Yale Daily News — Week of Sept. 3

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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 · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 28 · yaledailynews.com

Despite flooding and outages, Yale forges ahead with classes BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER

COURTESY OF MATTHEW MEYERS

Water seeps through the carpet in Bass Library on Wednesday night due to the remnants of Hurricane Ida.

After more than a half foot of rain pounded Connecticut late Wednesday into Thursday morning, Yale continued with the second day of classes despite ongoing power outages in several classroom buildings and residential colleges. Remnants of Hurricane Ida slammed parts of the Northeast, including New Haven, late Wednesday night and early Thursday morning. By 8 a.m, once the storm had cleared, the power remained down in numerous campus buildings, according to an email sent to faculty and students on Thursday morning from Dean of Yale College Marvin Chun; Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Tamar Szabó Gendler; and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Lynn Cooley. Specifically, classroom buildings up Hillhouse and along Prospect Street — including A.K. Watson Hall, Henry R. Luce Hall and Rosenkranz Hall — did not have

Yale-NUS College to close in 2025

YALE DAILY NEWS

National University of Singapore will restructure curriculum into “New College,” removing Yale’s name from the often-contentious joint liberal arts college. BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER

According to an NUS statement, the new program will allow more Singaporean students to access a joint liberal arts and specialized education. Cohorts will double from 250 to around 500 students, and students will learn the common curriculum and be able to access more pre-professional offerings. Yale-NUS College was founded in 2013 with a mission of collaboration to provide a liberal arts education in Asia. But controversy clouded its creation, particularly due to the authoritarian government that rules the island nation

Yale-NUS, an often-controversial collaboration between Yale and the National University of Singapore, will close its doors in four years. This July, NUS President Tan Eng Chye GRD ’89 declared his intent to establish the “New College,” which will merge YaleNUS College with the NUS University Scholars Programme, an existing interdisciplinary initiative. Yale’s name will be removed from the institution.

Students in McClellan Hall moved to Omni McClellan Hall on Old Campus an email on Friday stating that the students will be relocated to the Omni Hotel for “at least the first

BY JULIA BIALEK STAFF REPORTER On Friday afternoon, Yale University sent undergraduate students who were slated to live in

SEE MCCLELLAN PAGE 5

SANYA NIJHAWAN/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

The change, announced five days before the start of the fall semester, is affecting 49 students in mixed-college housing.

and restricts some speech. Since its inception, Yale-NUS has been primarily funded by the Singaporean government. Yale repeatedly drew ire from critics who claimed it did not clearly articulate guidelines for free expression and nondiscrimination, and for putting its name on an educational institution beyond its control. But Pericles Lewis, vice president for global strategy and Yale-NUS’s founding president, said that Yale was pleased with the collaboration and was not the proponent of its dissolution. Salovey similarly underscored Yale’s pride in the partnership. “Yale takes great pride in the accomplishments of Yale-NUS College—a pioneering partnership between two leading universities to create a residentially based liberal arts college,” University President Peter Salovey wrote in a statement. “In the eight years since the College admitted its first class, it has become one of the most highly selective institutions of higher SEE YALE-NUS PAGE 4

would be closed for the remainder of the day. The sites at the Schwarzman Center and 150 York St. would continue operating. People who could not reschedule a canceled test would not be penalized for the delay in adhering to their testing schedule, she wrote. Melanie Boyd, Dean of Student Affairs, wrote in a campus email that Yale’s central messaging systems were working unevenly as of Thursday morning, and potentially causing communication challenges. The deans confirmed that classes would continue, but that courses held in the affected buildings should meet over Zoom or be rescheduled to another time. In a 1 p.m. follow-up email, the deans clarified that classes should not take place in the affected buildings for the rest of the day, regardless of whether the power came back on. They added that people should only enter the buildings, some of them research facilities, to retrieve items and secure equipSEE FLOOD PAGE 4

FAS Senate gets faculty input on in-person teaching BY MADISON HAHAMY AND ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTERS In-person learning at Yale is back for the fall semester — but not all faculty are on board with what they say is a unilateral policy that ignores social distancing guidelines or those with vulnerable family members. Last week, University officials sent a memo to faculty that allows them to teach remotely for the first week

if it is “impossible” to teach in person; however, longer-term accommodations remain hard to come by, prompting some faculty concern. The FAS Senate recently sent out a survey to faculty, which will close this Friday, that allows them to anonymously share their opinions regarding in-person teaching. “We have heard concerns from some faculty and we wanted to SEE CLASSES PAGE 4

YALE DAILY NEWS

The University Provost clarified accommodation policies and mask guidelines ahead of the term’s start.

Admin stands behind in-person classes BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER In a Thursday panel, University leaders outlined the layers of public health precautions Yale will take for the fall semester, designed to limit coronavirus infections to no more than five percent of the student body throughout the 180day period. Last spring, the University announced plans for a fall semester that would more closely resemble a standard term and said that the semester would be between “10 and 90 percent normal.” Since then, ninety-six percent of students and about 90 percent of faculty and staff are fully immunized against COVID-19. But due to the emergence of the highly transmissible Delta variant, the University has added in testing, contact tracing and masking protocols, as well as restricted social gatherings.

CROSS CAMPUS

INSIDE THE NEWS

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 2020.

SUMMER

Yale libraries expanded their reach across the globe this year due to the COVID-19. Students studying remotely, though unable to use library spaces, recieved access to nearly all library materials through various services provided by the University.

power for much of the day. Several residential colleges — specifically Benjamin Franklin, Silliman, Pauli Murray and Timothy Dwight Colleges — also did not have power as of the email update. An email from Timothy Dwight Head of College Mary Lui explained that there are standing flood waters in Yale’s Central Power Plant and that entryways G and H in the college experienced particularly severe damage. Some students in those entryways were relocated to temporary housing due to a ceiling leak, University spokesperson Karen Peart told the News. By 4:30 p.m., power had been restored to all campus buildings except for Dow Hall, Dunham, Tsai CITY and Warner House, according to a Yale Alert. There is no timeline for the power to come back on in those buildings, the alert continued. Madeline Wilson, Director of Yale’s COVID-19 Testing and Tracing Program, wrote in a 12:15 p.m. email that testing sites at 60 Sachem St. and 109 Grove St.

Read a recap of stories published online in the News this summer: the School of Drama went tuition-free, Yale hired a new Chief Investment Officer and more. Page 6-7 RECAP

KAREN LIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

In a Thursday town hall, University leaders expressed optimism for the term but left open the possibility of a more transmissible variant emerging. On Thursday, one day before Yale welcomed the first-year class to campus, University President Peter Salovey held a town hall with Yale’s health and safety leaders to explain just

SCHWARZMAN

The Schwarzman Center opened its doors on Wednesday, and students will now be able to experience the center’s many gathering spaces and arts offerings. Page 9 ARTS

COVID

Yale recorded more positive COVID-19 cases this term than the corresponding period last fall as students return to in-person classes after 18 months of remote instruction. Page 9 UNIVERSITY

how typical the fall term might be and comment on additional COVID-19 possibilities for the semester. SEE ADMIN PAGE 5 MAYOR

Karen DuBoisWalton has ended her campaign for New Haven mayor, leaving incumbent Justin Elicker as the sole Democratic candidate. Page 13 CITY


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