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Tuesday september 23, 2014 vol. cxxxviii no. 77
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ACADEMICS
Students petition to revive Sanskrit
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In Opinion Ryan Dukeman advocates for more apartmentstyle housing, and Azza Cohen endorses early concentration. PAGE 4
By Jasmine Wang staff writer
Today on Campus Noon: Urban archaeologist Daniel Schavelzone will give a lecture on management of cultural resources. 216 Aaron Burr Hall.
The Archives
Sept. 23, 1971 175 university students were officially registered as Princeton voters for the first time since 1927.
News & Notes Rutgers student death apparently linked to alcohol
the death of a Rutgers student early Sunday morning might be alcohol-related, according to a preliminary investigation, though the cause of death has yet to be determined. Caitlyn Kovacs, a sophomore at Rutgers, had gone to a small gathering at the school’s chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon in New Brunswick Saturday night. At approximately 3 a.m. on Sunday, Kovacs seemed to be “in distress,” so a few of her friends took her to the hospital. Kovacs was declared dead shortly after arriving at the hospital. Jeremy Rodriguez, Kovac’s friend, told CBS that he “sensed some sort of intoxication” when he spoke with Kovacs on the phone, but he thought she was going to be fine. Rutgers has made counseling services available to students. The death is currently under investigation by the New Brunswick and Rutgers police departments and by the prosecutor’s office. Delta Kappa Epsilon said in a statement that it would cooperate with the investigation.
Princeton welcomes first new police officers since consolidation
the town of Princeton formally welcomed its first new police officers since the consolidation of the Borough and Township in January 2013, according to Times of Trenton. Donald Stephen Mathews and Dashawn J. Cribb took official oaths on Monday night. They have been working for the law enforcement department since last month. Mathews, previously a police sergeant in Mansfield, holds a degree in criminal justice from Richard Stock-
BEN KOGER :: PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
The Art Museum was open late as graduate students from all departments gathered for “Cocktails and Curators.” U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U. hires outside law firm in mental health lawsuit By Chitra Marti staff writer
The University hired an important law firm last week to represent it in a mental health lawsuit in which a student was allegedly forced to withdraw following a suicide attempt. The student, who is unnamed in court filings, sued the University in March and is representing himself. The University is being represented by William F. Maderer, of the firm Saiber
LLC, and Ryan E. San George, federal court documents show. Maderer and San George will also be representing the seven individuals named as defendants in the case, including Vice President for Campus Life Cynthia Cherrey, Executive Director of University Health Services John Kolligian and University President Emerita Shirley Tilghman. Neither Maderer nor San George responded to requests for comment. Maderer has represented the University in the past, most notably in a case
in which University admission officials allegedly used applicants’ personal information to gain access to their admission decisions from Yale back in 2002. Then-Associate Dean and Director of Admission Stephen LeMenager used applicants’ names, birth dates and social security numbers from their Princeton admissions files in order to get into the Yale system and see the outcomes of their applications there. Although Tilghman maintained at See LAWYERS page 2
An online petition to reintroduce Sanskrit into the University curriculum has 240 student signatures as of Monday morning. The petition was started by Vidushi Sharma ’17 and began circulating on Sept. 18. Sanskrit, one of the 22 official languages of India, is the primary liturgical language of Hinduism. The University’s policy on Sanskrit has been more inconsistent than those at other Ivy League institutions. Brown offers an entire classics concentration in Sanskrit, including six courses offered on Sanskrit language and culture, while Harvard, Columbia, Cornell and the University of Pennsylvania all offer some sort of course sequence on Sanskrit. Both Harvard and Yale provide language tutorial programs or live-streamed classes from other institutions if there are no professors on campus to teach South Asian languages, including Tamil and Hindi. Classics professor Joshua Katz said it is a shame that the University overlooks this region of the world, considering India’s population is second in size only to China. Katz added that the failure to provide Sanskrit instruction is as grave a mistake as not offering Latin, writing about Sanskrit’s importance as “a major liturgical language,” as well as “a language with a massive literary tradition” and one that has “regularly acted as a major vehicle of cultural transmission.” Katz is also a trustee of The Daily Princetonian Publishing Company, the parent company of The Daily Princetonian, and a former ‘Prince’ faculty columnist. Eric Huntington, Cotsen postdoctoral fellow at the University’s Society of Fellows, also expressed his opinion in favor of Sanskrit, citing See LANGUAGE page 2
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
Forbes College hosts 5 Cambridge exchange students By Ray Mennin staff writer
Five students from St. John’s College at Cambridge University visited Forbes College for a week-long residential college exchange this past week and left Monday night. Visiting students were originally supposed to stay with the five residents of Forbes College who completed a similar exchange during spring break last year. Master of Forbes College Michael Hecht explained that since those students are now upperclassmen and have since left Forbes, the Cambridge students were instead housed by residential college advisers and resident graduate students in Forbes. The trip consisted of attending classes with each visi-
tor’s host student, touring the Princeton campus, spending time in the University’s eating clubs, visiting a Broadway show, spending a day in New York City and visiting the local farm Terhune Orchards. Katherine Reggler, a secondyear student at St. John’s College, was one of the students who visited Princeton this past week. She said that Princeton is much quieter than Cambridge, noting that the student population of Cambridge is more than double the size of Princeton, and the college is spread across the town rather than being concentrated in one location. “This means that there is always something going on in the town, and it has been strange to be at a university but not experience the constant bustle of my normal university
life,” she said. While the quiet nature of the Princeton campus might have stuck out to some, Forbes resident William Paulson ’17 of the United Kingdom remarked that only a few British universities have student bodies as heterogeneous as Princeton’s. “Although Oxford and Cambridge and a few other major universities in the U.K. such as [University College London] and [London School of Economics] attract applicants from the world over, very few others can boast an ethnic and cultural diversity as great as Princeton,” he said. Hecht explained that he finds the program exciting because Princeton’s residential college system is to some extent modeled on Cambridge See EXCHANGE page 3
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
COURTESY OF MICHAEL HECHT
Exchange students from the U.K. visited the University this past week.
LOCAL NEWS
PRINCO, Hall ’80 invest in media Town council discusses plans investment firm Thrive Capital to develop Witherspoon Street By Sheila Sissmit staff writer
The Princeton University Investment Company and Chair of the University’s Board of Trustees Kathryn Hall ’80 have both invested in Thrive Capital, a venture capital investment firm focused on media and Internet investments. Princo is the University department that manages $17.8 billion of the University’s $18.2 billion endowment.
In addition to her chairmanship, Hall is CEO of Hall Capital Partners, a hedge fund based in San Francisco that has over $29 billion in assets under management. She does not directly manage any part of the University’s endowment. Thrive Capital was founded by Josh Kushner, a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Business School, and was an early backer of the photo-sharing app Instagram. It is currently in the process of raising See THRIVE page 3
By Anna Windemuth staff writer
Town residents discussed concerns over preserving the historic and cultural charm of Witherspoon Street while considering the implications of current zoning regulations during a public meeting on Monday night. Although Witherspoon Street spans only about a mile in length, it includes eight different zoning areas. Since the Township and Borough of Princeton consolidated in 2013, representatives
felt that a unified discussion on the future of this major throughway would be a welcome form of proactive planning, town council members said. “This is a street that impacts almost everybody in the community,” Princeton Mayor Liz Lempert said when initiating the discussion. Lempert said that if the community decides that current zoning is not in line with the town’s common vision for the neighborhood, steps may be taken to enlist a consultant and consider isSee ZONING page 3