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Spring Admission Program Expands After Successful First Year
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More Welcome, Less Weak
VOLUME LI | ISSUE 2
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2018
TONY WU | WSN
Free Med School Ignites Supporters, Skeptics Langone hopes the move will drive doctors to less lucrative positions, but critics question effectiveness. By ALEX DOMB and KRISTINA HAYHURST News Editors
It seemed an utterly uncharacteristic move from one of the most expensive universities in the United States, but NYU’s School of Medicine, the third-ranked medical school in the nation, recently made a surprise announcement that sent shockwaves throughout the world of higher education. Effective immediately,
no current or future students will need to pay tuition fees to attend the prestigious postgraduate program. “This decision recognizes a moral imperative that must be addressed, as institutions place an increasing debt burden on young people who aspire to become physicians,” Dean and CEO of NYU Medical School Robert Grossman said in a press release. Although tuition will be covered for all students, attending NYU Medical School
will not be free for all. Non-commuter students will still need to pay for costs of living, which, for those who choose to live in campus housing, average at $27,000 annually. But the elimination of tuition fees, which total at approximately $55,000, significantly changes the financial landscape of current students and potential applicants for years to come. Many journalists expect the move will lead to a surge in applications at Langone, a program that already touts a hyper-exclusive acceptance
rate of just six percent. The announcement, which elicited a raucous ovation from the incoming firstyear class, was the result of 11 years of intensive fundraising. Pitching the concept of free tuition to wealthy donors over the course of several years, NYU Langone raised $450 million of its intended $600 million dollars to fund the initiative. $100 million was contributed by Home Depot co-founder and Vice CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
A Guide to New York’s Midterm Elections By SARAH JACKSON News Editor If you’re registered to vote in New York, brace yourself for midterm election primaries, which will be in full swing in fewer than 10 days. The candidates in this year’s elections include everyone from a former NYU professor to New York’s first openly gay member of Congress, and the issues they champion — or oppose — range from free college to MTA changes. Ahead of the Sept. 13 primaries and Nov. 6 general elections, here’s a look at the politicians vying for your vote in federal and state elections.
Governor In the Democratic primary, incumbent Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo will run for a third term, facing off against activist and “Sex and the City” actress Cynthia Nixon, a proponent of education reform and universal rent control. Across the aisle is Republican nominee and Dutchess County executive Marc Molinaro, who has spoken about combating the opioid epidemic and reforming mass transit. Running as an independent under the banner of a new political party, the Serve America Movement, is former Syracuse mayor and former NYU Wagner visiting Professor
Stephanie Miner, who is running largely on an anti-corruption platform. Other gubernatorial candidates include former Erie County Executive Joel Giambra, who is also running as an independent, as well as Green Party co-founder Howie Hawkins and Libertarian businessman Larry Sharpe. Cuomo remains the one to beat in the Democratic primary, leading his closest competitor, Nixon, by an average of 33.5 points, based on polls conducted in July by the Siena College Research Institute and the Quinnipiac U niversity Poll. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
TONY WU | WSN
Candidates in the Democratic primary include Andrew Cuomo and Cynthia Nixon.