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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 104 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SNOW SNOW

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CROSS CAMPUS Bye-bye Brooks Brothers!

University administrators have confirmed that 1 Broadway Ave., which has been unoccupied since the closing of Au Bon Pain last year, will not be leased to Brooks Brothers. Fans of highend men’s clothing will sadly have to resign themselves to shopping for Nantucket reds at J. Press, Jack Willis, or some other preppy local purveyor. Spilling secrets. A private

visit to campus from former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger was leaked to the press on Monday. An invitation sent out yesterday morning to a panlist consisting mostly of Yale graduate students in history stated, “Dr. Kissinger’s visit to campus will not be publicized, so we appreciate your confidentiality.” Despite the request to keep the meeting hush-hush, the email invite was subsequently forwarded to Salon.

The lineup. Almost as exciting

as the Spring Fling lineup, student speakers for Class Day 2014 have been announced. The serious reflection will be delivered by Lauren Harris ’14, the comic reflection by Ariel Kirshenbaum ’14 and the Ivy ode by Ifeanyi Awachie ’14, according to a Monday email from Class Day organizers.

The usual suspects. Brown

University has announced its Spring Weekend lineup, and it includes two repeats from Yale’s Spring Fling lineup: Diplo and Chance the Rapper. Brown will also have performances from Andrew Bird and Lauryn Hill.

COGNITION MONKEYS NOT FOUND CURIOUS

CORPORATION

TENNIS

Yale Corporation names Dervan and Kennard as new trustees

BULLDOGS KICK OFF SPRING SEASON WITH SUCCESS

PAGES 10-11 SCITECH

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 12 SPORTS

of speakers of TEDxYale 2014 has been announced. Included on the list are Branford Master Elizabeth Bradley, professor Robert Shiller, former Yale College Council President John Gonzalez ’14 and magician Jen Kramer ’14.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1933 The Yale College Council votes to fund a Spring Fling where student and professional bands will perform. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

PAGE 3 CITY

BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID STAFF REPORTER Less than a year after stepping down from the Yale presidency, Richard Levin has been named the next chief executive officer of the online education outfit Coursera. Levin’s appointment to lead Coursera — an online platform for Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) used by 108 schools including Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Stanford and the University of Pennsylvania — was announced Monday on the company’s blog. Noting Levin’s business acumen and enthusiasm for online education, Coursera co-founders Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng said on the website that Levin would help their company achieve its ultimate goal: “to change the world through education.” In recent years, Coursera has shot to the forefront of the online education trend, popularizing the idea of MOOCs, which allow for global online participation in courses through a video platform. Levin told the News that the job offer rolled out of a converSEE COURSERA PAGE6

HENRY EHRENBERG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Former Yale University President Richard Levin will continue to shape education as the new CEO of Coursera.

Van Gogh suit dismissed BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTER A Vincent Van Gogh masterpiece whose rightful ownership has generated international controversy will remain on the walls of the Yale University Art Gallery for the foreseeable future.

On Thursday, U.S. District Judge for Connecticut Alvin Thompson dismissed a claim by French citizen Pierre Konowaloff that he is the rightful owner of “The Night Café” — valued at $200 million — and that Yale should return the painting and pay damages of $75,000. Konowaloff is the great-grandson of

a Russian aristocrat who owned the painting before it was confiscated by Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution in 1918. The painting arrived in 1961 at the YUAG, where it is currently on display in the European art wing. SEE VAN GOGH PAGE 4

Yale partners with Chinese university BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTER Yale moved globalization efforts forward last week, announcing a joint venture with leading Chinese research institution Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU). University President Peter Salovey and SJTU President Zhang Jie signed the centerinto existence during Salovey’s trip to Shanghai last week. Salovey and other administrators said they hope the center, which will focus on biostatistics, will lead to richer research opportunities than either institution could create on its own. “An ultimate goal is to identify and facilitate research collaborations not just with biostatisticians at Yale, but colleagues at Yale School of Medicine interested in clinical issues that are a priority at SJTU, such as lung cancer and diabetes,” said School of Public Health Dean Paul Cleary, one of the leading administrators in the push to create

Spring break forever.

One more lineup. The lineup

Yale Undergraduate Prison Project tutors incorporate rap

Levin named CEO of Coursera

Cornell + Cornell = Yale. MIT students have created a new version of the viral online game 2048, one that allows players to combine colleges instead of numbers until they reach “MIT.” In the game, two Cornells combine to make a Yale, two Yales combine to make a Harvard, and two Harvards make an MIT. Eleven schools are featured in the game.

Professor Akhil Amar arrived at his Constitutional Law class around 20 minutes late on Monday. He apologized with the excuse “Sorry guys, it’s been a long spring break.” Amar then realized he had forgotten his casebook and had to leave again to retrieve it.

TUTORING

YALE UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY

Pierre Konowaloff’s claim to Vincent Van Gogh’s “The Night Cafe” was dismissed last week.

SEE SHANGHAI PAGE 6

Salovey talks town-gown relations BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER A meet-and-greet, not a negotiation. That was the intent of a dialogue on Monday evening between Yale President Peter Salovey and the Board of Alders, the legislative arm of New Haven government. On the heels of major transitions in University and city leadership — Salovey’s rise to the presidency last summer and the election of Mayor Toni Harp last fall — town and gown came together to underscore their mutual interests and shared commitments. First, though, Salovey challenged the very idea of there being a discrete town and gown.

“This is my home. I think of myself as of New Haven as much as a I think of myself as of Yale,” Salovey told roughly 20 members of the Board gathered in a second-floor City Hall meeting room. “I’m very much not one of these people who thinks in terms of town and gown. It’s all the same to me. This is where I’ve lived my whole adult life. This is my hometown.” Salovey, who first came to Yale as a graduate student when he was 23, dwelled extensively on his personal investment in New Haven. He said he decided to remain within city limits out of an appreciation for urban life — but also as a “political” choice to ensure SEE SALOVEY PAGE 4

ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Salovey focused on his personal relationship with and strong dedication to the city in his speech.


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