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THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY · FOUNDED 1878 CROSS CAMPUS MORE ONLINE cc.yaledailynews.com y In front of Sterling Memorial Library, a circular granite fountain commemorates the history of women at Yale. While most students appreciate the monument for its simplistic beauty, the “Women’s Table” strikes a particularly powerful chord among female architecture students. Designed by Maya Lin ’81 ARC ’86, the structure is a reminder that a female graduate of the school has achieved renown in architecture — a field that remains largely dominated by men. “Maya Lin has been one of my great- est role models in architecture,” Jacqueline Kow ARC ’14 said. “It has been a dream of mine to hear her speak.” At the School of Architecture’s first “Yale Women in Architecture” symposium this weekend, Kow will have her wish fulfilled. From Friday evening to Saturday afternoon, 180 alumnae and current female students alike will gather at the school to discuss issues such as evolving design practices and the intersection of architecture and activ- ism, School of Architecture Dean Rob- ert A.M. Stern said. But the symposium’s larger goal is to allow graduates to share their experiences as women architects, he explained. The event is at once a reunion and a cele- bration of the 30th anniversary of the Sonia Albert Schimberg Award, which is given annually to a high-achieving female archi- tecture student. Former BlackRock execu- BY NICOLE NAREA CONTRIBUTING REPORTER A federal immigration judge announced Thursday that Josemaria Islas, a local undoc- umented Mexican immi- grant whose detention incited widespread controversy, will be released from the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after post- ing bond. Islas, who was arrested by Hamden police in July, was detained at a Massachusetts jail earlier this month in vol- untary compliance with an ICE hold request authorized under the federal Secure Com- munities program. Islas’ case sparked an outcry among BY CYNTHIA HUA STAFF REPORTER Yale students drink more than the average for college students nationwide, Yale College Dean’s Oce surveys have found. As part of its participation in the National College Health Improve- ment Project, a consortium of 32 colleges working to reduce high- risk drinking on their campuses, the University began conduct- ing an ongoing survey of student drinking habits in fall 2011. Find- ings from the 2011–’12 year reveal that Yale’s overall alcohol con- sumption rate is higher than the national average and that fewer Yale students reported taking risk-reducing steps, such as eat- ing before drinking, than at other universities. Though the Univer- sity shared a summary of last year’s survey conclusions with students who attended a series of dinners this month designed to foster com- munication between students and INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING CLOUDY 38 EVENING CLOUDY 38 MEN’S BASKETBALL Despite a last minute comeback, the Bulldogs fell to Hartford PAGE 12 SPORTS CYCLING GSA ADDRESSES DANGERS OF COMMUTING PAGE 5 NEWS ALASKA Kreiss-Tomkins ’12 challenged to Alaska House recount PAGE 3 CITY PARTY ACADEMIA NIGHTLIFE ON THE SYLLABUS PAGE B3 WEEKEND Do you know what a provost does? Neither do most Yalies. Check out the News’ website to hear how other students responded to this question. Speaking of provosts. Dartmouth announced yesterday that Philip Hanlon, provost of the University of Michigan, will serve as the college’s next president. Hanlon’s appointment comes just three weeks after the University’s own provost, Peter Salovey, was announced Yale’s next president. But that’s where the similarities stop: Hanlon’s moustache can never match the one that made Salovey famous. Real talk. Just keep swimming. Roughly 20 swimmers from the men’s swim team were trapped for 10 minutes in an elevator in Payne Whitney Gymnasium yesterday, bravely maintaining their composure as they waited for freedom. In their Speedos. It’s almost over. Today is the last day of November, which means those of you who have been neglecting your razors in celebration of “No Shave November” can soon get rid of your fuzzy appendages. Unless, of course, your facial hair has been keeping you warm in this chilly New England weather. We still have eight Rhodes. No Yalies were awarded the Marshall Scholarship this year, a break from Yale’s previous success with the honor. The University claimed one Marshall Scholar last year, three in 2010 and three in 2009. Celeb sighting. Ward 22 Alderwoman Jeanette Morrison stopped by Silliman College’s dining hall for dinner last night. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY 1961 Four undergraduates and 10 Divinity School students make plans to participate in a series of sit-in demonstrations in Baltimore, Md. protesting segregation. Submit tips to Cross Campus [email protected] NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 60 · yaledailynews.com BY JANE DARBY MENTON STAFF REPORTER In an effort to promote excellence in teaching at the University, Yale is expanding its teaching program currently available for graduate students to include faculty mem- bers as well. Provost Peter Salovey announced in a Nov. 15 email to faculty the creation of the University-wide Yale Teaching Cen- ter to replace the Graduate Teaching Cen- ter, which trained graduate students to be teaching fellows and take other teach- ing positions after Yale. Bill Rando, assis- tant dean of the Graduate School and newly appointed director of the YTC, said the center aims to support teaching at the Uni- versity and promote discussion of educa- tional strategies. While continuing to train graduate students, the YTC will oer work- shops for faculty members and mentoring opportunities between tenured and non- tenured professors, said Rando, who served as director of the Graduate Teaching Center for the past 14 years. Rando said many of the center’s pro- grams will target new or junior faculty members, but that the resources will be available to all professors. “There are so many amazing teachers here, but not a central place for them to share their strategies,” Rando said. “That is a big part of what this center will do.” Graduate School Dean Thomas Pollard said the University will hire additional sta to support the YTC’s expansion, though Teaching center launched SEE TEACHING CENTER PAGE 4 SEE ARCHITECTURE PAGE 6 SEE IMMIGRATION PAGE 4 SEE ALCOHOL SURVEY PAGE 4 WOMEN IN ARCHITECTURE Reunion highlights diversity Student drinking tops national average JACOB GEIGER/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR The detention of Josemaria Islas, an undocumented immigrant, sparked an outcry among immigrants’ rights groups. ALLIE KRAUSE/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER Maya Lin ’81 ARC ’86, who designed the “Women’s Table” outside of Sterling Memorial Library, will speak at the School of Architecture’s reunion for female alumnae. A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG DKE BROTHER L egendary artist Vincent van Gogh has found an unlikely home: the beer-stained basement of Delta Kappa Epsilon. When the fraternity repainted its basement, President Nick Dan ’13 took it upon himself to spray paint “Starry Night” onto the wall. Sur- prisingly, he is not studying art. CHRIS PEAK/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER Yale students reported taking fewer risk-reducing steps, such as eating before drinking, than at other universities. Yale College Dean’s Office surveys shed light on student drinking habits T his weekend, the School of Architecture will host a reunion to celebrate its female alumnae. Drawing women architects from around the nation, the celebration has sparked discussion about ongo- ing gender disparities in the field. YANAN WANG reports. Detained immigrant released

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Page 1: Today's Paper

T H E O L D E S T C O L L E G E D A I L Y · F O U N D E D 1 8 7 8

CROSSCAMPUS

MORE ONLINEcc.yaledailynews.com

y

In front of Sterling Memorial Library, a circular granite fountain commemorates the history of women at Yale. While most students appreciate the monument for its simplistic beauty, the “Women’s Table” strikes a particularly powerful chord among female architecture students. Designed by Maya Lin ’81 ARC ’86, the structure is a reminder that a female graduate of the school has achieved renown in architecture

— a field that remains largely dominated by men.

“Maya Lin has been one of my great-est role models in architecture,” Jacqueline Kow ARC ’14 said. “It has been a dream of mine to hear her speak.”

At the School of Architecture’s first “Yale Women in Architecture” symposium this weekend, Kow will have her wish fulfilled. From Friday evening to Saturday afternoon, 180 alumnae and current female students alike will gather at the school to discuss issues such as evolving design practices and the intersection of architecture and activ-ism, School of Architecture Dean Rob-ert A.M. Stern said. But the symposium’s larger goal is to allow graduates to share their experiences as women architects, he explained.

The event is at once a reunion and a cele-bration of the 30th anniversary of the Sonia Albert Schimberg Award, which is given annually to a high-achieving female archi-tecture student. Former BlackRock execu-

BY NICOLE NAREACONTRIBUTING REPORTER

A federal immigration judge announced Thursday that Josemaria Islas, a local undoc-umented Mexican immi-grant whose detention incited widespread controversy, will be released from the custody of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after post-

ing bond.Islas, who was arrested by

Hamden police in July, was detained at a Massachusetts jail earlier this month in vol-untary compliance with an ICE hold request authorized under the federal Secure Com-munities program. Islas’ case sparked an outcry among

BY CYNTHIA HUASTAFF REPORTER

Yale students drink more than the average for college students nationwide, Yale College Dean’s O!ce surveys have found.

As part of its participation in the National College Health Improve-ment Project, a consortium of 32

colleges working to reduce high-risk drinking on their campuses, the University began conduct-ing an ongoing survey of student drinking habits in fall 2011. Find-ings from the 2011–’12 year reveal that Yale’s overall alcohol con-sumption rate is higher than the national average and that fewer Yale students reported taking

risk-reducing steps, such as eat-ing before drinking, than at other universities. Though the Univer-sity shared a summary of last year’s survey conclusions with students who attended a series of dinners this month designed to foster com-munication between students and

INSIDE THE NEWSMORNING CLOUDY 38 EVENING CLOUDY 38

MEN’S BASKETBALLDespite a last minute comeback, the Bulldogs fell to HartfordPAGE 12 SPORTS

CYCLINGGSA ADDRESSES DANGERS OF COMMUTINGPAGE 5 NEWS

ALASKAKreiss-Tomkins ’12 challenged to Alaska House recountPAGE 3 CITY

PARTY ACADEMIANIGHTLIFE ON THE SYLLABUS PAGE B3 WEEKEND

Do you know what a provost does? Neither do most Yalies. Check out the News’ website to hear how other students responded to this question.

Speaking of provosts. Dartmouth announced yesterday that Philip Hanlon, provost of the University of Michigan, will serve as the college’s next president. Hanlon’s appointment comes just three weeks after the University’s own provost, Peter Salovey, was announced Yale’s next president. But that’s where the similarities stop: Hanlon’s moustache can never match the one that made Salovey famous. Real talk.

Just keep swimming. Roughly 20 swimmers from the men’s swim team were trapped for 10 minutes in an elevator in Payne Whitney Gymnasium yesterday, bravely maintaining their composure as they waited for freedom. In their Speedos.

It’s almost over. Today is the last day of November, which means those of you who have been neglecting your razors in celebration of “No Shave November” can soon get rid of your fuzzy appendages. Unless, of course, your facial hair has been keeping you warm in this chilly New England weather.

We still have eight Rhodes. No Yalies were awarded the Marshall Scholarship this year, a break from Yale’s previous success with the honor. The University claimed one Marshall Scholar last year, three in 2010 and three in 2009.

Celeb sighting. Ward 22 Alderwoman Jeanette Morrison stopped by Silliman College’s dining hall for dinner last night.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY1961 Four undergraduates and 10 Divinity School students make plans to participate in a series of sit-in demonstrations in Baltimore, Md. protesting segregation.

Submit tips to Cross Campus [email protected]

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 60 · yaledailynews.com

BY JANE DARBY MENTONSTAFF REPORTER

In an effort to promote excellence in teaching at the University, Yale is expanding its teaching program currently available for graduate students to include faculty mem-bers as well.

Provost Peter Salovey announced in a Nov. 15 email to faculty the creation of the University-wide Yale Teaching Cen-ter to replace the Graduate Teaching Cen-ter, which trained graduate students to be teaching fellows and take other teach-ing positions after Yale. Bill Rando, assis-tant dean of the Graduate School and newly appointed director of the YTC, said the center aims to support teaching at the Uni-versity and promote discussion of educa-tional strategies. While continuing to train graduate students, the YTC will o"er work-shops for faculty members and mentoring opportunities between tenured and non-tenured professors, said Rando, who served as director of the Graduate Teaching Center for the past 14 years.

Rando said many of the center’s pro-grams will target new or junior faculty members, but that the resources will be available to all professors.

“There are so many amazing teachers here, but not a central place for them to share their strategies,” Rando said. “That is a big part of what this center will do.”

Graduate School Dean Thomas Pollard said the University will hire additional sta" to support the YTC’s expansion, though

Teaching center

launched

SEE TEACHING CENTER PAGE 4

SEE ARCHITECTURE PAGE 6

SEE IMMIGRATION PAGE 4

SEE ALCOHOL SURVEY PAGE 4

W O M E N I N A R C H I T E C T U R E

Reunion highlights diversity

Student drinking tops national average

JACOB GEIGER/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

The detention of Josemaria Islas, an undocumented immigrant, sparked an outcry among immigrants’ rights groups.

ALLIE KRAUSE/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Maya Lin ’81 ARC ’86, who designed the “Women’s Table” outside of Sterling Memorial Library, will speak at the School of Architecture’s reunion for female alumnae.

A PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS A YOUNG DKE BROTHER

Legendary artist Vincent van Gogh has found an unlikely

home: the beer-stained basement of Delta Kappa Epsilon. When the fraternity repainted its basement, President Nick Da!n ’13 took it upon himself to spray paint “Starry Night” onto the wall. Sur-prisingly, he is not studying art.

CHRIS PEAK/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Yale students reported taking fewer risk-reducing steps, such as eating before drinking, than at other universities.

Yale College Dean’s Office surveys shed light on student drinking habits

This weekend, the School of Architecture will host a reunion to celebrate

its female alumnae. Drawing women architects from around the nation, the celebration has sparked discussion about ongo-ing gender disparities in the field. YANAN WANG reports.

Detained immigrant released

Page 2: Today's Paper

OPINION .COMMENTyaledailynews.com/opinion

“What I think is the bad news is that for things to fail to work out, you need not screw up.” 'LDFFLY' ON 'HUNDREDS ATTEND HAPPINESS PANEL'

PAGE 2 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

THIS ISSUE PRODUCTION STAFF: Scott Stern PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS: Leon Jiang

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT COPYRIGHT 2012 — VOL. CXXXV, NO. 60

EDITORIALS & ADSThe News’ View represents the opinion of the majority of the members of the Yale Daily News Managing Board of 2014. Other content on this page with bylines represents the opinions of those authors and not necessarily those of the Managing Board. Opinions set forth in ads do not necessarily reflect the views of the Managing Board. We reserve the right to refuse any ad for any reason and to delete or change any copy we consider objectionable, false or in poor taste. We do not verify the contents of any ad. The Yale Daily News Publishing Co., Inc. and its o!cers, employees and agents disclaim any responsibility for all liabilities, injuries or damages arising from any ad. The Yale Daily News Publishing Co. ISSN 0890-2240

SUBMISSIONSAll letters submitted for publication must include the author’s name, phone number and description of Yale University a!liation. Please limit letters to 250 words and guest columns to 750. The Yale Daily News reserves the right to edit letters and columns before publication. E-mail is the preferred method of submission.

Direct all letters, columns, artwork and inquiries to:Marissa Medansky and Dan SteinOpinion Editors Yale Daily [email protected]

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NEWSMadeline McMahonDaniel Sisgoreo

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SPORTS Eugena Jung John Sullivan

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MULTIMEDIARaleigh Cavero Lillian Fast Danielle Trubow

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COPYStephanie Heung Emily Klopfer Isaac Park Flannery Sockwell

PRODUCTION & DESIGN Celine Cuevas Ryan Healey Allie Krause Michelle Korte Rebecca Levinsky Rebecca Sylvers Clinton Wang

PHOTOGRAPHY Jennifer Cheung Sarah Eckinger Jacob Geiger Maria Zepeda Vivienne Jiao Zhang

ILLUSTRATIONSKaren Tian

LEAD WEB DEV.Akshay Nathan Earl Lee

INSIDER'S GUIDE Elizabeth Chrystal Catherine Dinh

It was enchanting. From the moment you first see him, you cease to think of

makeup or Oscars or clumsy writing or how an actor could simultaneously be eloquent and have the scratchy, decid-edly unrhetorical voice histo-rians say Lincoln had.

Instead, Daniel Day Lewis became — or already was — Lincoln. I didn’t think about how good or accurate a job Lewis was doing, as thinking to ask such a question implies an ability to separate actor and role that, in this case, I lacked.

Some will inevitably dis-agree with my take on Lewis’ performance, but several — including the actor — seem to have had a similar experience.

What’s remarkable wasn’t just Lewis’ acting. Rather, in so correctly and impossibly embodying popular concep-tions of our 16th president, Lewis proved just how strong our sense is of who Lincoln really was.

Some of this reflects the simple incorporation of our historical awareness into the film; we’ve all read Lincoln’s words. We already knew that he liked to tell stories, some-times to illustrate his argu-ments through metaphor and sometimes just to amuse. We knew his relationship with his wife to have been tense. We knew that he was a canny poli-tician, dealing less in the abso-lute morality of Tommy Lee Jones’ excellent Thaddeus Ste-vens than in the art of the pos-sible: steadily and surely find-ing ways to advance what he knew to be right.

But outside of histori-cal facts, the part Lewis really played — and which I found to so completely correspond to preexisting notions of Lin-coln I didn’t even know I had — was that of a perfect leader and perfect man. He was brilliant and simple, magnanimous and practical, somehow able to write the finest words without ever being self-aggrandizing or condescending.

Lewis’ Lincoln could speak easily with the limbless sol-diers he had ordered to war, but he spoke just as eas-ily with rival statesmen. And while he perfectly tailored his words to each situation, he never altered his bearing or manner of speaking based on who he was talking to. And in those very rare instances where Lewis’ Lincoln lost for a moment his self-control, he seemed to become, if any-thing, more commanding and more righteous, as if pouring forth some sort of divine fury.

Normally in a film about some great figure, there is a tendency to humanize. We

start with a flawed char-acter with whom we can empa-thize and in whose shoes we can imagine o u r s e l v e s . G ra d u a l l y, he or she b e c o m e s s o m e t h i n g more, but often that

transformation is sparked not just by a unique mind or char-acter, but also by circum-stance. Such stories allow any of us to imagine ourselves as a Shakespeare, Churchill, Eliza-beth or even Moses.

But for whatever reason, the Lincoln we carry around with us in our imagination is above such conventional char-acter development. We forget entirely what he was like before he was great or how he became great, and we don’t put lim-its or qualifiers onto his great-ness, even though we know of mistaken decisions he made (Cold Harbor, General McClel-lan) or mistaken beliefs (send-ing freed slaves back to Africa) that he at one time held. Spiel-berg dodges this problem by starting his film late into Lin-coln’s presidency. We defi-nitely don’t imagine ourselves in his shoes.

I’ve read that Lincoln once argued against the notion that Americans of his time exces-sively idealized George Wash-ington. Even if they imag-ined him to have been impos-sibly perfect, the belief of such human perfection could inspire us to greatness in a way that more relatable figures can’t.

I’m not sure if I buy this. After all, we usually tune out holier-than-thou voices, which often do more to push us away from doing what we know to be right than people who actually invite us to do wrong. But perhaps the pecu-liar quality that Lincoln saw in Washington — and that we see in Lincoln — is a greatness so humble and unassuming that we can’t resent or envy it.

Here at Yale, we have our fair share of ambition. Many of us want to be president, and most of us want to be great. But from the screen, Daniel Day Lewis and Abraham Lincoln somehow chastise and inspire us: showing us what we can’t do, while making us want to do what we can.

HARRY LARSON is a junior in Jonathan Edwards College.

Contact him [email protected] .

Lincoln's greatness

On Dec. 1, World AIDS Day calls upon us to consider the HIV/AIDS pandemic —

its human cost, global impact and unresolved future. Events on cam-pus, online and around the world will promote education, advo-cate solidarity with those who are HIV-positive, and honor the 30 million lives lost over the past three decades. AIDS is not a dis-tant problem, nor is it isolated in underdeveloped countries. AIDS matters to you because it a!ects people in Connecticut, in New Haven and at Yale.

Consider these statistics: Con-necticut has the eighth highest per capita incidence rate of HIV/AIDS among the 50 states. From 1981 to 2010, over 20,000 cases of HIV/AIDS have been reported to Con-necticut’s Department of Health. In New Haven alone, 3,000 peo-ple live with HIV. The pandemic a!ects every age group and eth-nicity. Infected males widely out-number females at a ratio of 65-to-35.

In past years, HIV infection rates have broadly outpaced the gov-ernment’s response. Since 2002, the prevalence of HIV cases has increased in Connecticut, despite national decreases in diagnoses.

However, recent changes in the American health care sys-tem, implemented by the A!ord-able Care Act (ACA), may bet-ter equip Connecticut to care for people living with HIV. Passed in 2010, the ACA aims to expand access to a!ordable health cover-age, reducing the number of unin-sured Americans. Acknowledging the particular impact of the ACA for people with HIV, the White House concurrently published the United State’s first comprehen-sive national HIV/AIDS strategy: a three-pronged approach that aims to reduce the number of new HIV infections, increase access to pri-mary and HIV-specific care and reduce HIV-related health dispar-ities.

In the past, the majority of HIV-infected Americans relied on Med-icaid to cover their health care costs. Over 24 percent of those infected are uninsured, depend-ing instead on the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program, which funds health care and supportive ser-vices for a low-income demo-graphic. Although these programs are significant for many HIV/AIDS patients, the Ryan White Program is not designed as an insurance system and is burdened by long waiting lists.

In light of the parameters of the Ryan White Program, the ACA expands Medicaid advantages for HIV/AIDS patients. Those infected no longer have to fulfill stringent financial or categorical require-ments to become eligible — such as being pregnant, having children

or su!ering from an additional disability. The ACA also provides a 50 percent discount on brand-name drugs, thereby closing the prescription drug benefit “donut hole” that previously made many treatment options una!ordable. And because many HIV specialists also serve as their patients’ pri-mary care physician, the ACA has also increased Medicaid payments for primary care services.

In Connecticut, the Depart-ment of Public Health has been awarded more than $23.8 million in prevention fund grants from the ACA. A portion of these funds has been allocated to HIV/AIDS pre-vention campaigns, which seek to identify high-risk populations, increase testing opportunities and o!er HIV-infected patients the medical services they need. Con-necticut has also recently enacted the Personal Responsibility Edu-cation Program, teaching youth about contraception and the pre-vention of HIV infection.

Last year, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton o!ered her vision for the near future: an AIDS-free generation. In that future, every child is born free of HIV and faces a lower risk of contracting the illness as they grow up. This lofty goal is not abstract. With the induction of the ACA, as well as the continu-ation of other important programs and agencies, this goal is achiev-able.

But more can always be done. The ACA has been controversial, with many states choosing to opt out of some of its policies. National and state governments must con-tinue to seek out opportunities and programs that serve people living with HIV. Communities, like ours here at Yale, must dedi-cate time and energy to education campaigns, prevention e!orts and advocacy events.

The U.S. has set the bar high to achieve an AIDS-free generation, and with these e!orts, Connect-icut can reach this goal, too. We know how to get there. The ques-tion is not “Can we end AIDS?” It is “Will we?” Does the U.S. have the political willpower to implement the substantial means to achieve a great end?

On AIDS Day, we invite you to support, engage and learn more about local initiatives here in New Haven. Seek out peers and faculty interested in HIV/AIDS research and lend a hand. Call upon your representatives, take initiative and get involved. By making democ-racy work for you, the answer is yours to decide.

ISABEL BESHAR is a junior in Say-brook College and AUSTIN JASPERS

is a sophomore in Trumbull College. Contact them at

[email protected] [email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T S ISABEL BE SHAR AND AUSTIN JASPERS

An AIDS-free world

In seventh grade, my teacher made me escort a classmate to the nurse’s o"ce after

he stabbed himself in the head while twirling a pencil. She was paranoid that he would spread AIDS on doorknobs throughout the school if I didn’t. The prob-lem was that this kid did not have AIDS.

Fast-forwarding to today, numerous organizations and foundations advocate impor-tant health-related platforms, including preventing and treat-ing — even, in my teacher’s case, explaining — HIV/AIDS. We often chose to support the causes that have touched our lives the most. In the history of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, many of the most influential activists had HIV/AIDS themselves, wit-nessed friends die one after the other or even observed commu-nities decimated by the disease. For HIV/AIDS, this should not be true.

Many people dismiss aware-ness days. Critics deem them redundant — worth neither e!ort nor time. The people who show up to events already care, they say.

Awareness days may seem meaningless as a mere collec-tion of numbers on a calendar, but it is a standard to recognize events that have significance in our lives whether they are birth-days, independence days, deaths or religious holidays. Aware-ness days are an opportunity for a history lesson, a shift in per-spective, a moment of gratitude, a time of memorialization and an opportunity to rise above the status quo.

This in mind, it would be an injustice to not acknowledge the impact HIV/AIDS has had on society and the world.

Most college students under-stand the seriousness of HIV/AIDS, but even the most edu-cated people have misconcep-tions (my seventh grade teacher was a very smart lady whose class I enjoyed very much). Oth-ers have not considered the bur-den that HIV/AIDS places on individuals and families, both physically and mentally.

Yet the HIV/AIDS epidemic has brought worldwide atten-tion to important global health issues. It has shed light on pre-viously hidden groups of soci-ety, including gay people, minorities and intravenous drug users. It has brought attention to sub-Saharan Africa and other underdeveloped regions, and intervention has followed.

The emotion and passion behind the initially stigma-tized and mysterious disease has sparked international action

that has not been matched. These e!orts transformed our views of activism and restored our belief in the power of a cause. The idea that it is infea-sible to tackle an epidemic in a low-resource setting has been erased.

