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 5, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 80 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SNOW CLOUDY
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CROSS CAMPUS
“The only edible, breakfasttable daily newspaper in Cambridge, Mass.” The
Harvard Lampoon has set up an entirely fake version of The Harvard Crimson online. Satirical articles on the site include “Faust Will Not Unvest | Will Wear This Three-Piece Pantsuit Forever,” “UC To Send 300 Troops to Syria” and “15 Arbitrary Freshmen Wearing J Crew.” The page also included the article, “Crimson Editors Congratulate Selves on Meaningful Contribution to National Political Discourse.” Meanwhile in the real Harvard Crimson… In commemoration
of the 10th anniversary of Facebook, The Harvard Crimson ran a feature on its founding. Highlights from the piece include a photo of Mark Zuckerberg from 2004, a throwback to Facemash, cameos from the Winklevii and some discussion of the “poke” function.
#AmericaisBeautiful.
Blue State has released a new “mission poster” that is all stars and spangles. “Coffee fueled American Independence,” and “The Founding Fathers planned the revolution in coffeehouses,” the posters read. The only colors used on the poster are red, white and blue. Lunch Roulette. The
International Student Organization has started up their game of lunch tag once again. Students who sign up will be paired randomly with someone else for a meal. Each meal is worth 1 point and taking a photo earns an additional point. The three top scorers will win Froyo World gift cards.
There’s a place on… York Street may not resemble Ocean Avenue at the moment, but Yellowcard stopped by this week for a performance at Toad’s on Monday. If you listen to the lyrics of their hit song carefully, it does seem to describe a night at Woad’s: “Sleeping all day, staying up all night … Staying up all night” THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1970 Thefts rise on campus. Every residential college is hit but Morse and Ezra Stiles have experienced particularly high rates of crime. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus
EDUCATION
Slifka center promotes student initiative in art exhibits
MONTESSORI SCHOOL TO OPEN IN ELM CITY
PAGES 10-11 CULTURE
PAGE 3 CULTURE
PAGE 3 NEWS
Legend
Percent change
School
Number of Applications
UPenn
15%
+14%
34,295
STATE POLITICS Gov. Dannel Malloy backs minimum wage increase PAGE 5 CITY
Dean search waiting on Corporation BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTER
10%
Brown
employs more admissions officers and begins committee deliberations earlier each year in order to ensure that decisions are still handed out in the spring. Year-to-year fluctuations in the number of total applications are less significant than long-term trends, Quinlan said in a statement. He cited increased demographic and international diversity and the rise of the use of tools such as the online Common Application as examples of some recent trends. Quinlan said that unlike some other universities, Yale does not seek to raise the number of applica-
Students and faculty anticipating the announcement of the new Yale College and Graduate School deans should not hold their breath. University President Peter Salovey is unlikely to name the advisory committee that will recommend candidates for the deanships until around mid-March, said Yale College Dean Mary Miller. The deans themselves, who will be selected by Salovey and the Yale Corporation, will be named sometime before the end of the term. Though past dean searches have varied in length, one of the reasons for the monthslong search timeline for Miller’s and Graduate School Dean Thomas Pollard’s successors is that the Yale Corporation must first make a decision on whether to overhaul the structure of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. In a report last week, a six-person ad-hoc faculty committee on decanal structures proposed the creation of a new dean of faculty position. The Yale Corporation — a group of 16 individuals including Salovey — will decide on the issue some time after their next meeting on Feb. 21 and 22. According to senior adviser to the President Martha Highsmith, the Corporation needs to vote on whether to add the position of a faculty dean because it would involve altering the Corporation bylaws. “I think it’s definitely worth considering, but we’re going to talk about it among other things at the upcoming corporation meeting,” Yale Corporation member Douglas Warner III ’68 said. “So I’m going to defer judgment until I hear the views from the president, the provost and others and then see where we come out.” Though the faculty will be able to voice their opinions about the potential structures at a
SEE ADMISSIONS PAGE 4
SEE DEAN SEARCH PAGE 6
Yale
+4%
+4.4%
5%
26,498
30,291
Princeton
+0.4%
0%
26,498
Harvard
Percent increase from 2013
Soup kitchen. Miya’s Sushi gave out free “piping hot pumpkin miso soup” to everyone who came by on Tuesday during the shift of server Frank Blazi, who has already been everybody’s favorite source of sake bombs and miso soup for ages.
SLIFKA
Applicants break 30,000
Good money/bad money.
