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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 115 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

RAINY RAINY

47 45

CROSS CAMPUS

SELL OR TAKE? MONEY WHERE YOUR MOUTH IS

INCREASE VISIBILITY HEY, CLASS OF 2019 YPD makes appearance at the AACC to discuss policing.

ADMISSIONS OFFICE TURNS FOCUS TO RECRUITMENT.

PAGES 10–11 SCI-TECH

PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY

PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY

Candidates debate admin relations

Department Chief Ronnell Higgins’ latest email went out a little past midnight Tuesday, alerting campus to a robbery that took place at the York Street-Chapel Street intersection. Neither of the victims, both undergraduates, reported injuries, but still: That Google Maps location was far too recognizable.

He got to say “Hi.” EGOT-

winner Bobby Lopez ’97, who wrote the scores for “Avenue Q,” “The Book of Mormon” and “Frozen,” visited Yale yesterday, joining the Spizzwinks(?) for dinner at Yorkside. Not that it bothered him anyway, but good thing the cold weather’s gone now.

He noticed. Emails from

University President Peter Salovey are (sort of) more light-hearted than the ones Yalies get from Higgins, and Monday’s was particularly upbeat due to the arrival of springtime. Encouraging students to step outside to soak it all in, Salovey wrote vividly on the idea of renewal.

Expanded online presence.

A Monday post on YaleNews announced new Google Custom Search systems in the University’s website. Welcome to the 21st century, Yale.

New Haven’s first spin studio, Shift Cycle, opens on Crown Street. PAGE 7 CITY

Behind Bergdahl, a Yale professor

Close to home. Yale Police

It’s actually happening. If the construction alongside Prospect Avenue isn’t enough proof that the new residential colleges are moving along, mockups of potential college crests have made rounds both on campus and online. NewYaleColleges.com went live recently, featuring profiles of namesake candidates — including regulars like Bouchet, Hopper and Cloud — and renderings of the shields that might one day line their halls.

SHIFT AND SPIN

YALE LAW SCHOOL LECTURER REPRESENTING BERGDAHL BY SKYLER INMAN STAFF REPORTER

putting an undergraduate on the Yale Corporation his central promise, Joe English ’17 stressed broader, more grassroots outreach efforts. Ben Martin ’17, meanwhile, touted plans to weave together distinct student groups, such as athletic teams and the cultural houses. A particular flashpoint was a disagreement over how the YCC

On Nov. 23, 1970, just off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard, a Lithuanian sailor named Simonas Kudirka jumped ship. Leaping from the Soviet fishing vessel where he worked, Kudirka landed on the deck of the Vigilance, the U.S. Coast Guard cutter that was floating nearby. Although Kudirka sought asylum from the USSR, authorities aboard the Vigilance allowed Soviet sailors to take him back, resulting in his assault and imprisonment in a Lithuanian mental institution. The situation that unfolded, in which Kudirka was revealed to be an American citizen, made national headlines and blossomed into a military controversy so large it became known as U.S. Coast Guard’s “Day of Shame.” The military trial that followed would become the first major case for young lawyer Eugene R. Fidell — then a 25-year-old assistant legal officer serving in the U.S. Coast Guard. Over four decades later, Fidell — who now lectures on military justice and American tribal law at the Yale Law School — finds himself at the center of another controversial case. Fidell is acting as the civilian rep-

SEE YCC DEBATE PAGE 4

SEE BERGDAHL PAGE 4

KAREN YANG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

YCC presidential candidates Joe English, Ben Martin and Andy Hill participated in a heated debate Monday. BY JOEY YE STAFF REPORTER With Yale College Council elections beginning this Thursday, candidates for next year’s executive board sparred Monday over the council’s role in negotiating the boundary between the student body and the administration. Candidates for the four positions — all of which are contested, save

the vice presidential race — spoke before an audience of more than 50 students in Linsly-Chittenden Hall, sharing their plans to better serve students by ensuring more robust access to high-level decision makers in the University. The centerpiece of the debate, the showdown among the three presidential candidates, revealed similar priorities yet distinct plans for achieving these goals. While Andy Hill ’17 has made

