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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 · WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 85 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY CLEAR

27 25

CROSS CAMPUS

TRACK AND FIELD

SCHOOL OF ART STUDENTS PRESENT THESES

RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE Speculation about residential college names continues

BULLDOGS PERFORM WELL ON HOME TURF

PAGES 10-11 CULTURE

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 12 SPORTS

Med School to see reform

Bananagrams. The Facebook group “Princeton Bananas” popped up last week, featuring regular posts of rather unflattering photos of Princeton students eating bananas. “This insurgency was built to instigate drastic change in our gustatory habits,” the page says. “We will not stop until every Princeton student decides to eat their bananas with fork and knife lest they be captured on camera.” One submission for example is captioned, “A tender lip-lock with this golden glory.”

BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS AND WESLEY YIIN STAFF REPORTERS

the 2014–’15 academic year and roll out the full curriculum the year after. “This is a pretty dramatic change,” said Mike Schwartz, associate dean for curriculum at the Yale School of Medicine. “It’s a more integrated approach, and it brings the students to patients earlier in the curriculum.

In a Tuesday night email to several hundred active members of the Yale International Relations Association (YIRA), the organization’s executive board alleged its former president misallocated YIRA funds. But several YIRA members interviewed have questioned the claims made in the email and an attached document. According to the letter, the former president of the organization during the 2012’13 year Larissa Liburd ’14 requested $3,500 from YIRA for her group, Citoyen Haiti. The YIRA board voted to allocate the funds with the understanding that the preceding board had approved the decision, the letter said. The YIRA letter said that Citoyen Haiti was not a constituent organization of YIRA. As of press time, Citoyen Haiti’s website continued to state constituent status, and that donations to Citoyen Haiti are tax deductible because of its relationship to YIRA, a 501(c)(3) organization. The letter added that Liburd’s case has been referred to the University administration, though it did not provide details about the extent of the University’s involvement. “To rectify the misappropriation of funds and the unapproved use of the YIRA name and 501(c)(3) status by a Yale student, the Executive Board members involved have referred this case to the Yale University administra-

SEE MED CURRICULUM PAGE 6

SEE YIRA PAGE 4

There’s always money in the banana stand. Meanwhile at

Brown, a new Twitter account titled Brown Bananas @ brown_bananas_ is posting pictures of students enjoying the fruit. They’re elite and they don’t eat meat. In other news on the

dietary habits of Ivy League students, the Ivy League Vegan Conference 2014 was held this past weekend at Princeton, presumably so that Ivy League vegans could support fellow Ivy League vegans in attending Ivy League schools while being vegan?

Posterchild? Stefan Palios ’14, former co-president of Athletes and Allies, went on Fox CT this week to talk about his experiences as an openly gay athlete. The piece related to the recent coming out of defensive end Michael Sam, who is a top NFL draft prospect from the University of Missouri. Palios talked about his experiences revealing his sexuality to his teammates on the track and field team. Cheap date idea. The Film

Study Center is hosting a preview screening of “Winter’s Tale,” a romantic film starring Colin Farrell, Russell Crowe and Jessica Brown Findlay. The film opens on Valentine’s Day and the plot is based on a 1983 book about a thief that falls in love with a girl dying of tuberculosis. “This is not a true story. It’s a love story,” the film’s advertisements read.

Not a cheap date. As part of a

citywide promotion, the “Elm City Elf” is giving out goodies. Most recently, local resident Steve Mark won the raffle where entrants were asked which New Haven restaurant they found most romantic.

Burn Book(er). After the

announcement of the Class Day speaker, Nick Defiesta ’14 “Immediate reactions to @JohnKerry as Class Day speaker have ranged from “meh” to “Awesome!” to “at least he’s better than @ CoryBooker” He was surprised to find a minute later, Cory Booker tweeted back, “Ouch.” THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1960 Sterling Memorial Library tests out 35 experimental carrel desks which provide greater division and privacy for students studying. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

YIRA email sparks controversy

VICTOR KANG/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Starting in the fall, the School of Medicine will reform its curriculum to emphasize clinical knowledge BY HANNAH SCHWARZ STAFF REPORTER When Yale School of Medicine first-years arrive in New Haven in fall 2015, they will encounter a curriculum drastically different than that taught today. The School of Medicine is currently in the process of reforming its curric-

ulum to integrate clinical knowledge with basic science teaching and provide students with earlier exposure to clinical experience. The change comes in the midst of medical school curricula reform across the country aimed at better preparing students for a rapidly evolving health care system. The School of Medicine plans to pilot one aspect of the reform during

