Yale Daily News — Week of Feb. 12

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, FEBRUARY 12, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 15 · yaledailynews.com

Yale community mourns loss of Kevin Jiang ENV ’22 BY TALAT AMAN AND JULIA BROWN STAFF REPORTERS Kevin Jiang ENV ’22, a beloved member of the Yale School of the Environment community and US Army veteran, was shot and killed on Saturday night. Born in Seattle, Jiang studied environmental sciences at North Seattle College and ecology and biology at the University of Washington, where he graduated magna cum laude. He served in the US Army National Guard for over eight years as an environmental scientist and engineering officer according to his LinkedIn profile, and was also a tank operator. Just over a week ago on Jan. 30, he proposed to his fiancee Zion Perry GRD ’26. He would have celebrated his 27th birthday on Feb. 14. “Kevin was and is a gift from God,” Perry wrote in an email to the News. “He was a true and righteous man after God’s own heart. Life is so precious and short. My only hope is that he is with his Heavenly Father now in perfect peace.”

Upon his acceptance to YSE, Jiang had written on his Facebook page that he promised to “never stop growing” and helping enact positive change in other people’s lives. During his time in New Haven, he was an active member of the Christian Union at Yale. According to the New Haven Independent, Jiang actively volunteered at the Trinity Baptist Church on State Street. His mother was also an active volunteer and had moved from Seattle to live near Jiang in 2019. “Kevin was one of the most joyful and enthusiastic people I’ve known!” Elizabeth Nassir ’22 wrote in an email to the News. “His smile lit up a room! He was authentic and welcoming, making everyone feel at ease. His love for God and others was evident in the way he spoke and acted. We could always trust him to do the right thing. He loved the outdoors, was an avid fisherman, and was quick to find beauty in even the simplest things. I am so grateful for the time we had with him, and he left me and my friends as better people.” Many friends and family members took to Jiang’s social media to honor

COURTESY OF DENETHI WIJEGUNAWARDANA

Jiang was a veteran of the US Army National Guard and member of the Christian Union at Yale.

Memoir frustrates some First Women

COURTESY OF MARA LAVITT

The Written History Project will publish the final book in two different versions, one with the names of contributors and one without. BY AMELIA DAVIDSON STAFF REPORTER As part of the celebration of 50 years of coeducation at Yale College, members of the “first women at Yale” cohort — those who graduated in 1971, 1972 or 1973 — contributed to the Written History Project, which was meant to collect and preserve the history of coeducation at Yale College. But some alumnae were upset upon learning last month

that their names would be removed from some of their testimony. The project managers will publish the final book in two versions — a private one that included the names of contributors and an index of the writers, and a public one, which removed their names from their testimony. Beginning in September 2019, when the project was first introduced, 141 women submitted testimony to the Written History

Project. Two explicitly requested anonymity, and the rest submitted testimony using their names. Upon submission, the women signed a release — a copy of which was obtained by the News — which gave the University permission to edit their submissions. The release did not mention the right to anonymize the women’s accounts. The News spoke with four members of the first women cohort who were involved in the project as contributors, all of whom expressed anger and disappointment at the anonymization of their submissions. And in emails obtained by the News, at least seven total women expressed surprise and frustration at the co-editors’ decision to anonymize their work. “When you remove names from something that is a personal reflection, you in a way have diluted the power of that reflection,” said Dori Zaleznik ’71, one of the contributors to the project. “It feels like having proposed a really good project that could have power and potential historical interest to people looking at the beginning of coeducation — that they’ve weakened what they were attempting to do.”

NHPD names person of interest BY TALAT AMAN, JULIA BROWN AND MADISON HAHAMY STAFF REPORTERS In a press conference on Wednesday afternoon, New Haven Police Department Chief Otoniel

Reyes named 29-year-old Qinxuan Pan as a person of interest in regard to the shooting of Kevin Jiang ENV ’22 this past Saturday. Reyes refrained from calling him a “suspect,” instead reiterating that he is a “person of interest”

COURTESY OF NEW HAVEN POLICE DEPARTMENT

NHPD Chief Otoniel Reyes said that Pan should be considered "armed and dangerous."

Class sizes are changing after increase in student leaves BY JULIA BIALEK AND AMELIA DAVIDSON STAFF REPORTERS

YALE NEWS

The class of 2024 was the only one to see an increased class size this term.

CROSS CAMPUS

INSIDE THE NEWS

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1897.

CAREER

The Boy’s Club is hosting a range of entertainment for Yale students, including, but not limited to, boxing, banjo-playing and quartet singing.

According to an Office of Career Strategy report, over 25 percent of class of 2020 graduates reported having post-graduate plans affected by the pandemic. Page 6 UNIVERSITY

GRECO

In a year characterized by increased leaves of absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic’s disruption of student life, data shared by the University Registrar’s Office shows how class sizes have changed. According to the data — current as of Feb. 1 and subject to change up to Feb. 15 — the classes of 2021, 2022 and 2023 all have lower enrollment numbers this term as compared to their original matriculation class sizes. On the other hand, the class of 2024 saw an increase in class size, due to students originally in the class of 2023 who took leaves of absence. However, despite the increase in students taking leaves

Valentina Greco, professor of genetics at the Yale School of Medicine, received the 2021 Momentum Award by the ISSCR for her work. Page 7 SCITECH

EXHIBIT

A new streetside exhibit titled "Made Visible: From Every Angle" has premiered and aims to celebrate Black History Month with local Black artists' work. Page 8 ARTS

of absence, the number of students who will be offered admission into the class of 2025 will not change, which will lead to an massive expansion in the undergraduate student population. “We are all committed to ensuring that all aspects of a Yale education — from learning and research to residential college and extracurricular life — continue to flourish when students are back on campus,” Dean of Yale College Marvin Chun told the News. According to data from the Registrar’s Office — which is still preliminary due to continued data entry as the Formal Enrollment and Census is finalized — the classes of 2021, 2022 and 2023 had 1,579, 1,573 and 1,550 enrolled students respectively in the fall of each class’s first

VALENTINE

Valentine's Day is coming up, but undergraduates living in campus are still in quarantine in their residential colleges. How are they celebrating?? Page 11 UNIVERSITY


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.