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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 · MONDAY, APRIL 8, 2013 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 116 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY RAINY

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CROSS CAMPUS

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RUNNING FOR A CAUSE

BY LORENZO LIGATO STAFF REPORTER

Apple picking 2.0. In a

Writer turned speaker.

Keeping secrets. In a Sunday

email to the Yale community, Dean of Student Affairs Marichal Gentry reminded students about the University’s hazing regulations and laws in anticipation of this Thursday’s senior society “Tap Night.” According to Gentry, hazing laws prohibit a number of activities, including indecent exposure, mental stress, blindfolding, confinement, assault, ingestion of substances or “physical activity that could endangerer the health or safety of the individual.”

A technology boost. Tired of

having to forfeit intramural games when not enough players show up? Ben Sherman ’13 has the answer: The techsavvy senior created a new IMs website that hopes to make it easier for college captains to keep track of how many participants have signed up for upcoming games. Sherman said in a Saturday email to IM captains that he hopes the new website will replace the existing one next semester.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1968 The activist group “Black Women of New Haven” announces plans to boycott all white establishments in the Elm City as part of an effort to honor the mission of the late Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., who passed away four days earlier. Though the Black Students Alliance and Dwight Hall Committee at Yale both endorse the boycott, three residential college dining halls are unable to open after several employees participating in the boycott fail to report for work. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

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Yale sued after tailgate death

Grandmaster Robert Hess ’15 will travel to St. Louis, Mo., on May 3 to compete in the U.S. Chess Championships. The chess whizz will spend 10 days facing off against the greatest chess players in the country in a battle for monetary prizes totaling $180,000. Hess previously competed at the World Team Chess Tournament in 2009, where he placed second.

Pulitzer Prize-winning author and editor in chief of The New Yorker David Remnick will give Princeton’s Class Day address on June 3, the school announced last Thursday. Remnick, who graduated from Princeton in 1981, will succeed comedian Steve Carell as the school’s Class Day speaker.

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The life of a genius. Chess

Sunday email sent to the Yale community, Yale Police Chief Ronnell Higgins reminded students to keep their laptops closely guarded at all times, warning Yalies of a 20-something-yearold man recently arrested for his connection to two laptop thefts at Blue State Coffee. Higgins’ email followed a similar warning last fall, when the police chief alerted students of an increase in iPhone thefts, a phenomenon dubbed “apple picking.”

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PHILIPP ARNDT/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

PAINT PARTY ON THE GREEN — FOR CHARITY On Friday, 250 Yale students and New Haven residents gathered for a 5-kilometer run on the Green. Participants raised $1,250 for Kiva Microfinance, which gives small loans to entrepreneurs in developing countries.

Sixteen months after a fatal crash at the 2011 Yale-Harvard game left a Massachusetts woman dead, the victim’s estate has filed a negligence suit against the University, the city of New Haven, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, Inc. and others involved in the crash. Nancy Barry, a 30-year-old woman from Salem, Mass., died after being struck by a U-Haul truck during the tailgate before the Yale-Harvard football game on Nov. 19, 2011. Brendan Ross ’13 was driving the rented U-Haul into the tailgate area assigned to the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity,when the vehicle accelerated and swerved into the Yale Bowl’s D-Lot on Central Avenue at around 9:39 a.m., killing Barry and injuring Sarah Short SOM ’13 and Harvard employee Elizabeth Dernbach. Paul T. Edwards, an attorney representing Barry’s estate, filed a lawsuit with the New Haven Superior Court on Friday seeking charges against many parties allegedly involved in the crash for failing to take all SEE TAILGATE PAGE 4

Homicide spate plagues Elm City BY LORENZO LIGATO STAFF REPORTER New Haven has been struck by three murders in the past nine days, lifting the city’s murder tally to a total of five homicides this year. The last homicide to hit the streets of New Haven took place Friday evening, when the New Haven Police Department received reports of a shooting in the area around the Super Deli #7, a convenience store located at 1613 Chapel St., just a sixminute drive from Yale’s central campus. When the officers

arrived at the convenience store at 7:06 p.m., they secured the scene and learned that the victim, Richard Eichler, had been transported by private car to the St. Raphael campus of YaleNew Haven Hospital, department spokesman David Hartman said. Eichler, a 26-year-old New Haven resident, died from the gunshot wounds shortly afterwards. Detectives from the department’s Major Crimes Division and Bureau of Investigation have started their investigations and are currently in the process of interviewing witnesses and col-

lecting evidence, Hartman said. He added that according to several witnesses, the suspect is an African-American male of short stature, wearing dark purple pants and a blue sweater at the time of the shooting. Friday’s homicide is the third to hit the Elm City in just over a week, after a nearly 65-day murder-free streak — an interval New Haven had not seen since March 2012. Roughly 48 hours before Friday’s homicide, on Wednesday, April 3, Asdrubal Bernier, 32, was fatally shot in front of 145 Wolcott St., in the heart of the