HIV/AIDS has changed the landscape surrounding other health concerns, too. Advocates for maternal and child heath must now care about issues like mother-to-child transmission — or the fact that, in Zimbabwe, HIV/AIDS causes one in every four maternal deaths and one in every two maternal deaths in South Africa. Connections between HIV/AIDS and tuber-culosis, malaria, certain types of cancer and other STDs have also since been identified. HIV/AIDS resources can be used to strengthen health systems. HIV/AIDS drugs have played a key role in the global fight for a!ord-able medication, the evaluation of patent laws and the standard-ization of treatment protocols.

In addition, the American Foundation for AIDS Research has stated that our responses to the HIV/AIDS pandemic have strengthened government accountability.

The President’s Emergency Fund for AIDS Relief (PEP-FAR), implemented by Presi-dent George W. Bush in 2003, is just one example. In a three-year period, PEPFAR averted 1.2 million deaths and cut the HIV/AIDS death toll by 10.5 per-cent in its targeted countries. PEPFAR has become a model for outcome-based initiatives, while the newly launched Global Health Diplomacy O"ce will give HIV/AIDS an even greater role in international relations moving forward.

By virtue of its magnitude and biological complexity, the HIV virus has infected more than just the immune systems of the 30 million who have died. To not encounter HIV/AIDS on a daily basis is a blessing. For this reason, World AIDS Day is an opportunity for thanksgiv-ing just as much as last Thurs-day was. However, tomorrow also holds the greater poten-tial to spark a new understand-ing or enthusiasm. Tomorrow, on Dec. 1, contemplate how one virus can change the work-ings of society, alter the way we approach policy, raise the stan-dard for activism and add a new dimension to the interconnect-edness of the world.

LINDSEY HIEBERT is a sophomore in Pierson College.

Contact her at [email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T L I N D S E Y H I E B E R T

A new awareness

On my first day in Madrid, Spain, while easing into the practice of only speak-

ing the local language, I had the opportunity of conversing with a native madrileño. Although my newfound friend and I began with simple introductions, the con-versation quickly digressed into a rather argumentative discussion on the topic of the siesta — a break in the workday when the entire city manages to sleep. Despite my admiration for the art of nap-ping (if napping were an Olympic sport, I'd surely be a gold medal-ist), I could hardly comprehend the existence of a society in which such a break was not only acceptable, it was a norm. I, the product of a cul-ture whose workforce reveres long hours and professional devotion, questioned the practicality of such a convention. The local Span-iard simply replied, "The tradition of the siesta is all we know, and it makes us happy." In that particular moment, I felt entirely unqualified to continue denouncing the well-established practice. With such a minimal knowledge of his culture, how could I have the audacity to form an opinion on his lifestyle?

Rather than judge, I took the

opposite approach — I followed the syllogism he laid out for me. If happiness improves quality of life, and the motivation for most decisions in life is to improve said quality … where did his logic fal-ter? Despite my years as a seasoned debater, I found myself momen-tarily speechless — it was a cold and unfamiliar territory. Could the peculiarities of the Spanish culture truly form a happier population than the competitive one I have been a part of for 20 years? With three months ahead of me and a strong sense of curiosity, I sought to find out the answer for myself.

The next day I arrived at my host mother’s apartment in the resi-dential neighborhood of Parque de las Avenidas. I was promptly exposed to a number of cultural quirks, the first of which consisted of the following: In Spain there is no such thing as a quick meal — consumption is a social activ-ity. Although the custom takes time away from important parts of one’s daily routine, this so-called system of “sociable consump-tion” is thoroughly enjoyable and typically well-worth the invest-ment. Meals, particularly lunch (the day’s most substantial meal),

require diners to break from the day’s chaos and partake in lively discussion. The most intimate conversations I have shared with my host mother, Pilar, have been during these lunches. She speaks to me daily of her childhood mem-ories of the Spanish Civil War, of the years she spent in Morocco and of the moment her grandson Luigi (now 21 years old) found out that Santa Claus didn’t exist. These discussions form some of my most precious memories of the past semester. Nevertheless, I can’t help but notice that logical flaws exist within the cultural frame-work that perpetuates this gastro-nomical tradition.

Spain’s current state of fiscal distress is common knowledge. The number of homeless individ-uals sleeping on the street reflects the high unemployment rate; con-sistent metro delays reflect ser-vice cuts made as a result of nearly depleted budgets; the day that three major trade unions went on strike — and my school canceled classes as a safety precaution — reflects anger building amongst members of the country’s middle class. The su!ering of Spain’s gen-eral population is evident in every

corner of this city: a fact I recog-nize, even after calling Madrid home for only three months. Is it sensible to continue living the way the Spanish always have? Does it make sense to close convenience stores and tobacco stands at 7 p.m., when most working Span-iards have the time to shop on their journeys home? Does it make sense to eat one’s largest meal in the middle of the day, when such a level of consumption requires a period of rest? Does it make sense to put life on pause for a siesta when this country requires every minute of productivity it can mus-ter? It is not as though the Span-iards can easily change these cus-toms that form an integral part of their culture, but it is easy to ques-tion the practicality of such tra-ditions during a time of financial strife.

Perhaps then the real ques-tion is as follows: Do these cul-tural idiosyncrasies lead to a truly happier population, and if so, is it worth the price?

STEPHANIE MAZURSKY is a junior in Jonathan Edwards College.

Contact her [email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T S T E P H A N I E M A Z U R S K Y

Culture and the Spanish economy

HARRY LARSON

Nothing in Particular

International Dispatches

Page 3: Today's Paper

FRIDAY FORUM KANYE WEST

“I feel like I'm too busy writing history to read it.”

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 3

With apologies to Penelope Laurans, who would expect better.

POETRYG U E S T C O L U M N I S T M I C H E L L E T AY L O R

In defense of the oxford comma

As junior and senior pre-meds begin to prepare for the upcoming medical

school application cycle, they feel a mixture of excitement, trepidation and relief. All that time struggling with problem sets, those frenzied afternoons in lab and the evenings clustered around peer tutors will finally be weighed, measured and hopefully not found wanting. The process also sparks some intro-spection about what it means to be pre-med at Yale, how pre-meds have chosen to spend their hours and what regrettably fell by the wayside. But unlike other students preparing for life beyond Yale, pre-meds face a harsh critique from many of their peers — that they and their chosen course of study were not su!ciently “intellectual.”

This critique seems to be some-thing about which humanities and science majors agree. To human-ities students, pre-meds don’t spend enough time thinking about the most interesting and pressing political and social issues. To sci-ence students, many pre-meds don’t have the scientific curios-ity to pursue a single discipline in-depth or to dedicate the years in lab needed to tackle a particular scien-tific question properly. These crit-icisms might actually be accurate — if the determinant was a dichot-omy between abstract thinking and doing, with the pre-med being lumped in with the latter descrip-tor, acting only as an automaton.

As a pre-med humanities major, I hear the judgment from both sides. I watch my fellow human-ities students spend luxurious hours pondering the great ques-tions, reading the great works and gaining a background in literature,

history and philosophy that will serve them well in the academic sta" rooms and political parlors of the future. While the applications of humanities courses may be less immediately apparent than those of pre-med classes, humanities students can assure themselves, “Whatever I decide to do after col-lege, I’m learning how to think.” To the English major who can curl up in bed with Shakespeare and (legit-imately) call it a productive night, being pre-med may seem like an intellectual sacrifice.

“Pure” science majors and teaching fellows can also contrib-ute to a pre-med’s sense of unease. How many times have I been told that I must only want the answers to the homework questions, and don’t really care about the science behind the course material? The charge is harsh, namely, that pre-meds aren’t interested in course content at all. Given the obvi-ous intertwinement of modern medicine and science, it is highly improbable that a pre-med would complete the full set of required courses without having a genuine interest in science. But neverthe-less, these comments may make some pre-meds worry that they haven’t focused enough on the kind of scientific inquiry valued by their science peers.

How can pre-meds defend themselves against the charge of being intellectual dilettantes? We shouldn’t begin by keeping quiet about our statuses as pre-meds in front of the wrong company, or seeking out the comforting pres-ence of our pre-med study bud-dies. Instead, it’s time we all stop being so critical about each oth-er’s academic choices. Pre-meds

aren’t the only targets of negative stereotyping. Humanities students are typecast as being confined to an ivory tower, with no clue about their futures. Science students are portrayed as insu!ciently cul-tured, lacking the savoir-vivre of their better-read humanities counterparts.

But no major or academic route has a monopoly on “intellectual-ity.” We are all struggling in college to balance acquiring knowledge and pursuing our passions with our hopes for a fulfilling future. Whether majoring in humanities or the sciences, the pre-med will have managed to combine a passion for learning and doing. Think of the pre-med who spends her summer at a Ugandan hospital grappling with global health issues, or the one who volunteers in a local hospice struggling with the ethical care of the dying. And even the pre-med hunched over a late-night prob-lem set with a third cup of co"ee is absorbing problem-solving skills that will help her in medicine and beyond. Translating our prepara-tion at Yale into a lifetime of intel-lectual curiosity and achievement will be no more or less challenging for a pre-med than for any other student, whatever her calling. And 30 or 40 years from now when your doctor is helping you weigh the pros and cons of a medical proce-dure, or squeezing your hand as you wake up from anesthesia, you may be pleasantly surprised to find that she isn’t a complete intellec-tual lightweight after all.

MICHELLE BAYEFSKY is a junior in Davenport College. Contact her at

[email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T M I C H E L L E B AY E F S K Y

Pre-meds, both thinking and doing

The first time someone mentioned the workload gap between science and

humanities majors with a slight sneer and roll of the eyes, I silently revolted.

That’s not true, my freshman self thought. Everyone works hard in their classes.

By sophomore spring en route to pursuing physics as a second major, I was properly jaded.

The rumors are true. Advanced hard-science classes really are more brutal than anything else you will experience in your academic life at Yale.

But although weekly all-night-ers for a half-credit PHYS 206 lab have thoroughly convinced me the workload gap is real, a jeer-ing attitude towards those pursu-ing creative majors is by no means justified. Gaining a foundation to succeed in the arts takes time and e"ort, and excelling in them requires a completely di"erent approach.

As a political science and phys-ics double major who regularly takes music composition classes and likes to write, I’ve experienced a myriad of thought environments at Yale. They are as diverse as they are valuable.

The place you go in your head when you draw material from deep within your consciousness feels distinct from the process of enmeshing yourself in a text or a di!cult equation. It is meditative, detached, serene.

If non-science majors appear to have it easier, it is because the professors in any discipline try to implement the learning envi-ronment most conducive to suc-cess. “Sorry, I didn’t feel inspired

tonight,” is not an excuse for hand-ing in a problem set late — a kiss of death for your grade. By contrast, deadlines don’t mean much in the world of music composition. At the end of the term (or sometimes slightly after…) you hand in a large score that you were supposedly making progress on all term. It’s brilliant.

It struck me that Yale aims to prepare each of us in our respec-tive fields, and people who create must leave space to take in their surroundings, to see in ways most won’t.

Regardless of our area of con-centration, Yale trains us to pro-duce, problem-solve and ana-lyze at any moment. But to truly be inspired, to create to our high-est potential, requires something more than discipline.

Inspiration is unpredictable and elusive.

It takes a di"erent kind of men-tal toughness to spend long hours on tangentially related trains of thought — such as when a com-poser listens for hours to Chopin, Ives or Nine Inch Nails without stressing about seemingly making no progress whatsoever towards producing something original. Nothing kills creativity like stress, and Ivy League universities are a hotbed for anxiety. But creators must be willing to let themselves wander, sometimes down a path that leads nowhere.

The creator works by waiting, watching and listening without knowing what will pay o" until it happens — and sometimes not even then.

Inspiration might be in the way you stare out the window and watch the tiny icicles, like white

flower buds foreshadowing a sea-son still months to come, con-dense on the thinnest branches of the bare tree on Broadway. It’s the atmosphere. It’s the way the slight autumn breeze brings you back to a childhood soccer game. It’s the rough outlines of a room full of friends as you walk in and take them all in without focusing on a single one. It’s that rock drum-beat that becomes the rhythm of your countermelody line in mea-sure 132.

Wasting time takes on a whole new meaning. If our creative capacity is sum of all of our expe-riences, who knows what we’re adding to the mix? Often the result can surprise us — that’s what makes innovation exciting.

But creativity can also be bur-densome. The artist must be pre-pared to drop everything and write, paint or sculpt whenever inspiration strikes. A new horizon is always just around the corner.

Rather than be frustrated by the workload gap across disci-plines, we should acknowledge and embrace it. Without creativity and innovation, we would not have progress. I hope creative students on campus are given room to thrive — to bring about a more beauti-ful tomorrow that we all can, on some level, appreciate. Our lives are enriched at every turn because somebody took the time to listen when inspiration came knocking.

So as I gear up for another pain-ful term of quantum mechanics, I’m content to let my friends in Green Hall dream.

