NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 14 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLOUDY
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CROSS CAMPUS
Five more. Weeks until
A GOOD START ANALYZING THE BULLDOGS’ WIN
SHOP ’TIL YOU DROP
POSITIVE THOUGHTS
Professors, students praise new course selection requirements.
MENTAL HEALTH COALITION PUSHES ADMIN FOR ACTION.
PAGES B1–B4 SPORTS
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
Bulldogs notch first win
October recess begins, of course. Still, some of us are counting down to the end of this week. “Parent’s Weekend” looms, promising some chaos before bittersweet Sunday, when heartfelt goodbyes will give way to much-anticipated, well-deserved rest and relaxation. Loud and clear?
well-loved for his ambition, but we have to question his reliability: The Washington, D.C. rapper’s New Haven concert, long scheduled for tonight at Toad’s Place, has been postponed to Dec. 10.
Float on. Well, on the subject of big-name performers, Modest Mouse is set to take the stage at the College Street Music Hall exactly one month from today. But, for the moment, we’re more interested in the “Float for Peace” dance party taking place this evening at 6 p.m. Starting at the Women’s Table, the event invites attendees to dance to music playing in their own headphones for 90 minutes in what’s meant to be just one of several “silent discos” taking place around the globe at the same time. “Harsh and unforgiving.” Such
is apparently the worldview that Dave Weigel of The Washington Post will be looking to share with audience members at his conversation with the Yale College Democrats this evening, according to a tweet he shared before making the trip up to New Haven last night. And we thought we were jaded.
Sweater weather. Fall officially begins on Wednesday, and the Yale College Council is jumping on a business opportunity, as a result. An email sent to the undergraduate population on Friday promoted a special deal on those letter sweaters that all-too-many people will be wearing once the weather completely cools down. “Order now so you don’t miss out!” the message ended, shamelessly attempting to tap into the FOMO that seems to come with not owning one. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
2009 The YCC — having just merged with the Yale Student Activities Committee — finalizes its fall agenda, including a “Homecoming” week before The Game and a “Party Train” excursion to New York City. Follow along for the News’ latest.
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Or the Quinnipiac. New lanes open on the Q Bridge lessen traffic. PAGE 7 CITY
Faculty critize latest standards BY EMMA PLATOFF STAFF REPORTER
Blue carpet. Nine Yalies were among last night’s Emmy nominees, including Yalein-Hollywood fixtures Claire Danes ’02 and Paul Giamatti ’89 DRA ’94 for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series and Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series, respectively. The night’s only Elis Emmy, however, was Frances McDormand DRA ’82, who took home the Outstanding Lead Actress in a Miniseries or a Movie prize for her work in “Olive Kitteridge.” Where’s Wale? Wale might be
CROSS THE RUBICON
For the ninth year in a row, Yale football won its season opener — but this time, it took a fourth-quarter comeback, highlighted by this go-ahead touchdown, to beat Colgate 29–28. PAGE B1
Eight months after faculty were asked to comment on a controversial draft document of faculty standards of conduct, the finalized standards were presented in the updated Faculty Handbook, sent to faculty in a Friday email from University President Peter Salovey and Provost Benjamin Polak. Starting in January, faculty were given several weeks to submit comments on the draft document, which included provisions on teaching, scholarship and relationships with colleagues. At the time, many faculty objected to what they viewed as overly specific and controlling language. Trumbull Master Margaret Clark, who chaired the committee responsible for authoring the document, said last semester that the committee would take into account all feedback. Notably, one particularly controversial section — which formerly declared that “if a faculty member’s behavior violates the faculty’s shared principles, he or she may be subject to sanction, whether or not the behavior is specifically described” — was toned down to state
GREG CAMERON/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
SEE FACULTY PAGE 4
Tweaked aid form seeks to put students at ease BY TYLER FOGGATT STAFF REPORTER Earlier this month, the Obama Administration announced a series of changes to the Federal Application for Student Aid that could simplify the process of applying for financial assistance. Beginning in 2016, the FAFSA will open on Oct. 1, instead of its past release date of Jan. 1. Director of Financial Aid Caesar Storlazzi said that in addi-
