NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 13 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLEAR
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CROSS CAMPUS
CATCHING UP DOES YALE LAG BEHIND?
COMING BACK
VIVE LE TOUR!
One student’s story highlights the difficulty of reinstatement.
CYCLISTS TO RACE AROUND NEW HAVEN GREEN.
PAGE B3 WEEKEND
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
PAGE 5 CITY
Arson suspected in AEPi fire
At this rate... We know that everyone who has been running around from finance info session to finance info session has been keeping tabs, but, for the rest of you: The Federal Reserve elected to keep interest rates at their near-zero levels yesterday. And, in doing so, Fed Chair Janet Yellen GRD ’71 will spend the next three months under heavy scrutiny as the world begins to wonder if she will ever raise rates. Check back in December.
Public display. On the
other end of the spectrum is the public sector, job opportunities that will be on display this afternoon in the Sterling Memorabilia Room for the Office of Career Strategy’s “Government Networking Event.” Represented offices include the Central Intelligence Agency, State Department and Peace Corps. Room for debate. Among the issues currently weighing on government higher-ups is the Iran nuclear deal. Bringing the discussion to campus, various groups are hosting a debate this weekend on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action between Council of Foreign Relations Fellow Philip Gordon and Foundation for Defense of Democracies Executive Director Mark Dubowitz. Abstract concrete. The New York Times paid a visit to the Yale University Art Gallery to write a story about how the museum’s juxtaposition of ceramics with the more traditional mounted paintings has cultivated a unique viewing experience. Fortunately, you’re all in a position to see it for yourself, rather than having to live vicariously through the article’s photos. “And chill.” Movie marathons
seem to be in vogue, with at least two colleges — Morse and Timothy Dwight — hosting outdoor screenings in their respective courtyards and the Yale Film Study Center showing “Being John Malkovich” tonight.
City celebration. Between
“Apizza Feast” and the “NHV Block Party,” appreciating New Haven’s goodness is also all the rage this weekend.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
2009 Raymond Clark III is arrested and charged for the murder of Annie Le GRD ’13.
Follow along for the News’ latest.
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Ready to go. Football team looks for first victory this weekend. PAGE 10 SPORTS
Alexander, poet and professor, to depart DEPARTURE HIGHLIGHTS YALE’S STRUGGLE TO RETAIN DIVERSE FACULTY BY LARRY MILSTEIN AND EMMA PLATOFF STAFF REPORTERS
fire on the exterior of the property, and other fires on the exteriors of 397 Crown St. and the AEPi fraternity house at 395 Crown St. David Ribot ’17, president of AEPi, said
Famed poet and English professor Elizabeth Alexander ’84, who recited a poem at the 2009 inauguration of President Barack Obama, will leave Yale for Columbia at the end of this academic year. Alexander’s departure is just one of three departures of black professors affiliated with the African American Studies Department announced in the last few months. Those departures have led many to question the University’s ability to not just hire, but retain a diverse faculty. “The English Department at Columbia, where I’ll be housed ... has an extraordinary community of African-Americanists who are long-time collaborators with me and many of my wonderful Yale colleagues,” Alexander said. Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies professor Vanessa Agard-Jones ’00 will leave for Columbia alongside Alexander. Likewise, Anthropology, African American Studies and American Studies professor Jafari Allen will also depart at the end of this year for the University of Miami. Several professors attributed these departures to systemic problems with Yale’s
SEE ARSON PAGE 6
SEE DIVERSITY PAGE 6
Financial vanguard. Speaking
of finance, MarketWatch revisited a Baltimore Sun column recently written by former Yale Corporation member Charles Ellis ’59 on the regulatory loopholes historically exploited by financial advisers, costing American retirement savers around $17 billion per year. Ellis — whose lengthy resume includes serving as a board member for Vanguard Group — used the piece to bring to light the need to defend unaware investors from such exposure.
