Monday, April 29, 2013

Page 1

Special Photo Spread: Men’s Diving, p. 8 Founded 1876 daily since 1892 online since 1998

Monday april 29, 2013 vol. cxxxvii no. 53

WEATHER

{ www.dailyprincetonian.com } HIGH

LOW

59˚ 50˚

COMMUNIVERSITY

STUDENT LIFE

Honor Code policy changes

Cloudy. Few showers possible. chance of rain:

30 percent

Follow us on Twitter

By Alexander Jafari staff writer

@princetonian

In Opinion

Professor Anthony Grafton discusses the challenges facing the new University president. PAGE 4

On the Blog Becky Kreutter discusses no-pass/D/fail courses and the liberal arts education.

On the Blog Rachel Klebanov discusses Terrace act Miracles of Modern Science.

PRINCETON By the Numbers

40

Number of students left behind for the Class of 2016 Boat Cruise.

News & Notes

AURELIE THERAMANE :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

University students and town residents come together to celebrate at Communiversity on Sunday afternoon. STUDENT LIFE

STUDENT LIFE

40 freshmen unable to board cruise

Spirit of Princeton winners announced

By Patience Haggin news editor

A group of 40 students who had purchased tickets to attend the Class of 2016 boat cruise in Weehawken, N.J. on Friday evening was not able to board the cruise, as one of the buses carrying students arrived too late, according to information provided by the members of the Class of 2016 Class Council and reports by students who attended but did not board

the boat cruise. The buses carrying students had originally been scheduled to arrive at the dock in Weehawken at midnight to depart on a cruise hosted by Entertainment Cruises. While several buses did arrive late, the last bus of students arrived shortly before 12:45 a.m. and was not able to board the cruise. Members of Class Council, which organized the event, confirmed that the bus driver had gotten lost.

LAST LECTURES

4.29 news FOR LUC.indd 1

Gwen Lee ’16, a member of the Class Council, said she was in contact with the student captain throughout the night and said that the boat’s captain set 12:45 a.m. as the latest time that the boat could leave and held to his deadline even as the last bus of students arrived. “The deadline at 12:45 was very strict, and once they start pulling out, they said ‘we can’t pull back at all,’ ” Lee said. Priya Krishnan ’16, also a

member of Class Council, said the cruise staff said that returning to shore at 12:45 would mean canceling the cruise. “I talked to some of the staff on the boat, and I was like, ‘Is there any way we can turn it around?’ and they were like, ‘We can’t do that without ending the whole cruise,’” Krishnan said. Council member Molly Stoneman ’16 added that the Council members were See BOAT page 5

ACADEMICS

“Been there and done that”: practitioner professors

Slaughter ’80 writes op-ed urging Obama administration to act in Syria

wilson school professor Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80 urged the Obama administration to act on evidence that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons against civilians in an opinion piece published in the Washington Post on Friday. Slaughter cautioned the president to remember the “shameful” U.S. decision not to intervene in the Rwandan genocide. Alluding to a December diplomatic cable concluding that the Syrian government had likely used chemical weapons in an attack in the city of Homs before Christmas, Slaughter wrote that similar evidence has been repeatedly suppressed by the administration to avoid having to act on the president’s statement that the use of chemical weapons would constitute a “red line” for the United States. “But the White House must recognize that the game has already changed. U.S. credibility is on the line,” Slaughter wrote. “For all the temptation to hide behind the decision to invade Iraq based on faulty intelligence about weapons of mass destruction, Obama must realize the tremendous damage he will do to the United States and to his legacy if he fails to act. He should understand the deep and lasting damage done when the gap between words and deeds becomes too great to ignore, when those who wield power are exposed as not saying what they mean or meaning what they say.” Earlier this month, it was announced that Slaughter will leave the University to become the next president of the New America Foundation, a nonpartisan think tank based in Washington, D.C.