tion to giving students more time to complete the form, the earlier date will also allow students to use older tax information to fill out the FAFSA. The FAFSA — a form used by college students to determine their eligibility for financial assistance — has a reputation for being time-consuming and difficult to complete. In addition to deciding which students are eligible for Pell Grants, student loans and other forms of fed-
Yale looks to inspire female scientists BY BRENDAN HELLWEG STAFF REPORTER One hundred twenty-one rockets ascended in the air nearby Kline Biology Tower this Saturday, deploying parachutes as they drifted back to the cheering astrophysicists. Those scientists were not Yale faculty members testing out their latest lab experiment. They were middle school girls participating in the Girls’ Science Investigations, a free program, partially funded by Yale, meant to inspire more girls to develop an interest in science and to narrow the gender disparity in scientific fields. The event kicked off the first of four full-day science workshops scheduled for the year, covering topics ranging from astrophysics to quantum mechanics to electromagnetics. These highly complicated fields are distilled by Bonnie Fleming, the program’s founder and co-director and a professor of physics at Yale, into accessible and engaging daylong workshops, said Dana Joseph, a high school junior in New Haven and alumna and now volunteer of the program. “Bonnie does an incredible job of helping people connect
intricate topics to things they already understand,” Joseph said. “It’s so important for young girls to know they can do hard stuff, and this is rocket science — it doesn’t get more complicated than that.” The 121 girls in the program started the day with a series of classes on rocketry, extraterrestrial life and physics. Each girl constructed a two-foot-tall rocket with a parachute in the nose of the rocket and a decorated telescope to watch the rocket. Kelly Nowak, whose daughters have participated in the program, said she learned about the opportunity when her older daughter’s teacher nominated her for the program. As a patent attorney who uses scientific knowledge on a daily basis, she was excited to introduce her daughters to science, she said. “We just have to get girls out there and interested in science,” she said. “Programs like this help you do it.” Nowak added that she wished that the program could take place at times other than Saturday mornings to accommodate girls involved in sports. Her daughter, she added, is passionSEE GSI PAGE 4
eral aid, the FAFSA also determines how much tuition a student is responsible for paying to their university. But with over 100 questions and the expectation that students complete the form in the late winter or early spring — before most families file their taxes — the FAFSA has been criticized by students and higher education experts. “The FAFSA is possibly the hardest and longest app for college,” Emma Goldrick ’17 said.
She added that filling out the form would be almost impossible if her parents did not have a working knowledge of English and steady jobs, which is not the case for many students applying for aid. It is in recognition of this difficulty that the federal government is making modifications to the form. At a press conference on Sept. 14, U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said the government was announcing an
“easier, earlier FAFSA.” Currently, most students are expected to apply to college in the fall, and for financial aid in January, when the FAFSA is released. This timeline makes it unlikely that students know the size of their financial aid package until long after they are admitted. Another complication is that the current FAFSA requires an applicant’s tax information from SEE FAFSA PAGE 6
Experts square off on Iran deal
WA LIU/PHOTGRAPHY EDITOR
Over 150 students attended the debate on the Iran deal held in Linsly-Chittenden Hall on Sunday evening. BY DAVID YAFFE-BELLANY CONTRIBUTING REPORTER More than 150 students gathered in Linsly-Chittenden Hall Sunday evening to watch two foreign policy experts spar over an issue that has drawn the praise of Hillary Clinton LAW ’73 and the ire of Henry Kissinger: the Iran deal. Mark Dubowitz and Philip Gordon parsed the intricacies of the nuclear deal — an accord struck between Iran and an American-led coalition of six powers intended to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon — for nearly two hours. Although
the deal has generated an intensely partisan divide, the event was sponsored by five ideologically diverse student groups: The Yale Friends of Israel, the Yale College Democrats, the Yale College Republicans, the Politic and the Yale International Relations Association. Dubowitz, the executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a non-partisan think tank focused on nonproliferation, argued against the deal, which he called “fatally flawed.” Gordon, a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who formerly worked as a special assistant SEE IRAN DEAL PAGE 6