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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 32 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY RAIN

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CROSS CAMPUS On your best behavior. With

Parents’ Weekend looming, some of Yale’s flagship groups are preparing for Saturday and Sunday shows. Among them: the Whiffenpoofs, Whim ’n Rhythm, the Yale Symphony Orchestra, the Yale Glee Club and Just Add Water.

Educate yourself. This afternoon, the Office of Career Strategy will host an Education Networking event to connect students to opportunities in teaching and policy. Representatives from Hopkins School and Baltimore Collegiate School for Boys will be in attendance. “On the road again.” Rapper Ab-Soul performed at Toad’s last night, drawing a Woadslevel line to the dance club on a Thursday. The Carson, California, product is known for his collaboration with Chance the Rapper on “Smoke Again” from the latter’s “Acid Rap” mixtape, stirring hope that the 21-year-old Chicago performer might consider his own trek to New Haven after being unable to attend last year’s Spring Fling due to illness. Printing the prizewinner.

After Patrick Modiano won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Literature, Yale Press moved in quickly to tap into the French novelist’s newfound success. The publisher announced on Thursday that it would begin printing translated versions of Modiano’s “Suspended Sentences: Three Novellas” in November. In the heat of the race. An

article published by National Review, the magazine founded by William F. Buckley Jr. ’50, called Gov. Dannel Malloy “America’s Worst Governor,” citing tax increases as a major reason. It also called this fall’s gubernatorial race between Malloy and challenger Tom Foley “the most interesting race of the 2014 season that no one is talking about.”

Winter is coming. Singlegame tickets for the Yale basketball season are now available, alongside tickets for hockey games, through the Yale Ticket Office.

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LUX ET CANNABIS YALE’S MARIJUANA CULTURE

YLS RECRUITMENT

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Law School to offer an open house event for Yale College students

DOWNTOWN POPUP SHOP FEATURES INDIE ARTISTS

PAGES B3 WEEKEND

PAGE 5 UNIVERSITY

PAGE 7 POP-UP

Yale data server crashes BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER Yale’s data server failed yesterday evening. Members of the Yale community were unable to access websites and email throughout Thursday evening due to a power outage. Beginning at approximately 6:30 p.m., all websites powered through yale. edu — including EliApps and Classes*v2 — appeared to have crashed. As of press time, most services remained unavailable. This technical difficulty comes at an inconvenient time as students are unable to prepare for midterms, complete online assignments or use Yale printers. At 10:15 pm, Yale Chief Information Officer Len Peters told the News that the situation was an “ongoing process.” “This is a very rare occasion for us,” Peters said. “It is a major multi-point power failure, which we are going to need to do a thorough investigation to find out the cause.” Peters said Yale’s primary data center, located on George Street, may have crashed due to a circuit breaker or computer failure. He added the two backSEE DATA SERVER PAGE 4

VOLLEYBALL Bulldogs look to notch wins against Penn, Princeton PAGE 12 SPORTS

Local 34 to escalate action UNION WILL HOLD DEMONSTRATION ON OCT. 21 BY NICOLE NG STAFF REPORTER

KEN YANAGISAWA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Yale students are feeling the effects of Yale’s data server failure that occurred this evening. Yale CIO Len Peters said the problem is a multi-point failure

Tensions between Yale’s largest union and the administration reached a new high yesterday, when Local 34 — the University’s white and pink-collar union — unanimously voted to take broader action to reverse the budget cuts that the unions say have left fewer workers with more work. Though the endowment grew to an alltime high in fiscal 2014 and the budget deficit likely shrank considerably, the University will continue its plan to reduce administrative costs — a move that has frustrated Yale’s unions.In the past, when the University reduced administrative costs, Local 34 President Laurie Kennington said the union engaged in discussion and delivered petitions to Yale administrators. Yet, the news that the University would continue its plans to reduce administrative costs, despite a record-high endowment, incited Local 34 to SEE LOCAL 34 PAGE 6

Yale, peers find challenges overseas BY RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTER The cover of the film, “To Singapore, with Love” shows a man staring out across the river into his native Singapore. Forced into exile by the country’s Communist government 50 years before, the man yearns to make a connection with his homeland but ultimately cannot due to his past as a student activist.

