Today's Paper

Page 1

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 · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 8 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY SUNNY

74 80

CROSS CAMPUS

WORK, MEET LIFE PREPARING FOR THE REAL WORLD

CHECK YOUR SPAM

POLICE BRUTALITY

VOLLEYBALL

EliApps spam filters catch important emails, cause headaches

RESIDENTS SAY COMPLAINT SYSTEM IS INEFFECTIVE

After strong Yale Classic performance, team looks to keep rolling

PAGE B3 WEEKEND

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 7 CITY

PAGE 12 SPORTS

City rails against new Amtrak line

AIR FORCE ROTC WELCOMES NEW CADETS

One more time. A speech

from President Barack Obama closed this year’s Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, drawing more than 100 students to a watch party hosted in the Calhoun Buttery by the Yale College Democrats.

BY BEN PRAWDZIK STAFF REPORTER

Not all roses at the DNC.

Connecticut first lady Cathy Malloy is under media scrutiny for comments she made at the DNC, crying foul over the treatment the American public and media give to politicians and their families. She has since apologized.

Also under fire. U.S. Rep.

Chris Murphy, the Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate who’s facing off against Republican Linda McMahon, is facing questions about a foreclosure on his home in 2007, and on a lawsuit alleging he failed to pay rent in 2003.

The race goes on. The

McMahon and Murphy camps have agreed to four debates in October, though none will be in New Haven. Murphy is pushing for more debates.

Make your voice count.

Former Yale College Council President Brandon Levin ’14, who is responsible for providing student feedback to the committee searching for University President Richard Levin’s successor, sent an email to Thursday afternoon announcing that he’ll host office hours next week to solicit student input.

Are we really number 2? A

new set of college rankings out from CrowdRank — the self-proclaimed “Wikipedia of rankings” — lists Yale as the number two bachelor degreegranting University in the nation, behind only Harvard. The rankings draw on “the over 3 million community votes already cast to bring the crowdsourcing revolution to rankings,” not only the voices of college counselors, according to a press release. Stanford came in third, followed by Cornell and the Naval Academy. Great faculty support.

Harvard students may not be the only ones cheating up North: Former Harvard psychology professor Marc Hauser is guilty of six cases of data fabrication or manipulation in work supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, according to a report released Wednesday by the federal Office of Research Integrity. Franco GRD ’16 faces suit.

James “Does-He-EvenGo-Here” Franco GRD ’16 is facing a lawsuit from a former professor who claims Franco publicly disparged him after receiving a “D” in the class. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1980 193 undergrads are unable to register for courses because they still have not paid their term bill. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

BRIANNE BOWEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

‘I WILL SUPPORT AND DEFEND THE CONSTITUTION’ Yale’s new Air Force ROTC unit administered the Oath of Office to eight new cadets Thursday morning on Beinecke Plaza. Representatives from the University of New Haven and Southern Connecticut State University were also in attendance.

Students hope for broadening of Yale’s reach BY CAROLINE TAN STAFF REPORTER Throughout his nearly 20-year tenure, University President Richard Levin has sought to expand Yale’s presence abroad. But with a new president taking the helm in the next academic year, some students are hoping to see the scope of those efforts broaden. Several of the initiatives Levin has launched to increase Yale’s presence abroad in recent years — such as an exchange program with Peking University in Beijing and a partnership with the National University of Singapore to build a liberal arts college — have focused on forging connections with Asian countries. Though few debate that Levin has succeeded in growing the University’s brand on an international stage, some cultural group leaders in the Latin American, African and Middle Eastern communities feel the president’s agenda has focused disproportionately on Asia at the expense of other regions. “I did get this perception that [Levin] was pushing this Asian agenda a lot,” said Murat Dagli ’14, president of the Latin American Student Organization. “It was always China, always Singapore.” Levin said in a Thursday email that the University has increased its presence “on every continent,” citing heightened healthrelated work in Africa and expanded alumni involvement in Latin America. He added that Yale has “hundreds” of research partnerships and exchange programs in Europe, including the Yale-University College London exchange program for doctoral students. Still, other efforts have focused strongly on Asia. In addition to creating Yale-NUS College and the Yale-PKU program, which was cancelled over the summer due to low enrollment, Yale has also placed an emphasis on the region in its Visiting International Student Program. Launched at the start of the previous academic year, the program initially brought students from Mexico and Singapore to study at Yale for one year. It SEE LEVIN PAGE 6