University to pilot Classes*v2 alternative BY EMMA PLATOFF AND VICTOR WANG STAFF REPORTERS Starting with a potential replacement of Classes*v2, the University is looking to bring outside technologies back to campus. Beginning this fall, 40 to 50 courses across the University will pilot Canvas, a learning

management system that may replace Classes*v2. While Canvas has already supported several distance-education programs — including those in Yale College Summer Session, the Doctor of Nursing Practice program, other initiatives in the School of Forestry and the School of Management and some classroom courses — the

fall pilot will provide more comprehensive feedback for its suitability to on-campus courses. If the pilot is successful, the University would likely convert to the new platform gradually, over the span of roughly two years. “The level of satisfaction [with Classes*v2] is modest — it’s okay,” Deputy Provost for Teaching & Learning Scott Stro-

bel said. “But people find it to be awkward and kind of clunky. Some of the things [that some Yale professors] want to do with a learning management system they can’t do, so they tend to go outside [Classes*v2].” The newly formed Learning Management System steering committee, composed of nearly two dozen faculty, staff and stu-

dents from across campus and chaired by Strobel, will oversee the pilot study and issue a recommendation regarding Canvas in spring 2016. If, after consulting with pilot participants and support providers, the committee does not recommend a switch to Canvas, the University SEE CLASSES*V2 PAGE 6

Yale Tech? Harvard State?

Following up on United States President Barack Obama’s proposal to create a free community college system nationwide, The Washington Post published “Are Harvard, Yale, and Stanford really public universities?” yesterday. The piece’s writer called for a tax on universities with large endowments to perhaps help fund Obama’s plan.

Kid cannabis. According

to a story by CBSNewYork, Connecticut lawmakers are considering legislation that would eliminate the age restriction on access to medical marijuana.

Found a way. After initially

being cut from the roster, Ryan Lavarnway ’09 suited up for the first Opening Day of his career, as the Eli’s Baltimore Orioles topped the Tampa Bay Rays by a score of 6-2.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1965 Three professors accept visiting faculty positions in the Romance Languages Department.

Follow along for the News’ latest.

Twitter | @yaledailynews

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

A decade later, fmr. YIO intern manages billions BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER Endowment managers at other universities have long wondered how Chief Investment Officer David Swensen has consistently generated returns above Yale’s peers. Now, they may have a little bit more insight. In a New York Times profile published last Thursday, former Yale Investments Office analyst Zhang Lei GRD ’02 SOM ’02 chronicled his journey from interning under Swensen to managing one of the world’s most successful firms, Hillhouse Capital Group. The firm, which Zhang founded in 2005, now controls over $18 billion. It is no coincidence that Zhang named his firm in honor of the street that runs through Yale’s campus. Just three years after Zhang graduated, the University became one of his earliest backers, “seeding” $20 million in capital when Zhang first solicited investments — a decision that underscores Yale’s willingness to seek out unconventional sources of opportunity. “I actually had no investment experience at all prior to

Judge: Wang cannot stand trial BY SARA SEYMOUR STAFF REPORTER

the internship,” Zhang said. “By working there, that really helped me get to the fundamental core of what really is an investment, and that made me always ask what is really the essence of investing versus what is the noise.” Zhang added that even after Yale agreed to invest with Hillhouse Capital, he was initially hesitant to charge the University on the terms of the contract since “we just started and I felt we hadn’t proven ourselves,” he said. It was only after YIO Senior Director Dean Takahashi ’80 SOM ’83 personally called and insisted that he begin charging the University that the true business partnership between Hillhouse Capital and Yale began. Zhang described his investment philosophy as a combination of “Swensenism” — a term inspired by Swensen’s philosophy of “unconventional wisdom”— and traditional Chinese Buddhism. He added that during his time at YIO, he learned the importance of identifying genuine talent and focusing on the fundamental questions.

Judge Thomas O’Keefe Jr. ruled yesterday that alleged murderer Lishan Wang is not competent to stand trial. Wang, who has been accused of murdering former Yale-New Haven Hospital postgraduate fellow Vajinder Toor in 2010, has been representing himself in court until today. In 2010, Wang was ruled competent to stand trial, but due to the prolonged nature of the case and concerns about Wang’s ability to continue to represent himself, O’Keefe ordered a competency exam in early February. The competency exam was conducted later that month by the New Haven Office of Court Evaluations, which is part of the Connecticut Mental Health Center. The psychiatrists who conducted the exam found that he was not competent to stand trial. “Can someone who has a lot of symptoms of a psychotic disorder ... represent themselves in a murder trial? Probably not,” O’Keefe said in court. However, the psychia-

SEE INVESTOR PAGE 6

SEE WANG PAGE 6

SARA SEYMOUR/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Lishan Wang has been accused of murdering a postgraduate fellow at the Yale-New Haven Hospital.


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