“To Singapore, with Love,” became a source of controversy in early September when the Singaporean Media Development Authority deemed the film a threat to national security and prohibited any screening or distribution of it in Singapore. As the MDA makes certain allowances for viewings at academic institutions, however, Yale-NUS administrators said in September that the Univer-

sity would go forth with plans to show the film in a classroom setting. Upon receiving news that Yale-NUS was planning a screening of her film, filmmaker Tan Pin Pin announced on her Facebook page, and in interviews with different news outlets that she did not authorize the screening. A day later, YaleNUS spokesperson Fiona Soh said that “To Singapore, with

Debate on new college names begins

Love” would not be screened. Soh said in an email to the News that Yale-NUS would respect the filmmaker’s decision, and thus canceled the screening. In a Thursday email, YaleNUS President Pericles Lewis said to the News that the school is now waiting to show the film when the filmmaker is ready for them to do so. Amid the controversy, University President Peter Salovey

said it is of prime importance for Yale-NUS to remain faithful to academic freedom. “I remain committed to the proposition that faculty at YaleNUS College must be able to make use of any material they deem appropriate for their classrooms, in which they and their students must be able to study and talk about any topic,” SEE YALE-NUS PAGE 4

FOOTBALL

No vacancy. An article

published by Multifamily Executive this week named New Haven as the “tightest rental market in the country” over the past quarter-year, with its 2.1 percent vacancy rate. Each of the top seven spots was occupied by cities in California or Connecticut, including sixth-ranked Hartford.

GRANT BRONSDON/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

ELIS LOOK TO CONTINUE WINNING STREAK The Bulldogs went into the 2013 matchup 3-0 and lost to the Big Green 20-13. This year Yale hopes to continue its undefeated season. See page 12.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1929 The Yale Police Department announces that it will levy heavy fines against anyone vandalizing University parking meters after dealing with 10 such cases over the preceding two weeks. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

SARAH ECKINGER/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Students have taken up Salovey’s request for new college names as an opportunity to express the importance of diversity at Yale. BY DAVID SHIMER AND RACHEL SIEGEL CONTRIBUTING REPORTER AND STAFF REPORTER From a clergyman to a politician to a professor, 10 individuals and two towns have had the honor of an eponymous Yale residential college. In preparation for the construction of two new residential colleges, the University is work-

ing to determine who else should be added to that list. On Wednesday morning, University President Peter Salovey sent an email to all members of the Yale community asking them to submit suggestions for the naming of the two colleges. With construction set to officially begin in Feb. 2015, the Yale CorSEE COLLEGES PAGE 6

Lawmakers discuss Ebola BY APARNA NATHAN STAFF REPORTER Connecticut legislators and New Haven public health officials gathered on Thursday — a day after Ebola claimed its first victim in the U.S. — to discuss the epidemic. U.S. congresswoman Rosa DeLauro and Senators Richard Blumenthal LAW ’73 and Chris Murphy led the meeting, at which they described the state’s plans for improving

hospital preparedness to deal both with panicked patients and the logistics of handling suspected cases. They solicited suggestions from officials present, including representatives from local hospitals, public health agencies and biotechnology companies. “It’s one thing to plan, it’s another thing to be prepared,” State Public Health Commissioner Jewel Mullen ’77 GRD ’96 said. “You can’t prepare after the fact.”

The legislators repeatedly emphasized that there is no cause for alarm in Connecticut, but the state must be prepared to contain the disease. With the CDC screening incoming passengers at five U.S. airports, Blumenthal advocated extending screenings to the Bridgeport, New Haven and New London seaports to keep the disease from entering the country. On SEE EBOLA PAGE 4


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