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 · WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 122 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY RAINY
48 54
CROSS CAMPUS
FILM FESTIVAL ENVIRONMENT STARS ON SCREEN
SOCIAL MEDIA
CLIMATE CHANGE
CYCLING
@YALE TAKES TO TWITTER, FRIENDS FACEBOOK
Scientists predict global warming will have dire effects on public health
Yale club team finishes second in annual home race, behind MIT
PAGES 8-9 CULTURE
PAGE 3 NEWS
PAGE 5 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
PAGE 14 SPORTS
Occupy escapes eviction
End of an era? As the English Department’s longtime registrar, Ruben Roman gained a reputation for being kind and friendly. He moved to a new position in the University Registrar’s office in 2010 — a position that has since been eliminated, leaving Roman out of a job. To help Roman find a new job, Tae-Yeoun Keum ’08 has begun circulating a draft letter of recommendation for Roman and is inviting all students who want to help out to sign.
BY MADELINE MCMAHON STAFF REPORTER
Town-gown stars. On Tuesday,
President Richard Levin and New Haven Mayor John DeStefano presented the Yale University Seton Elm-Ivy Awards for improving towngown relations. Winners of the Seton Elm include Bruno Baggetta, Nan Bartow and Robert Smuts ’01. Winners of the Ivy Award for members of the Yale community include James Boyle ’94, Sarah Demers, Bonnie Fleming, Gordon Geballe ’81, Kurt Zilm and LaTisha Campbell ’12.
Sentenced. John Mazzuto
’70 — the former CEO of automotive chemical company Industrial Enterprises of America, Inc. and a Yale donor — was sentenced to between 1.5 and 4.5 years in prison Tuesday for his part in a $60 million stock fraud scheme, a portion of which was used to make a $1.7 million donation to the Yale baseball program in 2007.
In memoriam. Reed
Whittemore ’41, a former U.S. poet laureate and emeritus professor of English at the University of Maryland, died last week at his home in Kensington, Md. He was 92.
Panlist explosion. Another
incident of panlist spam occurred Tuesday, when an alum asked to be taken off the journalism_list panlist, starting a chain reaction of requests to be removed that went into the double digits. Even Mark Schoofs ’85, a senior editor at ProPublica who teaches the seminar “Journalism,” requested to be taken off the list.
Celebrating today. Mayor
John DeStefano Jr. and delegates from New Haven School Change, New Haven Promise, Solar Youth, New Haven Economic Development Corporation, New Haven Re-Entry Initiative, Shubert Theater, Arts and Ideas Festival and Market New Haven, among others, will visit the State Capitol in Hartford today for New Haven Day. Also in Hartford. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney will campaign in the state’s capitol today, a day after chief rival Rick Santorum suspended his campaign. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1962 Yale paleontologist Charles Reed receives a $35,000 grant to study life along the Nubian Nile.
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Genderneutral spreads
JENNIFER CHEUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Occupy New Haven won an injuction from a federal appeals court Tuesday shortly after the city began bulldozing the encampment.
MINUTES AFTER CITY SENDS BULLDOZERS TO GREEN, FEDERAL APPEALS COURT JUDGE ISSUES INJUNCTION BY NICK DEFIESTA AND BEN PRAWDZIK STAFF REPORTERS Less than 30 minutes after police began bulldozing the Occupy New Haven encampment on the New Haven Green, city officials were forced to halt the eviction when a federal appeals court issued an injunction allowing the protest to survive at least another week. City officials first started preparing to evict the protesters on Monday after federal judge Mark Kravitz issued a 26-page ruling on a lawsuit that Occupy lawyer Norm Pattis filed last month in hopes of preventing the protesters’ removal. Kravitz rejected Pattis’s argument that evicting the encampment would violate the protesters’ First Amendment rights and ruled that the city could lawfully remove its tents and other structures from the Green start-
ing at noon on Tuesday. In an effort that involved the police, fire and parks departments, the city began to disassemble the encampment immediately after noon on Tuesday, inciting a confrontation with protesters brandishing signs and makeshift shields and drawing a crowd of more than 100 onlookers. But shortly after the eviction began and police arrested two Occupy members, both city officials and protesters got word that Pattis had successfully received a week-long stay for the protest from the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York. “In the six months that the Occupy encampment has existed on the Green, the city has acted in a cooperative and supportive fashion in terms of free speech,” Mayor John DeStefano Jr. said at an afternoon press conference following the ruling’s announcement. “But
For the first time, every residential college will house students living in mixed-gender suites next year. In February, after working with the Yale College Council, administrators announced that genderneutral housing would be available to both the junior and senior classes beginning in the 2012-’13 school year. Though the option to live in a mixed-gender suite has been available to seniors for the past two years, six out of 12 residential colleges currently have mixed-gender suites. This year’s housing draws have yielded a significantly higher number of students in mixed-gender suites — Branford College alone will have more students in mixed-gender suites next fall than there were in all of Yale College this year.
