T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8
NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 119 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY SUNNY
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CROSS CAMPUS In protest. The Yale Muslim
Students Association hosted a “Hoodies and Hijabs” day Thursday afternoon in protest of the murders of Trayvon Martin, an AfricanAmerican teenager who was shot on Feb. 26, and Shaima Alawadi, an Iraqi Muslim who was found murdered in her home last month. Organizers urged students to wear either a hoodie or hijab — a Muslim headscarf — or both to protest discrimination based on an individual’s clothing.
Open to the world. Open Yale
Courses, the initiative that makes video lectures of Yale College courses available for free online, added seven new courses to its website on Thursday. The courses range from philosophy and cognitive science professor Tamar Gendler’s “Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature” to history professor Paul Freedman’s “The Early Middle Ages” and courses in AfricanAmerican history and organic chemistry.
Turn with our biological clock.
A new study out from the Yale School of Medicine shows that many women don’t fully appreciate the consequences of delaying motherhood and think that assisted reproductive technologies can reverse aged ovarian function.
No more racket! A terrible, horrible, no good, very bad noise was coming from the Central Power Plant on Thursday, disrupting the lives of Swing Space residents. One emailer speculated that the sound could be caused by the transfer of natural gas, but said he had no way of knowing whether that’s the case. Schedule changes. Payne
Whitney Gymnasium will remain open Friday and Saturday, but will close Sunday for the Easter holiday, according to an email sent to students Thursday.
And we’re live. The pilot episode of “TOO DAMN LIVE” starring campus politico Michael Knowles ’12 and generally famous politician Jimmy McMillan, who rose to fame for claiming that the rent is “too damn high,” debuted Thursday night, to acclaim from several commenters on the website chattrspace.com. Sparks fly. A number of the Democratic candidates for the U.S. Senate seat that will be vacated by U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman ’64 LAW ’67 at the end of the year participated in a debate Thursday night in which one candidate — Lee Whitnum of Greenwich — accused U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, the frontrunner for the nomination, of selling his soul to Israel. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1971 In a memo from Yale’s personnel director, the University opposes its employees’ efforts to unionize. Submit tips to Cross Campus
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FEMALE FACULTY ANALYZING THE SCIENCE ‘PIPELINE’
COLLEGE LIFE
M. LACROSSE
W. TENNIS
More students transfer out of Timothy Dwight than any other college
ELIS CHASE THIRD STRAIGHT WIN AT DARTMOUTH
No. 27 Elis begin quest to repeat as Ivy champions with match against Penn
PAGE B3 WEEKEND
PAGE 5 NEWS
PAGE 12 SPORTS
PAGE 12 SPORTS
Faculty approve Yale-NUS resolution LEVIN CRITICIZES PROPOSAL’S LANGUAGE, CITING ITS ‘MORAL SUPERIORITY’ BY GAVAN GIDEON AND ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTERS Despite a statement of opposition from University President Richard Levin, faculty voted by
a wide margin to pass a resolution urging Yale-NUS College to uphold principles of non-discrimination and civil liberties at Thursday’s Yale College faculty meeting. The roughly 200 Yale College
faculty members who attended the meeting spent two and a half hours discussing revisions to a resolution proposed last month by philosophy and political science professor Seyla Benhabib GRD ’77. After debating the text of the three-paragraph resolution nearly word for word, professors — including some who support the Singaporean liberal arts college — approved a ver-
sion that begins by expressing concern over a “history of lack of respect for civil and political rights” in the country. Immediately before the final vote, Levin made a brief statement objecting to that language. “I felt that the tone of the resolution, especially the first sentence, carried a sense of moral superiority that I found unbecoming,” he told the News Thurs-
At Arch. School, role of drawing in doubt BY NATASHA THONDAVADI STAFF REPORTER From Feb. 9 to 11, more than 500 architects, professors and critics from across the globe descended on New Haven to debate the place of hand drawing in contemporary architecture. Meant to fill Hastings Hall to capacity, the symposium — “Is Drawing Dead?” — was so popular that attendees were relocated to overflow rooms elsewhere in the School of Architecture’s Rudolph Hall to watch the symposium via live-streaming video.
day night. The meeting marked the first time faculty members have taken a stance on Yale-NUS through a formal vote. Levin said in February that the decision to launch the college ultimately rested with the Yale Corporation, as the venture is a new school and not a program within Yale College. SEE RESOLUTION PAGE 6
College designs finished CONSTRUCTION OF 13TH AND 14TH NOW WAITING ON DONATIONS
UPCLOSE When architecture professors George Knight ARC ’95 and Victor Agran ARC ’97 approached Dean Robert A. M. Stern more than 18 months ago with the idea for the symposium, Agran said they were motivated by personal passions for drawing and a desire to improve on their own teaching of drawing in today’s educational environment. But they had no idea the subject would strike such a raw nerve in the global community. What was originally planned as a more modest event grew into one of the largest symposia in the school’s history. The discussion did not end that weekend. In the two months since, architectural journals and blogs have been flooded with reviews, forums and opinion pieces that asked broad questions about what role drawing can, should and does take in architecture today. “The symposium will hopefully spark a conversation between people in the field about different types of drawing and their virtues,” Knight told the News in February.
