Yale Daily News - Sept. 27, 2016

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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2016 · VOL. CXXXIX, NO. 19 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

RAINY CLOUDY

74 59

CROSS CAMPUS From Dakota to Connecticut.

The Association of Native Americans at Yale, Fossil Free Yale and other student groups are hosting Cherokee lawyer Mary Kathryn Eagle for a discussion on the Dakota Access Pipeline today at 7 p.m. in LC 102.

GUT FEELING BACTERIA, WEIGHT LOSS LINKED

(ALMOST) SWEEP

PRO-WHAT?

Six Yale professors and alums earn MacArthur ‘Genius Grants’

PROTESTS AT PLANNED PARENTHOOD

PAGE 6 SCI TECH

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 3 CITY

ELECTION 2016

All eyes on nominees

Everyday IM hustlin’.

Sillimanders now have an extra incentive to participate in IMs. For every selfie taken at the IM fields and sent to the Head of College, students will receive two Sillibucks to spend at the buttery or on Silliman gear.

When they go low, we get high. Saybrook Dean Christine

Muller sent a Saybrookwide email yesterday afternoon asking students to be considerate of others after various undergraduates reported smelling marijuana in the Saybrook library last week.

Yale: 1, Harvard: 0. The

Bulldogs may have lost to the Crimson in field hockey on Friday, but Yale is leading in endowment returns. While this year Yale’s endowment grew by 3.4 percent, Harvard’s dropped by two percent.

Yale: 1, Harvard: 1. According to the Crimson, Harvard is on track to completing their new LGBTQ and Diversity office by 2017. Meanwhile, the location of Yale’s own Office of LGBTQ Resources has been a source of concern among undergraduates. It is currently located in an annex dorm behind Payne Whitney Gymnasium. The Union and the Constitution forever. In

the first presidential debate last night against Hillary Clinton LAW ’73 , Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump referred to La Guardia, JFK and Newark Airports as “third world countries.” What does that make CT Limo then?

Debates for days. “I have a son, he’s 10 years old. He has computers, he’s so good with these computers it’s unbelievable,” Trump said during the debate. Yale could always use another CS50 teaching assistant.

DENIZ SAIP/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Yale students and New Haven residents gathered Monday night to watch the first presidential general elecBY AMY CHENG AND CAITLYN WHERRY STAFF REPORTERS Donald Trump wore a blue tie, Hillary Clinton LAW ’73 wore a red dress and Michael McGarry, a legislative council-

man from Hamden watching the presidential debate in Cask Republic, wore tweed. Monday marked the first presidential debate of an election year that has divided Americans, but the Yale and

New Haven communities came together over the spectacle of two presidential hopefuls going head-to-head on national television. NBC’s Lester Holt modSEE DEBATES PAGE 4

SMASH HITS Volleyball begins title pursuit with a sweep of Brown PAGE 12 SPORTS

Tension in Board of Ed BY JON GREENBERG CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Community concerns about the Elm City’s public schools transformed a routine Board of Education meeting into a heated debate, loaded with accusations of incompetence and selfish behavior against certain Board members. More than 100 people packed the Beecher School auditorium on Tuesday evening to air their grievances with what they said was a toxic environment among those managing New Haven’s public schools. Responding to recent controversies, especially New Haven Public Schools Superintendent Garth Harries’ ’95 poor rapport with Board members and other local policy makers, at least 20 community representatives publicly chastised officials for pursuing personal agendas and failing to approach the district’s problems in a unified way. “It is in the air that we are not getting along,” said a reverend who testified. “There are different agendas being carried out, and it’s dividing our community.”

An altercation between Mayor Toni Harp, president of the BOE, and fellow member Dr. Edward Joyner at the beginning of Monday night’s meeting hinted at internal division within the Board. Before public testimony began, Harp expressed her views on how the meeting should proceed. Joyner then exclaimed that she “was not a dictator” and the views of other members should be given equal weight. Later in the meeting, speakers offered their views on the ongoing decision of whether or not to fire Harries, the polarizing superintendent. Several residents accused Harries of being stubborn and difficult to work with. Even those residents who ultimately came to his defense at the meeting conceded that the criticisms were valid. “Harries is stubborn, not a good communicator, uncomfortable,” said Marianne Maloney, who teaches at New Haven Academy. But, she added, “his stats are good.” This sentiment was echoed by his other supSEE BOE PAGE 6

Panel discussion opens public renaming debate BY DAVID YAFFE-BELLANY AND CHRISTINA CARRAFIELL STAFF REPORTER AND CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Yale’s newly created Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming hosted its first public discussion Monday, focusing

on how universities nationwide handle racially charged naming debates. The renaming committee, which University President Peter Salovey announced in August of this year, was established in the wake of widespread outrage from students and faculty about the

Yale administration’s April decision to keep the name of Calhoun College. Tasked with establishing principles for all future naming decisions, the committee is composed of two students, six professors and four Yale alumni and staff. But Monday’s discussion,

“Blackout” event condemns police brutality

which occurred at noon in a classroom at the Yale Law School and featured a panel of five distinguished academics discussed naming, was not widelyattended by undergraduates, the body primarily responsible for catalyzing campus-wide conversations last year about renaming

Calhoun College and abolishing the title “master” for heads of college. History professor Beverly Gage ’94, a committee member who chaired the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Senate last year, SEE NAMING PANEL PAGE 4

COMMEMORATING VANISHED STUDENTS

What’s in a name? Tonight

at 8 p.m. the Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming will meet with students of Calhoun College at the Calhoun Head’s home.

Trapped in the closet. R. Kelly will perform in Bridgeport early October. A former professional basketball player, the singer and producer is known for his collection of hit singles like “Bump N’ Grind” as well as his hip-hopera. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1960 Timothy Dwight College administration debate requiring female visitors to carry passes on weekends. Women are already required to have passes on weekdays.

ROBBIE SHORT/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER ALEX ZHANG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Around 200 Yalies wore black in solidarity with black communities nationwide.

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BY ZULFIQAR MANNAN CONTRIBUTING REPORTER In solidarity with black communities on campuses nationwide, a group of around 200 Yalies — all dressed in black — took to

Cross Campus Friday afternoon for National Blackout Day. The demonstration, organized by the Black Student Alliance at Yale, was held in response SEE BLACKOUT PAGE 6

GROUPS REMEMBER DISAPPEARED STUDENTS On Sunday, several local Mexican-interest groups, including Unidad Latina en Acción and MEChA de Yale, organized an installation on the Cross Campus lawn. Organizers set up 43 empty desks to protest the disappearance of 43 students from a teacher’s college in Guerrero, Mexico, in September 2014, after a confrontation with local police.


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