NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 68 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLEAR
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CROSS CAMPUS Pro tip. What we learned about
a certain Westport hedge fund last night: Bridgewater reads Cross Campus. And so should you, if you want to be a buyside gladiator.
And now, we wait. App
deadlines for the other, perhaps tamer internship opportunities at firms like Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Bain & Company passed yesterday. Question: How many ping-pong balls can you fit inside SSS 114 during a Corporate Finance lecture?
Harvard’s so popular. Some
hard-hitting investigative reporting by Quartz ranked the Ivy League schools by the number of Twitter users following their respective alumni page. @HarvardAlumni topped the list with 21,600, dwarfing @Yale_Alumni’s last-place yield of 889. Sorry, friends. Looks like Harvard really is the better school.
SCORE! BO HINES JOINS YALE FOOTBALL
GENTRIFICATION
MEDIA STUDIES
New Haven developer seeks to revitalize Dixwell neighborhood,
FILM STUDIES MAJOR RENAMED AND EXPANDED
PAGE 12 SPORTS
PAGE 3 CITY
PAGE 7 CULTURE
Shabba! A$AP Ferg and YG.
Tonight at Toad’s. Quite the turnaround from Wednesday’s Corey Smith concert. Isn’t Toad’s great?
Admissions officers say they do not check applicants’ Facebooks PAGE 7 UNIVERSITY
Johnson ’54 accused of $150 million fraud BY RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTER Charles Johnson ’54, former chairman of the mutual fund Franklin Resources and the largest single-gift donor in Yale’s history, has been accused of helping to defraud the heir of one of Franklin Resources’ earliest investors of $150 million, The New York Times reported Wednesday afternoon. A lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court in San Francisco by Anthony P. Miele III
places Johnson at the center of an alleged scheme to conceal shares of Franklin Resources now worth $130 million from Miele. According to the complaint, as reported by The Times, Miele was bestowed with Franklin stock after his father’s death over 40 years ago, worth $16,000 at the time. The complaint alleges that Johnson concealed the shares from Miele. Since then, Miele’s 4,000 Franklin shares have turned into 2,531,250 shares, with a total value of
$130 million, plus $20 million in uncashed dividends, according to The Times. The lawsuit specifically accuses Johnson of breach of fiduciary duty, negligence, fraudulent concealment and negligent prevention of assistance, and makes similar accusations against Franklin Resources. The Times reported that Johnson denied the accusations, though he did cooperate for a limited time with the plaintiff’s inquiry into the stock but then stopped.
“We have not been served with a copy of the filed complaint, and we have no comment at this time,” Head of Corporate Communications for the Americas at Franklin Resources Stacey Coleman said in an email. Johnson, who retired from Franklin Resources in June 2013, told The Times that he was not aware of the lawsuit but said that he thought the “Mieles are on a fishing expedition for their own negligence.” In September 2013, John-
Music Hall to open on College Street
son donated $250 million to the University to support the building of two new residential colleges, moving Yale towards its total fundraising goal of $500 million for the project and dramatically accelerating the construction of the colleges. Johnson had previously funded Yale programs such as the Brady-Johnson Program in Grand Strategy and Johnson Center for the Study of American Diplomacy. SEE JOHNSON PAGE 4
Med School plans diversity measures BY AMAKA UCHEGBU STAFF REPORTER
Hann-y time. Yale College Democrats President Tyler Blackmon ’16 appeared on last night’s broadcast of “Hannity” on Fox News. We’re going to guess that Blackmon, also a News staff columnist, blended right in down there. Where’s the pork? Chipotle restaurants across the nation — including the one on Chapel Street — have temporarily stopped selling carnitas after finding its supplier to be in violation of company standards. Maybe give the sofritas a shot, instead.
SOCIAL MEDIA
which has been closed for 12 years. “The Palace was the place to be when I was young,” New Haven Director of Arts, Culture and Tourism Andrew Wolf said. “[The music hall] will be a place for residents, espe-
The Yale School of Medicine’s new policies addressing faculty diversity are set to be released at the end of the week, days later than previously planned, in order to incorporate faculty feedback presented at town hall meetings. The school has been developing the initiatives since early November, when the Gender Equity Task Force first convened following a sexual misconduct case involving the school’s former chief of cardiology. Dean of the School of Medicine Robert Alpern presented a draft of the diversity initiatives to faculty members at town halls Tuesday and Wednesday evenings. While feedback at those meetings was largely positive, faculty members made recurring calls for improved communication and stricter accountability, both of which Alpern said will be included in the final draft of the policy proposal. “When we came up with our ideas, the task force and chairs modified them,” said Alpern. “But now, the feedback from faculty will lead us to modify them further.” Following the removal of Chief of Cardi-
SEE PALACE PAGE 4
SEE MED SCHOOL PAGE 4
ERICA PANDEY/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Mayor Toni Harp joined a press conference announcing the planned opening of the College Street Music Hall. BY CAROLINE HART AND ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTERS By the time spring arrives, Toad’s Place will no longer be the sole music venue in New Haven. City officials announced at a press conference yesterday that the old
Palace Theater on 238 College St. will reopen as the College Street Music Hall. The New Haven Center for Performing Arts, a non-profit organization that owns the property, located directly across from the Shubert Theater, is spearheading and fully funding the effort to renovate the site
Varga! Canadian sports news
network TSN gave an update on the man, the myth, the legend Tyler Varga ’15, who’s in Bradenton, Florida, these days training for the NFL draft and everything that comes with it. The piece highlighted Varga’s speed as something oftoverlooked about the running back … we’ve always thought he was pretty fast.
