April 9, 2018

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Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Monday April 9, 2018 vol. CXLII no. 38

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STUDENT LIFE

SARAH HIRSCHFIELD :: PRINCETONIAN NEWS AND FILM EDITOR

COURTESY OF PELUMI ODIMAYO

Moses is an educator and activist who was involved in voter registration in Mississippi during the civil rights movement.

TigerLaunch team at the NYU Stern School of Business, where the New York regional was held.

SNCC activist Bob Moses U. students move to discusses US Constitution finals of TigerLaunch By Sarah Warman Hirschfield Associate News and Video Editor

Bob Moses started his talk yesterday by asking the audience to say the words of the Preamble of the U.S. Constitution with him. “I’m going to ask you to think about the Preamble, and whether you can own it,” Moses said. Moses is an educator and activist who was involved in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, voter registration in Mississippi during the Civil Rights Movement, and improving minority education. In 1982, he received a MacArthur Fellowship, which he used to create the Algebra Project, a mathematics literacy effort targeting low-income

students and students of color. Yesterday, he joined KeeangaYamahtta Taylor, assistant professor in the Department of African American Studies, to discuss the evolution of U.S. racial justice political organizing. Moses pointed out that the Preamble uses an active verb in the present tense: “Do ordain and establish.” “It says in effect that there is a class of constitutional people who own the Constitution,” he said. “Nowhere in the text does it tell you who the ‘we’ is.” To think the constitutional meaning is solely in the written text is ridiculous, according to Moses. “What does it mean to be a constitutional person in this country?” he asked the audi-

ence. “What does it mean to be a constitutional person?” Part of that answer can be found in Article Four, Section Two, Clause Three — the Fugitive Slave Clause, which required that slaves who fled to another state to be returned to the owner in the original state. That clause, explained Moses, identified another class: constitutional property, Africans. The clause outlined the obligation of the federal government to return “any constitutional property that decides to leave the constitutional person,” he said. “Right there in the Constitution, in the very beginning, is the basic conundrum of the country. Where are we now? What has happened in our conSee SNCC page 3

STUDENT LIFE

USG discusses Lawnparties, movie cosponsorship by clubs

By Jacob Gerrish Staff Writer

The Undergraduate Student Government discussed thesis pictures, “Yard Parties” funding, and student co-sponsorship of Garden Theater movies during its weekly meeting on Apr. 8. U-Councilor Diego NegrónReichard ’18 introduced an initiative to hold a photoshoot for seniors on Apr. 16 to celebrating the passing of thesis deadlines. Because the event would be backed by the 2018 Class Council, low-income students could acquire high-quality photos without incurring exorbitant costs from private photographers. “Something I noticed that the Financial Reform Team can bring about in the future is the idea of identifying cultural problems that might make people feel alienated,” NegrónReichard stated. University Student Life Committee Chair Tania Bore ’20 presented on the “Yard Parties” funding request of $2,500 by the leaders of campus co-ops. “Yard Parties” would serve as an alternative to House Parties for independent students and would introduce underclassmen to additional dining options. “It would be cool to see some-

thing like this in the Fall potentially, or maybe more around bicker at the turn of the semester, to really put it on display as people are making food choices for the next year,” Campus and Community Affairs Chair Caleb Visser ’20 said. The Senate passed the budget request. Movies Committee Chair Jona Mojados ’20 discussed how the Movies Committee has begun to show advertisements for student groups onscreen and to allow student groups to co-sponsor movie screenings this semester. However, Visser raised concerns about the screening of The Passion of the Christ that Princeton Faith and Action sponsored this past weekend. “[Showing certain movies] really marginalizes and damages our relationships with community members here,” Visser said. “For example - The Passion of the Christ - if you Google anti-Semitic movies, it’s the third movie to come up.” Other Senate members agreed about the necessity for clear and rigid guidelines in future student co-sponsorship movie applications. Academics Committee Chair Olivia Ott ’20 presented on the progress of the new academic calendar proposal. The faculty

will vote on the proposal on Apr. 23, and the 2020-21 academic year will be the earliest that the proposal will go into effect. “It is looking optimistic that it will be approved by the faculty,” Ott said. Negrón-Reichard further proposed that the Social Committee and the Chief Elections Manager organize a “Get Out The Vote” event in Frist on Apr. 16. Entitled “Project 50,” the voter registration drive would attempt to raise student participation in Spring USG elections from 15% to 50%. Social Committee Chair Liam Glass ’19 requested an additional $10,000 to cover production for the Lawnparties headliner. Total USG commitment to Lawnparties would then increase to $117,000. The Senate approved the proposal. The Senate also confirmed the following members: Jessica Lawlor ’21 and Anne Crowley ’21 to the University Student Life Committee; Lyubomir Hadjiyski ’21, Samantha Shapiro ’21, and Jocelyn Reckford ’20 to the Academics Committee; Marcus Jonas ’21 to the Communications Committee; Aditya Shah ’21 as U-Councilor; and Maris Fechter ’19 as Website Manager. The next USG meeting will take place on Apr. 15, 2018.

By Nick Shashkini and Benjamin Ball Staff Writers

An elite team of computer science majors from the University are taking their project to the finals of TigerLaunch, the nation’s largest studentrun entrepreneurship competition. “We all have our shared interests in the sense that we believe in the power and the use of technology to solve some of the problems in developing and developed countries,” said Felix Madutsa ’18. The co-founders of the BlockX team are Madutsa, Avthar Sewrathan ’18, and Richard Adjei ’18. The students have known and worked with one another on various projects since their freshman year, so the idea to collaborate on a business came naturally. “We’ve been partnering together since COS 126,” Computer Science — An Interdisciplinary Approach, said Sewrathan. “We’ve known each other

for such a long time that we knew we’d want to start a company together.” Their company’s mission is to help people reclaim their privacy and data on the internet. To achieve this, their program uses blockchain, a digital ledger in which transactions made in bitcoin or another cryptocurrency are recorded. Their particular blockchain-based naming and storage system is called Blockstack. “A lot of people talk about blockchain to take power from financial middlemen; we’re just trying to use blockchain to take power from information middlemen, the people who supply most information you consume,” Adjei said. He added that this goal is especially important in the cases of developing countries, where it can be difficult to obtain information that isn’t influenced by the government or another higher power. See LAUNCH page 2

STUDENT LIFE

U. students mobilize against proposal for nearby fracked gas compressor station

KATIE TAM :: PRINCETONIAN CONTRIBUTOR

Princeton was the last town to not have a grassroots movement mobilized against this station, according to Jack Aiello ’21.

By Katie Tam Contributor

A coalition of student groups headed by the Princeton Student Climate Initiative is mobilizing against the planned construction of a natural gas compressor station four and a half miles from the University. Compressor Station 206 would be along the existing Transco pipeline as part of the Northeast Supply Enhancement Project, and would be

in the between of the South Brunswick and Franklin Park residential areas, according to the Williams-Transco website. The compressor station will carry fracked gas from Pennsylvania through New Jersey for distribution to areas along the East Coast. Students at the University and members of the local community have collaborated in advocating against the compressor station. A local environmental organization called See COMPRESSOR page 4

In Opinion

Senior columnist Ryan Born offers several pedagogical suggestions to reform the standard lecture, while assistant opinion editor Samuel Aftel calls for more merciful, rehabilitative honor code penalties for minor offenses.

SEE PAGE 7 FOR CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Today on Campus Noon: Infidelities and Regrets: Confessions of a Translator Louis A. Simpson International Building / 144

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