NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 57 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
RAIN RAIN
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CROSS CAMPUS
(EARLY) ACTION! PLAY EXPLORES ADMISSIONS
HEY ARNOLD
SCHOOL SPIRIT
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan praises Salovey’s policies
EXTENDED SCHOOL DAY PROGRAM TO COME TO ELM CITY
PAGES 12-13 CULTURE
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
PAGE 5 CITY
Church St South tenants promised vouchers
Well endowed. The Bulldogs
may have fallen to Harvard in the 132nd rendition of The Game, but Yale dominates the endowment game. In its article “Harvard’s Sick of Losing to Yale and Has a Plan to Fix Endowment,” Bloomberg Business reports that Harvard’s returns over the past five years have been bested by Yale’s by 4 percent.
Land of opportunity.
According to the criteria developed by Measure of America’s “Opportunity Index,” Connecticut is the state with the third-most access to opportunity. The Constitution State is beat by Vermont and Massachusetts. Measure of America’s assessment considered education, civic health and job access, among other factors.
Another former Wesleyan student pleads guilty for fake MDMA distribution PAGE 7 CITY
Harvard, Princeton abolish “master” BY DAVID SHIMER AND VICTOR WANG STAFF REPORTERS
temporary hotel housing. The city and Northland also committed last week to finding or creating 301 new federally subsidized apartment units in New Haven. The 301 units will replace the 301 units that previously housed residents at Church Street South. After Northland and the city find the new units, former Church Street South tenants will be given first pick in leasing them. Officials have not yet released a timeline for the availability of new
Over the past two weeks, Harvard and Princeton have decided to stop using the word “master” in their residential college housing systems. On Tuesday, Harvard College Dean Rakesh Khurana sent an email to all Harvard students announcing that undergraduate residential “house masters,” with the support of Harvard President Drew Faust and Faculty of Arts and Sciences Dean Michael D. Smith, had unanimously expressed a desire to change their title. As such, Harvard College will soon launch a process that culminates with a suggested replacement title, to be announced at some point early next year. The Harvard announcement comes less than two weeks after Princeton University announced it would immediately change the title of “master of the residential college” to “head of college” amid discussions about racism and discrimination on college campuses nationwide, including a call by student activists to remove the name of former U.S. President Woodrow Wilson from campus buildings and the School of Public and International Affairs. At Yale, the University has yet to decide whether to replace the title of master, months after religious studies professor Stephen Davis sparked campus dialogue on the subject when he asked students in his college to refer to him as the “head” of Pierson College rather than the “master.” In an email to his students,
SEE VOUCHERS PAGE 6
SEE MASTER PAGE 4
He got a big ego. James Franco
GRD ’16 launched “Rando Franco,” an iPhone app that compiles photos, videos and social media posts from the actor, yesterday. The free app already has 19 five-star reviews. Its description begins, “Things are about to get… weird.” Rated 12+ for frequent and intense profanity and crude humor.
STILL SWEATIN’
JIAHUI HU/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Church Street South units suffered from structural damage, moldy water and chronic leakages. BY JIAHUI HU STAFF REPORTER After hearing an announcement last week from Northland Investment Corporation and public officials, several Church Street South residents looked to the sky in gratitude. City officials, representatives from the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development and Northland — the private developer that has owned the condemned complex since 2008 — told residents last Tuesday that they would all be receiving por-
table vouchers, federal money to offset the cost of rent at any new home the residents can find. Northland and public officials originally planned to screen and find homes for each displaced family. But the announcement means that Church Street South tenants will select their own housing. Units at Church Street South have suffered from structural damage and unlivable conditions, including moldy water and chronic leakages, for at least a decade. After several residents filed litigation last summer, Northland moved 58 families into
The day has arrived. Rumor
has it Grand Strategy will announce which juniors have been accepted to the course today. There will inevitably be several broken hearts around campus tonight, but fear not. If you didn’t get this GS, applications for the Yalecoordinated internship at Goldman Sachs will open on Dec. 14.
It was lit. New Haven hosted its annual tree-lighting ceremony on the Green to celebrate the beginning of the holiday season. In addition to live performances and refreshments, the event featured a camel and several alpacas. Rated RB. The first performances of hip-hop and contemporary dance group Rhythmic Blue’s fall semester show “Rhythmic Blue Presents: RBXXL” are scheduled for this evening at the Off-Broadway Theater at 41 Broadway. The group will also perform Saturday night. Confronting the Model Minority Myth. The Asian
American Cultural Center hosts a teach-in at 7 p.m. this evening in LC 102. At the event, the first panel focuses on issues of discrimination and the second explores activism and resistance. Panelists include Timothy Dwight Master Mary Lui and WGSS professor Inderpal Grewal. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
2014 Former President Jimmy Carter speaks at Woolsey Hall in an open forum. He addresses discrimination and violence against women and girls around the world, which he calls the gravest violations of human rights. Follow along for the News’ latest.
