NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 125 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
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CROSS CAMPUS Prizewinner. Among Monday’s Pulitzer Prize winners was Elizabeth Kolbert ’83, who took home this year’s award for general nonfiction with her book, “The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History.” A staff writer for The New Yorker, Kolbert has established herself as an authority on environmental issues. Much respect. We’d be remiss not to write about the other prizewinners. The Post and Courier, for example, received the Pulitzer for Public Service for “Till Death Do Us Part,” an in-depth series on domestic abuse in South Carolina. Who needs a prize? The
Blackstone Group apparently already knows that it’s a big deal. A feature posted by ValueWalk.com on Monday made a careful point to highlight a quote by Stephen Schwarzman ’69 noting that “it’s six times harder to get a job as an analyst at Blackstone than to get into Harvard, Yale or Stanford.” One can only imagine how hard it was for Schwarzman to become the firm’s CEO.
FOOD FANTASY IMAGINING FOOD LEADS TO OBESITY
AN OPEN HOUSE
TAKING THE GAMBLE
Yale-NUS implements “open housing,” a gender neutral housing program.
BILL TO ADD MORE CASINOS MOVES FORWARD.
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Grand Old Prescott. Florida
Senator and now-official 2016 presidential candidate Marco Rubio will be the keynote speaker for the Prescott Bush 1917 Awards Dinner in Stamford, Conn., on June 4. Remember that, between three generations of Bushes and figures like William F. Buckley Jr. ’50, Yale does actually have quite the conservative legacy. And the Republicans on campus won’t let you forget it.
All in the grip. Yesterday,
YaleNews profiled an campus study on the importance of an advantage held by primates and humans: hand dexterity. Thank nature by making sure you have a firm handshake. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1926 Polls conducted by the News to take the campus pulse on prohibition laws reveal a roughly three-to-one majority of people who believe that the federal ban on liquor has not reduced drinking at Yale. Follow along for the News’ latest.
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Gobrecht’s departure sparks search for.new basketball coach. PAGE 14 SPORTS
Yale to implement carbon pricing scheme BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER Yale will become one of the first institutions in higher education to implement a price on its carbon emissions. In its 36-page report released Monday afternoon, the Presidential Carbon Charge Task Force recommended that Yale adopt an internal fee on the carbon dioxide emissions of University “units,” which include athletic facilities, academic departments, administrative offices and residential colleges. Under the committee’s proposal, each unit would be assessed on their “net emissions,” which
is the difference of their actual emissions in the year over their adjusted base emissions rate during the previous three-year period. As a result, facilities and departments whose emissions grew faster than the University average across these units would incur a charge, while units with slower emission growth would receive a rebate. “We look forward to piloting this concept in select units in the future, and to continued careful research and study as we consider potential wider implementation,” University President Peter Salovey wrote in the announcement. “We believe that this proposal can serve as
a model for other institutions, expanding Yale’s role as a pioneer in researching, teaching, and designing innovative solutions to climate change.” Economics professor William Nordhaus ’63, who chaired the task force, stressed that the carbon charge should not be viewed as a “tax” or a way for the central administration to raise money. The task force recommended that the charge be phased in within three years beginning in the 2015–16 academic year. The period will allow the University to test the recommendations, make actual calculations of carbon emissions, and initiate the budget charges for
selected units. However, in his announcement, Salovey did not explicitly agree to a Universitywide implementation within that timeframe. The report recommended the exact price of the charge for 2015 to be set at $40 per ton of carbon dioxide, the social cost of carbon emissions estimated by the federal government and used in federal legislation. With Yale emitting — directly or indirectly — roughly 300,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide per year, the total carbon-charge revenues would be approximately $12 million per year for the university, the report stated. In an email to the News,
Three cultural houses to be renovated
Salovey said that he was interested in Yale becoming a “test case” for this carbon charge, which can then be studied to see how well such financial incentives work in changing behavior. The pilot will also allow the University to consider the challenges in implementing such a program. The report recommended the internal carbon pricing scheme be a “revenue neutral” charge, meaning the sum of all carbon charges across units total to zero, with no revenue directed towards the central administration. Still, some details — such as how to best divide the UniSEE CARBON PAGE 4
Financial aid: Balancing affordability and fairness
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One global guy. There is perhaps no better way to describe Fareed Zakaria ’86, the featured speaker at today’s School of Management event, than to celebrate the third anniversary of the Global Network for Advanced Management’s creation. Any guesses as to which major Zakaria — whose credentials include hosting CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS” — would choose, were he to do Yale over again? He does it all. Not to say that Zakaria is a one-trick pony: An article on the Huffington Post’s blog yesterday spoke in support of the Yalie’s most recent book, “In Defense of a Liberal Education,” taking a second to appreciate the ability to, very simply, read, think and write well. Pay attention, all you prefrosh choosing between Yale and Wharton.
