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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 95 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

CLOUDY CLOUDY

27 12

CROSS CAMPUS The Hunger Games. Berkeley

took first place in the Final Cut competition, with Branford coming in second and Trumbull taking third place. The colleges won $1000, $500 and $250 respectively. The Berkeley team consisted of Emily Farr ’14, Isabelle Napier ’14 and Angela Ning ’14. According to their precompetition interview, Farr’s best kitchen memory is of the first time she went fishing when she single-handedly caught the fish, de-scaled it and fried it.

HOUSEHOLD STUDENT PLAY COMES TO DPORT

ENVIRONMENT

SERVICE

Students to build solar powered house for competition

DWIGHT HALL TO IMPROVE SPRING TRIPS

PAGES 10-11 CULTURE

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 3 CITY

Holder-Winfield wins seat BY SARAH BRULEY AND LILLIAN CHLIDRESS STAFF REPORTERS Supporters of Gary HolderWinfield who gathered at the election results party at the Greek Olive on Tuesday night were hardly surprised when Holder-Winfield was announced the next state senator for the 10th district in Connecticut. Holder-Winfield, the only Democratic candidate running, won 75 percent of the votes in New Haven,

running against lead Republican opponent Steven R. Mullins. The election was held to replace the senate seat that Toni Harp left vacant when she became mayor of New Haven last November. “One thing that I do know from this election is that honesty and integrity matter,” Holder-Winfield said. “I want young people to see that you can do something different than what’s expected in politics.” Holder-Winfield’s campaign was characterized by grassroots

community efforts. Gary Stewart, a ward co-chair for Ward 24 who volunteered with the campaign said Holder-Winfield spent Tuesday knocking on doors, giving rides to the polls and making phone calls. Workers at the Ward 23 polling station said that around noon, folks from Holder-Winfield’s campaign came by to deliver sandwiches and coffee to polling staffers. The Yale College Democrats have SEE HOLDER-WINFIELD PAGE 4

Hall of Graduate Studies dining hall will be closed tonight for a Chocolate Fest Dinner. The event’s menu will include chocolate and cocoa infused meat and vegetarian entrees, along with salad, fondue and dessert. Cocktails will also be served for those over 21, which will likely be most attendees since undergraduates are banned. The event also advertised the “World’s largest vat of Nutella,” which also made an appearance at last week’s Sex and Chocolate event for grad students.

The Lit does Buzzfeed. The

Yale Literary Magazine, despite being known for its traditionally high acceptance standards, is now asking students to submit translations of a poem consisting entirely of emojis. Guess that’s poetry in the era of gifs for you.

College to Congress. A recent

article on The Huffington Post explored which colleges produced the most members of Congress, using data from Find The Best. Harvard topped the list with 47 members. Yale came in third with 18, following Georgetown which had 20. The ranking only includes current U.S. Representatives and Senators.

Controversy at Columbia.

The Kappa Alpha Theta chapter at Columbia University has been receiving backlash after holding a “Beer Olympics” party while dressed in racial stereotypes representing Mexico, Japan, the Netherlands, Ireland and other countries. Pictures of the mixer, with girls wearing sombreros, have caused criticism and controversy.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1960 A petition circulates Trumbull citing overcrowding. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

WILLIAM FREEDBERG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

University President Peter Salovey and Yale College Dean Mary Miller were among the judges at last night’s cmpetition. See page 3 for the full story.

Divestment debate inches forward BY ADRIAN RODRIGUES STAFF REPORTER This past weekend, the two highest University bodies on investor action met to formally discuss the possibility of Yale’s divestment from fossil fuels. The Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility, which is made up of eight professors, students and alumni, and evaluates ethical issues surrounding the University’s investments, raised the arguments for and against divestment before the Yale Corporation Committee on Investor Responsibility on Saturday in a confidential meeting. The ACIR was charged with recommending whether or not Yale should restrict its investments in fossil fuel companies. Though the results of the meeting have not been released, the CCIR has the final authority to direct the Yale Investments Office on the issue of divestment and is expected to present a decision soon. “I know that [the trustees] take Yale’s leadership around climate change seriously,” said Yonatan Landau SOM ’15, a member of the student divestment advocacy group Fossil Free Yale. “With continued support from the broader Yale community, I hope they will see that they can safely take a major step forward in leading the world away from disastrous climate change.” Landau said he knows Yale Corporation members are aware of a 2013 study published by the University of Oxford demon-

strating that divestment campaigns have the potential to impact fossil fuel companies and government legislation. Last month, Fossil Free Yale, the student group that has led the charge for divestment on campus in recent months, presented its case to members of the ACIR. During that meeting, ACIR Chair and Yale Law School professor Jonathan Macey said Fossil Free Yale and the ACIR would work together to send letters to companies involved in manufacturing fossil fuels and ask them to disclose the environmental impact of their activities.