City departments overreach by $14 million BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER City department heads are requesting too much money from the city — $14 million too much. Mayor Toni Harp told the News Tuesday that there is a $14-million gap between the aggregate funds requested by city departments and the revenue the city has at its disposal for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2014. Based on preliminary departmental requests,

spending would outpace revenue by millions of dollars, Harp said on Tuesday afternoon — less than three weeks before her budget is due to city alders on March 1. Harp said she is elbow-deep with budget director Joe Clerkin trying to avert a hike in taxes. But the city will likely need roughly $14 million in additional funds to balance its budget should department heads get what they have asked for, she added. If she honors the agencies’ requests, a bud-

get hole of up to $14 million looms. “I don’t want to raise taxes,” Harp said. “We’re going to have to make cuts.” The $14-million hole in preliminary calculations of the general fund does not even take into account the additional $5.3 million that the school district is requesting from the city, Harp added, saying the gap is really closer to $19 million. At Monday’s school board meeting, New Haven Public Schools Superintendent Garth

Harries ’95 revealed a total year-long spending scheme of roughly $396.5 million. A majority of funds will come from state Education Cost Sharing, but Harries said he would also be asking the city to up its contribution to help foot the school district’s operating budget. “We want to do more for our students, not less, and that would require $5.3 million,” Harries said at Monday’s meeting. “That said, we know the city is in a difficult fiscal situ-

ation. We are talking with city officials to see what the potential is for this kind of budget increase.” Harp stated bluntly that the city could not afford a $5.3 million increase in education costs. The necessary hike in property taxes would be untenable for city residents, she told School Board members Monday night. The potential budget gap comes amid turbulent fiscal SEE DEFICIT PAGE 6

Sorority rush Republicans clamor to unseat Malloy continues to grow BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER AND ISABELLE TAFT STAFF REPORTERS

BY CAROLINE WRAY STAFF REPORTER More female students rushed sororities this year than any other in Yale’s history. On Jan. 22, 236 potential new members, or PNMs, registered for the rush process for Yale’s three on-campus sororities: Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Pi Beta Phi. After three rush rounds over the course of a week, 141 girls received bids. As last year saw 200 PNM’s begin rush, sorority leaders said they were pleased with the rise in awareness and interest in Greek life on campus. “We were very surprised, actually,” said Jéssica Leão ‘16, an officer on Yale’s Panhellenic Council, the representative government body that coordinates sorority recruitment. “We expected the number to rise above 200, but we were shocked to rise all the way to 236.” Leão attributed the boost in numbers to the Panhellenic

Council’s expanded outreach programs before recruitment this year, which included social media publicity and informational sessions for PNM’s. Panhellenic Council president Morgan White ’15 oversaw the implementation of this outreach as well as the general organization and streamlining of the rush process, Leão said. According to Mackenzie Lee ’16, a member of the Theta executive board who rushed last year, the clarity of this year’s rush process represented a significant improvement. “Panhellenic was much more present in this year’s rush,” she said. “They were a lot more transparent about the process.” For the first time this year, the process included a group of nine recruitment counselors, members of sororities who temporary disaffiliated from their organizations for the duration of rush. Each PNM was assigned to one of these

Six declared Republican candidates for governor of Connecticut are gearing up to turn the governor’s office red by overcoming a Democratic opponent they assume will be incumbent Gov. Dannel Malloy. Malloy has remained mum on the prospect of a second term, but his silence has not deterred a crowded field of Republican hopefuls from making their ambitions known — foremost among them Malloy’s 2010 opponent, former U.S. Ambassador to Ireland Tom Foley. “I hope and expect [Gov. Malloy] will run,” State Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney said. “There will be no other Democratic candidates if he decides to run.” Looney identified Foley as one of three principal Republican challengers, also naming Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton and State Senate Minority Leader John McKinney ’86 as “serious” contenders with the “basis to seek the [Republican] nomination.” Connecticut State Sen. Toni Boucher, Shelton

SEE SORORITY PAGE 6

SEE GOVERNOR’S RACE PAGE4

HENRY EHRENBERG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Gov. Dannel Malloy has not yet announced whether he will run for a second term, giving hope to Connecticut Republicans.


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