this has become an obnoxious use on the Green by a few people. I don’t think it’s appropriate for a few to monopolize one of the central assets of the city — the people of New Haven deserve the New Haven Green back.” City officials — including New Haven Police department Chief Dean Esserman — gathered on the Green before the noon deadline, facing a group of around 30 protesters who chanted slogans like “Hell no, we won’t go!” and “What do you do when you’re under attack? Fight back!” According to DeStefano, the city was notified around 11 a.m. that Pattis had filed a request for an injunction with the New York appeals court, and shortly afterwards received a request from the lawyer to delay the eviction until the court made its decision. DeStefano declined to delay the eviction, and said that even as late as noon it appeared Pattis’ efforts for another stay were
“This is enough to justify that the policy is working,” said Joseph Yagoda ’14, chair of the YCC’s gender-neutral housing committee. Branford has just one mixedgender double this year, said Rachel Ruskin ’12, a member of the Branford housing committee, and it will have three junior suites and four senior suites living mixed-gender next fall. Ruskin said these mixed-gender suites will house 40 Branford students, greater than this year’s Yale Col-
SEE OCCUPY PAGE 6
SEE GNH PAGE 6
This is enough to justify that the policy is working. JOSEPH YAGODA ’14 Chair, YCC gender housing committee
Master’s stats House to vote on death penalty repeal under review BY ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTER After the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences reviewed its doctoral programs last year, a similar effort is underway to evaluate the school’s terminal master’s programs. By meeting with directors of graduate studies and compiling statistics on each program — such as data on applications, admissions rates, enrollments and degree completion rates — administrators hope to determine the reasons students enter these programs and how successful the programs are at meeting students’ needs, Assistant Dean of the Graduate School Carl Hashimoto said in a Tuesday email. The comprehensive review will consider issues such as how master’s programs award course credit, the job placement of graduates and funding arrangements master’s programs have with the Graduate School , administrators said. Administrators have been gathering data since the fall, and they are now in the process of visiting individual departments to discuss those programs, Associate Dean of the Graduate School Richard Sleight said in a Tuesday
email. As of Tuesday, administrators had met with seven of Yale’s master’s programs, and they will also seek feedback from a student survey, Hashimoto said. “The review involves taking a ‘snapshot’ of the programs by gathering data and then sharing and discussing the information with departments and programs,” Sleight said. “We began this study with no specific ‘action items’ in mind. We simply want to see where we are in master’s student training.” Not all of the Graduate School’s 22 terminal master’s programs — which students enter to earn only a master’s degree rather than the degree en route to a Ph.D. at Yale — have new students each year. The current review focuses on the 14 programs that are “active,” which includes programs that have a few students or as many as 30 entering in a given year, Hashimoto said. Sleight and Hashimoto declined to comment on the results thus far, as the review is still ongoing. They said they expect to finish collecting information by the end of this semester. SEE MASTERS PAGE 4
CHRISTOPHER PEAK/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
State Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney joined Mayor John DeStefano Jr. Tuesday in urging state representatives to approve a bill repealing the death penalty, which is now going to the House for a vote. BY CHRISTOPHER PEAK STAFF REPORTER Starting today, the repeal of Connecticut’s death penalty will be eligible for a vote in the state House of Represenatives, where a majority will ensure the punishment’s abolition. After more than 10 hours of
debate, the state Senate last Thursday approved a measure replacing the death penalty with life in prison without parole by a vote of 20 to 16. In hopes of pressuring state representatives in Hartford to approve the measure, city officials, including Mayor John DeStefano Jr. and New Haven
Police Department Chief Dean Esserman, held a press conference at City Hall Tuesday calling for repeal. Esserman said the repeal of capital punishment is “long overdue” in the state. “Discipline [that works] is SEE DEATH PENALTY PAGE 4