After Amtrak announced the route for its proposed new high speed rail line in the Northeast — which promises to deliver passengers from Boston to Washington, D.C., in just over three hours — city officials began a vigorous campaign against a program that they argue will leave New Haven in the dust. The current railroad infrastructure in the Northeast Corridor — the main rail artery north of Washington — runs through New Haven, Stamford and Bridgeport on its way to Boston. But in late July Amtrak announced it wants the new $151 billion high speed line, jointly developed with the Federal Railroad Administration, to bypass the three coastal Connecticut cities and stop in Danbury, Waterbury and Hartford instead. With the Sept. 14 deadline to submit project comments to the FRA rapidly approaching, city officials are working to build grassroots opposition to a project that they say could damage the Elm City economy and cripple Union Station, currently the tenth busiest rail station in the U.S. with over 700,000 annual passengers. “The best way to grow jobs and strengthen New Haven is to get us to New York in one hour. With high speed rail, that is possible,” said Elizabeth Benton ’04, City Hall spokeswoman. “The City of New SEE AMTRAK PAGE 4

Without Levin, Yale-NUS leadership evolves BY GAVAN GIDEON AND TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTERS When Yale-NUS College has faced criticism in the last two years, University President Richard Levin has been the first to come to its defense. But with Levin’s departure set for June 30, 2013, administrators at both Yale and the National University of Singapore say the new college’s administration is prepared to lead on its own — and overcome any challenges it may encounter along the way. Even after he steps down, Levin will retain an advisory role as a member of the Yale-NUS Board of Governors for at least three years. Levin told the News Aug. 30, the day he announced his planned departure, that Yale-NUS is ready to begin its first academic year without him. It has a senior administrative team in place, roughly 40 faculty hired and an

admissions process well underway.

There’s always been the intention… to back off when the new president was appointed and let the person carry on the project. RICHARD LEVIN University President Levin also said he expects his successor to be less involved with the college than he was. “My involvement came at a time when there wasn’t a Yale-NUS president,” he said. “There’s always been the intention between [NUS President Tan Chorh Chuan] and me to

back off when the new president was appointed and let the person carry on the project.” In the past, administrators of the Singaporean liberal arts college — a joint venture between the two universities — often deferred to Levin on questions about the planning of Yale-NUS and freedom of expression in Singapore. This August, for example, Yale-NUS President Pericles Lewis said Levin would be better able to address the question of who will enforce a ban on political parties and protest at Yale-NUS: the college itself or the Singaporean government. Still, Lewis said Tuesday that as the Yale-NUS administration grows more independent, he does not think Yale’s next president is “going to be in a position of constantly defending the project.” “By the time the successor takes SEE YALE-NUS PAGE 4

Obama camp hopes to energize local support BY LORENZO LIGATO STAFF REPORTER As Barack Obama took the stage in Charlotte, N.C., to accept the Democratic party’s nomination for president Thursday night, his campaign organized a watch party that drew dozens of New Haven supporters. Around 80 New Haven residents from across the city gathered at 100 York St., in the apartment of Lydia Bornick, executive director of the New Haven Public Education Fund, to watch the final night of the 2012 Democratic National Convention. Active involvement in New Haven’s grassroots efforts supporting Obama’s re-election has not reached the same level as it did four years ago — prompting organizers of the party to view it as an opportunity to recruit volunteers and plan for the last stretch of the campaign. “Today is about celebrating Obama’s re-nomination together SEE OBAMA PAGE 6

PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

New Haven Democrats gathered Thursday to watch the final night of the Democratic National Convention and plan next moves in Obama’s campaign effort.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.