ZOE GORMAN is a senior in Davenport College. Contact her at

[email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T Z O E G O R M A N

Letting artistry breathe

Remove the mark and loosen stray semantics;Drown clarity, flood sense! Your grammar’s anticsWith oxford commas makes no sense — just style:The hipster’s unclear, casual, cool smileOf apathy. That final comma formedA rug for wandering, slow feet, informedAn end, and cleared a space to think, to breathe —And News, you pull it straight out from beneathThe bewildered reader: me. To understandYou, News, I need the comma’s curly hand,Delineating meaning, vanquishingMy doubt. List items need distinguishing Or else become appositives — and canSense really figure which is which? No! ManIs but mortal; language fails; but grammar leapsThe gap between us, “poet” and reader, sweepsThe page clear. And — unhip as I may be(and quite unhip: who else opines but meanachronistically in defunct verse?),I feel the comma makes the text converse —Or orate, even, in a grander wayThan current fashion sighs, and deems ‘okay.’So I say: I need the comma, need clarity,Poise and commitment. Wait. Is clarityPoise and commitment? Or is what I need

MADELEINE WITT/STAFF ILLUSTRATOR

All three? See! What I really need (News, heed)Is an oxford comma. Alas, you’re too coolTo use the punctuation taught in school.

MICHELLE TAYLOR is a senior in Davenport College.

Contact her at [email protected].

Page 4: Today's Paper

administrators on alcohol issues, Yale has not yet decided how to use the find-ings.

“The modern student seems to be dif-ferent [in drinking habits] than students have been in the past,” said Hannah Peck DIV ’11, a YCDO fellow who led the dis-cussion dinners. “Schools are now deal-ing with things they have never seen before.”

The survey also found that the major-ity of drinking at Yale takes place in dorm rooms, particularly during “pre-games,” and that the percentage of students who have three or more drinks in one hour decreases by class year. In addition, fre-quent binge drinking — defined as con-suming five drinks in one sitting for men and four for women — was found to be more prevalent among seniors, despite the common perception that students drink more responsibly as they get older. Peck declined to provide specific statis-tics from the survey.

Dean of Student A!airs W. Marichal Gentry did not respond to request for comment.

Past studies of alcohol culture at col-leges across the United States have shown similar results in regard to changes in drinking habits as students age, said Toben Nelson, associate direc-tor of the College Alcohol Study, a group at the Harvard School of Public Health that conducts national surveys on col-lege students’ alcohol consumption. He added that other research projects have also found that the perception that older students drink more responsibly is false, but he said there has not been substan-tive past research on pre-gaming.

“Pre-gaming is more of a recent phe-nomenon [that] researchers have just [begun] paying attention to this year, so there’s a lot left to be learned about the kind of drinking going on in those set-tings and the potential for preventing drinking in that setting,” Nelson said.

Yale’s anonymous online survey was sent to all sophomores, juniors, seniors

and graduates of the class of 2012 by the end of the 2011–’12 academic year, Peck said, and 2,664 students — roughly 51 percent of the undergraduate body — completed the survey. The demographics of survey respondents accurately reflect those of the greater student body, said Rebecca Friedkin, acting director of the O"ce of Institutional Research.

“The distribution of respondents by self-reported gender, class year and res-idential college mirrors the actual distri-bution of students along these variables, increasing confidence in the validity of the survey results,” Friedkin said.

The surveys were initiated as part of Yale’s participation in NCHIP’s Learning Collaborative on High-Risk Drinking — a two-year e!ort to collect data on current high-risk drinking habits in college stu-dents and the success of various e!orts to reduce this trend, Peck said. The Col-laborative’s data-collection process will end in July 2013, culminating in a confer-ence at which the findings will be pub-licly released and discussed, said Amy

Olsen, a spokeswoman at Dartmouth, where NCHIP is located.

Fifteen of 21 students interviewed said they are not surprised by the survey’s findings. Still, seven students said they are surprised that Yale’s drinking rate is higher than the national average, and five said they are surprised that fewer Yale students took steps to reduce the risk of drinking.

Romary Santana ’15 said she expected Yale’s drinking rate to be lower than the national average because of the stereo-type that Ivy League students are less likely to drink.

“[The findings] surprised me because I don’t really consider Yale a party school as compared to a state school,” Santana said.

Two additional waves of surveys have been sent to students this fall, and two more will follow in the spring.

Contact CYNTHIA HUA at [email protected] .

immigrants’ rights groups and politi-cians including Gov. Dannel Malloy and Mayor John DeStefano Jr., all of whom decried the detention as an example of overly aggressive ICE policy. But on Thursday, a Hartford immigration judge announced Islas’ release on $4,000 bond, leading to celebration among a crowd of 35 supporters gathered outside the courthouse.

“Josemaria’s case is unfortunately just one of too many cases where individu-als with little to no criminal history are subject to deportation,” DeStefano said in an email to the News, calling Secure Communities “counterproductive” to the relationships the police department has attempted to establish in immigrant communities.

ICE spokesman Ross Feinstein, how-ever, countered that Islas has exhib-ited grounds for becoming “a prior-ity for removal” as an undocumented immigrant who has repeatedly violated immigration law. He said Islas was been deported on four separate occasions in 2005, entering again without permis-sion.

At the time of his arrest, Islas was charged with a misdemeanor of attempted armed robbery after the robbery victim identified him as the o!ender. But Islas was not convicted of any crime due to lack of evidence.

“Our priorities in New Haven, Conn., are the same as our priorities nation-wide, which target illegal aliens based on our stated immigration enforce-ment priorities,” Feinstein said. “ICE has adopted clear priorities that call for the agency’s enforcement resources to be focused on the identification and removal of those that have broken crim-inal laws, recently crossed our border, repeatedly violated immigration law or are fugitives from immigration court.”

Secure Communities, which was implemented statewide Feb. 22, allows ICE o"cials to check police fingerprints of criminal suspects against ICE and FBI databases in an e!ort to deport crim-inals residing in the country illegally. When ICE officials believe a suspect may be undocumented, they can issue a detainment request asking the state to hold the individual in custody pend-ing deportation proceedings. Such hold requests are not legally compulsory, and

Gov. Dannel Malloy, a strong critic of the program, has repeatedly promised since March not to comply with those for non-violent o!enders. Nevertheless, the pro-gram has garnered criticism for unnec-essarily targeting nonviolent criminals and undermining community policing.

But while Islas is a nonviolent offender, Malloy cannot overturn the judicial branch’s decision to place him in ICE’s custody, as the state judiciary has a tradition of complying with all hold requests without discretion. But Judge Patrick Carroll, Connecticut’s deputy chief court administrator, announced in a Thursday release that the policy is under review. He said state judicial o"-cials are working with members of the executive branch to “develop a uniform policy” to honor Secure Communities detainment requests for only violent o!enders.

In an e!ort to put additional pressure on the judicial branch to amend its poli-cies in a timely manner, Mike Lawlor, a top aide for Malloy, joined forces with local advocacy groups to denounce the Secure Communities program at Thurs-day’s press conference. Latrina Kelly-James of Junta for Progressive Action, a

New Haven immigrant rights advocacy group, applauded Lawlor for his “con-tinued support of immigration policy change” and said they are “unified as advocates.”

“Secure Communities puts state and local government in the middle of a no-win situation,” Lawlor said. “It couldn’t be any clearer that there is so much wrong with current immigration laws.”

Ana Maria Rivera of Junta for Pro-gressive Action said she hopes that increased cooperation among branches of state government and the commu-nity will ensure that Islas’ incarceration marks the “last case of wrongful detain-ment we will see in Connecticut.”

Lawlor said the state cannot afford “the breakdown of trust” in immigrant communities if state and federal author-ities are overly aggressive in targeting undocumented aliens for deportation.

Junta for Progressive Action esti-mates that approximately 10,000 to 15,000 undocumented Latino immi-grants reside in New Haven.

Contact NICOLE NAREA at [email protected] .

FROM THE FRONTPAGE 4 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

“I wanted to be a teacher.” KIM KARDASHIAN, AMERICAN

REALITY TELEVISION STAR

plans are not yet finalized. Cur-rently, Rando, YTC Associate Director Kristin Rudenga and 20 graduate student fellows over-see the Graduate Teaching Cen-ter’s programs, which include a teacher-preparation certifica-tion program and teaching-fel-low training workshops.

Though he does not yet have specific plans for the YTC, Rando said, the center will expand “organically,” as organiz-ers explore different strategies of engaging with faculty mem-bers. Since the announcement, he said, five faculty members have contacted him about inde-pendent consultation on their courses.

“Every teaching center is a lit-tle different depending on the culture of the university, and we don’t know what ours will look like yet,” Rando said. “It will unfold over time the way [the Graduate Teaching Center] unfolded over time.”

Rando — who is a part of Ivy Plus, a consortium of teaching center directors at Ivy League schools — said he is looking at the established teaching pro-grams of Yale’s peer institutions, including Harvard, Princeton and Stanford for ideas as the pro-gram moves forward.

Anders Winroth, a professor of medieval history, said he thinks a Yale-wide teaching center could enrich the quality of teaching at the University because the best way to approach a topic for research can di!er from the best way to approach teaching. He said the teaching fellows in his lecture course are all enrolled in the center’s training program, and he has attended several GTC workshops himself.

“I remember saying to Bill, ‘I don’t understand why you’re only doing this for graduate stu-dents. I can think of faculty who would want to use these things.’ I certainly wanted to,” Winroth said.

Michele Marincovich, director of Stanford’s Center for Teach-ing and Learning, said research-heavy institutions should pro-vide an infrastructure of support to help faculty balance research and teaching. Stanford’s center has worked directly with roughly 60 percent of the faculty, she added.

Terry Aladjem, the executive director of Harvard’s Bok Cen-ter for Teaching and Learning, said he has worked with Rando in the Ivy Plus consortium of teaching center directors and is excited about Rando’s ability to use increased resources to ben-efit Yale.

“We’ve long regarded Yale as a close partner in this busi-ness, and I think this will give us even more of a reason to share resources and strike up commu-nication,” he said.

Four professors interviewed said that prior to the creation of the YTC, they independently solicited Rando’s advice on issues concerning teaching.

Psychiatry professor Ben Toll said he contacted Rando four years ago for advice on improv-ing one of the courses he teaches. Toll said he worked closely with Rando for over a year to redesign the course, adding that since that time, his course ratings have sig-nificantly increased.

This semester, the Graduate Teaching Center o!ered 13 fun-damentals of teaching work-shops for departments including history, physics and engineering.

Contact JANE DARBY MENTON at [email protected] .

YTC FROM PAGE 1

IMMIGRATION FROM PAGE 1

ALCOHOL SURVEY FROM PAGE 1

Survey finds seniors turn to ‘binge drinking’

Secure communities challengedYTC includes faculty

Every teaching center is a little di!erent depending on the culture of the university, and we don’t know what ours will look like yet.

BILL RANDODirector, Yale Teaching Center

Page 5: Today's Paper

NEWSYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 5

NEWS “Bikes and planes aren’t about going fast or having fun; they’re toys, but serious ones.” HARRISON FORD AMERICAN FILM ACTOR AND PRODUCER

BY APSARA IYERCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

While his contentious Alaskan State House campaign resulted in a narrow vic-tory, Democrat Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins ’12 will face a recount on Monday to hold onto his new title.

After unseating eight-year incumbent Bill Thomas, a Republican, for a seat in the Alaska House of Representatives by a nar-row 34-vote lead — certified almost three weeks after Election Day — Kreiss-Tom-kins will need to wait a little longer for the final tally since his opponent challenged him to a recount this week. A native of Sitka, Kreiss-Tomkins left Yale last spring to campaign to represent his home district in the Alaska State Legislature.

“[The possibility of representing my district] is a dream. … The district is my home, and as [the representative] my job would be to make my home a better place, to care for my neighbors,” Kreiss-Tom-kins said. “This campaign was a five-month exercise in my ability to empathize with people, and as a consequence to care for them if I were to have the power and responsibility to advocate for them.”

Kreiss-Tomkins initially held a 44-vote lead after around 80 percent of the total votes had been counted on Election Day, Nov. 6. But as Alaska’s Division of Elec-tions began tallying the additional votes, Kreiss-Tomkins and Thomas were often exactly tied or separated by a narrow dif-ference of votes.

At one point, Kreiss-Tomkins fell behind Thomas by two votes, a situation that Kre-iss-Tomkins wrote in a letter to supporters gave him “a sickly feeling in my stomach.”

On Nov. 22, after the final absentee and special absentee ballots were counted, Kreiss-Tomkins was declared the winner, with a 0.38 percent margin of victory in an 8,216-vote election. Alaska law allows candidates who lose an election by less than 0.5 percent to request that the state conduct a recount.

