December 14, 2018

Page 1

Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Friday December 14, 2018 vol. CXLII no. 119

Twitter: @princetonian Facebook: The Daily Princetonian YouTube: The Daily Princetonian Instagram: @dailyprincetonian

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com }

BEYOND THE BUBBLE

ON CAMPUS

COURTESY OF WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

COURTESY OF MPALA RESEARCH CENTRE

The Mpala Research Centre started hosting University undergraduates in 2005 and has been hosting students ever since.

In her lecture on Thursday, Davis described U.S. history as a “history of broken promises.”

U. researchers in Kenya Davis associates see land drama firsthand prison, capitalism By Sarah Warman Hirschfield, Asad Hussein, and Rebecca Han Associate News and Video Editor and Contributors

The Mpala Research Centre is a world of its own. Great research comes out of the center — its reserves boast a wealth of environmental, scientific, and human resources which researchers draw upon. The subjects of the study — livestock and land, mainly — are contentious political issues in Kenya as well. In early 2017, for instance, famed conservationist Kuki Gallmann, author of “I Dreamed of Africa,” was shot in the abdomen in Laikipia, where Mpala is located. Despite this,

the center will soon be celebrating its 25th anniversary, and Princeton students will continue to benefit from access to Mpala’s 48,000 acres of diverse ecosystems and wildlife. Mpala began hosting University undergraduates in the summer of 2005 and has hosted researchers since 1994, according to Mpala Wildlife Foundation trustee Laurel Harvey. “We have people from over 50 different countries that come and work at Mpala,” said Dino J. Martins, executive director of Mpala and lecturer in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB). Researchers come from the Americas, Europe, and Africa.

“It’s an incredible place where people get to connect with the wild in a way that’s unique, because they’re not only unraveling problems and solving them, but they’re actually also working with people to do the science and apply the science to improve their resource management, their protection of biodiversity, and enhance their livelihood,” said Daniel Rubenstein, a member of the Board of Trustees of Mpala Research Centre and director of the Program in Environmental Studies. “Courses in the field program touch on all of that.” Mpala promotes research that improves ecosystem funcSee KENYA page 3

STUDENT LIFE

By Oliver Effron Contributor

For radical activist Angela Davis, Ph.D., the criminal justice system and capitalism are one and the same. In a fiery lecture hosted by the Whig-Cliosophic Society, Davis — two-time Communist Party USA Vice-Presidential candidate and former FBI 10 Most Wanted fugitive — spoke about her activism around social equality and her experience in the California criminal justice system. Thursday’s talk represented the third occasion in as many years in which Davis has spoken on campus. After a brief introduction

from Whig-Clio co-presidents Lena Hu ’19 and Justin Wittekind ’21, Davis took the stage to a standing ovation, remarking on the demographic make-up of the crowd. In the 1950’s, “a gathering such as this would have been impossible,” she said, “especially at Princeton University.” The election of Donald Trump in 2016, according to Davis, was “an unexpected low” for those who “wished for a better future.” “I don’t know a single event that created such a collective despondency,” she said. Still, she said the election was only one of many events fraught with racial injustice throughout See DAVIS page 2

ON CAMPUS

The Daily Princetonian elects Jean- Herzog-Arbeitman ’19 Jacques ’20 as next business manager mixes improv, physics

CLAIRE THORNTON :: PRINCETONIAN HEAD NEWS EDITOR

“She’s shown a lot of initiative,” said Gizzie ’19, the current business manager.

By Josephine de La Bruyere Contributor

On Wednesday, Taylor JeanJacques ’20 was elected business manager of The Daily Princetonian for the 143rd Managing Board. A psychology major from Greenwich, Conn., she will begin her tenure in February. “I’m very excited,” Jean-Jacques said. “It’s exciting to take on more and play a bigger role on the busi-

ness side of things.” Jean-Jacques joined the business team her first year, working with online advertising for the ‘Prince’ website, after which she served as head of operations for one year. In her new role as business manager, Jean-Jacques will be in charge of all the business operations of the ‘Prince.’ These duties include making sure that the paper is producing revenue and that the ‘Prince’ has enough financial backing to contin-

By Benjamin Ball Senior Writer

Jonah Herzog-Arbeitman ’19 very possibly won his Marshall Scholarship because his reviewers liked the fact that he can perform skits about the cosmos. On campus, Herzog-Arbeitman is known for his study of physics and his involvement in the improv comedy troupe Quipfire!. This year, he also threw poetry into his mix of passions, working on a creative thesis with professor Michael Dickman. On Thursday, along with associate professor of theater Brian Herrera, Herzog-Arbeitman gave a talk about his research passions as part of the Creative Intellect Series, sponsored by the Lewis Center for the Arts. He led his audience in a series of four interactive exercises: an improv skit in which he explained his thesis, a poetry reading, and two wordplay games. “Creativity is part of every intellectual practice. Every creative practice has an intellectual dimension,” Herrera said on Thursday. Each Creative Intellect Series talk serves as what Herrera called a “public facing work-demo,” the culminating exercise of a student’s independent work with him.

In Opinion

Today on Campus

Senior columnist Madeleine Marr discusses the effectiveness of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s social media campaign, while columnist Siyang Liu reminds students that the dorms don’t clean themselves. PAGE 4

8 p.m.: The New Jersey Symphony Orchestra presents Handel’s Messiah, directed by Patrick Dupré Quigley and featuring the Montclair State University singers Richardson Auditorium, Alexander Hall

Herzog-Arbeitman’s independent work with Herrera began last spring, after the first creative intellect conversation, which was with Tessa Albertson ’20. “He approached me,” Herrera recalled, “and said, ‘I’m trying to bridge my work in physics with my work in comedy and my work in poetry — and I haven’t found a space on campus. Could we do something together?” Together, Herrera and Herzog-Arbeitman selected books drawing from four particular fields: the history of comedy, the theories of comedy, tactics of popular science, and performance study and theory. Herzog-Arbeitman completed those readings during his spare time while studying physics in Germany — he and Herrera then turned their attention to the interplay between physics and performance studies. Then, midway through the fall semester, Herzog-Arbeitman started receiving invitations to participate as a finalist in what Herrera laughingly called “fancy British scholarships.” He discovered that the bridge between physics and improv greatly interested his interviewers. See IMPORV page 2

WEATHER

ue to produce a print copy every day. Jean-Jacques said that, in the coming year, there are “a lot of opportunities” and “new ways of making money.” She mentioned specifically looking beyond just advertising, such as focusing on sponsored content or special issues of the ‘Prince’ that a particular business or group of businesses could support. Sarah Hirschfield ’20, associate news editor and head video editor for the ‘Prince,’ expressed enthusiasm at the news of Jean-Jacques’s new elected position. “She’s good-hearted, and will undoubtedly be the best leader in this position,” Hirschfeld said. “She is consistent in her performance and a hard worker in every aspect of her life.” Jean-Jacques is preceded by current business manager Ryan Gizzie ’19. Gizzie praised Jean-Jacques’s work as head of operations and said he’s looking forward to her coming tenure as business manager. “She’s shown a lot of initiative and been a great part of our business team,” Gizzie said. “She’ll have some good ideas going forward.” Those ideas, according to Gizzie, also include furthering and continuing to modernize the online presence of the ‘Prince.’ “That’s something the ‘Prince’ has done really well, and that’s something she’ll continue to push the envelope on next year,” Gizzie said.

HIGH

50˚

LOW

43˚

Cloudy chance of rain:

20 percent


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.