FIRED UP
STEPHANIE ADDENBROOKE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
City authorities are investigating recent fires at the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity, above, and other Crown street properties. BY STEPHANIE ADDENBROOKE STAFF REPORTER Overnight fires on Crown Street, which displaced students living in off-campus housing and members of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity,
may have been started intentionally. Around 2:40 a.m. Thursday morning, the New Haven Fire Department arrived at the corner of Crown and Park Streets after residents of 401 Crown St. reported a
Stark supporters divided on backing Eidelson BY ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTER On the heels of a forceful Ward 1 Democratic primary win by Sarah Eidelson ’12, supporters of former challenger Fish Stark ’17 are split on whether or not they will support the incumbent in the general election. During the primary, the Yale College Democrats did not canvass for either candidate, and the Ward 1 Democratic Committee declined to make an official endorsement in the race — although Stark independently solicited the support of 19 of 37 members of the committee. Following Eidelson’s primary victory, however, the Dems have thrown their weight behind her. “Although the majority of our board
volunteered with Fish’s campaign, we have a duty as the official arm of the Democratic Party on campus to support the winner of the primary,” said Maxwell Ulin ’17, elections coordinator for the Dems. Ulin added that, while the Dems had decided to remain neutral in the election when Stark declared his candidacy in March, Republican Ugonna Eze’s ’16 entry into the race in April changed that decision. The Dems agreed in the spring, Ulin said, to back the victor of the primary election. Jacob Wasserman ’17, co-chair for the Ward 1 committee, said that both the ward’s committee and the town’s Democratic Committee would officially endorse Eidelson in November. He added that SEE ELECTION PAGE 4
Prof. students face high healthcare costs BY AMAKA UCHEGBU STAFF REPORTER Roughly 10 years after the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences began paying the full price of Yale health insurance for students with families, few professional schools at Yale have followed suit. The graduate school Health Award, as it is called — a subsidy that covers the full cost of Yale Health insurance for graduate students with families — was initiated by former Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Dean Jon Butler after the school’s administration realized those students were turning to social services for health insurance. At Yale, all students are eligible to purchase Yale Health Specialty insurance at an annual fee of $2,176. But the price of Yale Health insurance jumps to $8,098 when a spouse is added to the plan. The family insurance plan, which covers a spouse and children, costs a further $5,488, bringing the
ERICA PANDEY/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Republican candidate for Ward 1 Ugonna Eze ’16 has started campaigning for the upcoming general election in November.
Engineering students see few OCS opportunities
cost of health insurance for a graduate student with a threemember family to $13,586. Students can only stay on their parents’ insurance plan until they turn 26. As a result, Yale students with children must shoulder the cost of the health insurance for both themselves and their whole families, while living on a student budget. “For the normal healthy typical adult, you don’t need to worry about insurance,” said one professional student who is on Medicaid and WIC but asked to remain anonymous to avoid the stigma associated with those services. “But after getting pregnant, the chances of me having a health issue goes up by a lot, along with the cost of insurance.” Each Yale professional school has a different financial aid arrangement, but only the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences will pay the full
Arina Bykadorova ’18, a mechanical engineering major, sent out more than 20 resumes to different companies in New York City last spring. She received only one reply. She ended up at Con Edison, an internship that she had found with almost no help from the Yale Office of Career Strategy. She had perused the OCS website during the application season, finding few jobs that matched her interests. She applied for one job that was writing-oriented, but turned it down. She felt that Symplicity, the website that OCS uses to post job and internship openings, did not have much to offer her and her fellow engineers. “I think it would be great if there were more opportunities for mechanical engineers, especially since anyone who is younger than a junior or senior year finds it difficult to get an engineering job unless they have a really strong recommendation,” Bykadorova said,
SEE GRAD HEALTH PAGE 4
SEE ENGINEERING PAGE 4
BY STEPHANIE ROGERS STAFF REPORTER
KEN YANAGISAWA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Engineering majors have criticized the lack of internship opportunities available to them.