In an interview with the News, Thomas criticized Kreiss-Tomkins for the Yale stu-dent’s publication of a mailer that cited a prominent Alaska Native leader lend-ing her support to Kreiss-Tomkins, which Thomas said the leader later told him she never gave. In an interview with Alaska radio station KHNS on Nov. 21, the day before votes were certified, Thomas said Kreiss-Tomkins “lied on so many things and … was supposed to run a clean cam-paign and didn’t.”

The comments marked the latest in a race often defined by the candidates’ many di!erences, including age — Thomas, at 65, is 42 years older than the 23-year-old Kre-iss-Tomkins — fundraising and campaign strategies.

Kreiss-Tomkin said his campaign had

relied on a grass-roots approach, going door to door and visiting isolated commu-nities often ignored during the campaign process.

“Politics should be about people, and we ran a campaign powered by people,” Kre-iss-Tomkins said.

Kreiss-Tomkins recalled speaking with elderly voters in Heidelberg, Alaska, who had told him that they had not seen candi-dates go door to door since the 1980s.

“In Sitka and a lot of small towns in Alaska, that kind of grass-roots campaign-ing, going door to door, is really appreci-ated and respected, and I think Jonathan was able to use that to his advantage,” said Aren Vastola ’14, a Sitka native.

Former President of United Fishermen of Alaska Bobby Thorstenson, a Republican who said he refused to vote for Mitt Rom-ney because he thought the presidential candidate was “too moderate,” gave Kre-iss-Tomkins “1-to-20” odds of a Novem-ber victory when he met the candidate in August. But after meeting with Kreiss-Tomkins multiple times and seeing how the candidate spent time getting to know voters across his district, which is spread across five islands and part of mainland Alaska, he decided to back Kreiss-Tom-kins.

“This was an epic campaign and epic

win — the last time there was a 22-year-old in the legislature [was] about half a century ago,” Thorstenson said. “He’s definitely the first guy in the legislature with a hyphen-ated last name — he used to be a nobody, but he beat who I would consider to be the fifth most important man in Alaskan poli-tics.”

Kreiss-Tomkins’ grass-roots approach also extended into fundraising e!orts. His campaign had more total donors than any other Alaskan House election, with one of the lowest per capita donation rates in the entire state. Overall, his campaign saw nearly 500 donors and raised around $70,000, a figure dwarfed in comparison by the $120,000 raised by Thomas.

But Thomas, a commercial fisher-man, said that Kreiss-Tomkins’ lack of a job allowed him to campaign more heavily during fishing season.

“He doesn’t work, he came home from college, he lives at home,” Thomas said. “I am a working man, I have a family, I had to work, that’s the di!erence. I have house and car payments.”

With Kreiss-Tomkins’ apparent victory, Republicans hold a 24–16 majority in the Alaska House.

Contact APSARA IYER at [email protected] .

Kreiss-Tomkins ’12 faces recount

GSA report tackles bike safety around campus

JONATHAN KREISS-TOMKINS

Democrat Jonathan Kreiss-Tomkins ’12 won a seat in the Alaskan House by just 34 votes.

BY MONICA DISARESTAFF REPORTER

Since the legalization of medi-cal marijuana in Connecticut this spring, businessmen have been working to develop the drug’s industry from scratch.

About a dozen interested par-ties met last week at the Legisla-tive O"ce Building in Hartford to discuss the proposed Connecti-cut Medical Cannabis Business Alliance, which is a coalition of those interested in growing and selling medical cannabis. The group aims to uphold appropriate practices and standards related to the drug, as well as educate patients, doctors and future businessmen about its use.

“There is a considerable lack of education out there regarding cannabis,” said Eileen Konieczny, a registered nurse in Stamford. “People are still very afraid of it just from the social stigmas that are there, but when used prop-erly, it’s one of the safest medi-cines that are out there.”

Tracey Gamer-Fanning, a six-year brain cancer survivor, said she strongly agrees with this sentiment after experiencing the benefits of medical marijuana firsthand as a prescription for her brain cancer. Gamer-Fanning attended the Connecticut Med-ical Cannabis Business Alliance meeting because she wanted to explain to those who may be involved in the medical canna-bis industry how this treatment a!ects patients.

Using medical marijuana, she said, was like turning on a “light switch” in her life, dramatically reducing the amount of time she was in pain and improving her quality of life.

In Connecticut, medical can-nabis may be prescribed in cases of serious illness such as AIDS and cancer. Use of the drug does not require smoking, which is harmful to lungs, Konieczy said. It can be utilized instead through edibles, capsules and topical applications, she explained, add-ing that the side e!ects of medi-cal marijuana are euphoria, red eyes, dry mouth and a desire to eat more food, which are less

harmful than the side e!ects of other drugs like opiates.

It is common for trade associ-ations like the Connecticut Med-ical Cannabis Business Alliance to form and discuss a common interest, said William Ruben-stein, the state Department of Consumer Protection commis-sioner. But he cautioned that the process of regulating medi-cal cannabis in Connecticut is far from complete.

The Department of Consumer Protection is obligated to pres-ent regulations to the state legis-lature by July 1, 2013, but Ruben-stein said the earliest companies will be able to apply for licenses to sell cannabis is the end of 2013. The department has already cre-ated temporary regulations that specify that there will be between three and 10 licensed marijuana producers in Connecticut and that growers must create a secure indoor facility, precautions that Rubenstein said are normal. The Department of Consumer Pro-tection has been instructed to treat medical marijuana the same as other controlled pharmaceuti-cals, he added.

While there were only a dozen people at the Connecticut Med-ical Cannabis Business Alliance meeting, Rubenstein said the state has received a “number of phone calls” from people inter-ested in pursuing the business of growing and selling medical can-nabis.

There are currently 65 people registered to use medical mari-juana in Connecticut.

Contact MONICA DISARE at [email protected] .

When used properly, [cannabis is] one of the safest medicines that are out there.

EILEEN KONIECZNYRegistered nurse

BY COLLEEN FLYNNCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

Almost 1,000 Yale cyclists could benefit from new bike lanes and safer streets if the Yale Graduate Student Assembly’s new bike plan finds support in city government.

Following a May 2012 report that iden-tified several dangerous intersections, the GSA approved a proposal on Oct. 31 that seeks to improve bicycle safety in and around Yale’s campus. The GSA sought feedback on the proposal — which includes recommen-dations like the creation of bike lanes on York, Chapel and Grove streets, along with several other infrastructural changes — and submitted it to Elm City Cycling, a non-profit organization dedicated to improving bicycle safety in the Elm City. GSA member Dan Spakowicz GRD ’13 said the GSA plans to submit the proposal to the New Haven O"ce of Transportation after incorporat-ing suggestions from EEC and various Yale departments.

“Some other members of the GSA and I are avid bicyclists,” said Patrina Pellett GRD ’14, GSA member and lead author of the new plan. “We all commute around New Haven, and drivers can be really aggressive and try to run you over.”

Tom Harned, a member of the ECC board and a representative on New Haven’s Com-plete Streets Steering Committee, said 15.5 percent of New Haven residents use non-motorized means to commute to work — the highest proportion of the 10 largest cities in New England. Though Yale’s 2011 Com-muter Transportation Survey found that nearly 1,000 commuters travel to Yale by bicycle, Spakowicz said the GSA’s report found several local intersections to be dan-gerous for cyclists, highlighting the inter-section of South Frontage and York, where a medical school student was killed in 2008, as a particularly dangerous intersection. Data in the report suggest that there is simi-lar probability of such an incident happen-ing at other intersections, such as the inter-section of York and Elm. Eight students who regularly bike on campus said they sup-ported the GSA proposals. Jordan Brower GRD ’16 said one of his friends fell face-first into the side panel of a car while biking.

“Even the most responsible bikers su!er mishaps here,” he said.

Though students expressed concerns

over bike safety in New Haven, Yale recently received bronze-level status from the League of American Cyclists, making it one of only 44 “Bicycle Friendly Universities” in the country. The GSA’s plan highlights some of the improvements the city has made in the past year, including the addition of over 20 miles of bike lanes and “sharrows” — a shared lane marking that indicates to drivers that they should expect cyclists on the road. Though Spakowicz said 10 to 15 percent of New Haven residents are cyclists, he added that the city reserves less than 1 percent of its transit budget for pedestrian and cyclist infrastructure.

Pellett said the GSA hopes the city and the Yale O"ce of Sustainability will help bring their proposals to fruition, but she added that the group currently has no funding for the plan. The GSA will present the pro-posal to various Yale departments within the week, including the O"ce of New Haven and State A!airs.

“We want to make this a living docu-ment,” Pellett said. “We want to present it to di!erent o"ces and get their feedback and incorporate it into the plan.”

David Streever, who is on the ECC board, said the GSA’s plan is important because it addresses the streets surrounding Yale — an area that ECC’s annual report does not cover in great detail.

New Haven Director of Transportation Jim Travers was unable to comment on the likelihood of the GSA’s proposal gaining approval from the city because he has not yet seen the report, but Streever said Trav-ers has been receptive to cycling issues in the past. Still, Streever said the city as a whole does not always reflect Travers’ support when it comes time to spend money.

“The city really needs to be a little more visionary and just take ideas and run with them, and if they don’t have the fund-ing now, they should still form a plan that would show the long-term improvement,” Streever.

The GSA report states that bike lanes have been shown to reduce riding on sidewalks, which is illegal in New Haven, by almost 60 percent.

Contact COLLEEN FLYNN at [email protected] .

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YDN

Medical pot alliance formed

Page 6: Today's Paper

tive Anne Weisberg and verte-brate zoologist Carla Studley created the distinction in honor of their mother, Sonia Schim-berg ARC ’50, one of only two women studying architecture in her class.

Weisberg and Claire Weisz ARC ’89, who received the award her graduating year, decided to organize the symposium after they met at a conference where Weisberg presented a talk enti-tled “Architecture of a Wom-an’s Initiative.” Weisz said that “Yale Women in Architecture” is an opportunity to explore ques-tions about lingering prejudices, attrition rates and obstacles fac-ing women in the field of archi-tecture.

“I’m excited about the potential for alumnae to come together and start a dialogue,” she said.

‘OLD BOY’S CLUB’In February 2006, the News

reported that nine School of Architecture students received orders from the school to take a semester’s leave of absence fol-lowing what faculty judged to be inadequate performance during portfolio reviews. Of the nine students, six were women.

For a class of 45 architec-ture students that included just 17 women, the results of the review were jarring, prompt-ing an examination into gender inequality within the school. Some of the students involved in the incident linked their aca-demic struggles to the lack of female representation within the faculty.

“As a woman in this archi-tecture school, when every-one you’re looking to learn from doesn’t reflect who you are, that

has an impact on your educa-tion,” Elizabeth Barry ARC ’07 told the News in 2006.

While the school has increased the number of female faculty members in the past six years, current students said that the gender disparity lingers. In a class of 57 students, Elisa Iturbe ARC ’14 is one of 16 women. Iturbe said that while she has not been the victim of any bla-tant acts of discrimination, she feels a subtle prejudice contin-ues to exist at the school.

“There is the sense that the atmosphere is skewed towards men, simply because there’s so much more of them,” Iturbe said. “You’re not always con-scious of it, but you can feel tes-tosterone in the air.”

Henry Chan ARC ’14 said that higher-level architecture remains an “old boy’s club” in which little effort is made to avoid discriminatory remarks. He said that several times during class lectures, he has heard pro-fessors making comments that would be considered “un-PC.”

“The male professors have had only male students for so long that they are unaware of some of the marginalizing com-ments they make about women in architecture,” Chan said.

New Haven-based architect Lisa Gray ARC ’87, who is orga-nizing one of the reunion’s pre-sentations, said dialogue sur-rounding issues pertaining to female architects has always been missing from the school’s curriculum. But while architects are still largely silent about the issue, statistics speak volumes about the gender disparities in the field.

In 2011, the National Archi-tectural Accrediting Board reported that 41 percent of architecture degrees were

earned by women. On the other hand, data compiled in 2009 from the membership of the American Institute of Architects reveals that only 14 percent of currently licensed architects in the United States are female.

In association with his class “Issues in Contemporary Prac-tice,” architecture professor Phillip Bernstein ’79 ARC ’83 organizes an annual “Gender

Panel.” During last year’s dis-cussion, his wife Nancy Alexan-der ’79 SOM ’84 gave a presen-tation of data on current female representation in architecture, citing statistics compiled by Kate Schwennsen of Iowa State University in 2012 showing that women comprise fewer than 5 percent of the recipients of the industry’s most prestigious prizes, such as the Firm Award

and the Pritzker Prize.“These numbers are in the

main worse than comparable professions like medicine or law,” Bernstein said.

A CHALLENGING FIELD Gray suggested that gender

disparities in architecture may be linked to the construction side of the profession. Archi-tects usually provide on-site supervision, and for some proj-ects, manage the large sums of money necessary for building.

