Yale Daily News

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T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, JANUARY 13, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 70 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SNOW SNOW

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THE SPY WORLD YALE’S TIES TO CIA RUN LONG, DEEP

ARCHITECTURE

SECTIONS

M. HOCKEY

Dubai trip for student design competition suddenly cancelled

ECON. DEPT. LEADS PUSH TO ONLINE SELECTION SYSTEM

Elis head to North Country one week after losing national ranking

PAGE B3 WEEKEND

PAGE 5 CULTURE

PAGE 7 NEWS

PAGE 14 SPORTS

Reno introduced as head coach

CROSS CAMPUS A Case of the Mondays. Today

is Friday on the calendar but Monday in practice. Campus is operating on a Monday schedule, so you have to wake up before noon. Or you don’t, because it’s still shopping period.

BY CHARLES CONDRO AND JIMIN HE STAFF REPORTERS

So productive! The YCC

launched a self-promotional website on Thursday that publicizes the group’s innumerable accomplishments by asking the age-old question, “What has the YCC done this year?” The website is modeled off a similar site called “What the heck has Obama done so far?” that was created to quiet down President Barack Obama’s haters. Haters, back off!

Har har har. Two other new

websites — one called “Yet Another Yale Textbook Website,” the other, “Yet Another Yale Bluebook Website,” sprung up early this morning.

Prof. John Lewis Gaddis

appeared on Charlie Rose on Wednesday night to promote his biography of the American statesman George Kennan, which was published in November to acclaim. Cut it out. A wave of vandalism

has hit Swing Space, according to an email sent to Swing residents by its resident fellows. The incidents involved graffiti on the windows, computers and tables of the second-floor computer lab in addition to more graffiti on the central staircase. One resident fellow said the graffiti consisted of “offensive phrases and words.”

Changes at Higher One.

The Yale-born startup that has been providing financial support services for colleges for over a decade announced on Thursday that Mark Volchek ’00 GRD ’00, its co-founder and chief financial officer, will take over as chief executive officer. Volchek will take over for Dean Hatton, who will retire on or before June 30.

VIVIENNE ZHANG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Tony Reno addresses press after being introduced as the 34th head coach of Yale football team.

Admin. growth raises concerns BY GAVAN GIDEON STAFF REPORTER Administrative appointments often fuel a long-standing concern among some professors that unnecessary bureaucratic positions drain resources from the University. Following the recent appointment of Kimberly Goff-Crews ’83 LAW ’86 as University secretary and vice president for student life, most faculty interviewed said they recognized the need for the new role. Though several faculty said administrative growth, both at Yale and across the country, is shifting decision-making authority

Keep it clean. Yale had the

second smallest amount of waste generated per person at its home football games, according to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Game Day Challenge. Yalies produced less waste than revelers at Harvard, Brown and UMassAmherst, but lost to Southern Connecticut State.

#perfectday. A mysterious do-gooder blasted Vanessa Carlton’s “A Thousand Miles” through Old Campus around 3 p.m. on Thursday, improving the mood in the area 1000fold. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1957 Yale officials announce a $200 hike in tuition, bringing the total yearly tuition to $2,000. The announcement marks the third jump in tuition in five years. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

BY MADELINE MCMAHON AND TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTERS

away from faculty members, administrators said an increase in the number of University staff over the past decade was justified by new initiatives and has not outpaced growth of the faculty body. A report presented to the Yale Corporation last year, the University’s highest governing body, shows that the number of University staff, measured in full-time equivalents, has increased by about 27 percent during the past 10 years. During the same period the total number of faculty has grown by 34 percent, but the number of associate, SEE ADMIN GROWTH PAGE 8

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Soon after Kimberly Goff-Crews ’83 LAW ’86 returned to campus last year as part of the committee reviewing Yale’s sexual culture, administrators said they knew they wanted to give her a job. But first, they had to create one. “It was more thinking ‘Well, if we brought her back, how would we structure a position?’ ” University President Richard Levin said of administrators’ hopes to bring GoffCrews back to Yale after more than a decade working as a student life administrator at Lesley University, Wellesley College and the University of Chicago. Goff-Crews had temporarily returned to Yale last April to serve on Yale’s Advisory Committee on Campus Climate, which was appointed shortly after a Title IX complaint was filed against the University. Even though Levin said he had been thinking about recruiting Goff-Crews since last spring, he did not approach her with an offer until after the committee released its report, he said, because he did not want to affect the outcome. But soon after the report came out on Nov. 10, Levin said he gave her a phone call. Administrators thought that Goff-Crews’ current role at Chicago as vice president for campus life would translate well to Yale’s structure, Levin said, and together, they designed a new role: vice president for student life. But to help provide incentive, Levin

