October 9, 2017

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Monday October 9, 2017 vol. CXLI no. 82 STUDENT LIFE

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Honor Committee under USG review By Marcia Brown head news editor

COURTESY OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, OFFICE OF COMMUNICATIONS, NICK DONNOLI

Morrison Hall hosts the meetings of the Honor Committee.

Code is always welcomed.” However, Flanigan further explained his motive for establishing the committee by noting past difficulties in working with members of the Honor Committee. “One of the big problems I run into is the people who are on the

committee say that [my] proposed reform won’t work,” he explained, adding that members then argue that the confidentiality of individual cases prevents them from explaining why the proposed reform would be ineffective. “I have found that route to be

Jones Act affects local co.

BEYOND THE BUBBLE

By Sarah Hirschfield, Talitha Wisner, and Jeff Zymeri

senior writer, contributor, and assistant news editor

In a Sept. 28 announcement, the Trump administration waived the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, also known as the Jones Act, a century-old shipping law that regulates coastwise trade between U.S. ports, for a 10-day period. The move, which the administration has claimed will ease hurricane aid shipments to storm-battered Puerto Rico, has drawn criticism from the maritime industry, which will face greater competition from foreign ships if the act is permanently repealed. By contrast, many Puerto Rican politicians

are calling for complete elimination of the act in order to lower costs during the recovery process. Though geographically removed from Puerto Rico, Princeton is nevertheless directly affected by the Trump administration’s position regarding the Jones Act. Anthony Chiarello, president and CEO of Tote Inc., a Princeton-based maritime company and one of the four Jones Act shippers to Puerto Rico, explained that under the Jones Act freight traveling between U.S. ports must be moved on a vessel owned by a U.S. citizen; must be manned by a U.S. crew; and must be built in U.S. shipyards by U.S.

ON CAMPUS

senior writer

“The future of the Hispanic community is on you,” journalist Jorge Ramos told students at the beginning of his talk, “Nuestro Futuro: A Conversation with Jorge Ramos,” this Friday. Ramos is the anchor of the Univision news program “Noticiero Univision,” the Univision political news program “Al Punto,” and the Fusion TV program “America with Jorge Ramos.” He has received eight Emmy awards and covered events ranging from the Salvadoran Civil War to the fall of the Berlin Wall. Addressing an audience that filled McCosh 50 lecture hall, Ramos urged students to use their education to increase Latino visibility. To make this point, he played a clip from the music video for the popular song “Despacito” by Puerto Rican singer Luis Fonsi and Puerto Rican rapper Daddy Yankee. Although the video has nearly 4 billion views on YouTube, making it the most-watched video in the site’s history, it was not nominated for an MTV Music Award. “So the most watched video was invisible for those who say what’s important and what’s not important, what’s influential and what’s not influential,” Ramos said.

In Opinion

Invisibility was a major topic in Ramos’s talk. Latinos compose about 20 percent of the United States population, or one in five people, he stated: Yet there are currently only four Latino U.S. Senators, for example. “Where are the other sixteen Senators?” Ramos asked. Ramos moved to the United States from Mexico in 1983 to study at UCLA. “This country gave me the opportunities that my country of origin simply couldn’t,” said Ramos, who worked for a Mexican television news outlet until the Mexican government censored him. “I got here and then suddenly, I was able to say whatever I wanted, complete freedom of expression,” he added. “Reporters were criticizing President Ronald Reagan, and nothing happened. They were not being censored.” “And then came Donald Trump,” Ramos continued, citing Trump’s speech announcing his candidacy for president, in which he referred to Mexican immigrants as racists and criminals. “If you’re an immigrant like me, you come here because you want to work,” Ramos said. “At the end, the reality, the numbers are there: ImSee RAMOS page 5

Contributing columnist Aisha Tahir makes a case for DACA on humane grounds, and columnist Liam O’Connor rebuts columnist Beni Snow’s arguments on lowering the drinking age. PAGE 4

ON CAMPUS

LINH NGUYEN :: CONTRIBUTOR

Christian protesters picketed on Prospect Avenue this weekend.

Christian group protests U. unveils on Prospect Avenue Lewis Center for the Arts complex ON CAMPUS

Jorge Ramos speaks about Latinx future By Audrey Spensley

workers. When asked whether a Jones Act waiver is doing any good for Puerto Rico, Chiarello expressed that he remains unconvinced. The administration and its supporters’ argument is that the waiving of the Jones Act would allow more foreign vessels to carry additional aid from the United States to Puerto Rico, but “that’s not the issue,” said Chiarello, adding that Tote and its competitors have more than enough capacity as is. “The issue isn’t getting the freight to the island,” said Chiarello. “The issue is getting from the terminal on the isSee JONES page 2

wholly unproductive,” Flanigan said of approaching the Honor Committee or its chair. “I just get the circle,” U-Councilor Diego Negrón-Reichard ’18 said, explained that he has experienced similar pushback. Negrón-Reichard is one of the members Flanigan se-