“[When] you walk onto a job site, you are literally the only woman, and you are the per-son who is in charge,” Gray said. “Especially as a young woman on a construction site, you really have to have good game. The only antidote is to get better and better at doing the job.”

Architecture professor Deb-orah Berke, who will moderate a panel on building practices, noted that the large amounts of capital involved in build-ing construction contribute to the field’s underrepresentation of women. She explained that historically, perceptions about women’s inability to handle money has placed control over capital primarily in the hands of men.

For both men and women, architecture presents a para-dox: it requires its practitioners to manage large sums of money while failing to provide archi-tects themselves with as much financial compensation as they would receive in other demand-ing professions.

Stern said he thinks that the same challenges facing male architects — long hours and a demanding schedule — are magnified for women, many of whom he said continue to bear the majority of household work. This issue a!ects female archi-tects to a greater degree than women in other high-stress professions due to the economic stress of a career in architecture. Since women who practice med-icine and law are more likely to have the financial means to hire domestic help, they are better able to balance their careers and their family lives, he said.

Citing the significant num-ber of female architects mar-ried to the male architects with whom they lead their firms, Altair Peterson ARC ’13 said the career’s inflexible sched-ules make the idea of marry-ing someone who “understands the commitment that design requires” appealing. Gray, who leads the firm Gray Organschi Architecture with her husband and partner Alan Organschi ARC ’88, recalled that when they met as architecture students, they

were both inspired by each oth-er’s passion for the craft.

Iturbe said that because “architecture is more than a 9 to 5 job,” it is natural for architects to seek spouses who lead the same kind of lifestyle, adding that she has questioned whether the rigorous time necessary for practicing architecture will allow her to raise a family at all.

“Women who want to be architects face the same gen-der challenges as those in other fields, but in my view low sala-ries, long hours, a lack of women mentors, uneven pay versus men and the general incompatibil-ity of architectural project work with family life put a lot of pres-sure on women in our field,” Ber-nstein said.

BRIDGING THE GENDER GAPWhile much remains to be

done to bridge the gender gap in professional architecture, female architects said they stayed in the profession for the inherent joys of design.

“Stick with it,” Berke advised. “And maybe start your own business, because then you can control the terms.”

This weekend’s reunion fits into the University’s broader, alumnae-led effort — termed the Yale Women initiative — to bring together female graduates across schools and disciplines.

“Things like this reunion and the Yale Women chapters around the country — in New York City, Los Angeles and northern Cal-ifornia — give female alum-nae a chance to come together and discuss how they’re looked upon, how they’ve man-aged work-life balance,” said Mindy Marks ’00, the direc-tor for shared interest groups at the Yale Alumni Association. She added that the program has connected with “a large number of women who haven’t partici-pated in alumni activity.”

And female architects are already seeing increased recog-nition compared to 30 years ago, when the Schimberg prize was established. This September, Berke was named the recipient of the first-ever Berkeley-Rupp Prize, a $100,000 award hon-oring her for her commitment to the advancement of women in architecture and her sustain-ability work. In 2010, the Pritz-ker Prize was jointly presented to Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizima; Sejima is only the second woman ever to receive the honor.

Weisz, one of the event’s two organizers, said the increase in female prize winners signifies a “breaking down” of past preju-dices. And with the discussions Weisberg and Weisz hope to spark this weekend, the chang-ing attitudes that encouraged such progress may grow more pervasive.

“I think it’s worth talking about how people operate in the field [and] why there aren’t more women in charge,” Gray said. “[It is] a step toward encourag-ing talented women to stay in the profession.”

Contact YANAN WANG at [email protected].

FROM THE FRONTPAGE 6 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

“Two great European narcotics: alcohol and Christianity.” FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE GERMAN PHILOSOPHER

ARCHITECTURE FROM PAGE 1

Female graduates encounter bias

KATHRYN CRANDALL/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

The School of Art’s Green Hall was designed by Deborah Berke & Partners Architects, whose founder will speak at this weekend’s symposium.

KATHRYN CRANDALL/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Firehouse 12 Music Studio (above) and Barcelona Wine Bar were designed by Gray Organschi Architecture.

D E B O R A H B E R K E

Berke, who will moderate a panel at this weekend’s symposium, founded Deborah Berke & Partners Architects and serves as an adjunct professor at the

School of Architecture.

EDUCATION & AWARDS With degrees from the Rhode Island School of Design and City University of New York, Berke has won the Berkeley-Rupp Prize and the American Institute of Architects Kentucky Honor Award, among other prizes.

MAJOR PROJECTSBerke’s notable work includes the 21c Museum Hotel in Louisville, Kent.; the Yale School of Art in New Haven, Conn.; and the Marlboro College Master Plan in

L I S A G R AY A R C ’ 8 7

A principle at New Haven-based Gray Organschi Architecture, Gray will present at the “Yale Women in Architecture” reunion this weekend.

EDUCATION & AWARDS Gray attended Yale for her undergraduate and graduate degrees and holds the Fellowship for design excellency by the Jury of Fellows of the Architectural Institute of America. She and her partner recently won the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in Architecture for work characterized by a strong personal direction.

MAJOR PROJECTSGray’s firm has worked on projects including Common Ground High School, Barcelona Wine Bar and Firehouse 12 Music Studio in New Haven.

[Discussion is] a step toward encouraging talented women to stay in the profession.

DEBORAH BERKEArchitect and adjunct professor

Page 7: Today's Paper

NEWSYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 7

NEWS “If journalism is good, it is controversial, by its nature.” JULIAN ASSANGE EDITOR IN CHIEF AND FOUNDER OF

WIKILEAKS

BY TIANYI PANCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

Pulitzer Prize-winning jour-nalist Dean Starkman spoke Thursday afternoon about the importance of investigative journalism for the future of the industry.

About 20 Yale students and alumni attended the Calhoun College Master’s Tea featur-ing Starkman, who works as an assistant managing editor of the Columbia Journalism Review. Starkman focused on the media’s failure in predicting the 2008 financial crisis before it occurred to underscore the need for e!ec-tive investigative journalism, or “accountability reporting.”

“Without accountability reporting, the public will be dis-empowered in confronting major and complex problems,” said Starkman.

Starkman told the audience about Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reporter Richard Lord, whom Starkman said “caught the financial crisis in its infancy” in his 2004 book “American Nightmare.” Through lengthy

interviews that connected him to a household facing foreclo-sure, Lord traced a single house-hold’s mortgage dilemma back to the global mortgage market, using terminology and theories that eventually became well-known after the financial crisis, he said. Starkman added that he thinks Lord was able to uncover a global phenomenon because “he experienced it personally with another family.”

Lord’s investigative report first gave Starkman the idea to look into business reporting in the years before the financial cri-sis, Starkman said.

Starkman’s research led him to conclude that the finan-cial press failed to perform an accountability report of the financial system during those years, he said, leaving the “pub-lic in the dark, powerless against the radicalized financial market.”

His experience with journal-ism surrounding the crisis fur-ther strengthened his belief in accountability reporting as opposed to “access report-ing”, he said, which is “all about scoops and speed.”

“Access reporting often pres-ents the orthodox views,” said Starkman, “while accountabil-ity reporting is invariably dissi-dent.”

Starkman added that research for accountability report-ing takes a significant amount of time and looks at systemic issues, so it can be di"cult, risky and expensive. Digital media, he added, is more compatible with access reporting than account-ability reporting.

Charles Triest ’74, who nearly lost his home during the mort-gage crisis, said he found Stark-man’s perspective of the 2008 crisis to be particularly enlight-ening because of his access to high levels of the financial world.

Mark Youngblood MED ’16 said he thinks that hearing about the financial crisis from some-one involved in financial report-ing helped him understand the crisis better.

Starkman won the Pulitzer Prize in 1994 for his work on the Rhode Island court system.

Contact TIANYI PAN at [email protected] .

Journalist talks financial crisis

recyclerecyclerecyclerecycleYOUR YDN DAILY

BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMASCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

As Gov. Dannel Malloy pushes to alter Connecticut’s energy infrastructure, some industry players in the state are speaking out against the administration’s plans.

At five public hearings earlier this month, heating oil providers protested the state’s proposed Comprehensive Energy Strategy (CES). The CES would introduce a multi-tude of energy goals, ranging from industrial energy needs to consumer energy e"ciency. The provision of the plan generating the most controversy is intended to increase the num-ber of households using natural gas for heat-ing by approximately 300,000. Owners and employees of heating oil firms said at both the hearings and in interviews with the News that the plan threatens their businesses. State o"-cials responded by saying that the plan does not seek to harm the heating oil industry, but rather increase consumer choice.

“In the long run the energy plan could have a detrimental impact on my company,” said Ralph Carlo, co-owner of New Haven-based Tracey Energy Services, which provides heat-ing oil.

State Rep. Clark Chapin, who has served as ranking Republican member of the Con-necticut House Energy Committee, said he had heard from a dozen heating oil dealers who were “very upset.” Chapin said he plans to invite the 12 dealers to a meeting to discuss the plan.

“I think when they say that the government shouldn’t be picking winners and losers as far as which commodity people use, I would tend to agree with that,” Chapin said.

The CES, which was introduced on Oct. 5, identifies the challenges in meeting Connect-icut’s energy needs with the goal of providing “cleaner, cheaper and more reliable energy to consumers and businesses,” according to Malloy spokesman Andrew Doba. The plan provides recommendations that, according to the state’s Department of Energy and Envi-ronmental Protection (DEEP), “give Connect-icut residents and businesses the power to choose from a wide array of energy options.”

The CES proposes to increase the number of natural gas-heated homes through subsi-dies and infrastructure development. Natu-ral gas, which the plan calls “a bridge to a truly sustainable energy future,” is currently sig-nificantly less expensive than heating oil and leaves a smaller carbon footprint when com-busted.

The proposal does not sit well with the heating oil industry, which includes 600 firms — upwards of 90 percent of which are family-owned — throughout the state and employs 13,000 people, Carlo said. Heating oil firm owners claim that the CES will not only elim-inate the jobs of many in the industry but also that it places too much power in the hands of major utilities that provide natural gas.

“It should be the homeowner’s choice if they want to convert. They don’t need incen-tives from the state or incentives from utili-

ties,” Carlo said. “You’re subsidizing one industry at the demise of another.”

Southern Connecticut Gas, Connecti-cut Natural Gas and Yankee Gas are the main Connecticut natural gas providers. UIL Hold-ings, a conglomerate with a market capitaliza-tion of $2 billion, currently owns both South-ern Connecticut Gas and Connecticut Natural Gas.

Carlo said that although heating oil dealers can “band together” through the Independent Connecticut Petroleum Association (ICPA), they do not have the resources to compete against firms such as Northeast Utilities when it comes to lobbying the state.

Neither UIL Holdings nor Northeast Utili-ties could not be reached for comment.

Malloy’s administration and the DEEP responded to the heating oil industry’s accu-sations by emphasizing that the plan is intended to augment consumer choice.

“No one is required to sign on to natural gas,” Doba said.

DEEP spokesman Dennis Schain responded further by noting that Connecticut is cur-rently on the “low end” of natural gas use. According to Schain, only 31 percent of households in Connecticut use natural gas, compared to 67 percent in New Jersey and 58 percent nationwide.

Schain added that the plan would signifi-cantly lower heating costs for Connecticut residents because of the lower cost of natural gas. Responding to heating oil owners’ claims that oil has traditionally been less expen-sive than natural gas and that current market prices are an anomaly, Schain suggested that there has been a paradigm shift in commod-ity prices.

“The past is not an accurate guide to the future when it comes to the prices of oil and gas,” Schain said. “The spread between the two is going to remain substantial.”

Malloy claims the average heating bill for a consumer using natural gas is $1,600, com-pared to $3,400 for one using heating oil.

The heating oil industry is not the only group unhappy with the plan. Advocates for greater adoption of renewable energy sources, such as Fight the Hike, also spoke out at the forums, claiming that the plan made too little mention of energy alternatives such as wind and solar power.

Fight the Hike and several other renewable energy advocates, including the Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority, could not be reached for comment Thursday.

In response, Schain noted that the plan does encourage having alternatives “tested in the marketplace,” but that renewables are currently too expensive to be the CES’ sole focus.

“We all love solar and wind, but do you really want to pay four times more for it?” Schain said.

Heating oil in New Haven currently costs an average of $3.75 per gallon.

Contact MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS at [email protected] .

Malloy’s energy plan sparks controversy

SARI LEVY/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Dean Starkman, right, discussed the media’s duty to investigate the financial system at a Thursday Master’s Tea.

