Today's Paper

Page 1

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 102 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

CLOUDY CLOUDY

38 25

CROSS CAMPUS

CONVERSATIONS THE INTERVIEW ISSUE RETURNS

UNDOCUMENTED

MEN’S HOCKEY

Connecticut students speak out in favor of the DREAM act

BULLDOGS TO TAKE ON CRIMSON AT INGALLS

WEEKEND B2-12

PAGE 5 CITY

PAGE 10 SPORTS

Budget draws sharp criticism

From the highest mountaintops. The organizers

for graduate student life at the McDougal Center spiced up their regular happy hour with an “on the road” version up on Science Hill. The affair, held in the lobby of Kline Biology Tower last night, was titled HHH (Happy Hour on Science Hill). No word on how many attendees made it back down the hill.

FACULTY RECOMMENDS NEW STUDENTS IN 2017, NOT 2016 BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID AND ADRIAN RODRIGUES STAFF REPORTERS

Bestseller. Ryan Greenwood,

the current Rare Book Fellow at the Yale Law School Library, was featured in the “Bright Young Librarians” series in the Fine Books & Collections Magazine. In the piece, he reveals that one of the favorite rare works he has handled is a tiny manuscript of the Magna Carta. Greenwood also said he collects bookseller catalogs, a sort of “meta-collecting.”

said would devastate property value and drive them from the city. Particularly troublesome, many insisted, is the increased allowance for Harp’s own office, up nearly 50 percent over the amount allotted in the current fiscal year.

In developing Yale’s two new residential colleges, the University had planned to increase the size of the incoming freshman class by 200 students in the fall of 2016. But now, the ad hoc committee on Yale College expansion has recommended that the process be delayed by a year. In a Thursday faculty meeting, roughly 75 faculty members gathered for what was meant to be a tying together of loose ends on two major debates: grading policy and the two new residential colleges. While the faculty members tabled the discussion of grading policy — which concerned only a minor point about independent study grades — they discussed the logistics of increasing the student body by 15 percent over four years, touching on the impact on discussion sections and housing. The ad hoc committee on Yale College expansion presented its recommendation that 200 new students be added to the class of 2021 instead of the class of 2020 as was previously considered. The University initially planned to move some 200 incoming freshmen to Swing Space in the fall of 2016 and then have them move along with new freshmen in 2017 to the new residential college buildings. Yale College Dean Mary Miller said this plan ultimately proved logistically troublesome, as Swing Space is occupied by

SEE BUDGET PAGE 6

SEE COLLEGES PAGE 4

Fifteen men on a dead man’s chest. Yale is playing host

to a symposium entitled “Performance and the Sea” this weekend, an affair sponsored by the Whitney Humanities Center and Interdisciplinary Performance Studies at Yale. The event will feature scholars conducting research on marine painting, sailor songs, shipboard theatricals, vernacular port performance and other specific, sea-related forms of expression.

Congratulations? Selections

for freshman counselors are being released around noon today. The results follow an intensive interview process that included soul-searching questions such as: What do you do if a freshman calls you in the middle of the night? (Turn your phone off?)

Ce n’est pas a typical game night. Reynolds Fine Art

has organized a “Surrealist Game Night” for the Arts On9 festival. The affair has been advertised as a “handful of games that will stimulate your unconscious mind.” Endless winter. The

International Festival of Arts and Ideas decided to begin advertising for this summer’s festival by sticking a countdown clipboard in the snow on the New Haven Green that most recently read “100 Days to June 14.” Here’s hoping the snow has melted by then…

A sit-down interview. The

Columbia Spectator recently printed a fictional interview with asculpture on their campus — a marble bench in front of Columbia’s Barnard Hall which carries the inscription “Stupid people shouldn’t breed” and “It’s crucial to have an active fantasy life.”

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1980 The Connecticut state legislature reconsiders the drinking age. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

College expansion debated

ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Ward 4 Alder Andrea Jackson-Brooks responds sternly to Ward 19 Alder Mike Stratton over comments about the budget. BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER In response to a 2014-’15 budget proposal Mayor Toni Harp unveiled just one week ago, nearly 70 city residents appeared at a public hearing on Thursday to send a unanimous message: do not raise

our taxes. Over the course of two hours of public testimony, more than two dozen people asked the 10-member finance committee of the Board of Alders to take a scalpel to the budget before it goes into effect July 1. As it stands, the budget calls for tax hikes that residents

Civil rights in New Haven questioned BY MAREK RAMILO STAFF REPORTER As a civil rights court case gears up for another round of hearings, local leaders are calling on the city to take stronger action to ensure its municipalities fairly represent the racial demo-

graphics of the people they serve. The plaintiffs are a group of 10 AfricanAmerican New Haven Police Department officers who allege that they were prevented from being promoted to the rank of sergeant because of their race, despite

Google Glass comes to Bass

passing the department’s exam in 2009. On Feb. 21, Judge Matthew Frechette from the Connecticut State Superior Court denied the city’s motion to drop the case; and so, what has come to be known as the New Haven 10 case will be brought to trial starting April 25.

Project Longevity’s William Mathis, along with many AfricanAmerican leaders from around the Elm City, said he believes the case is part of a larger struggle to promote more minority leaders to the to the highest ranks of public office. “ C r i t i c a l to t h e

a group that attempts to curb violence and support racial diversity, of which Mathis is a part, has also pushed for fairer representation of minorities within in the city’s Board of Education, police and fire departSEE CIVIL RIGHTS PAGE 4

Online housing centralized BY NICOLE NG STAFF REPORTER

Google Glass — a computer system worn like a pair of glasses — will soon become available for student and faculty use at the Bass Library media center. Google Glass is not yet on the market, but a partnership of three Yale organizations — the Yale University Library, the Student Technology Collaborative (STC) and the Instructional Technology Group (ITG) — applied to beta test the product last year. Since Google Glass arrived at Bass in mid-January, the three groups have been exploring the device’s uses and ways to introduce the technology to the greater Yale community. Soon after spring break, student and faculty groups will be able to fill out an online application to use Google Glass for spring or summer projects, and the device is slated to become available for general use beginning in the fall. “We realized that if we could potentially add this to the Bass media equipment col-

To streamline the complicated and often dramatic housing process, nine of Yale’s residential colleges are switching to a new online system this year. For the past several years, many colleges have experimented with their own online housing systems. After these systems gained popularity and other colleges sought computerized programs, the Yale College Dean’s Office began developing of a more centralized system in 2013. Hosted by Yale Information Technology Services (ITS), the new system uses StarRez — a student housing software program popular at many universities. It can perform all aspects of the housing process, allowing students to register, form suite groups and select their rooms online. Though residential colleges have opted to adopt the system to different degrees, administrators said all colleges will still

SEE GOOGLE PAGE 6

SEE HOUSING PAGE 6

BY AMANDA BUCKINGHAM STAFF REPORTER

advancement of those felt left behind [or] marginalized is the opportunity to see people who look like them and originate from their community as positive role models and in significant leadership positions,” Mathis said. The Coalition for AntiViolence Stakeholders,

YDN

Nine of the residential colleges are switching to a new online housing system.


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.