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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, DECEMBER 6, 2013 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 64 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY RAINY SUNNY RAINY

70 54 80 34

CROSS CAMPUS

WEEKEND DISORDERED EATING EXAMINED

FACULTY MEETING

STRIKES

REDDIT

Faculty continue to question online education ventures

FAST FOOD WORKERS CALL FOR HIGHER WAGES

Reddit founder talks entrepreneurship, career choices

PAGE B3 WEEKEND

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 5 CITY

PAGE 7 NEWS

Yale, Toad’s dispute land

Poopetrator drops out of race.

Voting is open for the Saybrook College mascot. Candidates include the lion, seal, sea lion, grapes, griffin and Saybertooth tiger.

LEVIN ANTICIPATED TRANSITION BEFORE DEPARTURE

Because man cannot survive on mochi alone. The Mochi

Store on Crown Street is moving out and Jake’s Diggity Dogs is moving in. However, Jake’s will still carry the full line of mochi ice cream, making it the cutest hot dog shop ever.

BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTER

sity property. In the most recent court action on Nov. 29, Toad’s brought forth six counterclaims, on three of which a superior court judge ruled in Yale’s favor. The music hall, which has

When University President Peter Salovey sits down with the officers of the University — the administration’s nine most senior leaders — the faces looking back at him are almost identical to those that faced former President Richard Levin a year ago. With the exception of Salovey and his replacement in the provost’s office Benjamin Polak, the individuals leading the University have remained the same since Salovey moved his belongings from Warner House to Woodbridge Hall on July 1. Administrators interviewed suggested that the causes for the lack of major leadership changes in the upper echelons of the University are twofold: the stasis may be due both to Levin’s recruitment of new administrators during the end of his tenure and to Salovey’s strong working relationship with the leadership team. “We really have a very strong team of vice presidents and I worked closely with them as provost,” Salovey said. “So given that the team is strong and given that we already have well-honed working relationships, it shouldn’t be surprising that there’s a lot of continuity.” Still, Salovey and others said that tran-

SEE TOAD’S PLACE PAGE 6

SEE ADMINISTRATION PAGE 4

90210, but closer to home.

The newest video from the Office of Undergraduate Admissions is a studentproduced short that showcases 06520. “New Haven, CT 06520” follows students around town to Claire’s, Wooster Square and other local spots. Beverly Hills pales in comparison. The Amazing Race.

Competitive eater Jamie “The Bear” McDonald will be hosting an eating challenge at Denny’s in New Haven on Monday. He will be single-handedly competing against teams from around Connecticut, including a pair of Yale graduate students, to eat as many red velvet pancake puppies as possible in 15 minutes. Additionally, the event is themed around The Hobbit. Last year, McDonald devoured the entire Denny’s Hobbit menu in under 20 minutes. Ironically, McDonald’s has not stepped into the sponsorship role.

They’re everywhere. The Elm

City elf doll is being placed in one New Haven store or restaurant each day for the 24 days before Christmas. Residents who find the elf will be able to turn it in for prizes (and take the elf home). Clues are being put up regularly on Facebook and Twitter.

“World Wizard Wheezes.”

World Micro-Market organized a Harry Potterthemed winter market for Saturday and named it after the Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes. Full Harry Potter garb should be expected. Bass will always love you. The

University’s most all-nighter friendly library is putting out encouraging messages in anticipation of finals this weekend, shedding a ray of light on the overwhelming darkness looming over the campus.

Getting inside Handsome Dan’s head. The Canine

Cognition Center at Yale opens Dec. 9. According to a Yale News article, the researchers are currently seeking canine applicants for their studies. SAT scores for the 25th to 75th percentile measure in at around 2320-2380.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1950 It is announced that around 600 juniors are expected to be drafted into the army by the end of the year. Submit tips to Cross Campus

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

Admins stay for Salovey

EARL LEE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Toad’s Place, a York Street fixture for more than 40 years, may have to close or move due to disagreements with Yale. BY JR REED STAFF REPORTER Yalies could be forced to find a new place to conclude their Saturday nights, if an ongoing land dispute between the University and the historic Toad’s Place nightclub

is not resolved. The legal dispute arose when the University sued the nightclub last year for allowing patrons to exit from side doors onto the adjacent walkway leading to Morse and Ezra Stiles Colleges, an act that Yale considers trespassing on Univer-

Math research program to launch BY JENNIFER GERSTEN STAFF REPORTER To devise a foolproof strategy for bidding chess, a variant of the game in which players bid for the right to move instead of taking turns, you might need longer than a lifetime. It’s the sort of task Yale math professor Sam Payne calls “easy to

understand, but impossibly difficult” — and the sort of task undergraduates with an interest in creative computation will get to tackle this summer at the inaugural session of Summer Undergraduate Math Research at Yale (SUMRY). The ten-week SUMRY proSEE MATH RESEARCH PAGE 6

CYNTHIA RUSSET T 1937 – 2013

Longtime professor dies BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTER More than half a century after arriving at Yale, history professor Cynthia Eagle Russett GRD ’64 died Thursday morning. She was 76. Russett, whose scholarship focused on the history of American women and the intellectual history of 19th and 20th century America, succumbed to cancer at a nearby hospice on Thursday morning. In an email to the Saybrook community, where Russett was a long-

time fellow, Saybrook Master Paul Hudak said Russett died comfortably and peacefully among family. “Cynthia Russett had her office in Saybrook for as long as I can remember, and so she spent a great deal of time with Saybrook students as adviser, as colleague and a keen presence in the college,” said Yale College dean and former Saybrook master Mary Miller. SEE RUSSETT PAGE 4

FES students warn of warming Olympics BY HANNAH SCHWARZ STAFF REPORTER In February, five students from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies will warn the world that the winter Olympics may someday be an event of the past. While the long-term effects of climate change are hard to detect, Team Climate plans to make the impact of global warming more tangible by highlighting its impact on many events at the winter games. Through encouraging the athletes to share how climate change has affected their sports, the group hopes to expose the game’s global audience to both the immediate impact and the less tangible — but more severe — long-term effects. “By targeting the winter sports community, we’ll be reaching spectators or sports fans who don’t normally read The New York Times and aren’t SEE FES OLYMPICS PAGE 6

HANNAH SCHWARZ/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Team Climate at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies hopes to highlight the real-life impacts of climate change.


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