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TE TE AC TE AC H AC FO H TE H FO R FO FO AC TE Y R R O AC R H TH U IM A F R H E O PA C CA FU FO R H CT TU SO RE AN R TE R T ER C G E H TE AC IA E E TE AC L CH H TE JU A FO IL H C AC ST DR FO R H IC H EN 11 F R O FO E ½Ê H R OU ó R T PA H G R RA E Y D EX A D Y PE SC S RI H O EN O L C E

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 2013 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 48 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY COLD

52 32

CROSS CAMPUS

TEACH FOR X YALIES TEACH FOR AMERICA

SWENSEN

MEN’S BASKETBALL

BRIQ

Chief Investment Officer talks downturn, morality of Wall Street

ELIS PREPARE FOR NEW SEASON, CENTRAL CT STATE

Restaurant defies expectations “with New York City feel”

PAGE B3 WEEKEND

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 10 SPORTS

PAGE 7 CITY

YLS to house students

WITH $25 MILLION GIFT, LAW SCHOOL TO CREATE STUDENT HOUSING

Honey, I supersized the kids!

TE AC H

The Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity has updated their lists of the best and worst kids’ meal combinations from fast food chains. At the top of the best list was Arby’s Kraft mac & cheese with apple slices and bottled water which contains 205 calories. Kraft mac & cheese dominated the best list, appearing six times in the top 10 meals. Meanwhile, McDonald’s McDouble, french fries and soft drink came in as the very worst item on the worst list with 880 calories.

BY CAROLINE WRAY CONTRIBUTING REPORTER

be used to house law students yearround in furnished two-bedroom suites, complete with en suite bathrooms, kitchens and shared community areas. YLS has not offered residential housing to law students since 2007, when dorms inside of the Sterling Law Building at 127

New Haven teachers voted last night to ratify a new contract that continues the legacy of the nationally acclaimed teacher’s contract passed in 2009. The contract passed with 775 votes in favor to 79 votes against, a positive showing of support for the school reforms of the past four years. The theme of the new contract is increased professionalism, said New Haven Public Schools spokeswoman Abbe Smith. The contract’s pillars include increased compensation for teachers who are deemed “effective,” “strong” or “exemplary,” time set aside for teacher collaboration and the creation of a Talent Council, which will seek to cultivate excellence in teachers, particularly in low-performing schools. “We appreciate the collaborative spirit of good faith between the parties that allowed this agreement to be reached at the bargaining table,” Smith said. Four years ago a major focal point of the new contract was TEVAL, the new teacher’s evaluation system, which groups teachers into five categories: “exemplary,” “strong,” “effective,” “developing” and “needs improvement.” The new contract will not only keep TEVAL intact, but will also build upon it, with increased compensation and support for teachers, which was made possible by a federal Professional Educa-

SEE LAW SCHOOL PAGE 4

SEE TEACHERS PAGE 6

Stairway to heaven. Technology

has failed us all once again. The elevator in Ezra Stiles tower stopped working on Wednesday, forcing miserable Moose to climb stairs to their dorm rooms. Perhaps none suffered more than Dean of Ezra Stiles Camille Lizarribar whose residence is located on the top floors of the tower. In two emails to the Stiles community, Lizarribar signed her messages: “Yours in ‘I did not need stairmaster training today...’,” and “Yours in notwalking-the-dog-late-tonight.” Tying the knot. Meanwhile

in other Ezra Stiles news, the first annual Rope Saturday will be held this weekend. The game, which was “invented by hungover Stilesians,” involves tying two Stilesians together and seeing which couple lasts the longest. The last pair still able to stand each other wins. A dip in performance. In the

8th Annual Sexual Health Report Card college rankings from Trojan Condoms were released Wednesday and Yale did not perform as expected. “The big news on your campus? Yale came in at #13, dropping 7 spots from 2012,” said Lindsey Edelman, a spokesperson for Trojan Condoms in an email to the News. Meanwhile, Princeton and Columbia took the top two places. What happened, Class of 2017?

Abysmal math skills. A recent

blog post from the Harvard Alumni Association compared Yale and Harvard in an entry titled “Beating Yale by the Numbers.” The list illogically compared the number of current students and number of living alumni, both of which Harvard — a larger school — has more of, in an attempt to prove Harvard’s superiority. The post was also dated November 23, 2013 in another example of the writer’s poor grasp of numbers.

