NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 2016 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 101 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLOUDY
65 51
CROSS CAMPUS
AFRICA SALON EVENT SHOWS OFF CONTINENT’S ART
THE FORCE
MOSQUIT-OH NO!
YPU debates whether police officers should be considered heroes
LAW SCHOOL PANEL DISCUSSES GOVT., ZIKA VIRUS
PAGES 12–13 CULTURE
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
PAGE 5 SCI-TECH
Campus renovations near completion
Thirty-four Tuesdays to go.
Voters in several states headed to the polls for primaries yesterday. Among GOP candidates, Sen. Ted Cruz won in Idaho, and Donald Trump took Michigan and Mississippi. In the two Democratic contests, Hillary Clinton LAW ’73 easily defeated Sen. Bernie Sanders in Mississippi, while her opponents clinched the Michigan win. Hawaii GOP results were not reported as of press time.
Letter to the leaders. In honor
of International Women’s Day yesterday, several prominent Hollywood stars and media personalities, including Meryl Streep DRA ’75, wrote an open letter to world leaders advocating for equality of the sexes. The letter called poverty a gendered issue and noted that 155 countries have laws that discriminate against women. Other signees included Sheryl Sandberg, Amy Poehler and Tina Fey.
Bridge to the Big Apple. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo floated the idea of constructing a bridge or underwater tunnel to cross the Long Island Sound and connect New York to Connecticut. Cuomo said he plans to ask for $5 million to formally explore the idea. Shortly after he was re-elected, Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy announced a $100 billion, 30-year transportation plan. Malloy’s plan does not include such a bridge or tunnel. I want you to STAY. Students and Alumni of Yale will host a tea with Drew Ruben ’11 LAW ’17 at 5 p.m. this evening at the Rose Alumni House. Ruben is a co-founder of Blue State Coffee, which pledges a share of all of its profits to local nonprofits chosen by customers. The shop now has eight locations in Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Faking it. New Haven resident
Dana Goldson, nephew of Board of Education member and former alder Darnell Goldson, was arrested Monday night after he escaped custody by pretending to be someone else. Even after he was caught, Dana Goldson initially refused to reveal his real name to New Haven police.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1970 The Yale Corporation appoints Abraham Goldstein LAW ’49 dean of the Law School. Goldstein, who had been at the law school for 14 years, taught criminal law prior to his appointment as dean.
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AYA class represenatives chosen for classes of 2018 and 2019 PAGE 5 UNIVERSITY
SOM alumni donations break record BY QI XU STAFF REPORTER
projects by their common mission of enhancing research and education. “The cranes dotting the Yale landscape are a visible reminder of how many [projects] are now in progress,” Polak wrote. “These sites … are as varied in architectural style and day-to-day use as they are united in a sense of purpose. Each is
While participation from alumni donors to Yale College hit a new low last year, gifts are on the rise at the School of Management. In fiscal year 2015, the total dollar amount raised for the SOM’s annual alumni fund skyrocketed from the previous year by 46.8 percent. The fund’s participation rate rose from 45.2 percent in 2014 to a record-breaking 51.5 percent, making the SOM the only school at Yale to have an alumni participation rate exceeding 50 percent over about the past 20 years. As the school gears up for more fundraising initiatives between now and the end of fiscal year 2016 in June, it has already seen positive signals: compared to this time last year, alumni participation in the fund is up by 0.5 percent, and dollar values increased by 15 percent. Joel Getz, SOM senior associate dean for development and alumni relations, said reasons for the upward trend include the expansion of outreach to international alumni, greater resources allocated for fundraising and excitement regarding the SOM’s recent developments, such as the school’s increasing global expansion. Getz, who has been in the position for eight years, said his team casts a wide net in soliciting donations and places emphasis on all gifts, even the smallest ones. Twenty-nine percent of alumni who had not donated in fiscal 2014 gave last year. “I am a firm believer that participation and
SEE RENOVATIONS PAGE 6
SEE DONATIONS PAGE 6
Chalk it up to student activism. Unite Against Sexual
Assault Yale, the Yale Women’s Center and the Black Women’s Coalition will jointly host a “Chalk-In Against Rape Culture” at Cross Campus at 11 a.m. today. Students are invited to chalk experiences or messages of solidarity to show support for survivors of sexual assault at Yale.
