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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2020 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 1 · yaledailynews.com
Community leaders bring COVID-19 vaccine trial to YNHH BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER Thanks to advocacy from community leaders, New Haven residents — particularly those of color — will soon participate in the third phase of a COVID-19 vaccine trial conducted by Pfizer and held at the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation, or YCCI. Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer was in talks with the YCCI to bring the trial to New Haven, but it was ultimately the YCCI cultural ambassadors — pastors and community leaders working to increase the participation of the African American and Hispanic communities in clinical trials — that persuaded the company, said Yale New Haven Hospital Chief Medical Officer Thomas Balcezak. YNHH is one of more than 100 sites participating in the Phase 3 trial of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine. Principal investigator of the trial at
Yale, Onyema Ogbuagu, enrolled the hospital’s first participant on Aug. 26. By then, nearly 400 people had applied to join the study at Yale, including healthcare workers, Yale faculty and members of the wider community. Recruitment is ongoing and the University and its community partners are particularly trying to recruit people of color to enroll in the trial. “If a vaccine is tested and people of color do not participate we may not know how effective the vaccine will be on people of color. If communities of color try to wait out the results others may benefit while it will put us at a greater disadvantage,” Leroy Perry, pastor of St. Stephens American Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and a cultural ambassador, wrote in an email to the News. “To do nothing is not an option.” Still, Perry said many memSEE VACCINE TRIAL PAGE 4
YALE DAILY NEWS
YNHH is one of more than 100 sites participating in the Phase 3 trial of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine.
Victor Ashe '67 New changes come to shopping period makes Corp ballot BY MATT KRISTOFFERSEN STAFF REPORTER
Nearly 5,000 miles away from New Haven, from his house in Hawaii, Jay Baptista ’23 woke up early one August morning to confusion. Like many other students, Baptista had thought that Yale’s Online Course Selection would open up that day at 9 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time for students to sign up for lectures and sections,
actually open,” he told the News last month. “The incongruencies between emails from the registrar and what SIS [said] really seemed to confuse me along with others about what was going on.” This year, Yale’s traditional “shopping period” — a time during which students can “shop” different classes before finalizing their course lists — has undergone significant changes by Col-
he said. In Hawaii, that meant Baptista woke up before 3 a.m. to score a virtual spot in his classes for the fall semester under a new pre-registration system piloted this year. But morning came and went. OCS did not open until later that afternoon. And, even though he eventually got into most of the classes he wanted, Baptista said the experience left him puzzled. “It seemed like there was a lot of confusion about when it would
SEE SHOPPING PAGE 5
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Victor Ashe '67 obtained enough signatures to make the Yale Corporation ballot as a petition candidate. BY VALERIE PAVILONIS STAFF REPORTER Petition candidate Victor Ashe ’67 has virtually secured a spot on the ballot for the 2021 election for the Yale Corporation, the first to do so in 18 years.
Six of the 17 members of the Yale Corporation — the chief governing body of the University — are alumni fellows, or members elected directly by alumni each SEE ASHE PAGE 4
JAMES LARSON/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Virtual learning has necessitated alterations to shopping period this year, which were already set to happen in fall 2021.
Students scramble to find their belongings In first-year address, Salovey talks bridging differences BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER
ERIC WANG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Yale packed many students' belongings over the summer, but many reported lost items.
When Sharla Moody ’22 returned to campus in late August to find her bedding, clothing and boots — which cost her mother a week’s worth of pay — missing, she was upset. But it was the loss of her late grandmother’s necklace that truly devastated her. “I’m a first-gen, low income student,” Moody said. “I don’t know how I could ever buy this stuff back now.” Like many other Yalies, Moody signed up to have Yale pack up and store her things, having left items in March. Even so, many of her belongings were missing when she went to pick them up. She now fears they are lost for good. In an early June email, the University outlined a set of options for students to retrieve their belongings before the coming year. Students could schedSEE BELONGINGS PAGE 5
CROSS CAMPUS
INSIDE THE NEWS
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1991.
SIGNS As students moved into their
A 16 year old was arrested for the murder of Christian Prince '93. Prince died from a single gunshot wound to the head. The police's evidence relied heavily upon testimony from a 17 year-old, who later recanted, saying he was coerced into testifying by the police.
dorms on campus last week, Yale employees took down signs posted around campus by New Haven Rising, which called on the University to pay higher taxes to the city of New Haven. Page 6 CITY
BY VALERIE PAVILONIS STAFF REPORTER Saturday afternoon saw a twist to the traditional first-year address, as administrators delivered an online message to virtual viewers in lieu of the usual in-per-
son ceremony in Woolsey Hall. The first-year address — typically delivered to assembled first years during their orientation — was instead a 50-minute video featuring University SEE ADDRESS PAGE 5
YALE UNIVERSITY
Salovey’s speech noted Yale’s mission and its values and cited specific causes of unease within the country: the coronavirus pandemic and police brutality.
PREORIENTATION Firstyear pre-orientation groups typically populate campus before fall move-in, but this year, the college was quiet as students hiked, volunteered, and learned about food sustainability from their computer screens at home. Page 9 UNIVERSITY
GAP YEAR Despite the nearly sevenfold increase in students taking gap years, the admissions office has no plans to reduce the number of admissions offers in the coming year. Page 12 UNIVERSITY
MUSIC
The School of Music will mix remote and in-person learning, prioritizing safety while allowing students to participate in some form of live ensemble playing. Page 13 CULTURE