5 CULTURE
9 OPINION
Healing After Gay Conversion Therapy
NYU Has an Abu Dhabi Problem
7 ARTS
10 SPORTS
‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ Wrecks the Mold Again
Why the College Football Playoffs Need Change
VOLUME LI | ISSUE XIV
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2018
$114M of NYU’s Gifts From Donors in China, UAE By VICTOR PORCELLI Deputy News Editor
Donations from China and the UAE to NYU totaled $114 million from 2012 to 2018.
The Foreign Gifts and Contracts Report, released earlier this year by the De-
partment of Education and publicized recently by university activists on social media, revealed that NYU receives more in foreign donations than comparable universities also listed. With almost 50
percent of the $261 million total coming from the United Arab Emirates, China and Hong Kong, NYU’s global campuses may be the difference-makers. The DOE report enumerates data from
2012 to 2018 and includes gifts of $250,000 or greater from a foreign source as well as contracts or gifts from institutions owned or controlled by a foreign source. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Norway $3,483,673 England $21,013,971
Denmark $2,916,628
Sweden $3,536,247 Lithuania $2,000,000
The Netherlands $3,268,548 Canada $4,859,341
France $8,052,177 Bermuda $1,225,000 British Virign Islands $2,600,000 British West Indies $1,600,000
Russia $5,075,000
Germany $4,057,792 Austria $1,309,070
Spain $1,268,009
Italy $2,878,798
Monaco $1,058,000
South Korea $3,223,376
Turkey $2,150,283
China $36,168,054
Czech Republic $1,291,876
Switzerland $28,938,360
Hong Kong $9,875,000 UAE $78,112,590
Japan $3,075,369 Taiwan $5,800,000
India $2,516,665 Brazil $5,314,000
South Africa $3,266,171
Indicates gifts totaling under $1,000,000
Australia $2,891,032
RACHEL BUIGAS-LOPEZ | WSN
Hamilton to Address Faculty Concerns About UAE By ALEX DOMB News Editor
MEGHNA MAHARISHI
Deputy News Editor
When students leave NYU to visit home, the university usually grows quiet. But over this year’s Thanksgiving break, NYU found itself embroiled in controversy. Late last week, over 200 NYU professors signed an open letter demanding President Andrew Hamilton condemn the United Arab Emirates for sentencing a British doc-
toral student to life in prison after a hearing that was reportedly five minutes long with no lawyer present. He was pardoned early Monday morning after British diplomats and universities pressured the Emirati government. Within a day of his sentencing, Hamilton’s Chief of Staff Richard Baum responded to the faculty members, sending a copy of a statement made by the university’s public affairs office and promising that Hamilton would send a longer response after Thanksgiving break. Reflecting concerns about NYU Abu Dha-
bi that have been years in the making and raising questions about the commitment to academic freedom, Thursday’s letter has prompted impassioned responses from faculty and students alike. How the Letter Came Together In person and online, NYU faculty members have spoken about the Hedges case for weeks. For many, the case hit close to home. Hedges, a fellow academic, was jailed in one of the countries where NYU maintains a degree-granting campus. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
COURTESY OF AIZAZ ANSARI
The NYU Abu Dhabi campus. A group of 208 professors wants NYU to put pressure on the UAE government about a Durham University student’s life sentence.