The 1K Facebook Comment. In a Y-Hack competition, $1000 is being given away to one of the top three most “liked” ideas written as comments on a Facebook status from Y-Hack. Here’s hoping for “LOL,” “trolling” and “One Button Brenzel” to make it into the top three because that would be hilarious. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1894. A large number of students attend a Whist Club meeting in Vanderbilt on Old Campus. It is decided that a Whist tournament will be held. Huzzah! Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

Teacher contract ratified

WILLIAM FREEDBERG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Renovations to Swing Space will allow Yale Law School to offer residential housing to its students as soon as 2019. BY LAVINIA BORZI STAFF REPORTER After years of planning, the Yale Law School’s long-awaited project to reinstall residential housing for law students will finally come to life. On Thursday morning, Yale Law School Dean Robert Post LAW ’77

announced that a $25 million donation to the law school — given by Robert C. Baker ’56 LAW ’59 and his wife, Christina — will enable YLS to renovate the building at 100 Tower Parkway, which is currently used as Swing Space for annexed undergraduates. In addition to housing small seminars and certain Yale offices, the four-story building will

NHPD Launches Communication Network BY MAREK RAMILO STAFF REPORTER Last week, the New Haven Police Department announced the establishment of a regional CompStat system, which connects Connecticut police departments through an open and efficient network. Every Thursday morning, NHPD officers and other New Haven officials gather at the NHPD office on Union Avenue to recap the week’s trends

in crime and discuss strategies for addressing them. Now, the Department will spearhead an additional, expanded CompStat meeting focusing on crime across south-central Connecticut. The new meetings, to be held via conference call, will be remotely attended by state officials, federal officials, city police from nearby towns and University police department officials. The new system is intended to strengthen relationships and

information-sharing between local police departments. “The purpose of the forum is to share information regarding ongoing investigations, as well as to learn best practices from one another,” NHPD spokesman David Hartman said in a press release. “It is an expansion of the existing CompStat meetings, which focus on New Haven.” Previously, inter-department work was handled on a case-by-case basis: if an offi-

Committe drops numerical grading BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID STAFF REPORTER Since the faculty tabled the proposal for switching to numerical grades last spring, the AdHoc Committee on Grading has turned its attention to less provocative ideas for grade reform. In Thursday’s Yale College faculty meeting, grading committee chair and economics professor Ray Fair officially announced to a room of around 75 professors that the grading committee would not pursue a number system any further, according to Yale College Dean Mary Miller. While Miller said the purpose of Fair’s presentation was largely to present interim findings and collect faculty input on grading, philosophy professor Shelly Kagan said the committee gave the impression that it had rejected the idea of enforcing a “onesize-fits-all grade distribution.” Instead, Kagan said the committee seemed fixed on the

idea of proposing different recommendations for entry-level, mid-level and advanced-level courses as a recognition of the fact that courses with older and more self-selecting students may warrant a different grading spread than introductory lectures. The grading committee said it was still “batting ideas around,” according to Kagan. Though the committee presented several models, the proposal for stratified grading was the most developed, he said. “There are some uncooked ideas. This sounded far more cooked,” Kagan said. The meeting had a “reflective and calm” tenor, Miller said, with the discussion of grades taking up only 30 to 40 minutes of the 90-minute-long meeting. This was a departure from the “contentious” faculty meeting last April, Kagan said, when the vote on the grading commitSEE FACULTY MEETING PAGE 4

cer in one city was looking for relevant information from the department in another, he would have to call a specific contact for help. These regional CompStat conference calls now centralize this information on a consistent basis. Because crimes that spill over from one department’s jurisdiction to another only happen “a couple times a month,” these conversations are more geared towards sharing general information and public

safety techniques, according to NHPD Chief Dean Esserman. Esserman said the Department first implemented CompStat in New Haven in 2012, and he has wanted to expand the technique’s reach to the region beyond New Haven once it proved successful in the Elm City. Several months ago, he sent NHPD Assistant Chief Achilles Generoso and Sergeant Al Vazquez SEE COMPSTAT PAGE 4

SOCIAL MEDIA

Yale extends global reach

A

s Yale administrators look to grow the University’s presence abroad, a team of social media experts is working to expand Yale’s engagement on a series of social media platforms. LAVINIA BORZI AND MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS report on the cross-sections of technology and internationalization. In a glass-walled room inside the Yale Office of Public Affairs and Communications — located on the third floor of 2 Whitney Ave. — a four-foot television screen flashes a series of ever-changing numbers: Facebook likes, Twitter followers and visitors to Yale’s website. In one corner of the screen, graphs depict the growth of Yale’s engagement on select social media sites. In another corner, a world map dotted with red spots shows the geographic distribution of online visitors to Yale’s news site. During his inaugural address last month, University President Peter Salovey expressed a desire to build upon for-

mer University President Richard Levin’s engagement with the world beyond the United States. And as Yale looks to promote itself abroad — disseminating information about research, admissions, campus life and more — Yale administrators say that the use of social media is becoming more and more important. “Anything that happens digitally is essentially an international operation,” said University Chief Communications Officer and Special Assistant to the President Elizabeth Stauderman. “What the social media effort does is broaden the access to anyone, and it’s a great equalizer SEE SOCIAL MEDIA PAGE 6


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