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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 2016 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 100 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

CLOUDY CLOUDY

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CROSS CAMPUS

SKINNY GENES GENE LINKED TO MELANOMA

AN EMPTY HOUSE

ALUM-YNUS

Yale Drama Coalition diversity discussion attracts few attendees

YALE-NUS GRADS TO BE GIVEN AFFILIATE STATUS IN AYA

PAGES 10–11 SCI-TECH

PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY

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New website bolsters financial aid protests

The road to the nomination.

Over the weekend, voters cast ballots in the Super Saturday primaries. Among GOP candidates, Donald Trump took Kentucky and Louisiana, while Sen. Ted Cruz won in Kansas and Maine. On the Democratic side, Hillary Clinton LAW ’73 took Louisiana and Sen. Bernie Sanders secured Kansas and Nebraska. Michigan will have its Democratic primary today.

Happy berthday. Per ESPN’s

latest prediction, the Yale men’s basketball team is slated to enter the NCAA Tournament as a 12-seed, against Iowa State. The current prediction has the Elis traveling to Denver for the first round of March Madness, which begins on Thursday, March 17. The last time the Yale men earned a berth in the tourney, they lost to Wake Forest in Philadelphia, back in 1962. True heroin(e). Rep. Rosa

DeLauro visited New Haven yesterday evening to attend a screening of “Heroin: Cape Cod, USA” — an HBO documentary about the American opioid crisis, told through the personal stories of former addicts in New England. After the screening, which was held at the NHFPL, DeLauro led a discussion focusing on a potential bill that would provide $1 billion in funding for drug treatment.

Cleaving the system. The Yale

Political Union and the Black Students Association at Yale will jointly host Emory law professor Kathleen Cleaver for a talk about police brutality and flaws in the criminal justice system called “Police are not heroes.” Cleaver was the first communications secretary of the Black Panther party. She will speak at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Sudler Hall. Wallace in wonderland. The winners of the 2016 Wallace Prize in fiction and nonfiction were announced yesterday. First-prize winners in both categories were members of the class of 2019. Madeleine Lee ’19 won in fiction, and Rachel Calnek-Sugin ’19 took first place in nonfiction. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1991 University Police are authorized to hire 10 new officers to join their forces. The new hires will increase the YPD force to 66 and will allow the department to put more officers on nighttime patrols. Follow along for the News’ latest.

Twitter | @yaledailynews

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SheCode student group teaches Elm City girls fundamentals of coding PAGE 5 CITY

Coliseum hotel to be selected BY JIAHUI HU STAFF REPORTER

website also features more than 100 narratives from students illustrating the hardships that the student effort has imposed on their lives at Yale. Isadora Milanez ’18, an organizer for SUN, said the purpose of the project is to bring conversations about financial aid policy into the open and to pressure the administration to act.

After four years of renderings, pitches and site visits, real estate advisory firm LiveWorkLearnPlay has narrowed the list of hotel companies competing to put a new location in the Coliseum parking lot from nine to three. LWLP spearheads the project to transform the Coliseum parking lot at the intersection of Orange and George streets into a 5.5-acre, roughly $300 million complex with apartments, businesses and a four-and-ahalf-star hotel. The firm solicited nine letters of intent from hotel companies beginning in 2012, LWLP co-managing partner Max Reim said. As LWLP considered the strength of each company’s brand, international marketing and loyalty program, it eliminated six companies, he said. Reim, who is working under a May 15 deadline set by the city to determine a hotel partner, said he hopes to make an official announcement within the next 60 to 90 days. “The value of investment to develop the hotel is between $100 [million and] $140 million,” Reim said. “We don’t just want to slap in another hotel that you see all over the place. Once we make a decision, we are married to them for 10 to 30 years.” LWLP aims for the first phase of con-

SEE WEBSITE PAGE 8

SEE COLISEUM PAGE 6

In memoriam. Elizabeth

Garrett, the first female president of Cornell University, died of colon cancer Sunday night. Garrett, who was 52, was appointed to the post only eight months ago. During her short term, she led an effort to establish a college of business. Before heading the Cornell administration, Garrett was the first female provost of the University of Southern California from 2010 to 2014.

GIRL CODE

KAIFENG WU/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Student Financial Services is located at 246 Church St. BY JON VICTOR STAFF REPORTER A website went live Monday morning that calls for the total elimination of the student effort portion of financial aid — the latest push in a yearslong battle between students and the administration to level the playing field for low-income students at Yale.

