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Wednesday september 24, 2014 vol. cxxxviii no. 78
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In Opinion Shruthi Deivasigamani questions the ‘Prince’ decision to publish the names of students in articles regarding their arrests, and Zeena Mubarak suggests that the Class of 2017 class council create more affordable class gear. PAGE 4
Today on Campus 6 p.m.: Jack Dorsey, founder of Square and Twitter, and Deb Dugan, CEO of (RED), will give a lecture on entrepreneurship and giving back to the community, hosted by the Princeton Entrepreneurship Club. McCosh 50.
The Archives
Sept. 24, 1979 The Pittsburgh alumni clubs of Harvard, Yale and Princeton were not open to women, who could only enter as guests of male alumni of the three schools.
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News & Notes Town council votes to ban fracking
The Princeton town council passed an ordinance banning fracking throughout the town at a council meeting on Monday. The ordinance, which was passed by a vote of 5-1, makes Princeton the first town in Mercer County and the second town in New Jersey to ban fracking, which critics say causes significant damage to the environment. Councilman Patrick Simon cast the sole vote against the ordinance, saying that it gives the impression that the town’s current laws regarding fracking are not strong enough. According to Princeton’s current laws, it is illegal to manufacture and drill for oil and gas within the town, but companies could apply for an exception to conduct fracking operations. Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, makes use of water and chemicals being pumped into underground shale formations. The pumping fractures the rock and releases natural gas. A June 2012 U.S. Geological Survey identified up to 1.6 trillion cubic feet of gas in the South Newark basin. While fracking is not currently practiced in New Jersey, it is practiced in Pennsylvania. Mayor Liz Lempert said in July that allowing fracking could make the town vulnerable to drilling companies coming in and trying to access the available natural gas.
LOCAL NEWS
Professor offered deal in theft case
MASS INCARCERATION 101
By Chitra Marti staff writer
An operations research and financial engineering professor arrested for stealing lawn signs earlier this summer might have his charges dropped if he completes community service at Trenton Central High School, according to a deal proposed by the Princeton municipal prosecutor. John Mulvey, who is teaching ORF 311: Optimization under Uncertainty, ORF 435: Financial Risk Management and ORF 535: Financial Risk Management this semester, was charged with allegedly stealing 21 lawn signs that advertised Princeton Computer Repairs, Tutoring and Digital Services over the course of last year. Mulvey did not respond to a request for comment. Ted Horodynsky, owner of the company, alleged that Mulvey stole the signs in retaliation for a traffic incident in which Horodynsky may have cut off Mulvey near a stop sign. The signs were recovered and eventually returned to Horodynsky. Horodynsky previously provided police and prosecutors with self-made videotapes of Mulvey stealing the signs, which were used in his initial arrest. Mulvey briefly appeared in See PROFESSOR page 3
BEN KOGER :: PHOTO EDITOR
Students for Prison Education & Reform (SPEAR) hosted a dinner, called Mass Incarceration 101, to inform students about issues regarding mass incarceration in the United States. At this moment, 2.3 million people are incarcerated, according to SPEAR. U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
Witherspoon Institute, Madison program take partisan funds
By Jacob Donnelly staff writer
The Witherspoon Institute — a conservative think tank based in Princeton that has many ties to the University — and a University-sponsored program for undergraduate students received substantial funding from the Koch brothersbacked DonorsTrust and the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation in the year 2012, according to Internal Revenue Service records. The Institute’s ties to the University include
politics professor Robert George, who helped found the Institute in 2003 and who is currently a senior fellow there, as well as history professor Harold James and politics professor John Londregan, both of whom are also senior fellows. The Institute also has personnel ties to the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions, a University-sponsored forum for undergraduates to discuss constitutional studies and political thought under the directorship of George. The source of these funds is an example of
how partisan foundations may support friendly institutions within academia — an area that is widely regarded as non-partisan or liberal depending on who you ask — which can in turn help amplify these groups’ views. In 2007, when the Charles Koch Foundation considered donating millions of dollars to Florida State University’s economics department in 2007, it came with the conditions that the curriculum must align with Koch’s libertarian philosophy; that the Koch Foundation would have See GRANTS page 2
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U N I V E R S I T Y A F FA I R S
U. President urges support for expanded freshman class
Office of Commnications reviews works about U.