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Under new coach, five quit men’s soccer BY DANIELA BRIGHENTI STAFF REPORTER Although the Yale men’s soccer team finished its 2015 season last month with 29 players on the roster, five players have since quit the team, and others are considering doing the same. The program, which ended its season with a 1–14–2 record, saw significant changes in its coaching staff this year following former head coach Brian Tompkins’ retirement at the end of the 2014
season. After a similar 1–13–3 record in Tompkins’ last season, new head coach Kylie Stannard, who previously worked as associate head coach at Michigan State, pushed to change the culture and mentality the team had developed under Tompkins. His actions, however, received mixed feedback from players. Some found themselves unable to adapt to Stannard’s new coaching style, which involved a higher level of intensity and negative criticism than players had
Yale pilots carbon charge program BY FINNEGAN SCHICK STAFF REPORTER Yesterday, Yale became the first American university to introduce a program of carbon charges. The program, which charges buildings on Yale’s campus that exceed a target amount of carbon dioxide emissions, was unveiled in April 2015 by Yale’s Presidential Carbon Charge Task Force. And on Nov. 19, at a White House summit on climate change, the University officially pledged to implement it. The six-month-long carbon charge experiment, beginning with December’s energy bill, is one limb of a larger network of climate change programs that bring Yale in step with President Barack Obama’s carbon emissions goals at the ongoing United Nations Conference on Climate Change taking place this week in Paris. Dozens of Yale faculty and students, including 60 students from Yale College and the School of For-
seen in previous years.
NEW PRIORITIES
The first piece of Stannard’s new approach, according to many players, involved elevating soccer to a higher priority for members of the team. Stannard said he always told the team that, in order of importance, family comes first, academics second, and soccer third. He believed additional activities, such as job searches or other clubs, should not be given as
much weight. Although players agreed that a certain level of commitment was necessary to improve the program, reactions to Stannard’s approach were varied. “There was definitely an increased focus on ensuring that soccer is the number one priority of the guys on the team over things like friendships and jobs,” said a senior soccer player who asked to remain anonymous due to the sensitive nature of the topic.
Forward Keith Bond ’16 bond highlighted the fact that none of the team’s coaching staff had any experience coaching in the Ivy League prior to this year. He said it took the coaches time to adjust to the type of student-athletes who play in the conference compared to other Division I leagues around the country. But according to goalkeeper Ryan Simpson ’17, one of the first things Stannard said when SEE MEN’S SOCCER PAGE 6
Malloy visits Planned Parenthood BY NOAH DAPONTE-SMITH AND MICHELLE LIU STAFF REPORTERS
estry & Environmental Studies, are traveling to Paris over the course of this week to attend additional conferences on the topic of climate change. “The pledge is to do better than we already are,” said Yale Office of Sustainability Director Virginia Chapman, who represented Yale at the White House last month. “As far as we know, Yale is the only institution planning to test an internal carbon charge.” Over 200 colleges and universities signed the White House pledge to move toward low-carbon energy, but each school made further commitments that varied from institution to institution, Chapman said. In addition to beginning the carbon charge experiment, Yale pledged to expand its sustainability plans to more fully include the academic community by increasing teaching and research on climate change, instead of simply targeting
Days after a shooter at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado killed three people, Gov. Dannel Malloy visited the organization’s Connecticut headquarters Monday morning in a show of support. Malloy — who met with Judy Tabar, the president and Chief Executive Officer of Planned Parenthood of Southern New England — said his visit to the clinic was intended to demonstrate solidarity with the organization, given the shooting and the recent verbal attacks Planned Parenthood has born from conservative politicians across the nation. Such partisan attacks, Malloy said, bear some responsibility for inciting acts of violence like the one in Colorado. He added that this year there has been a “frontal attack” on Planned Parenthood. “The rhetoric around Planned Parenthood has
SEE CARBON CHARGE PAGE 4
SEE MALLOY PAGE 4
MICHELLE LIU/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Malloy said he stands in solidarity with Planned Parenthood.