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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2013 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 85 · yaledailynews.com
WEEKEND INSIDE THE NEWS // FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2013
MORNING EVENING
SNOWY SNOWY
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CROSS CAMPUS
street cred LORENZO LIGATO and YANAN WANG look at how urban design can combat New Haven crime. Page 3
STREET CRED DESIGNING A CITY, FIGHTING CRIME
FACULTY MEETING
BROWNELL
MEN’S SQUASH
Professors approve changes to shopping, consider grading policies
RUDD CENTER FOUNDER LEAVES YALE FOR DUKE
Bulldogs prepare for last home match of season following sweep of Brown
PAGE B3 WEEKEND
PAGE 5 NEWS
PAGE 7 NEWS
PAGE 12 SPORTS
FORMER UN SECRETARY-GENERAL VISITS YALE
Neither friend nor food. Nemo
is coming — this time, not as a clownfish, but as a potentially historic blizzard. The storm is expected to hit New Haven this morning and dump up to 2 feet of snow on the Elm City. In preparation, Yale Dining has adjusted its hours and will serve dinner in the dining halls from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. In addition, Shabbat dinner will start one hour early at 6 p.m.
BY LORENZO LIGATO AND EVERETT ROSENFELD STAFF REPORTER AND SENIOR REPORTER
Rainbow nation. Five hundred students are expected to participate in this weekend’s IvyQ Conference, which will draw hundreds of LGBTQ students and allies from across the country to Yale. While the second annual LGBTQ GALA Reunion was canceled due to severe weather conditions, organizers said IvyQ will continue as planned with minor scheduling changes. Sex and the Elm City. Cynthia Nixon, the Emmy and Tony Award-winning actress from the hit television show “Sex and the City,” will be honored during a special concert tonight with the Whiffenpoofs. Nixon will receive the University’s first annual Artists for Equality Award, which is presented to artists who have demonstrated a strong commitment to the LGBTQ community. Yale’s very own Captain Hammer. Daniel Perez DRA ’13
has been named the winner of the 2013 Buerki Golden Hammer Scenic Technology Award in part for his work in engineering the flying pink cotton candy cloud that Katy Perry rode during her 2011 “California Dreams” tour. Sounds like a teenage dream. Trashing 007. A stealthy
intruder has infiltrated Pierson’s basement and may be there to stay. In recent days, a photo cutout of a smirking and gun-wielding James Bond has been spotted above the label for Pierson’s trash room, appropriately numbered room 007. Who knew James Bond could be so comfortable next to trash? Fighting fire. A district court judge ruled yesterday against 11 New Haven firefighters who argued that the city had unlawfully denied them potential advancement by failing to comply adequately with the 2009 Ricci v. DeStefano Supreme Court ruling on reverse discrimination. A strategy shoutout. New York Times columnist and Jackson Institute fellow David Brooks gave a shoutout to “Grand Strategy” yesterday when he mentioned the course — and the lessons he’s learned from Machiavelli — in his weekly column. Glad at least someone is learning. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
2008 Yale considers expanding day care options for employees and graduate students. Submit tips to Cross Campus
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NHPD ratifies contract
HENRY EHRENBERG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
‘I GREW UP WITH THE SENSE THAT CHANGE WAS POSSIBLE’ Former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan spoke to Yale students at a Jackson Institute for Global Affairs-sponsored talk Thursday afternoon. See PAGE 7 for full article.
After nearly two years of negotiations, New Haven Police Department officers ratified a five-year contract Wednesday night that boasts wins for both the union and City Hall. The vote — which took place all day Wednesday at the NHPD’s Union Avenue headquarters — ratified a new deal between the city and the 413 unionized officers who have been working without a contract since 2011. The agreement includes several planned wage increases for the officers, but it also outlines changes to pension and health benefits that should help City Hall manage its finances in the long run. The NHPD union, which has traditionally taken an oppositional stance to Mayor John DeStefano Jr.’s administration, broke with its historical precedent in ratifying the contract by more than two-thirds of the vote, 247–109. Generous health care coverage and a 20-year retirement age have long been cherished by the officers, and losses on both fronts reflect a changing departmental attitude. “There is some understanding [among those who voted to ratify the contract] SEE NHPD PAGE 6
E T H I CA L I N V E ST M E N T S
Fossil fuel divesting faces uncertain future
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n the 1970s, Yale was among the first institutions to divest from companies tied to South African apartheid. Now, students are urging the University to divest from fossil fuels — and waiting for Yale’s response. SOPHIE GOULD reports.
BY SOPHIE GOULD STAFF REPORTER Leaning against the walls and sitting in aisles, more than 80 students crammed into a classroom on the second floor of Linsly-Chittenden last Saturday afternoon. A handful wore seemingly normal white “Y” T-shirts, but with a noticeable change: The bottom half of the shirts had been dipped in black dye, intended to make them
Post-Newtown, mental health weighed BY MICHELLE HACKMAN STAFF REPORTER In the days following the shooting in Newtown that left 20 children and six staff members dead, speculation was rife over the 20-year-old gunman Adam Lanza’s mental health. Multiple news outlets reported that Lanza had been taking medication prior to the shooting and that his mother had been mulling over more intensive treatment for her son. Throughout the state, lawmakers and Connecticut citizens have been asking the same questions: Had the state’s mental health system been stronger, could the events at Newtown have been prevented? In the wake of the shooting, the Connecticut Legislature established the Bipartisan Task Force on Gun Violence Protection and Children’s Safety on Jan. 14, charged with the mission of patching up cracks in any laws through which Lanza may have slipped. The task force is divided into three caucuses: school security, gun safety and mental health, which will each propose a bill this
legislative session. Though bills normally take the entirety of the five-month legislative session to discuss, pass through committee and come up for a vote, the task force is due to release its proposals by the end of this month.
There is no connection between what went on in Newtown and people with mental illness.
look ominous, like they were caught in a rising tide of oil. Saturday marked the kickoff meeting of a campaign to get the University to phase out its endowment investments in the fossil fuel industry for ethical and environmental reasons. The campaign, called Fossil Free Yale, is part of a national movement started by environmental activist Bill McKibben that has spread to 252 college campuses, including most of the
Ivy League. McKibben has said that the effort aims to push universities — whose endowments total about $400 billion — to agree to immediately freeze all new investments in the 200 fossil fuel companies with the largest oil, gas and coal reserves and phase out existing investments in those companies over the next five years. A “green” portfolio, McKibben said, should be SEE INVESTING PAGE 4
Blizzard slams into region BY NICOLE NAREA STAFF REPORTER The Elm City is bracing for what some meteorologists are calling the “storm of the year,” which will slam into the East Coast in full force starting Friday evening and leave the region blanketed in at least a projected foot and a half of snow. The National Weather Service issued a blizzard warning and coastal flood advisory
for New Haven Thursday afternoon, which will remain in effect until 1 p.m. Saturday. The advisory warned of poor visibility conditions, snow accumulation ranging from 18 to 24 inches with winds up to 55 miles per hour and potential power outages due to fallen trees. University administrators and public officials across the region took measures in SEE SNOW PAGE 6
KATE MATTIAS Executive director, National Alliance on Mental Illness Connecticut Chapter Several mental health experts interviewed said that although they were glad to see an unusual spotlight shone on issues of mental health, they worried that producing legislation in reaction to a tragedy might produce regulations that were not well-thoughtout. SEE MENTAL HEALTH PAGE 4
EMILIE FOYER/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
Dining hall hours and food retail hours have been altered due to the incoming snowstorm.