Today's Paper

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VOL. 1 — NO. 1

THE FIRST COLLEGE DAILY AN INNOVATION JUSTIFIED BY THE DULLNESS OF THE TIMES JAN. 28, 1878 — The innovation which we begin by this morning’s issue is justified by the dullness of the times, and by the demand for news among us. Ever since the Record and the Courant have changed from weeklies to semi-monthlies, or in other words, have become about as newsy and approachable as The Lit., there has been an apparent necessity of having an unpretentious sheet which should contain the latest news, and short, pithy articles of interest. It is our purpose to publish such a sheet daily, and we hope to have the cooperation and welcome so necessar y to its success. Our columns are open to free discussion on all subjects “consistent with decor um and morality,” and to contributions from any member of the University. All communications should be addressed to the YALE NEWS, Box 494, or left at Gullivers’. As the Courant remarked in its last issue, THE NEWS is to be published for a few weeks as an experiment. If it meets with success, it will be continued through the year. The price, per copy, is perhaps somewhat exorbitant, but it will be lowered as soon as we are assured of our financial support. There is a prevailing sentiment among the undergraduates that the day set apart for prayer for colleges should be rigidly obser ved by us at Yale. The Faculty, heretofore, have only partially acknowledged the day, but it is hoped that, this next Thursday, they will suspend all recitations and have appropriate services. Moody and Sankey, it is reported, will be in New Haven during the next moon. We hope that the Faculty will deem it advisable to omit a few recitations in order that the fruits of their coming may be enjoyed by “the digs,” and by all without detriment to our tempored welfare.

AS WWI IS WAGED, THE NEWS SUSPENDS PUBLICATION ENLISTMENT OF FIVE EDITORS IN MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS MAKES SUSPENSION IMPERATIVE

SUBSCRIPTIONS WILL BE REFUNDED OCT. 19, 1918 — 1541st Day of the great war. The YALE DAILY NEWS will suspend publication for the duration of the war with today’s issue, because of the fact that of the six editors at the University, five are enrolled in military organizations, while the sixth is leaving to enlist in the Service. The decision to suspend publication was reached only after every possible solution of the problem was discussed because the NEWS which was founded by Herbert W. Bowen on January 28, 1878 is “The Oldest College Daily.” It would be possible to continue publication by having it under professional management, but as such a procedure would not only be a deparure from tradition, but would also make the paper useless as an undergraduate publication, it was deemed advisable.

HEEL THE NEWS

NEW HAVEN, CT., JANUARY 28, 1878 — 2013.

YALE COLLEGE PLAN LAUNCHED TODAY, AS SEVEN COLLEGES SWING OPEN GATES SEPT. 25, 1933 — Made possible by the generosity of Edward S. Harkness, Yale '97, of New York City, and marking an outstanding milestone in the University's history. Yale today will inaugurate the College Plan by opening seven Colleges in which will be housed undergraduates in Yale College, the Sheffield Scientific School, and the School of Engineering. Each of the colleges will contain representatives of the three upper classes, and as the accommodations range from 175 to 200 men, about 65 men in each class will live in a college. The University is thus reverting in effect to thepractice which for many generations characterized Yale, housing in a single building of represetnatives of several classes. In designating the unites as "colleges," the University is again reverting to a practice prevalent in the latter part of the last century when buildings on the Campus were known as Farnam College, South College, North College, and Durfee College. At the head of each college are a Master and some ten Fellows who are members of the teaching staff of the undergraduate schools and who will give a large part of their time to meeting students individually or in small groups to direct their work in their particular subjects. Some of these men will reside in the colleges, while others who do not live on the Campus will be provided with studies in the colleges, where they will meet their students.

NAVAL BLITZ OPENS WAR JULY 10, 1942 — Sounds and fury filled the staid streets of New Haven last night as 1500 students and local youths stormed the center of the city in a spontaneous demonstration less than twelve hours after the first Japanese bomb had dropped in Hawaii. Originating on the Old Campus, a mob quickly gathered momentum, till it had enough personnel early in the evening to fill Elm Street for two solid blocks. As the amused citizenry looked on, the crowd shouted “Let’s go to Tokyo,” sang, “Over There,” and strewed the street with parking signs. By 10 the mob had reached President Seymour’s home on Hillhouse Avenue and after one stanza of the Star Spangled Banner yelled for a personal appearance of the President. Carl Lohmann, 1910, Secretary of the University, came to the door and led the singing of Bright College Years until President Seymour appeared to address the assembled students from the steps of his house.

