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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, OCTOBER 8, 2013 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 30 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY CLEAR

68 46

CROSS CAMPUS

INAUGURATION SALOVEY LOOKS TO THE WEEKEND

PERCEPTION

ELECTION

HEAD START

A new SOM study examines motivation, intuition

ELICKER AND HARP CAMPAIGNS RACE FOR FUNDS

Government shutdown puts 800 children out of school in Bridgeport

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 8-9 SCITECH

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 5 CITY

Colleges to open in 2017

Last pool party of the year.

Yalies on the West Coast waved goodbye to the summer of ’13 with the “last pool party of 2013” held on Saturday at the W Hotel in Westwood, Los Angeles. The event, sponsored in true Los Angeles style by Vita Coco Pure Coconut Water, catered to members of The Ivy Plus Society, which puts on networking and social events for alumni of select colleges. Swing vote. In case Yale was not already enough of a vegan paradise, Blue State is holding a Facebook voting contest to determine which one of three vegan food items — vegan hoisin seitan wrap, vegan tempeh reuben wrap, or vegan Mediterranean sandwich — will end up on the coffee chain’s fall menu. One vegan student interviewed said that between this latest voting contest and Blue State’s existing charityof-the-month voting campaign, the coffee shops seem to be “a little too obsessed” with promoting their democratic values. “But I guess it makes sense given that their thing is coffee served up with a dose of liberal guilt,” she said.

Islas case drops BY SEBASTIAN MEDINA-TAYAC STAFF REPORTER

Graduate Studies. These projects had been delayed several times due to the financial downturn, which caused the Yale endowment to lose nearly a quarter of its value in the 2009 fiscal year. The announcement

Jose Maria Islas is now safe from deportation and able to return to his family and work, announced La Unidad Latina en Acción at a rally Monday morning. The announcement came after a long, highly publicized struggle between immigrant advocacy groups in New Haven and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Islas has known since August that he has been granted a “stay of removal” which allows him to reside and work in the U.S. legally for one year, though he only made this information public on Monday. Islas was imprisoned for four months last year for a false accusation of bicycle theft and could not pay bail because of his undocumented status. He was detained at a Mass. jail with an ICE hold request authorized under the federal Secure Communities program. His case spurred a city-wide movement to free Islas and protect him from deportation. “I am delighted and gratified that the government has taken a step that is long overdue and clearly appropriate,” said Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal LAW ’73, who has openly supported Islas since May.

SEE CONSTRUCTION PAGE 6

SEE IMMIGRATION PAGE 4

HENRY EHRENBERG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

After years in limbo, the construction of the new residential colleges is set to begin early 2015. BY ADRIAN RODRIGUES STAFF REPORTER The construction of Yale’s two new residential colleges was postponed indefinitely because of the recession, but Provost Benjamin Polak announced Monday that the

university plans to break ground on the colleges in Feb. 2015. In a Monday email to the Yale community, Polak formally announced a target timeline for the construction of the new residential colleges, the new Yale Biology Building and the renovation of the Hall of

Staying hip ’n relevant. The

Yale press office has gone full Valencia. An Instragram photo contest has been organized for Inauguration weekend and includes ten creative and somewhat odd categories, each with unique prizes. The taker of the “most festive Fiesta Instagram” receives two tickets to the Yale Rep’s spring production while the “Best Brain Instagram” of the Cushing Center brains exhibit receives a portrait by the University photographer. A University photographer photo shoot will also be awarded to the participant who produces the “most divine instagram” but this time “on top of one of Yale’s towers during the academic year.” Here’s hoping Kline Biology Tower is not out of the question.

True town-gown spirit. The

Yale Club of New Haven is actively recruiting Yale and non-Yale members according to the New Haven Register. Unlike hundreds of other Yale Clubs around the world, the Yale Club of New Haven has opened its doors to Elm City natives, including those who work at Yale and local businesses. The typical Yale Club events, including financial literacy seminars and scotch tastings, will still be provided.

