May 4, 2016

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Wednesday May 4, 2016 vol. cxl no. 59

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Aronson ’16, Fouquet ’16 to speak on Class Day By William Liu staff writer

Anna Aronson ’16 and Martina Fouquet ’16 have been chosen as the student speakers for Class Day 2016. This is the first time in the University history in which all three class day speakers are women. The speakers were chosen by a panel consisting of students, administrators and the undergraduate Class of 2016 Student Government. After speeches were submitted anonymously to the Class Day Committee, 12 finalists were chosen for a live audition. Of those 12, Aronson and Fouquet were chosen as the speakers who will present their narratives on stage alongside Jodi Picoult ’87. Their speeches, along with those by finalists Kujegi Camara ’16, Lovia Gyarkye ’16 and Neeta

Patel ’16, will be published in the Class Day program distributed at the event. “We have students speak because Class Day was started as a student initiative to give students a voice within the administration-planned commencement. We are interested in hearing how speakers will move a large and diverse audience of students, families, teachers and administrators,” said Azza Cohen ’16, a member of the Class Day Committee. Cohen is a columnist for the Daily Princetonian. The “theme” of Class Day is a reflection and celebration of our Princeton experience — but this can be manifested in so many different ways, she said. This year, the speakers were chosen for their wit and humor, but also their “moments of deeper reflection” about their See SPEAKER page 3

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

Policy to ban students from having cars at U. By Amber Park staff writer

Undergraduate students will not be permitted to have a vehicle on campus during the academic year, including on holidays and weekends, according to a new Undergraduate Student Parking Policy announced by Transportation & Parking Services. This new policy will be effective starting September 2016. Kim Jackson, director of Transportation & Parking Services, deferred comment to Daniel Day, assistant vice president of the Office of Communications. “The decision on student parking was made in the larger context of the University’s campus planning initiative to study and plan how best to use University space over the next decade. That effort includes reviewing

the ways people come to navigate the campus,” Day said. Day said that this new parking policy is a part of the University’s Transportation & Parking Services initiative to institute a range of sustainability options that also includes “reducing the number of single-occupancy vehicles on campus and shifting the campus culture to one that puts more emphasis on public transit, bicycling and other means of transportation.” According to Day, people ranging from TPS officials to undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and staff as well as representatives of the Undergraduate Student Government, the University Student Life Committee and Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students were involved in this decision. See CARS page 2

BEYOND THE BUBBLE

COURTESY OF HUFFINGTONPOST

Ted Cruz ’92 drops out of the presidential race By Jessica Li news editor

After three weeks of setbacks that culminated in a decisive defeat in the Indiana primaries, Texas Senator Ted Cruz ’92 announced the end of his presidential bid Tuesday evening. “From the beginning, I have said that I will continue on as long as there is a viable path to victory,” he told supporters at an event in Indiana, “Tonight, I am sorry to say, it appears that path has been closed.” Cruz’s withdrawal positions businessman Donald Trump as the possible Republican nominee. Trump garnered 1,053 delegates as of Tuesday night, just

shy of the 1,237 total delegates needed to gain the nomination, according to CNN. Paul Draper ’18, president of Princeton College Republicans and the director of the New Jersey chapter of Millennials for Cruz, said that it is extremely disappointing and disheartening to see the Senator walk away from the race. Draper is on the editorial board of the Daily Princetonian. “Tonight is a big hit to my political vision for the country,” Draper said, “Senator Cruz would’ve been a great nominee and President.” Draper further said that both Cruz’s and Trump’s campaigns had recognized Indiana as a stra-

ACADEMICS

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

Princeton Research Day to feature student work

CPUC discusses updates on cybersecurity

By Kristin Qian senior writer

will be her first time presenting via this format for this type of event. “I think it’s a really good way to basically demystify what can be complex – well not complex technical theses – and make it accessible to a range of fields,” Lin said. Lin said that when she talks to her friends about their research, particularly in STEM fields, they usually say that it is too complicated. However, she said that she is excited to see their posters at Princeton Research Day and see how they explain their projects to a non-technical audience. “I definitely want to see everyone’s posters. I have a lot of friends who are presenting as well, and they’re mostly in the STEM fields, so those are among the people who do poster sessions more regularly,” she said. Lawrence Liu ’16, a major in the Wilson School with certificates in Values and Public Life and East Asian Studies, explained that his project, titled “Constrained Legality: A Theory of Authoritarian Law in China,” is about a theory he has developed on the way that authoritarian states create their legal systems, using China as a case study. He said that Princeton Research Day is a great way to get everyone in the same room, which is important because it builds bridges between people that often might not talk to each other. Liu said both he and his thesis advisor thought it would be a good idea to get some experience See RESEARCH page 4

Flowers bloomed fully in the quiet Prospect Garden.

The first annual Princeton Research Day, a campus-wide celebration of student research, will be held on Thursday and features over 160 presenters who have been selected to give talks and show their independent creative and artistic works. This event differs from other type of undergraduate or graduate research poster session because the event aims to give students the opportunity to explain their research in everyday language, rather than in specialist, technical terms. Undergraduate students, graduate students and postdoctoral researchers from all disciplines will be presenting at the event, from Chemical and Biological Engineering, to Anthropology and Sociology. Director for the Office of Undergraduate Research Pascale Poussart, Dean of the Graduate School Sanjeev Kulkarni and Pablo Debenedetti, dean for research, were not available for comment at the time of publication. Victoria Lin ’16, an economics major, will be presenting her thesis research about maternity leave and its economic effects, entitled “Take It or Leave It: An Empirical Study of OECD Maternity Leave Policies and Female Labor Market Outcomes.” Lin said that poster sessions are not very common in many non-STEM fields including economics, so this

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Senior columnist Nick Wu evaluates the selection of Chvrches as the lawnparties main act, and guest contributors from the graduate school present their “Books-not-Bombs” endeavor. PAGE 6

12:20 p.m.: Daniel Sigman, Professor of Geosciences, will present a lecture titled “How Will the Deep Ocean Respond to Global Warming? Seeking Answers From the Ice Ages.”Guyot Hall 10.

PROSPECT GARDEN

ATAKAN BALTACI :: ASSOCIATE PHOTO EDITOR

tegically critical state. Senator Cruz had significantly drummed up campaigning efforts leading up to the primary, Draper said. He explained that there was more canvassing and fundraising in the past week than before. “There were indicative factors that [Indiana] was the ‘be all or end all’ [state],” Draper said. Draper, a former intern at Cruz’s congressional office, further described the Texas Senator as an outstanding public servant who truly embraces conservative principles. “[Cruz] was my introduction to politics, and I am extremely proud of his campaign in improving national discourse See CRUZ page 5

By Maya Wesby senior writer

University President Christopher Eisgruber ’83 opened Monday’s Council of the Princeton University Committee meeting with an agenda to provide developments on works from the CPUC Resource Committee, updates on stronger University cybersecurity and from the Freshman Scholars Institute with the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning. A brief Q&A session started the meeting, where U-Councilor Pooja Patel ’18 raised the question on why University fraternities and sororities do not have official access to resources from Sexual Harassment/Assault Advising, Resources and Education, noting that 15-20 percent of University students are involved in Greek life. Patel is a former staff writer for The Daily Princetonian. Vice President for Campus Life W. Rochelle Calhoun explained that “Rights, Rules, Responsibilities” notes that there cannot be a relationship between Greek life and University resources. She added that students are free to individually access SHARE as an University student. Economics and Humanistic See CPUC page 5

WEATHER

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

HIGH

54˚

LOW

46˚

Showers. chance of rain:

60 percent


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