Arco’s new arena. The
Pittsburgh Penguins picked up Mark Arcobello ’10 yesterday, meaning the former Eli will be playing home games on the same ice that his old teammates won the 2013 National Championship on.
Heart-stopping fun. PULSE
Happy Hour is tonight at The Study. If you’re looking to get your young professional on, mosey on down Chapel Street at 6 p.m. Dress code encompasses “sparkly jewels” and tuxedos. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1934 The application process for baseball team student manager opens. “The work is attractive, and typewriting is not required of the competitors,” a posting read. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus
YCC, Women’s Center assess One year in, Bagley suit misconduct resources awaiting resolution BY VIVIAN WANG STAFF REPORTER Amid ongoing national dialogue about sexual violence on college campuses, the Yale College Council and Yale Women’s Center are collaborating to assess the University’s sexual misconduct reporting resources. On Wednesday, the two organizations released a survey to the student body, asking for input on the mechanisms currently in place to address complaints of sexual misconduct. The survey’s results, collected anonymously, will be used by the Women’s Center and YCC Task Force on Sexual Health to compile a report, which will eventually be presented to the administration and the campus as a whole. The survey aims to engage a broader cross-section of student opinion, said task force member Emma Goldberg ’16, a former Opinion editor for the News. “We’re hoping to reach all sorts of students, not just students who have had personal experiences with Yale’s system of addressing sexual misconduct,” Goldberg said. “Our hope in doing this survey is to get all sorts of new information that the administration doesn’t already have.” For example, she said, the survey aims to discover why some students who have experienced sexual misconduct may have chosen not to report it, and to understand what may be the
perceived obstacles to reporting. The YCC Task Force on Sexual Health formed last September, and it began partnering with the Women’s Center midway through the semester in an attempt to combine the Center’s expertise with the YCC’s broader reach, Goldberg said.
We’re hoping to reach all sorts of students, not just students who have had personal experiences with Yale’s system of addressing sexual misconduct. EMMA GOLDBERG ’16 The collaboration also included the University Title IX Office and the Office of Institutional Research, and both offices helped write the survey questions. Still, the survey is being administered by the task force and the Women’s Center, rather than the administration, because the groups want to emphasize that this is a stuSEE SEXUAL MISCONDUCT PAGE 6
BY PHOEBE KIMMELMAN AND RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTERS More than a year after former School of Management professor Constance Bagley filed suit against the University alleging gender and age discrimination, her case is steadily inching towards trial. On Dec. 12, Senior United States District Judge Charles Haight denied Bagley’s motion for a preliminary injunction, which would have required the SOM to employ Bagley after her term on the Yale faculty expired at the end of 2014. The denial came after a Nov. 14 motion, filed by Bagley, claiming that the expiration of her contract would cause irreparable harm to her reputation and family, even after her contract was extended by Yale for 18 months. The University responded to that motion on Dec. 3, arguing that Bagley could not justifiably demonstrate irreparable harm and that she was not likely to succeed on the merits of her case. The University maintains no assurance that Bagley’s contract would be renewed was ever made, and that the nonrenewal was not a violation of her employment contract. The denied motion also comes four months after Judge Haight dismissed four of the 18 counts against the University in Bagley’s original complaint. In March 2014, however, Haight denied a motion filed by Yale to dismiss all of the counts. Bagley — who is currently a senior research scholar at Yale Law School — filed her case against the Univer-
sity claiming her professorship was not renewed in May 2012 as the result of age discrimination and gender bias. The SOM Dean Edward Synder, the SOM Deputy Dean Andrew Metrick and Bagley’s colleague, professor Douglas Rae, with whom Bagley co-taught a course, were also named as defendants. University spokesman Tom Conroy maintained that there is not a climate of discrimination at the SOM, which was described as a “chilly environment for women” by the Harte Committee, appointed by then-provost Peter Salovey to review Bagley’s grievance. “[The] SOM does not discriminate on the basis of gender and age and did not discriminate against Bagley,” Conroy said. He added that the University still believes the lawsuit to be without merit. Laura Studen, one of Bagley’s lawyers, said that previous setbacks in court, such as Bagley’s denied preliminary injunction, do not affect the integrity of Bagley’s complaint. In response to Yale’s claim that Bagley’s termination came in part as a result of poor student reviews, Studen said that relative to other professors, Bagley’s student evaluations were actually strong. “There is no professor that has not suffered criticism from student evaluations at [the] SOM,” Studen said. “She also had glowing, amazing responses and letters that she received over the course of years about what an amazing job she was doing, SEE BAGLEY PAGE 6