KENNEDY DEATH SHOCKS YALE; ALL ACTIVITIES CALLED OFF HARVARD GAME MAY BE POSTPONED A WEEK NOV. 23, 1963 — At Liggett’s a man bought the New Haven Register and gave the man seven pennies for it. “You have to read something before it’s true,” he said “You have to read it.” At Mory’s the tables were empty. Should there be more people there at 4:30 on a Friday afternoon? “Oh, I don’t think that’ll keep people away,” David said. A shoe shine boy, in front of the empty building that was once the Co-op, asked the inevitable question. A man said yes, he would have a shine, but don’t say anything kid. The kid didn’t say anything. For a while some bells were tolling. For a while, only a few people knew. Then everybody knew. There

was heavy silence, a fog of silence, a numbness. While the rush hour blocked the intersection of College and Elm, two little men, old men, gesticulated and talked in Italian. After a while one of them threw up his arms. Then he cried. Then he walked across Elm Street. Yale men have dates, because it is — or was — Harvard weekend. They walked around this afternoon with their dates and looked very awkward. One said in front of the Fence Club that he wanted to apologize to her, but he couldn’t, and they would make do. And best they could, they would make do. On the Old Campus was a Yale man, throwing a football about six feet into the air and catching it. He went on throwing the ball ino the air and catching it. Then he stoppped and walked into Dwight Chapel and didn’t come out. —Robert Kaiser

YALE TO END ITS CELIBACY WOMEN TO ENTER CLASS OF 1973 SUMMER 1969 — The redoubts of Yale masculinity will finally be stormed this fall when 588 women officially enroll, thus bringing twoand-one half centuries of collegiate celibacy to a close. The 230 entering freshman coeds will join 1027 men from the Class of 1973, a class that includes the largest percentage of black students in Yale’s history — 7.6 percent — but still falls short of the Black Student Alliance’s (BSAY) 12 percent goal. Admission to the Class of 1973 was the chanciest bet in Yale history: one of five men who applied were admitted and only one of ten women who applied made it. But the freshman women are only half the coeducation story at Yale next year. The 358 female transfer students (204 into the Class of 1971, 154 into the Class of 1972) represents 86 different colleges and will provide Yale with “an intellectual cross-fertilization unprecedented in the histor y of private education,” says Mrs. Elga Wasserman, special assistant tot he president for the education of women. —Jefferey Gordon

NIGHT RIOTS FOLLOW RALLY ON CITY GREEN BLACK AREAS STAY COOL, EXPECT CONTINUED PEACE MAY 2, 1970 — Confrontations between rock-throwing demonstrators and New Haven police er upted late last night after false reports of arrests drew an angry crowd of onstrators to the Green. The police resorted to tear gas on several occassions in an attempt to contain the crowd, and National Guardsmen were utilized to seal off the campus for several hours late in the evening. An uneasy truce finally prevailed early this morning as the demosntrators withdrew into the campus for the night. The police reported 17 demonstrators arrested during the series of brief skirmishes, and five persons were treated for a minor lacerations, according to a spokesman at YaleNew Haven Hospital. The incidents last night were the first to mar the May Day organizers’ hopes for non-violence. A bombing at Ingalls Rink late in the evening caused some destruction but only three minor injuries. The confrontation on the Green was touched off by a speaker who took the microphone from Jerry Rubin at a workshop in Branford College to announce that “several brothers” had been arrested for going on the Green after dark. The speaker, who claimed to be a Black Panther, elicted chants of “To the Green” from his listeners. —Tom Marren

PRICE FIVE CENTS.

