NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 44 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY RAINY
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CROSS CAMPUS Halloweekend. It’s here. Finally. Midterm season is mostly done and the YSO concert is tonight. Enjoy the festivities, most of which are listed in the items below. There’s a concert tonight?
For those with less-than-fast fingers, the consolation prizes are numerous and noteworthy. The Crucible, a Shades performance, Macbeth, Twiddle (the Halloween show at Toad’s). Anything and everything you could want on a Friday night.
VOTER APATHY YALIES AND THE GOVERNOR’S RACE
DISABILITIES
TERRY LODGE
Despite attempts at reform, note-taking system has yet to change
MARIO BATALI’S BAR AND RESTAURANT OPENS ON PARK ST.
PAGE B3 WEEKEND
PAGE 7 UNIVERSITY
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Univ. $51 million in black SURPLUS FOLLOWS $39 MILLION DEFICIT IN FY13 BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER Yale was officially in the black for the 2014 fiscal year. In the newly released 2013-14 report from the Yale Division of Finance, the University saw a $51 million dollar surplus from operations in fiscal 2014, compared to a
$39 million deficit in the previous year. The report also announced that the University’s net assets grew by $3.3 billion to a total of $25.8 billion, which was attributed to the strong 20.2 percent return on investments on Yale’s endowment in fiscal 2014. Other major contributors to the results included returns from the School of Medicine and the cost-saving activity from the University’s five-year plan to reduce administrative costs by 9 percent. Despite the gains, Vice President
for Finance and Business Operations Shauna King said new challenges lie ahead for the University. “From a balance sheet perspective, this was another terrific year, and Yale remains a place with the resources to support its varied and important mission,” she said in the report. “We are heartened by the improved operating performance, and it represents Yale’s measured and successful response to the finan-
Don’t press “M.” The Carillonneurs will be playing a concert this evening featuring classics like “Monster Mash,” “Thriller” and “Hedwig’s Theme.” To this soundtrack, Halloween is sure to dazzle and enchant. MATTHEW NUSSBAUM/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
More than tickets.
Communication and Consent Educators have in their possession four tickets to the YSO show that will go to the winner of the group’s Yaleoween Instagram Scavenger Hunt, which will be held from 7:30 p.m. through 10:30 p.m. tonight. Students behind the best pictures have a chance at the prize, which also includes two simulcast tickets and a pizza party for six at BAR. Rekindling the rivalry.
Yesterday, the New York Times reported on the Connecticut race for U.S. Representative between incumbent Elizabeth Esty LAW ’85 and challenger Mark Greenberg, a Cornell grad. Calling the dynamic between the Ivy Leaguers “nasty” the article also called Esty a “cagey fighter,” likely due to her Bulldog spirit.
MICHELLE OBAMA RALLIES SUPPORT FOR MALLOY The first lady made an appearance yesterday at Wilbur Cross High in support of Gov. Dannel Malloy for the Tuesday’s gubernatorial election. See page 6.
Frankel meets Frank. Late last
night, reality TV star Bethenny Frankel posted a picture of herself eating a slice of Pepe’s pizza, which she dubbed “the best pizza [she’s] ever had!” You and everyone else, Ms. Frankel. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
2012 A state death investigator and a Yale anthropologist research associate collaborate to trace the human remains discovered underneath a fallen tree on the New Haven Green back to multiple centuries-old skeletons. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus
Malloy sends $21.5 million to Coliseum project BY CAROLINE HART AND ERICA PANDEY STAFF REPORTERS On Thursday — just four days before the gubernatorial election — Gov. Dannel Malloy announced a $21.5 million state contribution to New Haven’s Coliseum Redevelopment project. The project will connect Orange and South Orange streets in order to link Union Station to the downtown city grid and provide commercial and residential spaces. The state funding will allow the city to begin initial construction on the project this summer. Canadian development firm LiveWorkLearnPlay has taken on the $395 million project, which, when completed, will include a new hotel and bring 4,700 construction jobs and 2,800 permanent jobs to New Haven. LiveWorkLearnPlay partner Max Reim took the stage with Malloy along with Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro, Mayor Toni Harp and President of the Board of Alders and Ward 5 Alder Jorge Perez at a Thursday press conference to announce the new contribution. In response to a question about why the announcement was made so close to election day, Malloy joked “shame on you.” He said that he has been working on the project since its inception in 2012, advocating for a hotel to be developed in the first phase and SEE COLISEUM PAGE 4
Singapore upholds law criminalizing gay sex BY PHOEBE KIMMELMAN AND RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTERS In recent months, campus discussion regarding freedom of expression at Yale-NUS has been focused on Singaporean laws limiting free speech. But on Wednesday when, Singapore’s highest court upheld a
Stay healthy, kids. A Thursday
article published by the Huffington Post revealed that fewer than 10 percent of college students got their flu shot, according to a recent University of Buffalo study. PSA: Vaccinations are regularly available all over campus, mainly through Yale Health (and occasionally Woolsey Hall).