REPPIN’
YALE DAILY NEWS
The addition of new classrooms to Beinecke will allow it to expand its programming. BY FINNEGAN SCHICK STAFF REPORTER Five major campus building projects are all set to finish by the fall semester, but the projects differ widely in scope and purpose — from wholesale spatial transformations to small internal changes. University Provost Benjamin Polak detailed each of the five building projects in his annual construc-
tion update email to the Yale community last week. The projects, which span the sciences, arts and humanities, include the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the Yale Center for British Art, the School of Music’s Hendrie Hall, the Sterling Chemistry Lab and the A. W. Wright Laboratory for physics research. Despite the different time frame and purpose of each renovation, Polak linked the five building
Public response to basketball team escalates BY DANIELA BRIGHENTI AND MAYA SWEEDLER STAFF REPORTERS In response to the Yale men’s basketball team’s continued display of support for former captain Jack Montague, actions from campus groups — and
from anonymous individuals — have ramped up. Four days after the team earned an NCAA Tournament berth with a win over Columbia, and six days after Montague’s father confirmed to the New Haven Register that his son was expelled, a third wave
YEI draws more female applicants BY VEENA MCCOOLE STAFF REPORTER Undergraduate students and women applied in increasing numbers for this year’s Yale Entrepreneurial Institute summer fellowship, sparking optimism in Yale’s entrepreneurial community that the change signals growing diversity in a typically male-dominated field. The proportion of applications from women to the 10-week intensive program increased from 21 to 31 percent this past year. Undergraduate applications comprised 43.2 percent of submissions, compared to 38 percent last year. In total, YEI received applications from 118 individuals across 43 teams. Ten teams will ultimately receive the fellowship, which includes $15,000 worth of funding intended to support young businesses as well as an opportunity to work in New Haven over the summer. Erika Smith, who is in charge of graduate and faculty programs and investments at YEI, said the change may be the product of several efforts
by the YEI to increase diversity. “Women represent just 12 percent of U.S. innovators but are receiving higher education degrees at a higher rate than men,” she said. “YEI is very interested in developing more interest from women in entrepreneurship, and we have taken an active role in encouraging participation in our programs.” Smith noted recent initiatives, including the expansion of the YEI Mentor Network of alumni advisors under the recent appointment of Mentor Director Priscila Bala ’06 SOM ’14. YEI has also highlighted successful female entrepreneurs on its website and launched new social venture programs such as the Yale College Dean’s Challenge on Social Innovation, she added. Wendy Davis SOM ’14, who founded the medical technology startup GestVision and who has previously received YEI funding, said she thinks diversity and gender inclusivity are instruSEE YEI PAGE 8
of posters appeared on campus, including some that singled out specific members of the men’s basketball program. The initial batch of posters last week featured images of players wearing T-shirts honoring Montague, and called on them to “stop supporting a rapist.”
On Wednesday, three student groups will “chalk-in” on Cross Campus in response to campuswide discussions about the team, as well as in support of sexual assault survivors at Yale, according to United Against Sexual Assault at Yale co-director Helen Price ’18.
The chalk-in has been organized by USAY, the Yale Black Women’s Coalition and the Yale Women’s Center, but it is unclear who is responsible for the posters, which were posted inside Dunham Laboratory’s SEE BASKETBALL PAGE 8
Trouble brews during cafe testimony
MICHELLE LIU/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Alders, business owners and city residents debated extending the Libra Cafe’s closing time. BY MICHELLE LIU STAFF REPORTER A simple request to keep the Libra Cafe’s doors open past 10 p.m. led to heated discussion at a Board of Zoning Appeals meeting Tuesday evening. The lawyer representing the cafe, Miguel Almodovar, appeared before the board to ask for an extension for a special exception granted by the same board last year. The original exception extended the closing hour of the Libra Cafe,
a restaurant on Main Street Annex roughly two miles away from campus that serves beer and wine, from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. between Thursdays and Sundays. Though the request was not listed on the board’s agenda as a public hearing, a number of community members and city officials gave negative testimony on the extension, claiming that the cafe’s disruptive patrons taxed city resources. East Shore Alder Al Paolillo, whose ward houses the cafe, cited a history of public disturbances from
establishments in the area — including the Libra Cafe. “If this body can’t use statistical evidence and history as a guide for the future, I’m not sure what we can use,” Paolillo said. The cafe was issued a ceaseand-desist order by Building Official Jim Turcio last month, when Turcio noticed patrons present for Valentine’s Day at the cafe still lingering at 1:35 a.m. the next morning, AlmoSEE ZONING PAGE 6