I know that [the trustees] take Yale’s leadership around climate change seriously.

Restaurant looks to solidify customer base in New Haven PAGE 5 CITY

Salovey unveils open data policies BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS AND WESLEY YIIN STAFF REPORTERS

FINAL CUT

Dinner by Willy Wonka. The

Parks & Rec. Mark Oppenheimer ’96 GRD ’03 has begun a protest for the city to adhere to their own parking laws. After last week’s snowstorm, Oppenheimer was ticketed for driving with snow on his vehicle. Following this, he noticed that a city staff member’s car was parked illegally in the bike lane near his house. He has since posted two YouTube videos protesting this breakdown of law and order, leading the New Haven Independent to dub the event “Oppenheimer v. Parks.”

SHAKE SHACK

Under a series of new policies, Yale may soon be a friendlier place for tech-savvy students. In an effort to create a more supportive environment for student application developers, the University is implementing a series of new policies on open data. The new policies — first articulated by University President Peter Salovey in a letter to the Yale College Council President Danny Avraham ’15 and YCC Communications Director Andrew Grass ’16 — were announced in a YCC email late Tuesday evening. The new policies come more than a month after a campus-wide outcry over the University’s decision to shutdown Yale Bluebook Plus, a student-created courseshopping website. The University argued that the site, which allowed users to sort courses based on numerical ratings, violated Yale’s intellectual property rules. Salovey’s letter was written in response to a January YCC report on open data, which provided several suggestions to the administration on how to reform its current technology policies. Salovey said he would immediately adopt two of the seven policy suggestions laid out in the YCC report. “I want you to know my personal commitment to providing a supportive environment for student application developSEE OPEN DATA PAGE 4

Students discuss new colleges BY NICOLE NG STAFF REPORTER In two forums on Monday and Tuesday, faculty and administrators collected student input about the integration of the two new residential colleges, slated to be completed in the fall of 2017, and the subsequent expected 15 percent increase in student enrollment. The panels, hosted by the Yale College Council, featured members of the Expansion Committee, which was formed this fall to discuss how the University should plan for the influx of new students. Over the past few months, the committee has been revisiting and updating plans created before the

construction of the new residential colleges was delayed in 2008 due to the financial recession. Approximately 20 students on Monday and nine on Tuesday presented concerns and questions about the establishment of a college culture in the new colleges and the impact of an enlarged student body on academics, spaces, student organizations and funding. “As we’ve gone through old reports in some detail … we’re finding they are a little dated,” Provost Benjamin Polak said. “However we’ve been working on what [we] need to do and prioritizing.” Administrators said many aspects of integrating the new colleges have yet to be decided. For example, if the

colleges are not completed by the fall of 2017, the committee is considering whether to house freshmen in Swing Space and then move them along with incoming freshmen into the new colleges in the fall of 2018. Another option would be to wait until the colleges are completed and move the freshmen immediately into the new colleges, Polak said, adding that this option seems more likely at this point. When students emphasized the importance of having upperclassmen in every residential college to create a unified culture, committee members said they are grappling with the issue of SEE RES COLLEGE PAGE 6

YONATAN LANDAU SOM ’15 Member, Fossil Free Yale In a campus-wide referendum held in November 2013 by the Yale College Council that saw responses from over half of the undergraduate population, 83 percent of voters favored divestment. The three members of the CCIR — Neal Leonard KenyGuyer SOM ’82, Catharine Bond Hill GRD ’85 and Paul Joskow GRD ’72 — could not be reached for comment. Macey also could SEE DIVESTMENT PAGE 6

TASNIM ELBOUTE/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

The Expansion Committee is working towards founding a strong culture for the new residential colleges.


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