RICK LEVIN WILL BE NAMED PRESIDENT NAMING WILL END 10 MONTHS OF SEEKING SCHMIDT’S SUCCESSOR APRIL 15, 1993 — Dean of the Graduate School Richard Levin GRD ’74 will be named Yale’s 21st president at a press conference today. The appointment of Levin, a former chairman of the Economics Department and dean of the Graduate School since last spring, will end the troubled 10-month search to replace permanently Benno Schmidt Jr. ’63 LAW ’66, who abruptly resigned from the presidency last May. Levin, Acting President Howard Lamar, University officers and trustees all declined to confirm or comment on today’s appointment. Still, University officials have been actively preparing for the announcement all week, holding clandestine conferences in Levin’s office and meeting rush deadlines in the Office of Public Affairs. Professors in the Hall of Graduate Studies, where Levin’s office is located, have been excitedly discussing the prospect of the dean’s promotion for the past few days. —Stephen Lee and Amy Oberdoffer

WORLD TRADE CENTER FALLS IN ATTACK SHOCK RIPPLES THROUGH YALE’S STUNNED CAMPUS SEPT. 12, 2001 — It was a lovely evening, warm but ruffled by cool breeze, without a trace of humidity. Candles flickered in a thousand outstretched hands and floated in the Women’s Table, settling the falling water and plaza beneath gently aglow. The throng on Cross Campus saw none of it. Behind their closed eyes, another vision prevailed — the indelible image of a pall of ash, looming above once-towering buildings to obscure the blue late summer sky. Though people filled the lawn from the Sterling steps to the gates of Calhoun, Cross Campus remained as silent as when it had stood empty a few hours before. As silent as it had been since the news had come. —Rebecca Dana and Eli Muller

SALOVEY: YALE’S NEXT PRESIDENT? SEPT. 3, 2008 — In appointing Yale College Dean Peter Salovey as provost last week, University President Richard Levin selected for himself a new right-hand man. He also may have chosen his own successor. As Salovey prepares to take office next month, his appointment to the University’s number-two position has raised an unavoidable question among those in Yale’s chattering classes: Will the beloved dean be Yale’s 23rd president? Time will only tell, and administrators and longtime observers of the University caution against trying to forecast the future occupant of Woodbridge Hall years before Levin will likely step down (Levin has said the earliest he would step down is at the end of the Yale Tomorrow fundraising campaign in 2011). But they admit the 50-yearold Salovey will almost surely be president someday, be it here or at another school. — Thomas Kaplan

THE NEWS TURNS 135! SEE INSIDE PAGES FOR ORIGINAL CONTENT

YALE, SINGAPORE PLAN NEW LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE SEPT. 13, 2010 — One of the first liberal arts colleges in Asia will likely bear Yale’s name. If all goes according to plan, Yale and the National University of Singapore will jointly open a school, located adjacent to the NUS campus, in 2013. It will be named YaleNUS College, and its governing board will be evenly composed of Yale and NUS appointees — but NUS, not Yale, will grant the students’ degrees. Representatives from both schools met in New Haven on Friday to sign a non-binding agreement to continue planning the college, and University President Richard Levin announced the news to faculty in an e-mail Sunday night. “The liberal arts model is not the norm in most of the rest of the world, but there’s an increasing feeling in Asia that it’s giving the United States an edge in educating creative leaders,” Levin said in an interview. “This college in Singapore could provide a way to influence all of Asia.” — Nora Caplam-Bricker

THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY TURNS 135 THE TRADITION OF NEWS AT YALE WILL CONTINUE BEYOND US JAN. 28, 2013 — We are no longer justified by the dullness of our times. Indeed, as we’ve all experienced, the times are no longer dull. Our days are filled with chatter of academic scandals and mayoral races, of presidential elections and presidential searches. From a flippant four-page upstart with anonymous editors, the NEWS has grown to a broadsheet, magazine and website, cultivated by a managing board of 49 dedicated editors and business managers, and over 200 total contributors. We are united by our fundamental belief that the times are interesting and worth our consideration. We hope — in fact, we know — that the YALE DAILY NEWS will live 135 more years as a constant force in shaping and informing the dialogue on campus. We are proud to be a part of an institution that will outlive our Yale careers and our very lives. As always, tomorrow’s news awaits.


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