Science campuses spread BY DANIEL BETHENCOURT AND TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTERS New York City Mayor Michael B l o o m b e r g ’s announcement in December that Cornell University would build an engineering campus on the city’s Roosevelt Island not only mirrors Yale’s acquisition of West Campus in 2007 — it marks the growing recognition that universities require large amounts of space for innovative science research. The construction of new science campuses may soon become more common at universities since it has been shown to bolster faculty recruiting and spur local economic growth, University President Richard Levin said. While both Cornell and Yale officials said they hope their science campuses will generate local technology “hubs,” University administra-

tors added they do not expect Cornell’s new campus to significantly affect Yale’s own recruiting. “We want to create a real hub of scientific activity around New Haven,” Levin said. “A lot of the new companies that have been formed in this region have been science-based companies that have come out of Yale.” Cornell’s new campus, which will be financed by New York City, Cornell and Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, will cost over $2 billion to build, according to the New York Times. In contrast, Yale purchased 136 acres from Bayer Pharmaceuticals in 2007 for $107 million to form West Campus — a deal that Levin has called the “deal of the century.” Several other universities have added science campuses in recent years, such as the University of Michigan, which bought a former pharmaceuti-

SEE RENO PAGE 13

A return for Goff-Crews

GRAPH FACULTY AND STAFF SIZE

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Last November, Tony Reno stood on one side of the Yale Bowl, watching his Harvard squad cruise to a 45–7 victory over the the school where he spent six seasons as an assistant coach. Less than two months later, Reno stood on the other side of the Bowl, overlooking the site of his last victory, and prepared for a long-awaited homecoming. After a 23-day-long search by the University, Reno was officially introduced Thursday afternoon as the 34th head coach of the Yale football team. He will succeed former gridiron leader Tom Williams, who announced his resignation on Dec. 21,

amid accusations that he had overstated his history as a Rhodes Scholarship candidate. Reno faces two critical challenges that Williams was unable to meet during his time at Yale: winning the Ivy League title and beating Harvard in The Game. “I’m the right man for the job,” Reno said in a press conference at the Bowl yesterday afternoon. “I understand the challenge of coaching at Yale and coaching in the Ivy League. I understand everything that makes Yale great, and I embrace it and want to build upon that tradition, that winning attitude and that success.” Immediately after Williams’ resignation, the University formed two

cal campus in Ann Arbor, Mich. in 2008, Levin said. Harvard had planned to construct a scientific campus in neighboring Allston, Mass. before the economic recession struck in 2008, he added. Science buildings become obsolete more quickly than conventional buildings, Levin said, and researchers need large amounts of space. “Scientists work with big research groups at first rates institutions, so you need a lot of space to do first class science,” Levin said. Plans for the Cornell campus began when Bloomberg announced a bidding competition between universities for a land grant institution dedicated to engineering and technology. Stanford University was also considered a frontrunner until Cornell received a $350 SEE CORNELL PAGE 10

said the administration felt they needed to make the appointment a “growth experience” and offered the title of University secretary. “We thought it desirable, especially in the wake of the Title IX claims to have better University-wide coordination in student affairs and student activities,” he said, adding that hiring Goff-Crews “seemed a good opportunity to combine those functions: student affairs and secretary.” Within six weeks, Goff-Crews accepted the position. “It is Yale, it is my home institution, I love what it stands for, and what it’s been able to do for students,” Goff-Crews said. “The opportunity to come back was one that I really cherished.” In addition to graduating from Yale College and Yale Law School, GoffCrews also served as assistant dean and director of the Afro-American Cultural Center from 1992-’98, all of which made her an attractive candidate, Levin said. The details of her job remain to be determined, but both Yale and University of Chicago officials said they believe Goff-Crews’s commitment to working personally with others throughout the University will be of major benefit to student life on campus.

COLLABORATIVE STRATEGY

As vice president for campus life at the University of Chicago, GoffCrews created a reputation for relentlessly seeking student opinion, SEE GOFF-CREWS PAGE 10

Crash inquiry continues BY JAMES LU STAFF REPORTER Nearly two months after the fatal Nov. 19 U-Haul incident at the Harvard-Yale tailgate outside the Yale Bowl, police have yet to complete their forensics investigation. It is not usual for crash investigations to take months to complete, said three personal injury lawyers who handle cases involving truck accidents, and in cases like this one — in which a U-Haul driven by Brendan Ross ’13 ran over three people, killing 30-year old Nancy Barry of Salem, Mass. — media scrutiny encourages police investigators

to be more cautious than usual. New Haven Police Department spokesman David Hartman added that the department’s forensics unit had begun several other concurrent investigations into separate incidents in December, slowing existing investigations. “It is not at all uncommon for the investigation to be going on two months after an accident,” said Eric Hageman, a Minneapolis-based personal injury lawyer who has represented clients involved in truck accidents. “Media scrutiny can certainly play a role in SEE TAILGATE PAGE 8


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