, was to allow “at least 170 members of the club [to] dine simultaneously.” Cap would also “accommodate outside events booked by alumni members.” See TAXES page 4
LECTURE
Referendum result sees concerns over campaign finances By Cassidy Tucker staff writer
The referendum to divest from certain Israeli companies was the most heated and contested referendum the University has seen in the 21st century, Undergraduate Student Government chief elections manager Grant Golub ’17 said. Both USG and student activist organizations have been riled by controversy over campaign financing and allegations of biased referendum language, even though the referendum has officially concluded. Undergraduate students split nearly down the middle over whether to divest from certain Israeli companies, with 52.5 percent voting against divestment. Golub is a former staff writer and staff copy editor for The Daily Princetonian. The amount of money spent by No Divest raised questions, Lily Gellman ‘17, a member of the Alliance of Jewish Progressives and the Princeton Committee on Palestine who
worked closely with the Princeton Divests campaign, said. “I don’t know where the money is coming from but it is definitely a lot with all of the pizza, all of their expensive posters,” Gellman said. “They had targeted Facebook ads and ads in the ‘Prince’ online, which I’d heard cost $350 per day.” There is no concrete evidence that No Divest sought funding from an outside source. An attempt by the ‘Prince’ to verify who registered the No Divest website revealed it was registered through a private proxy service, meaning who paid for the website remains unknown. Gellman said she acknowledged that students themselves may have paid for all of the No Divest campaign efforts. “Students would have had to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket which is a possibility, but even then — and I would never have thought to say this regarding a school See DIVESTMENT page 3
GABRIELLA CHU :: CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden joined Barton Gellman ‘82 on campus via telecast on Saturday.
Snowden discusses surveillance, whistle-blowing with Gellman ’82 By Kristen Qian staff writer
Edward Snowden and journalist Barton Gellman ’82 discussed mass surveillance and privacy in a public conversation on campus on Saturday morning. Snowden, a former contractor at the National Secu-
rity Agency who disclosed information about the NSA’s surveillance practices to Gellman and Glenn Greenwald, is in exile in Russia and joined the discussion via a live telecast. Since the disclosure of this information two years ago, “we’ve learned a lot that we didn’t know,” Gellman said.
The interview-styled conversation between Gellman and Snowden focused on questions of cryptography, mass surveillance and the ethics of whistle-blowing. “[The problem is that information is] increasingly getting into the hands of average citizens,” Snowden said. See LECTURE page 3
STUDENT LIFE
McCarthy ’06 third woman ever to chair eating club graduate board By Melissa Curtis staff writer
Caroline McCarthy ’06 will become the graduate board chair of Cloister Inn during Reunions, becoming the third woman ever to chair an eating club’s graduate board. She will be the University’s only female eating club graduate
board chair. She previously served as a member of the club’s graduate board. The first female graduate board chair was Kimberly Noble ’80, at Elm Club, which no longer exists as its own club, and the second was Anne Lester Trevisan ’86 of Campus Club, which has not been an eating club since
2005. Noble and Trevisan did not respond to requests for comment. McCarthy said she is aware of the low number of female chairs historically, but does not feel uncomfortable by being outnumbered in terms of gender. As the vice president of communications and content at true[X], an advertising and technology
company, she said she is used to working in a dominantly male environment. “I’m honestly not that intimidated given that I work in technology,” she said, adding that the documented issues with diversity in the technology industry are still important. “I’ve been in situations fairly often where I’m the only woman in
the room.” McCarthy said she thought the age disparity between herself and the other graduate board chairs was more consequential. “I think that what I find most daunting is that some of the grad board chairs were undergrads before the school even See GRAD BOARD page 3