According to the New York Daily News, Yale Law School professor Ian Ayres has offered to help victims exploited by the real “Wolf of Wall Street,” Jordan Belfort. Ayres wrote to the judge overseeing Belfort’s case and offered to donate money to the restitution fund.
FOLK MUSICAL ‘DUST CAN’T KILL ME’ OPENS
-2%
30,922
-5%
BY RISHABH BHANDARI STAFF REPORTER Yale received a record-high total of 30,922 applications for the class of 2018, cracking the 30,000 mark for the first time. The number of applications the University receives each year has doubled since 2002 when about 15,000 students applied to be a part of the class of 2006. This year’s application total marks a 4.4 percent increase over last year’s application count of 29,611. Because Yale expects to admit the same total number of students as it did last year — about 2,000 — the acceptance rate this year will likely drop
below last year’s 6.72 percent. The University’s acceptance rate for its early action program this year was 15.5 percent — 735 students were accepted out of 4,750 early applicants. The number of applications jumped 3 percent last year for the class of 2017, after increases of 5.8 percent and 5 percent for the classes of 2016 and 2015, respectively. Despite receiving more applications each year, Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Jeremiah Quinlan said in an email that he is confident the admissions office has the resources to thoroughly and holistically evaluate each candidate. He added that the admissions office
Miss America talks cultural awareness Note-taking service upgraded BY BLAKE DIXON CONTRIBUTING REPORTER
BY CAROLINE WRAY STAFF REPORTER As spring semester classes take off, over 100 students look forward to receiving class notes provided by the Resource Office on Disabilities through a more streamlined process than ever before.
We’re like a firewall between the note-takers and the recipients. JUDY YORK Director, Resource Office on Disabilities Each term, the Resource Office on Disabilities (ROD) hires student note-takers to offer their class notes to students with either temporary or permanent disabilities that hinder their note-taking ability in class. The system — which serves both undergraduates and graduate students with the exception of law school students — includes a work force of 108 students who sent more than 300 sets of notes to roughly 113 recipients, last fall. A December report by the Yale College Council highlighted a YCC investigation of the process, after the Council received complaints about “delays in receiving notes and a relatively low quality in some of the notes that were received.” Preserving the anonymity of the recipients of these notes
is a key tenant of the process and fundamental to the integrity of the service, according to Judy York, director of ROD. In order to do this, the original system had note-takers sending their typed notes to Carolyn Barrett, the office’s senior administrative assistant, who then distributed the notes to recipients. “We’re like a firewall between the note-takers and the recipients,” York said. “We ask the students to be their own quality control … if the students receiving the notes are not satisfied, we ask them to let us know as soon as they possibly can.” Inevitably, she said, some recipients may forget to review the notes they receive until right before exam season, when ROD has little to no time to address problems in the quality of notes from weeks earlier. About halfway through the fall semester, the YCC began a two-month investigation to improve the quality of the system — a process that included meetings with residential college deans, online research and collaboration with ROD staff members. “I was so pleasantly surprised to see how willing and excited Judy York was to dive head first into the path of improvement,” said YCC representative Kathy Khalvati ’17, who managed the investigation. “Her concern for the well-being of the students SEE NOTE-TAKING PAGE 6
The identity of the American “girl next door” is evolving, according to Nina Davuluri, Miss America 2014. In a Tuesday talk in Battell Chapel attended by roughly 100 members of the Yale community, the 24-year-old Davuluri — the winner of this year’s national Miss America pageant, and former Miss New York — discussed cultural competency and her struggle against the ignorance that stands in its way.
the national stage. She added that she learned to “turn it into a positive” by using her new title as a megaphone to share her experience. Davuluri said that a lack of cultural understanding can exist at every level of society, even among college-educated individuals. As Miss Amer-
ica, she said she is helping to change that, both at home and abroad. One of the ways she is helping to change societal standards is by changing the existing definition of beauty. “For the first time, girls at SEE MISS AMERICA PAGE 4
Girls at home can say, ‘This year, Miss America actually looks like me.’ NINA DAVULURI Miss America Although she was born and raised in the United States and views herself as “first and foremost American,” Davuluri was the subject of a controversy in late 2013 when she became the first Indian American to be crowned Miss America. Many spectators took to various forms of social media such as Facebook and Twitter to express what has often been described as racist and xenophobic views against Davuluri. The backlash was similar to another incident in 1983, when Vanessa Williams became the first African American to win the title. Davuluri said she experienced similar vitriol after being crowned Miss New York, which prepared her for scrutiny on
ALANA THYNG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Miss America Nina Davuluri spoke Tuesday about her struggle against ignorance and changing standards in the “girl next door.”