BY TAPLEY STEPHENSON AND NATASHA THONDAVADI STAFF REPORTERS
Despite administrators’ hopes, fewer high school seniors applied for New Haven Promise scholarships this year. Program officials said Thursday that 351 students applied to New Haven Promise — the Yalefunded college scholarship program — by the Monday deadline, down 20 from last year’s 371 applications. Announced in November 2010, the Promise program awards college tuition scholarships to New Haven public high school graduates who meet certain academic and disciplinary standards and matriculate to an in-state institution. Despite Promise administrators’ predictions that the program would see a boost in participation and efforts to spread a “college-going culture” in the city’s schools since the scholarship program’s introduction, the 5.4 percent decline in applications marks a setback for the program. Administrators of the program, which is funded primar-
SEE ARCHITECTURE PAGE 4
SEE NEW COLLEGES PAGE 6
KAMARIA GREENFIELD/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
At the Yale School of Architecture, a student’s workspace contains space for hand drawing and modeling as well as a computer equipped with architectural software. In the months since the symposium, the issue of drawing has come to occupy an important place in the school’s evaluation of its own curriculum. Peggy Deamer, a School of Architecture professor who heads the school’s curricular
Fewer students apply to Promise BY BEN PRAWDZIK STAFF REPORTER
review committee, said that the faculty is considering increasing the emphasis on certain computer-based technologies. Stern said that the school maintained
Architectural plans for Yale’s two new residential colleges were completed last week, but University administrators said construction cannot start without fundraising toward the $313 million outstanding for the project. The completed set of construction documents for Yale’s 13th and 14th residential colleges was issued by Robert A. M. Stern Architects last Friday, University Planner Laura Cruickshank said in a Thursday email. The final changes to construction documents concerned “technical work” on the structures themselves, School of Architecture Dean Robert Stern ARC ’65 said, while minor decorative elements, such as the designs for sculptures and plaques in the colleges, have
ily by Yale and administered by the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven, told the News in February that Promise was poised to significantly increase the number of New Haven students receiving its scholarships in the coming years. Betsy Yagla, the communications and research coordinator for New Haven Promise, said Thursday that it is unclear why the number of applicants fell. “It’s hard to tell why fewer kids applied, but our assumption is that because last year’s application was on paper, kids were handed it and some filled it out instinctively. This year the application was only online, so kids had to take the initiative to apply,” Yagla said. Yagla said while administrators had hoped to see an increase in the number of applications this year, they were not disappointed at the decrease because the program’s goal is to increase the number of students who qualify for and accept the scholarship, SEE NH PROMISE PAGE 6
AT H L E T I C S
Canadians opt for Eli teams BY LINDSEY UNIAT STAFF REPORTER While approximately 15 percent of Yale College students are members of varsity athletic teams, that statistic is much higher for Canadian undergrads: Forty percent of Canadian students at Yale are varsity athletes. Yale’s peer institutions show a similar trend: at Harvard, 30 percent of Canadian college students compete at the varsity level, and a whopping 60 percent of Dartmouth’s Canadians are on a varsity roster. But, like Yale, only 20 percent of both schools’ student bodies is on a varsity team. Not surprisingly, the majority of Canadian athletes at Yale play on the hockey teams, but they are also active in other varsity sports, including crew, lacrosse, track and field, and fencing. While 16 Canadian Elis interviewed said most high schoolers in Canada stay
JESSICA KOIZUMI
Each year, the Canadians on the women’s hockey team scrimmage against their American teammates. there for university, they added that it is highly desirable for Canadian athletes to come to the United States and compete in the NCAA, which offers a higher level of competition than Canada provides at the collegiate level. “As a Canadian athlete, coming to the States for school is kind of spoken
of as inevitable,” track and field thrower Stefan Palios ’14 said. “It was just always thought of as the thing good athletes did.”
NOT THE NORM
In a high school class of 240, Palios, a native of Grimsby, Ontario, was one SEE CANADIANS PAGE 11