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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 59 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY CLEAR

37 23

CROSS CAMPUS

THE GAME WHAT MAKES VARGA GREAT

URBAN RENEWAL

COMPUTER SCIENCE

Liveable City Initiative director departs, leaving a vacancy to fill

DEPARTMENT ABSENT IN ADMINISTRATION

PAGE 12 SPORTS

PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY

PAGE 5 SCI-TECH

Elm City immigrants mull Obama action

wasn’t long ago, but Thanksgiving Break is a different ball game. Whether you’re going or staying, take the chance to kick back before you inevitably get buried by the chaos of finals season. See you on the other side.

Not so fast! There’s still

one thing that we have to do before we get to break, though: Beat Harvard. Let’s storm Cambridge and bring home a victory that we can enjoy in the bliss that is having no class on Monday.

the 2004 “We Suck” prank “the Greatest College Prank of All Time” in an article that it ran yesterday, revisiting the meticulous strategy that Mike Kai ’05 and David Aulicino ’05 put in place to pull off the legendary feat.

Let there be Lux. It’s officially

holiday season: The annual adorning of the Old Campus halls with Christmas lights began last night, with Farnam Hall lighting up “JE LUX” as it does every winter. Soon to follow are the Durfee walrus, the Lawrance moose and the other yearly masterpieces.

Getting there. The property at 1 Broadway is finally starting to look like a storefront again, with signage and windows emerging from the construction site occupying EmporiumDNA’s future home. There, too. And right down the block from 1 Broadway, Barbour will open its doors today. The store revealed that the first 35 customers to filter through its doors will automatically win a gift card worth between $20 and $50. Yale’s finest. Yale Athletics announced that two studentathletes — Elle Brunsdale ’15 and Matt Townsend ’15 — have been named Rhodes Scholarship finalists. Let’s just say that both appear to be very deserving of recognition, and are living proof that athletes can bring the heat in the classroom just as well. Looking ahead. On Thursday,

The New York Times’ Upshot section reported on an analysis run by the Hamilton Project on the relationship between one’s college major and ability to pay off debt. Not surprisingly, the humanities lagged, while economics majors did well for themselves.

On shaky ground. City crews had to close areas around College and Crown Streets yesterday after a water main break created a sinkhole in the area. Repairs lasted throughout the afternoon. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1947 Five Yalies are arrested in Cambridge after campus police find them carrying around a can of paint and suspect them of having plans to vandalize. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

y MORE ONLINE goydn.com/xcampus

Against the Crimson, the Bulldogs look for a berth in NCAA tournament PAGE 8 SPORTS

NATA S H A C H I C H I L N I S KY- H E A L 1 9 8 7- 2 0 1 4

Grad student was “willing to give of herself”

Ready? Break. Fall Break

GOAT. Business Insider named

VOLLEYBALL

BY EMMA PLATOFF STAFF REPORTER

said. “It’s very frustrating, because there’s nothing we can actually do but pray and seek legal assistance.” In a nationally televised speech last night, Obama announced that undocumented immigrants will be eligible to apply to stay in the U.S.

Natasha Chichilnisky-Heal GRD ’18, a Ph.D. candidate in political science, died Tuesday night in her New Haven apartment. She was 27 years old. In a Wednesday morning email, Graduate School Dean Lynn Cooley conveyed the news to graduate school students and faculty, extending her sympathy and sorrow and urging mourners to take comfort in one other. The New Haven Police indicated that there was no evidence of either foul play or an accident, she said. According to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Connecticut, both the cause and manner of death are pending further study. “I encourage you to seek support from your fellow students, faculty and from chap-

SEE IMMIGRANTS PAGE 4

SEE OBITUARY PAGE 4

LILLIAN CHILDRESS/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Members of the New Haven community gather in La Casa to watch the president’s nationally televised speech announcing his new directive on immigration. BY LILLIAN CHILDRESS STAFF REPORTER It has been four years since West Haven High School senior Suidy Jimenez lived with her mother, and two years since she has seen her. It has been five months since her mother was arrested for try-

ing to cross the border, then put into a Houston detainee facility. To Jimenez, President Barack Obama’s executive order on immigration, announced last night, is a beacon of hope. “I can name many occasions where I wish I could have my mother near me, cheering me on,” Jimenez