Nemerov’s ghost? Early 18th century art can be terrifying if accidentally seen in the wrong light. Capitalizing on that fact, the Yale Center for British Art has assembled a Flickr album of “creepy artworks” for Halloween. Pieces depict amorphous monsters spewing flames on Englishmen, a massive funeral procession, and various moonlit gardens. In an odd bias, the series contains multiple pictures of scenes from Macbeth. This day in Yale history, 1962.

David Pauker, headwaiter at Mory’s, turns 65.

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Rothman wins Nobel Prize BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID AND JENNIFER GERSTEN STAFF REPORTERS The phone call came at 4:30 in the morning on Monday. “I have to say, it made me feel awake,” said James Rothman ’71, a biomedical sciences, cell biology and chemistry professor. The caller wished to con-

gratulate Rothman on his latest laurel: a Nobel Prize. Rothman, who chairs the Cell Biology department, shares the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Randy Schekman, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and Thomas Südhof, a professor at Stanford University. The three will split an award of 8 million Swedish krona, or roughly $1.2

million. The prize committee, which is based in Stockholm, cited Rothman, Schekman and Südhof for their “discoveries of machinery regulating vesicle traffic, a major transport system in our cells.” Together, the three recipients’ research pieces together how vesicles, which are cellular cargo packages, get to where

they need to go on time. Rothman’s individual contribution deals with the protein machinery that allows vesicles to dock at their destinations. Jonathan Bogan ’86, a professor of medicine and cell biology, said that Rothman’s seminal work was completed in the late 80s and early 90s, when Rothman was teaching biochemistry at Stanford.

All three of this year’s winners are affiliated with Stanford in some way — Südhof as a current professor, Rothman as a former professor and Schekman as a former doctoral student. Bogan said many of Rothman’s colleagues were expecting him to receive the award. SEE NOBEL PRIZE PAGE 10

Wood leaves aldermanic race

Charles Taylor dies at 84 BY RISHABH BHANDARI STAFF REPORTER Charles Taylor ’50 GRD ’53 ’55, Yale’s provost from 1963 to 1972 who helped spearhead the diversification of the student body and the modernization of University health care, died of complications related to Alzheimer’s disease in Paris, France on Sept. 25. He was 84. Taylor served as Yale’s provost during a time of significant tumult, and also served as acting president for one academic semester when former University President Kingman Brewster took a sabbatical in 1971. Faculty and friends interviewed remembered Taylor as a compassionate and effective administrator who advocated for dramatic change within the Yale student body in a time of fiscal hardship and political turbulence, as he pushed for the integration of women and racially diverse students. “Charlie Taylor was my model for what a University leader should be,” said Jonathan Fanton ’65 GRD ’77 ’78, special assistant to the President from 1970 to 1973. “He had a laser-like instinct about people — he was a good judge of people and he cared very deeply about Yale.”

YALE

Charles Taylor, a beloved former provost, will be remembered for pushing to diversify Yale. NICK DEFIESTA/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Taylor’s colleagues recalled him as a bright and independent thinker, as well as a dedicated advocate of Brewster’s long-term plans for the University, which involved broadening the demographics of the student body, accepting women and minorities and generally opening up the realm of higher education to become more socially SEE CHARLES TAYLOR PAGE 10

Ella Wood ’15, who previously lost the Democratic primary election in September, has dropped out of the race for Ward 7 Alderman. BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER Ella Wood ’15 has decided to drop out of the race for the Ward 7 seat on the New Haven Board of Aldermen, she told the News Monday evening, opting not to run as an Independent in the general election following her loss in September’s Democratic primary.

Wood’s decision effectively hands the election to incumbent Ward 7 Alderman Doug Hausladen ’04, who fended off Wood’s primary challenge by winning 331 votes to Wood’s 232. The erstwhile candidate moved to the ward this summer in order to challenge Hausladen in what was previously an uncontested race. Pitching a message of broader SEE ELLA WOOD PAGE 4


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