By Angela Wang associate news editor
PHILADELPHIA — University President Christo-
pher Eisgruber ’83 urged alumni to consider expanding the size of the incoming freshman class at an alumni event here on Tuesday eve-
UTSARGA SIKDER :: GUEST PHOTOGRAPHER
At a Philadelphia alumni event, University President Eisgruber ’83 discussed changes to the grade deflation and sexual assault policies.
ning. “I’m proud of all the students who we have, but I know we can do better and do more by taking more students,” he said. Eisgruber described a University education as a gift, asking “Can we give that gift to more students this year?” The idea of expanding the student body was first f loated at a meeting of the Council of the Princeton University community last September. The number of applications grows each year, he said, noting that with over 27,000 applicants per year, the University is turning away more than 92 percent of them. He called this a source of stress for applicants and added that the goal of increasing socioeconomic diversity could be addressed by accepting more qualified students on the whole. “One of the highest priorities for me going forward is to increase the socioeconomic diversity of our student body,” he said. This would include not only increasing the numSee PRESIDENT page 3
By Sharon Deng staff writer
When David Pupa wanted to write a fictional book whose main character attends the University, he was told that he would have to gain official approval before it could be published. In order to get the approval, Pupa submitted a rough draft of his manuscript and was granted preliminary approval two weeks later. He resubmitted the final draft of his book in May of this year. With few factual changes, the Office of Communications granted Pupa final approval and his debut thriller, “The Magician,” was published this July. The process started involuntarily when Pupa initially contacted the University in the summer of 2013 in order to request a tour of the campus. He said he hoped to gain a better understanding of the campus because a large portion of his book involves the University. “At a fairly young age [the lead character] was exposed to no love and a lot of problems,” Pupa explained. “He attends Princeton later on and when he attends Princ-
eton, it’s the first time that his mind is actually exposed to the brilliance.” This process highlights the little-known role that the Office of Communications plays in handling not only the image of the University in the media but also in the realm of literature. Not all books relating to Princeton have gone through an official approval process, though, and it remains unclear when the University may get involved in the pre-publication stages of a book and whether it has any censor powers after a text has been published. In April of this year, Danqi Shen ’11 published a book called Zi You De Lao Hu [Free Tigers] in mainland China. For the book, Shen compiled personal interviews and archival research she conducted about Princeton alumni. “No one at Princeton reached out to me saying that I couldn’t publish a book on Princeton, so I did it,” Shen said. “I’m not aware of any special process.” W. Barksdale Maynard ’88, a lecturer at the School of Architecture and a writer at See FICTION page 3
BEYOND THE BUBBLE
President of European Council advocates for coordination, solidarity in EU By Paul Phillips staff writer
Europe faces the dual challenge of remaining credible while ensuring its own stability, President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy said at a panel discussion Tuesday.
The panel, in addition to Van Rompuy, consisted of Renée Haferkamp, former director general of the European Commission; Peter Hall, a professor of European studies at Harvard; and Andrew Moravcsik, director of the European Union Program at the University. Van Rompuy advocated for
more coordination and solidarity between the various constituent members of the European Union while maintaining that each country is ultimately responsible for its own wellbeing. When asked if the European Union countries which are better off should make fiscal trans-
fers to weaker countries, Van Rompuy said that they should. However, he added that each country is responsible for the reformation of its own economy. He cited Germany as an example of these ideas, noting that while Germany had an unemployment rate equal to that
of France before the financial crisis, its employment rate is now about half that of France. He added that Germany and its politicians, such as Chancellor Angela Merkel, keep themselves well-informed of European politics as a whole. “Europe is still in the hearts See EUROPE page 3