Yale Daily News — Week of May 7

Page 1

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 · FRIDAY, MAY 7, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 27 · yaledailynews.com

Karen DuBois-Walton officially launches mayoral bid would be stepping down from her 14-year tenure as president of Elm City Communities, the New Haven Housing Authority, effective last Friday. Her bid became official on Monday morning. DuBois-Walton told the News that she will be sharing her platform in the next coming months, and that it will focus on policing, education and fiscal security. “As she moves from an exploratory committee to a full campaign committee, she’ll continue to prioritize listening to and lifting up the voices of all New Haven residents, while stressing opportunities for bold leadership and real, substantive change,” DuBois-Walton’s spokesperson, Will Viederman, wrote in a Monday press release. The difference between launching an exploratory committee and a mayoral campaign lies in the permission and documentation behind a race. DuBois noted in a phone interview with the News that the committee was intended to test out the “viability” and “ideas”

BY ÁNGELA PÉREZ STAFF REPORTER On Monday, former Elm City Communities President Karen DuBois-Walton ’89 officially announced her run for mayor and filed her campaign papers on the same day. DuBois-Walton is preparing to roll out her platform in the coming months. She will challenge one-term incumbent Mayor Justin Elicker in the Democratic primary this September. The primary election is typically decisive in New Haven, which has long been a Democratic stronghold. While Elicker announced his reelection bid in January, DuBois-Walton’s campaign efforts began in March, when she launched an exploratory committee to investigate the possibility of her mayoral run. She raised $69,652 in the first 23 days of fundraising, more than either of the 2019 mayoral candidates had raised in their first month. On April 21, DuBois-Walton announced she

behind a potential race. As soon as the documentation to become a mayoral candidate is filed on a city and state level, the candidate can actively campaign, request voter support and advertise a platform. In April, DuBois-Walton released a video calling for investment in police accountability through the funds New Haven received via the American Rescue Act. She called for community investment and collaboration with local community organizations. DuBois-Walton also said that a team like Mayor Justin Elicker’s Crisis Response Team should have been “been up and running much, much sooner,” noting that some situations “don't need a gun and a badge as a response.” “We should be defining what [a] 2021 version of community policing looks like in this community and creating models that could be picked up in other places,” DuBois-Walton told the News. “It's not something that that SEE DUBOIS-WALTON PAGE 4

COURTESY OF KAREN DUBOIS-WALTON

Former Housing Authority President Karen DuBois-Walton officially announced her candidacy in the 2021 mayoral race on Monday.

Ivy competition set to resume this fall Activists ask Yale to respect New Haven in street mural BY NATALIE KAINZ AND ISAAC YU STAFF REPORTERS Once again, labor activists are hitting the Elm City’s streets to demand more from Yale — this time, leaving behind a permanent, painted mark on the University’s doorstep.

The new mural sits in front of Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall on Prospect Street, part of which was closed on Saturday with the approval of the Board of Alders. SEE MURAL PAGE 4

COURTESY OF YALE ATHLETICS

The announcement comes after more than three seasons of canceled games. BY EUGENIO GARZA GARCÍA AND JAMES RICHARDSON STAFF REPORTERS After more than three seasons of canceled games, Yale and its Ivy League opponents are set to

return to regular athletic competition in the fall. In an email obtained by the News sent to Yale student-athletes Tuesday at 11 a.m., Director of Athletics Vicky Chun shared a joint statement from the Ivy

League Council of Presidents announcing their expectation for the resumption of Ivy League competition across all sports starting in fall 2021. The presiSEE IVY LEAGUE PAGE 4

NATALIE KAINZ/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Starting at 7 a.m. on Saturday, painters also added two stripes to Prospect Street’s bike lane.

Unions call for respect from Wilcox retires after 38 years at the YCBA Yale at car caravan rally BY ANNIE RADILLO STAFF REPORTER

Hundreds of local union members, students and university workers gathered in front of the newly painted “YALE: RESPECT NEW HAVEN” street mural at 1

BY NATALIE KAINZ AND ISAAC YU STAFF REPORTERS Overcast skies and drizzling rain did nothing to dampen the spirit of unity at a rally held by New Haven unions on Wednesday.

SEE CARAVAN PAGE 5

NATALIE KAINZ/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Protesters gather on Prospect Street to call for a fair renegotiation of University labor contracts.

On April 1, 2021, Deputy Director for Collections Scott Wilcox GRD ’78, PHD ’84, retired from the Yale Center for British Art after 38 years at the center. This step comes after a two-year phased retirement which began on April 1, 2020. Wilcox first came to Yale as a graduate student in art history in the late 1970s. He joined the YCBA in 1982 as assistant curator in prints and drawings and continued to rise in the museum’s ranks in the decades that followed. His colleagues at the YCBA described him as dedicated, intelligent and extremely knowledgeable about British art. During his time at the YCBA, Wilcox focused on making the museum’s collections accessible to the public and increased the prominence of British photography in the collections.

CROSS CAMPUS

INSIDE THE NEWS

Philanthropist Paul Mellon '29 contributes over $50 million worth of artwork, manuscripts and additional endowment to the University, the largest donation made by a single individual in the University's history. He also contributed $25 million in artwork, manuscripts and money to the Yale British Art Museum.

ASIAN

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1993.

To mark the beginning of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, this special issue of the News celebrates Asian communities at Yale and in New Haven. Read the full issue at bit.ly/33ocit3. Page 6-7 SPISSUE

HEDY TUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Wilcox joined the YCBA in 1982, eight years after its founding, as an assistant curator in prints and drawings. “Scott is deeply respected by his colleagues not only for his curatorial and administrative ability but for his intelligence,” said Jules Prown, founding director of the YCBA. “At staff meetings, when problems and

SCHWARZMAN

The Schwarzman Center will open in fall 2021 and serve as a hub for community life and the arts, offering a new dance studio, art gallery and theater. Page 9 ARTS

SWENSEN

David Swensen GRD ’80, Yale’s longtime Chief Investment Officer and creator of the “Yale Model” for institutional investing, died Wednesday evening. Page 13 UNIVERSITY

other issues come up for discussion, everyone awaits Scott’s analysis and conclusions and almost invariably follows his lead.” SEE WILCOX PAGE 5 BULLDOG

Silliman students can look out for a fresh face in the courtyard this fall: As a resident fellow, Handsome Dan XIX handler Haro ’18 will live there with her puppy, Kingman. Page 14 SPORTS


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.