Elis looks for a sixth victory against a winless Columbia PAGE 14 SPORTS
SEE SURPLUS PAGE 6
The fun continues. The perks of having Halloween land on a Friday? Guilt-free extension of the festivities over numerous days. Events like SigEp’s Spook’d at Elevate and Pierson Inferno headline Saturday night.
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law — Section 377A — criminalizing sex between men, questions arose regarding whether students at Yale-NUS are free to explore their sexual orientation. The verdict to uphold 377A comes after two separate appeals by three gay men in Singapore who claim that the law violates their human rights. Though the law has been in
effect since 1938, sources say the law is not enforced in Singapore, including at Yale-NUS. More than a dozen Singaporean students and Yale-NUS professors interviewed — as well as members of the Yale community in New Haven – said the law is not an accurate representation of Singapore’s tolerance towards its gay population.
O N L I N E E D U CAT I O N
Teaching and learning, unconventionally BY EMMA PLATOFF AND STEPHANIE ROGERS STAFF REPORTERS A decade ago, if professor Diana Kleiner had had a crucial question about a detail on a Roman ruin in the Syrian desert city of Palmyra, she would have had to get on a plane. But last semester, while she was teaching her massive open online course “Roman Architecture,” no flight was necessary — the 40,000 students in her course lived on all three continents that the Roman Empire contained at its height. Students who lived close to the relevant monuments often offered to take pictures to share with their classmates. For Kleiner, who admits that she was skeptical of the format at first, this type of interaction is exactly
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OOCs may steal the spotlight, but, recently, the University has been focusing on other online initiatives, hoping to bring to campus classes that Yalies would otherwise go without. EMMA PLATOFF AND STEPHANIE ROGERS report. what makes MOOCs so valuable. While she initially worried that the type of individual student engagement she values even in lecture courses would not be possible with such a large class, she was pleasantly surprised that she could still get a good sense of the class’s active students through their consistent posts on an online forum. Far from feeling alienated from her students, Kleiner got to know the active ones so well that on a trip to Rome
this summer, she visited some of them in person. “That opportunity to have people on the spot was incredible for the dialogue that ensues,” said Kleiner, an art history professor and member of the University’s committee on online education. “It was one of the most memorable experiences I had in that course.” For better or worse, Yale’s online platform is expanding, and it is not going to stop any time SEE MOOCS PAGE 6
“[Section 377A] is definitely not enforced on campus,” said Sherlyn Goh Xue Tin NUS ’17, a founder of Yale-NUS’s diversity alliance, The G Spot. She added that while some Singaporeans are frustrated that the law was upheld, others would be more upset if it was repealed. Most students interviewed said they were not shocked
by Wednesday’s verdict, but added that it will not drastically change social culture in Singapore. Abdul Hamid NUS ’17, a founder of The G Spot, said the recent verdict did not come as a surprise because it is consistent with the Singaporean govSEE SINGAPORE PAGE 4
Boyko released from quarantine SAYS QUARANTINES WORSEN EPIDEMIC BY STEPHANIE ROGERS AND AMAKA UCHEGBU STAFF REPORTER AND CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Two weeks after being admitted to Yale-New Haven Hospital with Ebola-like symptoms, Ryan Boyko GRD ’18has been released from a state-mandated quarantine. Despite testing negative in two separate tests for the virus, the 30-year-old Yale School of Public Health graduate student was quarantined in his home by the Connecticut Department of Public Health following the scare on Oct. 16. Boyko returned from his ninth visit to Liberia on Oct. 11, having spent three weeks working on a computer program to track and monitor the spread of Ebola. Since revealing his identity earlier this week, Boyko has lambasted the state’s quarantine order. “I am of course happy to be let
out of unwarranted home confinement, but am still upset that Connecticut and other states have adopted unsound, unscientific policies likely to worsen the epidemic in West Africa and make Americans less safe,” Boyko wrote in a Thursday email.
[I] am still upset that Connecticut and other states have adopted … unscientific policies. RYAN BOYKO GRD ’18 Student, Yale School of Public Health Boyko said that while the incubation period for Ebola is 21 days, the state can only make quarantine orders for 20 days at a time but decided not to renew the orders for a 21st day for reasons unbeknownst to him. SEE BOYKO PAGE 4