By Linh Nguyen contributor

By Shriya Sekhsaria news editor emerita

The University celebrated the opening of the new Lewis Arts complex with a dedication ceremony on Friday morning. “The Lewis Center for the Arts sprang from the conviction that the arts enrich our lives, strengthen our connections with one another and the world around us, and engage our imaginations,” President Christopher Eisgruber ‘83 said. Eisgruber added that the path towards the complex began more than a decade ago with the vision of former University President Shirley Tilghman to “seamlessly integrate the creative and performing arts into an undergraduate liberal arts education that is second to none.” The 145,000-square-foot complex designed by Steven Holl Architects is situated near Alexander Street and University Place. It was made possible in part by a $101 See LEWIS page 3

One of the remarkable things about life surrounding Prospect Avenue is its consistency: every weekend, hordes of intoxicated University students can be seen stumbling out of eating clubs on their way to Frist Campus Center for a late meal. However, this past weekend, the Street received unexpected visitors in the form of Christian protesters wielding megaphones and signs condemning evolution and sin. After midnight, in the early hours of Sunday, Oct. 8, five men unaffiliated with the University set up outside of Ivy Club to recognize Sin Awareness Day. They brought several signs with them, some reading “Evolution is a lie” and “Atheism is a temporary condition.” Throughout the night, vehicles from both Public Safety and Princeton Police appeared on the scene. According to upperclassmen, this was not the first time that Christian groups have visited the University. “They come at least twice a year,” Brandon Ward ‘20 said. “I just always ignore them, anyway.” After setting up for the gathering, one man stood on a small platform and shouted at students passing by using a loudspeaker. “We’re not against science, but

Today on Campus 7 p.m.: Civil liberties activist Timothy Edgar describes how he tried to make a difference by going inside America’s growing surveillance state as an intelligence official in his new book, Beyond Snowden. Sherrerd 101

we want good science,” the leader announced to a group of self-proclaimed STEM majors. “And science is man reading God’s thoughts, discovering God’s creation.” Individual members of the group approached passing students to question their “preparation for Judgement Day,” as well as to discuss God’s omniscience. The protesters left most students unimpressed: some instead questioned the gathering’s very presence at the center of the University’s party scene. “I don’t think it’s fair that they’re out here on a Saturday night when there are obviously kids looking to party and have a good time,” Kelton Chastulik ‘21 said. To some students, however, the group was not just flawed in their approach, but also in their efficacy due to their choice of crowd. “I respect that they have an opinion on campus, but they’re preaching to the wrong audience,” Marisela Neff ‘20 said. Most of the students who encountered the group appeared to share this sentiment, with many laughing at and insulting the creationist group. One individual even stopped to ask a protester, “Can you guys turn water into wine?” The group declined to comment for this article.

WEATHER

Invoking Section 704 Subsection C Clause 2, Academics Chair Patrick Flanigan ‘18 has established a subcommittee on the Honor Constitution. In a question and answer session during Undergraduate Student Government’s Oct. 8 meeting, Flanigan explained that the proposal for the committee had been made public as of the USG meeting notes released Sunday around 3 p.m. U-Councilor Ethan Marcus ’18 asked Flanigan if the Honor Committee Chair Carolyn Liziewski had been approached prior to this committee’s establishment. Flanigan replied in the negative. The subcommittee’s ultimate goal is to put a referendum on the ballot in time for elections in December. A referendum on any reform of the Honor Constitution would require three quarters of the student body and a 33 percent turnout rate. “This is very much a democratic process with experts, students, faculty, and administrators involved,” Flanigan said. Although she is not aware of the specifics of the new committee, Liziewski wrote in an email that “a conversation around the Honor

lected for the subcommittee. “The issue with the Honor Committee is that we’ve seen agenda setting and push back on any reform,” said Negrón-Reichard. “Patrick is doing this kind of amazing thing – tackling something we all agree is an issue.” For the subcommittee, Flanigan selected three U-Councilors, the president of a class, and several students with experience on the Honor Committee or the Committee on Discipline, the latter of which will not be affected by this subcommittee. Flanigan’s selections, confirmed with 15 positive votes and two abstentions, include Negrón-Reichard, U-Council Chair and Honor Committee Selection Committee member Pooja Patel ’18, Honor Committee member and junior class president Chris Umanzor ’19, member of the Committee on Discipline Mary Claire Bartlett ’18, and former member of the Honor Committee Micah Herskind ’19. According to USG senate precedent, new committees and subcommittees can meet before all of the members are formally confirmed, though they cannot take any official action until confirmation. “I wanted people who worked with the process and were experts and who represented the student See USG page 3

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