Task Force criticizes unclear policies BY CYNTHIA HUA STAFF REPORTER After its final meeting on Feb. 25, the Task Force on Alcohol and Other Drugs concluded that Yale has unclear disciplinary policies regarding alcohol-related incidents. The 17-member task force, which was convened by the Yale College Dean’s Office in December to make recommendations on creating a safer drinking culture at the University, submitted a report in March to Yale College Dean Mary Miller and the University Council Committee on Alcohol in Yale College. The University has not publicly released the report, Dean’s Office fellow Garrett Fiddler ’11 said, in order to keep specific facts about Yale’s drinking culture out of the national media and because administrators will not implement all recommendations. The bulk of the group’s recommendations centered on creating new events and initiatives, such as improved alcohol-education during Camp Yale, said Yale College Council President John Gonzalez ’14, who is also a member of the task force. The main policy recommendation addressed by the task force was the need for Yale to clarify disciplinary procedures, including the con-

sequences of hospitalization due to intoxication, said Paul Hudak, master of Saybrook College and a member of the task force. “As of right now, in practice, students do not receive any disciplinary action for going to Yale Health or Yale-New Haven for intoxication, unless it’s been a recurring problem,” Fiddler said. “However, a lot of that is practice but not explicitly written out. A lot of people, especially students, are not clearly informed.”

As of right now, in practice, students do not receive any disciplinary action for going to Yale Health or Yale-New Haven. GARRETT FIDDLER ’11 Student affairs fellow, Dean’s Office Students on the task force raised concerns that some undergraduates may expect disciplinary measures for being transported to Yale Health or Yale New-Haven Hospital, SEE TASKFORCE PAGE 5

Fair Haven neighborhood of the city. While investigations into Bernier’s death are still ongoing, several witnesses have described the shooter as an African-America male, between 25 and 35 years old, Hartman said. According to the same witnesses, the suspect might have fled in a black pickup truck, leaving Bernier on the ground, Hartman said. And just four days prior to Bernier’s murder, a shooting in Newhallville ended with the death of Eric Forbes, 33. A few minutes before being shot, Forbes had left the Taurus Café, a nightclub at 520 Winchester

Ave., where he was seen having an altercation with two unknown men. Detectives are still completing their investigations into this week’s murders, Hartman said, adding that all three cases are receiving much attention from the police department’s Detective division. With five homicides in total this year, New Haven has reached more than twice the murder rate for this time last year. Still, the 2013 murder count is far down from the 10-homicide high in the first trimester of SEE HOMICIDE PAGE 5

Corp. approves budget, meets with students BY JULIA ZORTHIAN STAFF REPORTER Members of the Yale Corporation chose not to initiate any major new budget or policy proposals during their meeting this weekend on the cusp of a complete overturn of its leadership. Instead, the fellows discussed projects already in progress and approved a capital budget similar to last year’s plan. The meeting marked the penultimate Corporation gathering for both University President Richard Levin and Senior Fellow Edward Bass ’67 ARC ’72, who will be replaced by President-elect Peter Salovey and Margaret Marshall LAW ’76, respectively, on June 30. Levin said the Corporation approved additional funding for ongoing building projects and the finance committee approved a $375 million capital budget for the upcoming year. “My view was the president-elect and the provost should have the summer to think about [budgeting major projects] and come up with their own priorities,” Levin said. The $375 million total the Corporation’s Finance Committee approved for the next fiscal year remained consistent with last year’s budget, he said. The budget, which is wellbelow recent years’ totals of $500

to $600 million because no major construction projects have been launched, covers minor projects and continuing initiatives such as finishing the School of Management building construction on Whitney Avenue by January 2014. Levin said the Corporation had the “full panoply” of committee meetings on Friday, in which various subcommittees of the Corporation, such as the Development and Alumni Affairs Committee and the Educational Policy Committee, presented updates to the rest of the group. Members of the Yale Corporation also interacted directly with students this weekend, holding meetings with both the Yale College Council Executive Board and the recently graduated Woodbridge Hall fellows. YCC President John Gonzalez ’14 said he brought up what the YCC considers three major issues on campus — alcohol policy, the proposed changes to the grading system, and changes to the academic calendar that took place this year. “I trust a lot of these corporation members, but they’re not undergraduate students and they don’t know the nitty-gritty of what it’s like to be a student,” he said. “I think that’s an integral part of those decisions they SEE YALE CORP PAGE 4


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