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T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 79 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY SNOWY

35 26

CROSS CAMPUS

SEXUAL HEALTH MISCONCEPTIONS RAMPANT

SERVICE

MAYOR

Alumni Service Corps expands domestic options

HARP DELIVERS STATE OF THE CITY ADDRESS

PAGES 10-11 SCITECH

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 3 CITY

Sotomayor recounts journey

Sunlight sealed and sent.

Dixie McCormick, the golden retriever who steadfastly stood guard outside the doors of Timothy Dwight’s dining hall, passed away on Tuesday. Quietly offering a warm hug or a wag of the tale, “Dixie loved all of you … never forget that,” read an update on the dog’s Facebook page. After three years on campus, Dixie will be remembered for the sunshine she brought into the lives of the countless TD students she greeted as they came home at night.

Sexual misconduct report released NUMBER OF DISCLOSED COMPLAINTS AT ALL-TIME HIGH BY ADRIAN RODRIGUES AND WESLEY YIIN STAFF REPORTERS

students received an email from Saybrook Library this weekend inviting them to “rush.” “That’s right friends. It’s rush season. And everyone knows the real hub of Yale Greek life is not High Street, Zeta, or Sig Chi. It’s obviously right here in the Saybrary,” the email read. The message also reminded potential rushees that every night in the library is late night and BYOB (bring your own books).

Portrait of a university president as a young man.

University President Peter Salovey was named after 1940s folk singer Pete Seeger, he revealed in an email Monday morning. “My parents were such fans of Pete Seeger’s music that they named their oldest child after him!” Salovey said. The announcement opened up a host of speculations as to who former University President Richard Charles Levin was named after: Wagner? Nixon? Richard the Lionheart, King of England?

Love in the time of CCEs. The

latest love potion cooked up by the CCEs is “Date Night,” a semiformal dinner to be held on Valentine’s Day in the Silliman dining hall. The event promises a themed menu as well as performances throughout dinner. Students are encouraged to come with a date, with friends or even screw-style (with a blind date). Party like a college kid! Feb

Club Emeritus, which is Feb Club for alumni, has an international reach this year. The Yale tradition without limits (age limits that is) kicked off this weekend and has parties planned for Geneva, Fontainebleau, Milan, Munich, Vancouver and Cape Town among other locations.

“She’s ba-a-ack,” read a line from The New York Times Sunday Book Review in its piece on Law School professor Amy Chua’s latest book, “The Triple Package.” THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1951 A festival brings together current and former Whiffenpoofs in the largest gathering of penguin tuxedos in the Northeast. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

Race for Harp’s Senate seat in 10th district heats up PAGE 5 CITY

Books over bros. Saybrook

Farmville. Undergraduate Career Services is hosting an event today titled “So you want to ... Work on a Farm.”

SENATE

her role on the Supreme Court. “[My Beloved World] was not about telling you what I didn’t know,” Sotomayor said. “But it was about showing you what I learned.” Sotomayor said returning to Yale during winter brings back fond memories. She recounted handdelivering coffee with her thenboyfriend, who is now her husband, many years ago to drivers stranded

Yale’s fifth semi-annual report of sexual misconduct complaints, which listed any complaints of sexual assault, harassment or other misconduct brought to University officials between July 1 and Dec. 31 2013, contains the highest number of complaints ever disclosed in the report since it was first issued in 2011. The number of complaints of sexual misconduct on campus totaled 70 over the past six months — a roughly 15 percent increase over complaints in the previous six-month period — according to the report, which was released Monday evening. Of the 70 complaints, 11 involved sexual assaults, nine were acts of intimate partner violence, 43 involved general sexual harassment and seven involved a range of behaviors not included in the other categories, such as stalking and voyeurism. Seven new cases were formally brought before the University-Wide Committee (UWC) on Sexual Misconduct, a process that involves an external fact-finder, a hearing and possible disciplinary action. Four of these cases resulted in suspensions, one student withdrew from the University, one case is pending and the last resulted in no disciplinary action. “I can only speculate — and not be certain — about the circumstances that led to an increase in the number of cases in the cur-

SEE SOTOMAYOR PAGE 6

SEE MISCONDUCT PAGE 4

JOYCE XI/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor LAW ’79 spoke to an audience of over 2,000 in Woolsey Hall on Monday. BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER True ignorance is not asking for an explanation when you do not understand — whether that may be in school, with friends or even on the Supreme Court, according to Sonia Sotomayor LAW ’79. In a talk on Monday afternoon in Woolsey Hall that was simulcasted in Battell Chapel, the Associate Justice of the Supreme Court discussed

her new memoir, “My Beloved World,” which chronicles her journey from a Bronx housing project to her appointment as the first Hispanic on the nation’s highest court. Before a crowd of over 2,000 students and faculty, some of whom had waited outside since 11 a.m. to secure a seat, Sotomayor spoke about her time as an undergraduate at Princeton and as a law student at Yale, as well as her views on affirmative action and her adjustment to

City demands funds

High prices alienate Yalies

ALDERS SEEK TO CLOSE GAP ON PAYMENTS IN LIEU OF TAXES BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER Give us what we deserve. That is the message a unanimous New Haven Board of Alders sent Monday night to the state of Connecticut. The Board approved a resolution calling on Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy and the General Assembly to fully fund Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT), a program that reimburses municipalities for lost revenue from nontaxable properties. “This is not charity for the city of New Haven — this is our right,” Ward 19 Alder Michael Stratton, one of the resolutions’ authors, said Monday before the vote. “Just give us our money.” Under statutory reimbursement levels, the state should be sending 77 percent of the property taxes the city would receive as reimbursement for schools, hospitals and other tax-exempt nonprofits, including Yale University, Stratton said. It is only sending 32 percent. As reimbursement for state buildings, the state is obligated to pay the city 45 cents on the dollar, but is currently only handing over 21 cents, he added. Connecticut’s Office of Policy and Management pegged New Haven’s fully funded PILOT reimbursementat $10.3 million for fiscal year 2014, according to a spreadsheet of town-by-town state PILOT fundSEE PILOT FUNDING PAGE 6

ALEXANDRA SCHMELING/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Students feel that the price point for most stores leased under University Properties on Chapel and Broadway is too high. BY J.R. REED STAFF REPORTER As rumors swirl around which store will set up shop at 1 Broadway Avenue, students are hoping that the new business will not mirror the high price points of many of the other stores near campus along Chapel Street and in the Broadway Shopping District. Following the real estate crisis of the late 1980s, the University bought storefronts along Chapel Street and Broadway — two of the

highest traffic streets in New Haven. When Richard Levin became President of the University in 1993, the administration made a decision to revamp the retail district in downtown New Haven near Yale’s campus, while extending the length of the business day by requiring many stores in these areas to stay open until 9 p.m. The University did this in an effort to rid the streets around campus of what they considered “bottom end establishments,” said Douglas Rae, a School of Management professor, who added that 25

years ago 1 Broadway was a “horrendous bar with people being thrown through windows every once in a while.” The University has been successful in changing the culture of the stores around campus, gaining nearly complete control of the real estate along Chapel and Broadway by the mid-1990s. However, students interviewed contended that these key shopping areas provide little variety and too many overly SEE RETAIL PAGE 6


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