Page 8: Today's Paper

NEWSPAGE 8 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

NEWSA conference examining

Whittaker Chambers’ Witness60 years later

The William F. Buckley Jr. Program at Yale

Friday, November 30th

LC 101

To promote intellectual diversity at Yale by providing a home for conservative thought. buckleyprogram.com

2:20-3:20 – The History of Witness

Lee Edwards, Professor John Gaddis, and M. Stanton Evans

Moderated by Professor Danilo Petranovich

3:40-4:40 – Foreign Policy and Chambers:

Is Witness’ Message Relevant Today?Elliott Abrams, Max Boot, and Jay Nordlinger

Moderated by Professor Charles Hill

4:50-5:50 – Without anti-Communism:

Peter Berkowitz, Norman Podhoretz and Alfred Regnery

Moderated by Roger Kimball

Page 9: Today's Paper

BULLETIN BOARDYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 9

Partly sunny, with a high near 42. Calm

wind becoming northeast 5 to 8

mph in the morning.

High of 44, low of 39.

High of 56, low of 46.

TODAY’S FORECAST TOMORROW SUNDAY

CROSSWORDACROSS

1 John and Paul6 Capital on its

own gulf10 Bar or bel intro14 Imminent, old-

style15 Shots served

neatly?16 Country on its

own gulf17 Mimic

mackerel?19 Tolled20 Seed cover21 Tony winner

Roger22 Many an Everly

Brothers hit23 “__-hoo!”24 Mimic

masquerades?26 Early Pilgrim

family28 Ready29 County bordering

Mayo30 Fairy tale threat33 Mimic

magazinemanagers?

38 The gamut39 Obtain despite

resistance42 Key of

Beethoven’sPiano SonataNo. 24

47 Europeantourists’ rentals

48 Mimicmasquerades?

52 “__ we havingfun yet?”

53 Like muchmouthwash

54 Pearl Buckheroine

55 “Dang!”56 __ uncertain

terms57 Mimic

miseries?59 Bread brushed

with ghee60 Stationary

surgical patient61 Rival of Helena62 In addition63 “The War of the

Worlds” foe64 Slurpee cousins

DOWN1 Tropical fruits2 Hot3 Regular4 Rank below

marquis5 Capacity-

exceeding letters6 Gold-medalist

decathleteJohnson

7 Less receptive8 Painter’s

undercoat9 __ Wednesday

10 Back fin11 Sends, in a way12 Taper, e.g.13 Gulp down18 Speaker of

Cooperstown22 Crude meas.24 Letter run25 Finn floater27 I problem?30 Wrong, with “all”31 Meter opening32 Dick Cheney’s

eldest34 Blabs35 Has a mortgage,

say36 Tourist’s options:

Abbr.37 Break up

40 End of theslogan that starts“Everybodydoesn’t likesomething”

41 African dangers42 Big food problem43 __ column44 Salon dyes45 It starts with

thunder andlightning in“Macbeth”

46 Mr. Rogers47 Blow off steam49 Irish lullaby

start50 Eating may

relieve itssymptoms

51 Compels55 Frisbee, for one57 “Lou Grant”

production co.58 Portugal’s

Manuel II, e.g.

Thursday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Kurt Krauss 11/30/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 11/30/12

CLASSIFIEDS

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Bulletin Board is a free service provided to groups of the Yale community for events. Listings should be submitted online at yaledailynews.com/events/ submit. The Yale Daily News reserves the right to edit listings.

THAT MONKEY TUNE BY MICHAEL KANDALAFT

SCIENCE HILL BY SPENCER KATZ

DOONESBURY BY GARRY TRUDEAU

6 4 9 71 3 4 6

9 6 17 3 2

36 2 9 4

1 7 38 5

7 8

SUDOKU DASTARDLY

ON CAMPUSFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 303:30 PM “Singapore Today — Opposition Perspectives” Panelists include Chee Soon Juan, secretary-general of the Singapore Democratic Party and Kenneth Jeyaretnam, secretary-general of the Reform Party of Singapore. Sponsored by the Yale International Relations Association and the Council on Southeast Asia Studies at Yale. Open to the general public. SSS (1 Prospect St.), Room 114.

4:00 PM “Documenting the Voices of Vanishing Worlds” Mark Turin will talk about the challenges faced by small-scale societies whose oral speech forms are increasingly at risk of disappearing without record. Free and open to the general public. Kline Biology Tower (219 Prospect St.), Study Room South.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 12:00 PM The Big Brush Painting Workshop InspireYale organizes its second painting workshop: Come paint with big brushes and rediscover your inner child! International artist and teacher Carmen Lund will lead the workshop, and the paintings will be featured in an exhibition at OISS on Monday, Dec. 3. While free and open to the Yale and New Haven community, this workshop is limited to 15 people only. Participants need to register, but do not need to stay for the entire workshop. O!ce of International Students and Scholars (421 Temple St.).

6:30 PM Film Cultures Colloquium and Screening Series Features two Italian films: the 1945 “Rome, Open City,” directed by Roberto Rossellini, and the 1948 “Bicycle Thieves,” directed by Vittorio De Sica. Supported by the Barbakow Fund for Innovative Film Programs at Yale. Whitney Humanities Center (53 Wall St.), Auditorium.

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23:00 PM Double Bars — The Music of Count Basie at GPSCY The Yale Jazz Ensemble, directed by Thomas C. Du!y, will perform the music of Count Basie, Miles Davis and more. Open to the general public. Yale Cabaret (217 Park St.).

SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS ONLINEyaledailynews.com/events/submit

y

CLASSICAL MUSIC 24 Hours a Day. 98.3 FM, and on the web at WMNR.org

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THE TAFT APARTMENTSStudio/1BR/2BR styles for future & immediate occu-pancy at The Taft on the corner of College & Cha-pel Street. Lease terms available until 5/31/13. It’s never too early to join our preferred waiting list for Summer/Fall 2013 occu-pancy. Public mini-stor-age available. By appoint-ment only. Phone 203-495-TAFT. www.taftapart-ments.com.

Page 10: Today's Paper

NATION & WORLDPAGE 10 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

Dow Jones 13,021.82, +0.28% S&P 500 1,415.95, +0.43%

10-yr. Bond 1.62%, +0.00NASDAQ 3,012.03, +0.68%

Euro $1.30, +0.00Oil $87.70, -0.43%

UN vote recognizes PalestineBY EDITH M. LEDERER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations voted overwhelmingly Thursday to recognize a Palestin-ian state, a long-sought victory for the Palestinians and an embarrass-ing diplomatic defeat for the United States.

The resolution upgrading the Palestinians’ status to a nonmem-ber observer state at the U.N. was approved by a vote of 138–9, with 41 abstentions, in the 193-member world body.

A Palestinian flag was quickly unfurled on the floor of the General Assembly, behind the Palestinian delegation. In the West Bank city of Ramallah, hundreds crowded into the main square waved Palestinian flags and chanted “God is great.” Others who had watched the vote on outdoor screens and television sets hugged, honked and set o! fireworks before dancing in the streets.

Real independence, however, remains an elusive dream until the Palestinians negotiate a peace deal with the Israelis, who warned that the General Assembly action will only delay a lasting solution. Israel still controls the West Bank, east Jerusa-lem and access to Gaza, and it accused the Palestinians of bypassing negoti-ations with the campaign to upgrade their U.N. status.

The Palestinians still face enor-mous limitations. They don’t control their borders, airspace or trade, they have separate and competing govern-ments in Gaza and the West Bank and they have no unified army or police.

The United States immediately criticized the historic vote. “Today’s unfortunate and counterproductive resolution places further obstacles in the path [to] peace,” U.N. Ambassa-dor Susan Rice said. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called the vote “unfortunate” and “coun-terproductive.”

The United States and Israel voted against recognition, joined by Can-

ada, the Czech Republic, the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau and Panama.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the speech by Pal-estinian President Mahmoud Abbas to the General Assembly shortly before the vote “defamatory and ven-omous,” saying it was “full of men-dacious propaganda” against Israel. Netanyahu called the vote meaning-less.

Abbas had told the General Assem-bly that it was “being asked today to issue the birth certificate of Pales-tine.” Abbas said the vote is the last chance to save the two-state solution.

After the vote, Netanyahu said the U.N. move violated past agreements between Israel and the Palestinians and that Israel would act accord-

ingly, without elaborating what steps it might take.

Thursday’s vote came on the same day, Nov. 29, that the U.N. General Assembly in 1947 voted to recognize a partitioned state in Palestine, with the jubilant revelers then Jews. The Palestinians rejected that partition plan, and decades of tension and vio-lence followed.

Just before Thursday’s vote, Israel’s U.N. ambassador, Ron Prosor, warned the General Assembly that “the Pal-estinians are turning their backs on peace” and that the U.N. can’t break the 4,000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel.

The vote had been certain to suc-ceed, with most member states sym-pathetic to the Palestinians. Several

key countries, including France, this week announced they would support the move to elevate the Palestinians from the status of U.N. observer to nonmember observer state.

Unlike the more powerful U.N. Security Council, there are no vetoes in the General Assembly, and the res-olution to raise the Palestinian sta-tus only required a majority vote for approval.

The vote grants Abbas an over-whelming international endorse-ment for his key position: establish-ment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem, the territories captured by Israel in the 1967 Mideast war. With Netanyahu opposed to a pullback to the 1967 lines, this should strengthen Abbas’ hand if peace talks resume.

BY DAVID ESPO ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The White House is seek-ing $1.6 trillion in higher taxes over a decade and an immediate infusion of funds to aid the job-less, help hard-pressed homeowners and per-haps extend the expiring payroll tax cut, o"-cials said Thursday as talks aimed at averting an economy-rattling “fiscal cli!” turned testy.

In exchange, the officials said, President Barack Obama will support an unspecified amount of spending cuts this year, to be fol-lowed by legislation in 2013 producing savings of as much as $400 billion from Medicare and other benefit programs over a decade.

The offer produced a withering response from House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, after a closed-door meeting in the Capitol with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. “Unfor-tunately, many Democrats continue to rule out sensible spending cuts that must be part of any significant agreement that will reduce our defi-cit,” he declared.

Boehner added, “No substantive prog-ress has been made between the White House and the House” in the two weeks since Obama welcomed congressional leaders at the White House.

Democrats swiftly countered that any holdup was the fault of Republicans who refuse to accept Obama’s campaign-long call to raise tax rates on upper incomes.

At the White House, presidential press sec-retary Jay Carney said, “There can be no deal without rates on top earners going up.” Taking a confrontational, at times sarcastic tone, he said, “This should not be news to anyone on Capitol Hill. It is certainly not news to anyone in Amer-ica who was not in a coma during the campaign season.”

With barely a month remaining until a year-end deadline, the hardening of positions seemed more likely to mark a transition into hard bar-gaining rather than signal an end to e!orts to achieve a compromise on the first postelection challenge of divided government.

BEBETO MATTHEWS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

A Palestinian flag is displayed after a U.N. vote recognizing Palestine as a state on Thursday.

‘Cli! ’ o!er lacks GOP

support

Page 11: Today's Paper

SPORTSYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 11

San Antonio Spurs sit top players against Miami HeatSpurs coach Gregg Popovich drew the ire of fans — and NBA o!cials —after he chose to send stars Tim Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili home on a commercial flight instead of having them play against the Heat on Thursday. Popovich defended the move by explaining that the Spurs were playing their fourth game in five nights, but NBA commissioner David Stern promised repercussions for the decision.

job of utilizing parts of our o"ense as pres-sure releases, and we allowed them to dictate tempo to us.”

Jones added that the team also had oppor-tunities to score both in the paint and from beyond the 3-point line that the Elis were not able to convert.

At the beginning of the second half, the Hawks were able to hit their stride o"ensively while the Elis continued to struggle.

In the opening two-and-a-half minutes of the period, Hartford’s Nate Sikma hit a 3-pointer and guard Yolonzo Moore II con-verted a layup. With 17:35 left in the contest, Hartford’s lead had quickly ballooned to 10 points, at 28–18.

Over the course of the next six minutes, the Hawks expanded their lead over the Bulldogs. In fact, after Hartford guard Wes Cole hit a 3-pointer with 11:36 left, Hawks had doubled the Elis’ score and led 46–23.

“Coach came in from the huddle right before the second half started and just told us the first four minutes … are the critical point, just being on the road,” Moore said. “We came out in the first four minutes and got the big lead.”

Despite the large deficit, the Bulldogs did not relent. Morgan’s 3-pointer with 8:33 remaining capped a 9–0 Bulldog run that closed the gap to 46–32. With 4:03 remain-ing, a Morgan layup cut the margin to seven, at 49–42.

In the end, the Elis were unable to overcome the 23-point deficit. After Hartford recovered a loose ball with the Yale defense out of posi-tion, Cole drained a three to halt the Yale run.

“We got down 20 and that’s just a little bit too much to swallow sometimes,” Jones said.

Morgan scored a game-high 15 points, while Cole came o" the bench to lead the Hawks with 12.

The Elis will continue their season next Wednesday against Bryant University in Rhode Island.

Contact ALEX EPPLER at [email protected] .