A USG referendum requiring the Honor Committee to change its standard penalty for students who write beyond the time limit during exams and to publish statistics about the number of students who appear before the Committee passed with 96 percent of those who participated in last week’s election voting in favor of the referendum. The referendum will change the penalty for writ-

ing over time during an exam to probation and may invoke a one-year suspension depending on the severity of the infraction. The committee will also release statistics of the number of cases heard and punishments instated every year. These statistics will be published in an aggregate giving total statistics for the past five years to protect the confidentiality of students’ cases. “I’m not really surprised with the outcome of the refSee REFERENDUM page 5

By Anna Mazarakis staff writer

SHANNON MCGUE :: SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Former Wilson School Dean Anne-Marie Slaughter ’80 delivers a lecture, entitled ‘Having a Life,’ on Friday evening in McCosh 50.

Joseph Amon is a visiting lecturer in public and international affairs at the Wilson School, teaching GHP 351/ WWS 381 epidemiology. He has taught the course every spring for the past three years and, though he does not have to do research while on campus, he has had the opportunity to advise senior theses. But when Amon isn’t teaching on Tuesdays and Thursdays, he has a whole different life. In addition to teaching, Amon serves as the director for the Health and Human Rights division at Human Rights Watch in New York, where he has worked on a variety of issues related to health and human rights, including the provision of access to medicines, human

rights abuses associated with infectious disease outbreaks and unproven cures for AIDS. Amon is just one of several professors on campus who have spent most of their lives outside academia. These professors, referred to as practitioners by several administrators interviewed for this article, are not expected to conduct research or publish, are not normally offered tenure and are often appointed only for short periods of time. The worry is that if they stay for too long, they will stop being practitioners, administrators said. But being a visiting lecturer also has certain benefits. For example, the Wilson School offers to pay for coach Amtrak train tickets to and from Washington, D.C., for practitioners who live there, according to its website. In See FACULTY page 2

By Daniel Johnson staff writer

Nine students have received the 2013 Spirit of Princeton Award, which recognizes positive contributions to the University community. Rafael Abrahams ’13, Ariceli Alfaro ’13, Farrah Bui ’14, Russell Dinkins ’13, Catherine Ettman ’13, Daniel Gastfriend ’13, Ruey Hu ’13, Carmina Mancenon ’14 and Nathan Mathabane ’13 were selected from a pool of applicants who were nominated by other members of the University community. Administered by the Office of the Dean of Undergraduate Students, the Spirit of Princeton Award has been given each year since 1995 to students who enhance the University though their contributions to student organizations, athletics, community service, religious life, residential life and the arts, according to the award website. Abrahams is a history major from Woodmere, N.Y. At Princeton, he was the Editor-in-Chief for the Nassau Weekly and wrote for Triangle Club. Abrahams is also pursuing a theater certificate and wrote an original play for his thesis, entitled “Eight Feet.” “I’m just happy the University recognizes creative and artistic activities as significant,” he said. “I think the school has a really strong community of writers that I am really happy to represent.” He has also been an assistant residential college adviser in Butler See AWARD page 3

ACADEMICS

East Asian Undergraduate Conference analyzes popular culture By Jean-Carlos Arenas staff writer

The first Princeton University East Asian Undergraduate Conference, abbreviated as EastCon, took place this weekend on April 26–27. The conference, which was held primarily in Lewis Library, featured 19 presenters and an assortment of events, including panels, workshop activities, an ice cream social and a keynote speech by the CEO of Next Entertainment World, Woo Taek Kim. The conference theme was “Beyond Gangnam Style: K-

Pop and the Rise of Asian Pop Music.” The event’s four panels — Exotic Economics and New Cultures, Technology and Digital Mediums, Transnationalism, and Gender — were conducted primarily by undergraduate students from universities nationwide who have conducted research on East Asian popular culture. Other panelists included a Ph.D. student from the University of Chicago and an undergraduate student from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. “It’s really satisfying to be among both scholars and

practitioners. That’s a very sophisticated model of what a conference should be like,” writing program professor Marion Wrenn, who spoke at EastCon, said. “Not just scholars talking about their research, but also having experts in the field who actually practice the production of culture talk about their work.” Attendance numbers at each event peaked at around 60–70 and at all times, at least 30 people were present, according to Swetha Doppalapudi ’16, one of the event’s organizers. See EASTCON page 3

DOLLY XU :: STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Jeannie Wagner talks about K-Pop influence on beauty ideals.

4/29/13 12:14 AM


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.