S E X UA L M I S C O N D U C T

Despite progress, sexual misconduct policies still draw ire BY NICOLE NG AND VIVIAN WANG STAFF REPORTERS In the fall of 1969, nearly 600 women stepped onto the grounds of Yale College as students for the first time. During the 45 years since Yale became co-educational, the University’s treatment of sexual misconduct has evolved substantially: An institution that once had no term for “sexual harassment” now has a University-Wide Committee on Sexual Misconduct that hears dozens of complaints every year. This evolution has come slowly. And while multiple reports and committees have been convened to address the issue, some of their suggestions have been taken into account and implemented, but others have not. Over the past month, the University’s procedures have again faced criticism. On Nov. 10, UWC Chair David Post con-

Y

ale’s sexual misconduct policies have come under close scrutiny in recent weeks. The policies, though, are the product of a decades-long evolution, one that began when few students even knew the term “sexual harassment.” Still, many say, the University has a long way to go. NICOLE NG AND VIVIAN WANG report.

vened an internal town hall for UWC members to discuss concerns they might have about recent media scrutiny of the committee. While neither the meeting nor its contents were made public, a UWC member who asked to remain anonymous, citing confidentiality concerns, told the News on Nov. 9 that the town hall would be a good opportunity for the committee to address some “cracks in the foundation” of its policies.

A BLIND EYE

One evening in 1974, a freshman student returned to her room visibly shaken. She told her roommate, Lisa Stone ’78 SPH ’82, that she had been sexually harassed by a teacher. Though deeply distressed, the two women did not know how to address the situation. Sexual harassment was not a phrase used at the time, let alone discussed on campus — Stone said as a freshman she did not even SEE MISCONDUCT PAGE 4

Anti-blight director departs BY ISABELLE TAFT STAFF REPORTER When Erik Johnson boarded a plane for southern California on Tuesday, he was leaving behind more than his job as executive director of the Livable City Initiative, New Haven’s housing code enforcement agency and neighborhood development department. He was leaving home. Johnson grew up in the Newhallville neighborhood before embarking on a career in city planning that took him to Baltimore, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C, and ultimately back home to New Haven to head the LCI in 2010. He announced in late October that he would be taking a job with a non-profit development organization just outside of Los Angeles, and his last day at City Hall was Monday. In an interview that afternoon, he said

working in his hometown came with an added sense of responsibility. “On some level, the job felt more important because you have an obligation to make where you’re from better,” Johnson said. Mayor Toni Harp is now in the process of reviewing candidates to replace Johnson as leader of a city department with a sprawling mandate of enforcing housing codes, reducing blight, supporting home-ownership and improving quality of life in New Haven neighborhoods. Johnson’s resignation came in spite of the mayor and economic development chief Matthew Nemerson, who oversees the LCI, negotiating with him over the summer to keep him in town. In May, he told Harp that he was taking a higher-paying job as the SEE LIVABLE CITY PAGE 6

KEN YANAGISAWA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Yale’s recognition of and response to sexual misconduct has evolved significantly since its first female students matriculated in 1969.

The endowment game YALE-HARVARD RIVALRY EXTENDS BEYOND THE FIELD BY LARRY MILSTEIN STAFF REPORTER Even after the scoreboard buzzes on Saturday afternoon, the rivalry between Harvard and Yale will be far from over. Rather, the competition simply shifts from the yard line to the bottom line. For the past three decades, Harvard and Yale have been competing not only in touchdowns, but also in returns. And as the institutions with the two largest endowments in the nation, investment performance is more than a sport — it is a multi-billion dollar game. At the end of the fiscal 2014 year — the period ending on June 30, 2014 —

Harvard’s endowment remained the largest in the country at $36.4 billion. Yale’s endowment stood at an institutional nominal high of $23.9 billion.

There is always a rivalry between money managers across the industry — it is a competitive endeavor. ANDREW LO Professor of finance, MIT “There is always a rivalry between money managers across the industry — it is a competitive endeavor by SEE ENDOWMENT PAGE 6


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