Men’s basketball comeback falls short

Bulldogs to face Army

Team looks to freshmen

Bears coming homeMARIA ZEPEDA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Yale is looking for an upset to regain confidence on the court.

67–11 scoring margin.“We’ve had losing seasons and

we’re still losing , but we have signif-icantly more goals than we’ve had in the past,” Haddad said. “We’re not … going to make that miraculous jump to league champions, but … we’re at least contributing to start that jour-ney. That’s what it’s going to be, a journey, and it won’t happen over-night.”

As the year continues, the fresh-men hope they can continue improv-ing.

Ferrara said that the first-year players continue to learn from their more experienced teammates and that the team is making strides with each game.

“If we continue to [get better], we feel as though we can make some noise in the ECAC,” Martini said.

Martini is the eighth-highest scor-ing defenseman in the conference and holds the team lead in goals, a feat she said she did not expect.

“I was expecting to make a greater contribution defensively than o"en-sively, but the fact that I have been able to get as many points as I have is definitely a pleasant surprise,” Mar-tini said.

But there are more than just three players in the freshman class. Defen-seman Ali Austin ’16 has played in only two games this season due to a concussion, though Haddad said that she should return in January. Astrom has played in every game this season, picking up a goal and an assist so far.

“Hanna is a great power forward and is always a threat around the net with her shot,” Zupon said.

Backup goaltender Rachelle Gra-ham ’16 has not appeared in a game yet.

Their teammates hope that the freshmen can provide leadership in the future and help to turn the pro-gram around.

“This class has great potential — I’m proud of them so far and am happy to be able to play with them this season,” Zupon said.

The team will take a break from games this weekend before taking on Union and RPI on the road on Dec. 7 and Dec. 8.

Contact GRANT BRONSDON at [email protected] .

earning them the 15th spot in the most recent U.S. Collegiate Hockey Online polls. While the wins have helped build confidence among players on both teams, they do not necessarily lead to momentum.

“Because it’s essentially a week-end league, it’s hard for there to be carry over [of momentum] from Sat-urday night to Saturday night,” head coach Keith Allain ’80 said.

In a game in which both oppo-nents play a similar style of aggres-sive, fast and physical play, special teams will be particularly important for victory.

“Brown is an extremely hard-working team. They’ll always bring a lot of energy and never give up,” leading scorer Antoine Laganiere ’13 said.

Despite graduating their top two penalty killers last year, the Bull-dogs have killed 30 of 34 penalties

successfully so far this season. Stu Wilson ’16 and Josh Balch ’13, while not as familiar with the job as their predecessors, have led the team on the penalty kill, Allain said.

Brown’s penalty-killing unit, while not as e"ective as Yale’s, is not far behind killing 33 out of 40 penal-ties on the season.

Though the Bulldogs have suc-ceeded in keeping opponents from scoring when short-handed, they still have room for improvement on the power play. Yale has put away

six power-play goals this season on 35 chances. Brown has performed similarly, scoring four power-play chances on 38 attempts.

“I think that’s an area we can build on as a hockey team with the players we have,” Allain said. “At the very least we should create chances and gain momentum every time we’re on the power play.”

In the past 167 matches between Yale and Brown, the Bulldogs have won 88 games and lost 71. The remaining eight games were tied. More recently, the Bulldogs have won 12 of the last 16 matchups.

Yale is currently 2–2 in confer-ence play and has the opportunity to go above .500 this weekend when the puck drops at 7 p.m. at Ingalls Rink on Saturday.

Contact ASHTON WACKYM at [email protected] .

o"ensive threat for the Bulldogs dur-ing Saturday’s matchup. Going into this weekend, Sarju will have appeared in all six games this season, boasting an average of 10.2 points per game.

“The freshmen have all contributed so far, which is important to our team because we are so young,” guard and last season’s Ivy League Rookie of the Year Sarah Halejian ’15 said. “We will continue to expect even more out of them as the season progresses.”

Halejian leads the team with 13.7 points per game and plays an average of 27 minutes per game.

Heading into Saturday’s matchup, Yale will be ranked eighth among the nation’s Division I schools in 3-point-ers made per game. However, the team is currently struggling to find cohe-sion, allowing an average of 82 points per game to its opponents and averag-ing 21 turnovers per game.

“Many things have contributed to our losses. We have a whole lot to work on still, such as playing as more of a

cohesive group on o"ense, and com-mitting more to our pressure defense and help defense principles,” Halejian said.

Last season, the Bulldogs beat Army 63–62. The Black Knights will hosting Yale this year coming o" of a win against Columbia University last Wednesday.

Messimer said the team is looking forward to the beginning of Ivy com-petition against Brown in January.

“I really just try to keep everyone’s spirits up and make sure we focus on the real goal, which is getting ready for the Ivy League,” Messimer said. “It’s hard to look that far forward some-times, but it’s my job to keep every-one’s head in the right place of just getting better and doing our best every night.”

Yale will take on Army at Christl Arena in West Point, N.Y. tomorrow. Tipo" is set for 3 p.m.

Contact DINEE DORAME at [email protected] .

We should create chances and gain momentum everytime we’re on the power play.

KEITH ALLAINHead Coach

M. HOCKEY FROM PAGE 12

W. HOCKEY FROM PAGE 12

W. BASKETBALL FROM PAGE 12

M. BASKETBALL FROM PAGE 12

ALEX INTERIANO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The Bulldogs allowed Hartford to make six of its eight 3-point attempts in the second half.

We did a very poor job of utilizing parts of our o!ense as pressure releases, and we allowed them to dictate tempo to us.

JAMES JONESHead coach, men’s basketball

MARIA ZEPEDA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Forward Jamie Haddad ’16 is tied for the team lead in assists with four along with Janelle Ferrara ’16 and Tara Tomimoto ’14.

Page 12: Today's Paper

SPORTS

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STAT OF THE DAY 10

FOR MORE SPORTS CONTENT, VISIT OUR WEB SITEyaledailynews.com/sports

y

BY ALEX EPPLERCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

After a slow o!ensive start, a 9–0 run in the middle of the first half against Hart-ford Thursday night capped by a layup from guard Aus-tin Morgan ’13 gave the Elis a 16–13 lead and hope that Yale’s strug-gling offense m a y h a v e finally found its stride.

Yet the Yale (2–6, 0–0 Ivy) offense again went cold, and a major run by Hartford (3–3, 0–0 America East) at the beginning of the second half gave the visit-ing Hawks at 60–51 victory over the Bulldogs at the John J. Lee Amphitheater. The game was the first in-state away game victory for Hartford since 2008.

“We can be all the nice guys we want,” Hartford head coach John Gallagher said. “But when you start winning games, then peo-ple start saying, you know what, they got something over there, and that’s what we’re striving for, that’s our approach every day.”

Before the Hawks separated themselves from the Elis, how-ever, both offenses appeared sluggish in the opening min-utes of the contest. With only six minutes remaining in the first half, the teams had combined for only 20 points. Hartford shot 37.5 percent from the floor dur-ing the first half, while the Bull-dogs managed to shoot only 22.7 percent.

The poor shooting perfor-mances by the two squads kept the game close. As the first period expired, the Hawks led 21–18.

“We had not great e!ort o!en-sively in our movement,” Yale head coach James Jones said. “Hartford did a good job of deny-ing us, and we did a very poor

BY ASHTON WACKYMCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

The high-tempo, physical play of both Brown and Yale will clash when the Bears visit Ingalls Rink Saturday night,

The Bears (1–7–1, 1–5 ECAC) face the No. 15 Bull-dogs (5–2–1, 2–2 ECAC) for Yale’s third home game of the season tomorrow. The Bulldogs typically try to gain momentum against opponents by keeping the pace of play up and not let-ting the opposition slow down the game. What is normally a battle of systems and styles will instead be a battle of will between two teams playing the same quick and nose-to-the-grindstone game.

“Brown is always a tough team to play,” leading point-getter Kenny Agostino ’14 said. “They play a similar style to us. They work really hard and pride themselves in their work ethic.”

Both teams are coming off wins as they head into Saturday’s matchup. The Bears won a home contest against Holy Cross 3–2 last week, and the Bulldogs swept two nation-ally ranked teams in overtime last weekend,

QUICK HITS

PASS SWIMMING TEST, OR DON’T GRADUATESOME IVIES STILL REQUIRE TESTThe Wall Street Journal reported yester-day on the continuing tradition of swim tests at universities including Cornell and Columbia. The tests usually involve swimming 50 to 100 yards in an indoor pool and are technically required to receive a diploma.

IF YOU MISSED IT SCORES

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

NUMBER OF KILLS PER SET FOR THE WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL TEAM DURING THE REGULAR SEASON. That puts Yale in second place in Division I in that category, just behind No. 6 Oregon. Yale also ranks third in assists, with 13.9 per set.

NCAABNotre Dame 648 Kentucky 50

NCAABUConn 61New Hamp. 53

IVY M. BBALLBrown 69Sacred Heart 56

NCAAW5 Notre Dame 72Cen. Michigan 63

NCAAWMiami (FL) 696 Penn State 65

“Brown is an extremely hard working team. They’ll always bring a lot of energy and never give up.”

ANTOINE LAGANIERE ’13FORWARD, MEN’S HOCKEY

MEN’S LACROSSENO. 20 IN PRESEASON POLLA poll released Thursday by InsideLa-crosse gave Yale the final of 20 spots in the poll. The men’s lacrosse team fin-ished last season ranked No. 14 after making the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 20 years. The regular sea-son begins on Feb. 23 at St. John’s.

STAT OF THE DAY 14.9

O!ense sputters as Elis fall

BY DINEE DORAMECONTRIBUTING REPORTER

The women’s basketball team will hit the road and take on the Army Black Knights (6–1) this weekend after a three-game losing streak.

With con-ference play nearing, Yale (1-5, 0–0 Ivy) is looking for an upset to regain confi-dence on the court. They recently fell to D e P a u l , Northwestern and Quinnipiac.

“We have a quick turnaround this week from Wednesday’s game before Army, but the most important thing for us to do right now is to work on what we do as a team and really improve on that as we move forward approaching the Ivy League,” captain and guard Allie Messimer ’13 said.

Freshman guard Nyasha Sarju ’16, who was named Ivy League Rookie of the Week last Monday, will be an

Yale travels to West Point

BY GRANT BRONSDONCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

Before the women’s hockey season started, Yale head coach Joakim Flygh said he expected a lot of his incoming freshman class.

“They’ll get lots of opportunities to play in games this year to prove them-selves,” Flygh said. “They can make a big impact.”

Through a dozen games, his words have proven prescient.

Defenseman Kate Martini ’16 and forwards Janelle Ferrara ’16 and Jamie Haddad ’16 have been the top three point-scorers this year for the Elis, with 10 of the team’s 15 total goals hav-ing come from the class of 2016. Had-dad, Ferrara and forward Hanna Astrom ’16 are also among the team’s top four in shots this season.

“Our freshman class was recruited to produce goals and to contribute to the team’s success in any way,” Haddad said. “We weren’t expecting to come in and ride the bench.”

In each of Yale’s wins on the year, two

of the Bulldogs’ goals have come from freshmen. Martini scored the team’s first goal of last Friday’s win over the University of Connecticut and later added the game-winner in overtime. On Oct. 26 against Colgate, both Had-dad and Ferrera scored a goal in the Elis’ 3–0 victory.

Alyssa Zupon ’13 said the squad has relied on the freshman class more so far this season than in previous years.

“They possess very diverse strengths,” Zupon said.

Despite the rookies’ e!orts, the team is 2–10 on the season and has only one conference win. The Elis have been out-shot 482–216 and outscored 41–15 by opponents.

Still, this year’s campaign has been a marked improvement over last year’s. Twelve games into last season, the team had one win and was in the midst of a four-game winless streak that would stretch to 21 games by the end of the year. Yale had surrendered 554 shots on goal and was on the wrong end of a

Freshmen leaving their mark

SARI LEVY/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Guard Austin Morgan’s team-high 15 points were not enough to overcome a dismal shooting night by the Elis.

Women’s BasketballSaturday, 3 p.m.

at

Army

Men’s HockeySaturday, 7 p.m.

at Ingalls Rink

Brown

M. BASKETBALL

SEE M. BASKETBALL PAGE 11

SEE W. BASKETBALL PAGE 11

SEE M. HOCKEY PAGE 11

SEE W. HOCKEY PAGE 11

Bulldogs take on Brown

Men’s BasketballWednesday, 7 p.m.

at

Bryant

Saturday 12/8, 1 p.m.

at

New Hampshire

HENRY EHRENBERG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

In the past 167 matches between Yale and Brown, the Bulldogs have won 88 games and lost 71 and the remaining eight games were tied.

MARIA ZEPEDA/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Heading into Saturday’s matchup, Yale will be ranked eigth among the nation’s Division I schools in 3-pointers made per game.