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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · MONDAY, MARCH 19, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 105 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY SUNNY
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CROSS CAMPUS
M. HOCKEY CANTAB BLOWOUT ENDS ELI SEASON
POLITICS
ECUADOR
W. TENNIS
Labor cheers victories within city’s Democratic Party; new chair elected
AMBASSADOR VISITS NEW HAVEN, EAST HAVEN
Yale win streak ends as Elis come up short in upset bid at Miami
PAGE B3 SPORTS
PAGE 3 CITY
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PAGE B1 SPORTS
Spring debuts in New Haven
City fails to evict Occupy
Buy U a Flang. Rapper T-Pain is scheduled to perform at Yale with rapper BIG RyAT on April 24 — the Tuesday of Reading Week, the date Spring Fling is typically held — according to a concert listing on BIG RyAT’s website. T-Pain’s website does not list any information about a performance at Yale. Yale College Council Events Director Katie Donley ’13 declined to comment on whether T-Pain will be playing Spring Fling.
DISTRICT COURT JUDGE GRANTS PROTESTERS TWO-WEEK REPRIEVE BY JAMES LU AND DIANA LI STAFF REPORTERS While Yalies flocked out of New Haven for spring break, members of Occupy New Haven were determined to stay put on the Green. Last Wednesday, 15 minutes after a 12 p.m. deadline City Hall set for residents of the protest’s encampment to vacate the upper portion of the New Haven Green, federal Judge Janet Hall gave the protesters a two-week reprieve, ruling that they could remain until at least midnight March 28. A full hearing in the protesters’ suit to prevent the city from evicting them will take place that day before U.S. District Judge Mark Kravitz. Cooperation between City Hall and the Occupy protesters, which has been remarkably strong throughout the majority of the protesters’ five-month presence on the Green, began to deteriorate last month when
A silver jubilee. U.S. News
and World Report released its annual rankings of the nation’s best graduate schools on March 13. Yale Law School landed at the number one spot, marking 25 years of topping the law school rankings. The School of Management landed at number 10 in the business school rankings, while the School of Medicine ranked seventh for research.
Getting social. The Yale College Council debuted a new system for introducing freshmen to other freshmen Sunday night. “Freshman Lunch” allows interested students to sign up to grab a meal with a random student — Yale Lunch, but for freshmen. The frosh who meets the most people on the service by April 20 will get a $200 gift card to Miya’s. Homecoming. Paul Giamatti ’89 DRA ’94 will be on campus next spring to star as Hamlet at the Yale Repertory Theater. The play, which runs from March 15, 2013 to April 13, 2013, will be directed by James Bundy, dean of the School of Drama and the Rep’s artistic director, The New York Times reported Thursday. Occupy The Times. An article
published in The New York Times’ Dealbook section last week examined the trend of Ivy League students rejecting Wall Street’s aggressive recruiting techniques in the wake of heightened critical attention on the big firms. The article focuses on Cory Finley ’11, who applied to work at Bridgewater Associates but decided to become a playwright instead.
Under fire. Garry Trudeau’s ’70 GRD ’73 “Doonesbury” comics sparked a nationwide controversy last week over a series of strips tackling an abortion law in Texas. The strips focus on a woman’s attempt to have an abortion in Texas in the wake of a new law requiring all women seeking abortions to undergo a pretermination ultrasound. Going pro. Jaden Schwartz —
the brother of former women’s hockey player Mandi Schwartz ’11 — signed a three-year, entry-level contact with the National Hockey League’s St. Louis Blues on Monday. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1961 One senior — T. Craig Joyner ’61 — is killed and two juniors are injured in a car crash in North Carolina. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
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VICTOR KANG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
AS BREAK ENDS, SPRING WEATHER ARRIVES Temperatures climbed into the high 60s Sunday afternoon, greeting Yalies as they returned to campus from spring recess. Students reunited with friends as they flooded Cross Campus and Old Campus, taking advantage of the warm weather.
SEE OCCUPY PAGE 4
Faculty seek greater role at Grad School BY ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTER A group of professors has petitioned for a greater voice in decision-making at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in a proposal submitted to administrators during spring break.
The proposal, which was sent to University President Richard Levin and Provost Peter Salovey on March 6 with signatures from 15 professors, calls for a faculty advisory committee to counsel the Graduate School dean and his staff on a regular basis about potential policies and initia-
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Classmates honor life of Foucher LAW ’14 BY DANIEL SISGOREO STAFF REPORTER Nina Foucher LAW ’14, described by friends and family as gentle and thoughtful, died March 5 in New Haven in an apparent suicide. She was 25. Foucher attended the University of Chicago on a full academic scholarship before coming to Yale Law School. As an undergraduate majoring in Fundamentals, a selfstudy program at UChicago, she was a member of the academic honor society Phi Beta Kappa and studied in Africa and Europe. Her friends and family said they will remember her for her genuine interest in those around her and the caliber of her academic work. “Nina’s gentle spirit and radiant smile always brought me joy,” said Sonia Mittal LAW ’13, who was friends with Foucher. “She’s someone who thought deeply about her role as a future lawyer, and as a member of the Univer-
tives. Administrators have not yet met to discuss the proposal, but Graduate School Dean Thomas Pollard said he welcomed its suggestions, and Salovey said he looks forward to discussing ways to “ensure robust faculty input” into Graduate School policies. Pollard said in a Sunday
email that he formed an informal advisory committee two years ago, which includes three to four faculty members from each of the school’s three divisions: humanities, sciences and social sciences. The idea for the committee emerged when the search committee for a new dean, which Pollard chaired,
“felt that the dean needed much better communications with the faculty,” Pollard said. Pollard said he met with the informal advisory committee — which comprises former members of the search committee — most months for the first SEE GRAD. SCHOOL PAGE 6
Term bill, financial aid budget to increase BY ANDREW GIAMBRONE STAFF REPORTER The total cost of attending Yale and the University’s financial aid budget will both jump by roughly 5 percent in the 2012-’13 academic year, according to figures released last Tuesday. Tuition will rise from $40,500 to $42,300 in the coming year, while room and board
will cost $7,150 and $5,850, respectively — an increase in total cost of 4.9 percent to $55,300. At the same time, Yale’s undergraduate financial aid budget has increased to $120 million — 4.6 percent more than the $114.7 million the University allotted to undergraduate financial aid in 2011-’12, Deputy Provost Lloyd Suttle said. Dean of SEE TUITION PAGE 4
GRAPH TERM BILL INCREASES 2003-’13 60000
Tuition Room & Board
Friends remembered Nina Foucher as passionate about improving the legal profession. sity community and the New Haven community, and in that way she serves as an inspiration to me.” Sinéad Hunt LAW ’13, another of Foucher’s friends, said she remembers Foucher in part for her bravery. During the first meeting of their civil proSEE FOUCHER PAGE 6
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