The website, financialaidatyale. org, was created by undergraduate activist group Students Unite Now and presents a report criticizing Yale for its failure to eliminate the student effort — a yearly sum that students on financial aid must contribute to their educations — despite the challenges the expectation poses for students on financial aid and the size of the University’s swelling endowment. The

Plans stall for civilian board to oversee police BY NOAH DAPONTE-SMITH AND JAMES POST STAFF REPORTERS Two-and-a-half years after voters approved the creation of a civilian review board as part of New Haven’s once-adecade charter revisions, the board has yet to materialize. A provisional civilian review

board — which would oversee investigations into allegations of police misconduct — was established by an executive order from former Mayor John DeStefano Jr. in 2001. The provisional group ended its meetings in September 2014, after which Chief Administrative Officer Mike Carter suspended meetings of the provi-

Students demand private prison divestment BY FINNEGAN SCHICK STAFF REPORTER A fledgling group of Yale undergraduates is demanding that the University divest from for-profit prisons — the latest attempt by students to use the endowment as a tool for social justice. Founded last semester, Yale Students for Prison Divestment — a branch of the Yale Undergraduate Prison Project — wrote an open letter to the University administration and Yale Corporation over the weekend highlighting the injustices committed by private prisons and outlining the ways in which continued investment in the industry does not align with Yale’s ethical investment principles. The letter claims that private prison facilities have limited government oversight, are free to offer substandard living environments, and are especially susceptible to corruption. According to the YUPP website, the number of inmates in private prison facilities is nearly 130,000 nationally. The letter had over 289 signatures from undergraduates, graduate and professional students by press time Monday night. Although students who signed the letter said they

would be willing to take more direct action, such as protests or sit-ins, to push Yale to divest, the fate of YSPD remains murky as it follows in the footsteps of groups like Fossil Free Yale that have unsuccessfully demanded divestment. “We find the practice of investing in the private prison industry to be morally incompatible with Yale’s mission,” read the open letter. “We therefore demand … that the Yale Corporation immediately divest from the for-profit prison industry, publicly denounce the for-profit prison industry and affirmatively state that it will not invest in the for-profit prison industry in the future.” This is the second time since 2005 that students have exerted significant pressure on Yale to divest from for-profit prisons. In 2005, the Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility, a group of students, faculty and staff members which advises the Yale Corporation on investment decisions, made a public statement defending investments in the Corrections Corporation of America — a company that owns and manages private prisons and detention centers — because the ACIR said SEE DIVESTMENT PAGE 6

sional group in anticipation of the creation of a new, formally codified board. The Board of Alders held a public hearing in January 2015 to discuss what this new board would look like. Hundreds turned out to deliver testimony on the importance of creating a board backed by subpoena power and fully independent of the New Haven

Police Department. But more than a year out, progress on the board has come to a standstill. “The Board of Alders had promised that they were going to vote one way or the other on it and we haven’t heard anything,” said Norman Clement, a prominent member of the Act Now to Stop War and End Racism Coalition, which has orga-

nized many anti-brutality protests in the last two years. Carter said he has little involvement with the process of creating a new review board. Though he said he is unaware of any progress on this new board, he noted that Mayor Toni Harp’s committee on SEE REVIEW BOARD PAGE 8

Power outage strikes campus

FINNEGAN SCHICK/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Sterling Memorial Library was one of several central campus buildings that lost power Monday. BY FINNEGAN SCHICK STAFF REPORTER Yale’s central campus was hit with a power outage on Monday morning, shutting off lights and Internet access in academic and residential buildings for almost an hour. The outage began around 10:25 a.m. and affected campus buildings from Timothy

Dwight College to Sterling Memorial Library. Buildings on Science Hill, including the Arthur K. Watson Hall, were also affected. Evans Hall, which houses the School of Management on Whitney Avenue, was evacuated, and students gathered outdoors while alarms sounded inside. The outage shut off power in all 12 residential colleges,

as well as in the Yale Health building. Power returned around 11:20 a.m. According to a campuswide Yale Alert sent at 11 a.m., the power outage was the result of a failure at the University’s central power plant. A Yale Facilities employee on the FaciliSEE POWER OUTAGE PAGE 6


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