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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 124 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

FOG RAIN

64 46

CROSS CAMPUS

NETWORKS TWITTER USED TO PREDICT FUTURE

MARKETS

UCS

Pop up European market to return to Elm City for second year

UCS LAUNCHES SUMMER JOB EVALUATION SITE

PAGES 10-11 SCITECH

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 3 NEWS

UNEMPLOYMENT New Haven unemployment rate above national average PAGE 5 CITY

Faculty governance: a power within

Baby bulldogs descend upon campus today. The hectic,

three-day rush event known as Bulldog Days takes place from 2 p.m. until the same time Thursday. Although difficult to imagine, there really are several hundred potential newcomers who have never heard of Toad’s, go to bed before midnight and who are not of voting age for the ongoing Yale College Council elections.

Global warming might be real, but divestment is not. A

prank email sent to members of campus yesterday declared the University had decided to divest from fossil fuels. The message described a ten-year plan to shift away from oil, coal and gas companies and create a full-time position dedicated to evaluation social and environmental impact. Administrators confirmed the announcement was a hoax. Nerd Alert. Yale News

released a piece yesterday documenting a conference of emergency medicine practitioners that took place at the Omni in late March. The article was titled “NERDS rule at Yale” in reference to the attendees who were New England Research Directors of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. “One of my residents, a first-time attendee, said it best, ‘I love being a NERD!” said James Feldman, research director at Boston Medical Center.

Bar and cars. According to USA Today, happy hour may soon become more convenient for New Haven Line Metro-North commuters. Metro-North has hired a consulting company for $1.1 million to design a retro-fitted M-8 car and one feature that might be returning is the bar cafe car. For now however, travelers must make the most of their by downing a few before boarding. Wearing the White Hat. Dartmouth’s 2014

commencement speech will be delivered by TV producer and Class of 1991 alumni Shonda Rhimes. Rhimes is the creator, head writer and executive producer of “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Private Practice” as well as the political drama “Scandal.” At Dartmouth, she studied English literature and creative writing. Well-versed. The New Haven school district is holding two citywide poetry jams this week, one for middle school students and another for high school students. Around 75 to 100 students will perform total by the end of the week. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

April 22 1932 Yale Harvard debaters hold an annual debate with the topic of Hoover’s re-election.

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A

s the University has grown more complex, existing structures of faculty governance have proven insufficient. This academic year, the addition of a Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the faculty vote to create an elected senate will likely change the University’s governance structures. ADRIAN RODRIGUES reports. NICK DEFIESTA/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

In the beginning there was no faculty.

UPCLOSE

For the first 54 years of its existence, the Collegiate School — later renamed Yale College — did not have a single professor. Between 1701 and 1755, a handful

of young tutors assisted the lone rector of the fledgling school. The University did not officially appoint its first professor until 1756, and the total size

of the teaching force did not exceed six for another 50 years. Since that time, the professoriate has gradually expanded, reaching 37 professors by 1901

and 70 by 1953. As of October 2013, Yale has 445 tenured professors. SEE GOVERNANCE PAGE 6

New Christian ministry center to open BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER On April 26, Christian Union, a national faith-based organization that exists at seven Ivy League universities and came to Yale in 2010, will host a ribboncutting ceremony for its new Christian ministry center on 31 Whitney Ave. The ministry center — named in honor of abolitionist James W.C. Pennington — will serve as a meeting space for Christian students and help facilitate Christian Union activities such as Bible studies, leadership training and prayer groups. Saturday’s ribbon-cutting event will include a tour of the new facility and a reception for students, donors and Christian Union representatives. Since the space was purchased by Christian Union in January, it has been used temporarily as an office space for the group and has also undergone renovations, according to Chris Matthews, director of Christian Union’s undergraduate ministry at Yale. SEE MINISTRY PAGE 4

KATHRYN CRANDALL/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

The new Christian Union ministry center on Whitney Avenue will provide space for meetings, events, and social gatherings of the Yale community.

Coding camp enrollment doubles BY RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTER After a successful first year, the Yale Entrepreneurial Institute and Student Tech Collaborative will host a second intensive coding program this summer, doubling the size of participants and revamping some of the program’s curriculum. The 10-week program — a collaborative effort between the two organizations — will host 30 Yale students on campus this year, compared to 15 last year. The program aims to teach basic coding skills to those with little programming experience. Participants are selected from an applicant pool and awarded a scholar-

ship covering the full cost of the program, as well as a $1,500 stipend for living expenses. Over the course of the summer, students complete two webbased programs as a means of launching an original business endeavor. Though the program attracts students interested in computer programming and entrepreneurship, this year’s participants come from a wide range of majors, including English, chemistry, mechanical engineering and environmental studies. This year, 26 undergraduates and four graduate students will participate. “We saw a need for more technical co-founders on campus,” said YEI SEE YEI BOOTCAMP PAGE 4

Homicide suspect arrested BY MAREK RAMILO STAFF REPORTER The New Haven Police Department has handcuffed the individual responsible for one of the city’s two most recent homicides, both of which claimed teenaged victims. On April 17, NHPD officers cornered 18-year-old Jeffrey Covington on Poplar Street, concluding their approximately three-week long investigation into 17-year-old Taijhon Washington’s murder. Police determined that Covington shot Washington and his 16-year-old half-brother Travon Washington, who survived the incident, late last

month near the intersection of Lilac Street and Butler Street. Taijhon Washington became New Haven’s fifth homicide victim of 2014, but the total climbed to six just 10 days later when 16-year-old Torrence Gamble was shot in the Hill neighborhood. “What we want all of you to know is that a young man of this dear family is a young man of this beloved city and that we all grieve together,” NHPD Chief Dean Esserman said at a Monday press conference held to announce the arrest. “We bring some answers to this family [with this arrest].” SEE ARREST PAGE 4


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