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Friday February 18, 2022 vol. CXLVI no. 4
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Divest Princeton takes legal action against U.
The PROSPECT
U. AFFAIRS
Candace Do / The Daily Princetonian Students lead a chant during the Divest Princeton sit-in in front of Nassau Hall on Sept. 24. The goal of the sit-in was to call for urgent and complete divestment from the fossil fuel industry.
By Paige Cromley
Staff News Writer
On Wednesday, Feb. 16, Divest Princeton filed a legal complaint to the New Jersey Attorney General against Princeton University. On the same day, organizations at Yale, Stanford, and Vanderbilt Universities, as well as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology filed similar complaints in their respective states. The complaint alleges that the Princeton University Board of Trustees has violated New Jersey law by continuing to invest in fossil fuels. It claims that the Trustees have “failed to consider the charitable purposes of the institution and the purposes of the
institutional fund by financially supporting the degradation of the climate, widespread damage to ecological and human health, and massive injuries to environmental and social equity.” It also states that “continued investment in fossil fuels by the Trustees violates the fiduciary duties spelled out in the New Jersey Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act (NJUPMIFA) and in New Jersey common law.” The Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act (UPMIFA) is a uniform state law enacted in 49 states and identifies “factors that a charity must consider in making management and investment decisions.”
Divest Princeton was assisted in formulating the legal complaint by the Climate Defense Project. This group of lawyers also helped student organization Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard file a legal complaint to the Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey’s office in March 2021. Both Harvard and Cornell, the latter of which filed a complaint in 2019, used UPMIFA as the basis for their filings to their respective state Attorney Generals. UPMIFA requires that those who manage a charity’s investments make their investments with certain standards of loyalty and care. The complaint filed by Divest Princeton accuses the Trustees of violating these duties. See DIVEST page 2
Navigating doubts, hopes, hormone replacement therapy at Princeton Anonymous
Content Warning: The following essay contains mentions of transphobia. When the intake nurse at University Health Services (UHS) asked my reason for coming in, my heart raced. The person who checked me in that day had referred to me by my legal name — one which I had asked the University to stop using in reference to me at the end of the previous semester (pro tip: changing your name on TigerHub doesn’t change your name in the UHS system). I expected
the worst when I blurted out, “Oh, I just had some questions. Um, about gender-affirming care.” She smiled. “Ah, like a consult?” When I nodded in reply, she took the data and vitals regularly obtained by intake nurses: temperature, blood pressure, any regular medications I was on, etc. When she left the room, I exhaled shakily and held my forehead in my hands. As I waited to be seen by the next practitioner, I thought back through the journey which led me to that room. Around a year prior, I See THERAPY page 12
STUDENT LIFE
Five to a quad, shared bathrooms, movie nights: A glimpse into COVID-19 isolation housing By Janny Eng
News Contributor
On Friday Jan. 21, Ashley To ’22 tested positive for COVID-19 and was moved to the 1967 Hall isolation dorm. There, contrary to her expectations, she was met with three other roommates in a quad. By the time she left, a fifth student was isolating in their common room. To was one of 224 undergrad-
uates and 72 graduate students who were required to isolate in the weeks of Jan. 21 and Jan. 28, according to the University’s COVID-19 dashboard. COVID-19 risk status on campus is currently “Moderate to High,” which the University defines as a positivity rate between 0.11–0.5 percent. As of last week, the positivity rate was 0.32 percent. Not all students who test posi-
tive are sent to isolation dorms. From Jan. 22–28, 166 students were required to isolate, with half spending time in “designated isolation spaces” and the rest “isolating elsewhere on campus, such as in their dorm rooms or campus apartments,” Deputy University Spokesperson Michael Hotchkiss wrote in an email comment to The Daily Princetonian. In addition to COVID-19 isolation dorms, the University re-
serves several houses each year “for public health emergencies,” according to Hotchkiss. “The number of undergraduate and graduate students in isolation due to COVID-19 changes often, as new cases are identified and as students complete their isolation,” Hotchkiss wrote. Students who have tested positive for COVID-19 or have COVID19-like symptoms will be required to isolate for a minimum of five
days. Students who have their own sleeping space may be asked to isolate in their own room, otherwise they will be relocated to specially designated housing for the duration of their isolation. Kendall Jeong ’25 reported that she had to relocate and isolate in a room with three other people. “I thought I’d be in complete isolation, but I have to say that having a roommate has been reSee ISOLATION page 2
A look back on Street Week
T H I S W E E K I N F E AT U R E S | PAG E 1 1
Sophomore participation rate highest in a decade By Izzy Jacobson
Staff News Writer
‘Worthy of taking up space’: Jennifer Lee ’23 founds nonprofit to support Asian Americans with disabilities After Jennifer Lee ’23 was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease, she found that her Asian American identity often wasn’t addressed or represented within peer support communities for the disease. In July 2021, along with a coalition of disabled Asian Americans and nondisabled allies from around the country, Lee founded the Asian Americans with Disabilities Initiative (AADI), a nonprofit run by and for people like her who identify as both Asian American and disabled.
This Week on Campus
ACADEMICS
The release of eating club placements to all participating sophomores and juniors on Feb. 4 marked the close of a Street Week characterized by a unique hybrid format and some of the most competitive numbers of the last decade. Over 1070 sophomores engaged in this year’s Street
Week, according to a report from the Interclub Council (ICC). This number marks a 12 percent increase from 2021, and the highest participation rate in the past decade. For the fourth consecutive year, the ICC reported that 100 percent of sophomores who participated in Street Week were placed into a club. Eighty-three percent of sophomores were placed into their first or second choice clubs.
The ICC also disclosed that 71 percent of sophomores chose to bicker two selective clubs — a five percent decrease from last year. Of sophomores who bickered a selective club, 66.7 percent were admitted, as opposed to 72 percent in 2021. The Interclub Council’s data did not disclose the number of Bickerees for individual clubs. Those numSee STREET page 3
ARTS
| The Collective and Democratic Right of All Peoples to Freely Determine Their Political Status — Feb. 18, 10 a.m., Zoom
| Theater Intime Presents: A Doll’s House — Feb. 18, 19, 20 @ 8 p.m., Hamilton–Murray Theater
A discussion with Daniel Turp, Professor Emeritus at the
A Doll’s House is the story of how a woman finds her voice and takes agency over her own life. This reimagining of Ibsen’s classic play takes place in a literal doll’s house.
Faculty of Law at Université de Montréal, and President of the Research Institute on Self-Determination of Peoples and National Independence (IRAI).
SPORTS
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Women’s Basketball vs. Brown — Feb. 18, 7 p.m., Jadwin Gymnasium The Princeton women’s basketball team (9-0) takes on Brown (1-9).