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YALE DAILY NEWS
The Afro-American Cultural Center is one of three cultural houses that the University intends to renovate next year. BY STAPHANY HOU AND VIVIAN WANG STAFF REPORTERS Four months after the first-ever external review of Yale’s four cultural centers revealed widespread problems, the University has released its plan to address those concerns. The external consulting group’s report, released in December, highlighted issues ranging from rundown facilities to illdefined leadership roles. Now, after months of discussion and vocal student activism, the University said the majority of the group’s proposals will be implemented for the coming school year. In a Monday afternoon email to the Yale community, Yale College Dean Jonathan Holloway, Graduate School Dean Lynn Cooley and University Secretary and Vice President for Student Life Kimberly GoffCrews promised to renovate three of the four houses, increase all of their budgets for the 2015–16 academic year, and restructure the roles of the cultural center directors. Specifically, the email promised renovations to the Asian American Cultural Center, La Casa SEE CULTURAL HOUSES PAGE 4
At 8:30 a.m. every weekday morning, Isiah Cruz ’17 leaves his dorm room in Ezra Stiles. He grabs a quick breakfast, walks to the Office of Career Strategy and sits behind a desk on the third floor.
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ented issues as well as issues that affect the broader New Haven community. “I commit to being a partner and coworker for each of you,” Eidelson said after the Board approved her nomination. Morrison pointed to Eidelson’s focus on reopening the Q House on Dixwell Avenue and her creation of the New Haven Youth Map — an online tool that connects city youth with affordable afterschool and summer programs — as highlights of her term.
Four hours later, he takes the elevator back down to Whitney Avenue and goes to class. Cruz said he sends a portion of his paycheck to his parents in New Jersey to help them pay rent. For summer job interviews, Cruz had to spend more of his money on a suit. Other discretionary expenses soon grew beyond his student income, and this semester, he was forced to take out a loan. As one of the nearly 2,800 recipients of need-based financial aid at Yale College, Cruz is expected to contribute toward his education. For the 2014–15 academic year, the “student effort” financial aid contribution — a combination of a student’s summer earnings and income from a term-time job that they must put towards their term bill — was between $4,475 and $6,400. The student effort is composed of a “student self-help” amount, intended to come from term-time work and set at $2,850 for freshmen and $3,350 for upperclassmen, and a “student income contribution” of $1,625 for freshmen and $3,050 for all other class years that is intended to derive from summer work. While administrators note that these amounts can be fulfilled by working an average of nine to 11 hours a week at the campus minimum wage of $12 per hour, many students argue that this calculus neglects a broad
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YALE DAILY NEWS
The Asian American Cultural Center will also undergo changes.
Eidelson named BoA minority leader BY NOAH DAPONTE-SMITH AND ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTERS Shortly after the New Haven Board of Alders bid farewell to longtime president and Hill alder Jorge Perez, Ward 1 Alder Sarah Eidelson ’12 made it into the record books. In a unanimous vote of approval from the Board, Eidelson was confirmed as the third officer, or the Board’s minority leader, making her the first Ward 1 alder to take a leadership position on the Board. That vote came after the Board hosted a sendoff ceremony for Perez, who has
ale currently has one of the most generous financial aid policies of any university, but students have recently called upon the administration to eliminate the “student effort” portion of financial aid packages — the amount recipients of aid are expected to contribute towards their education. While some administrators and experts argue that this contribution is fair and manageable, students on full need-based aid claim that the quality of their Yale experiences is suffering due to the expectation. TYLER FOGGATT reports.
served as alder for the Hill neighborhood for nearly 30 years. Perez is leaving the board to become the state’s banking commissioner, a post to which Gov. Dannel Malloy nominated him in February. Eidelson was nominated for minority leader by Dixwell Alder Jeanette Morrison, who praised Eidelson’s “strong leadership qualities.” Fair Haven Alder Santiago Berrios-Bones and Westville Alder Adam Marchand GRD ’99 seconded Morrison’s nomination. Morrison, who represents four of Yale’s 12 residential colleges, said Eidelson has shown an ability to tackle Yale-ori-