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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 27, 2016 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 71 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

CLOUDY CLOUDY

44 20

CROSS CAMPUS

WOMEN BEWARE! NEW PLAY AT SCHOOL OF DRAMA

HELLO GOV’NA

BEHIND BARS

Gov. Dannel Malloy visits Elm City to talk government efficiency

MAN WRONGFULLY CONVICTED SPEAKS TO STUDENTS

PAGES 10–11 CULTURE

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 5 UNIVERSITY

Ivy League, JMI Sports partner up

The best Woads of all time. As is tradition, the Yale College Council will announce this year’s Spring Fling lineup at Woads tonight. The announcement will take place at midnight, and, after the event, the Spring Fling Committee’s website will go live. Students can visit yalespringfling2016.com for details after tonight.

Last chance dance. This is your last week to stream several shows and movies on Netflix, which is bringing in a new batch of content with the new year. Popular films including “Terms of Endearment,” “The Hurt Locker,” “The Terminator” and “Rain Man” will be removed from the site next week. Pretty Little Liaisons. The

application to be a peer liaison for the coming academic year is now open. Peer liaisons serve the Office of LGBTQ Resources, the University Chaplain’s Office, OISS and the cultural centers. The peer liaison program has also changed its fall orientation dates to allow students who lead freshman preorientation programs to participate.

Black and fellow. The Yale

Center for International and Professional Experience is hosting a workshop to teach students how to write effective fellowship proposals. The workshop, which will take place at the CIPE at 11 a.m. today, will be followed by summer fellowships Q&A sessions next week.

In case you skipped leg day. Students living in the

Morse College tower woke up yesterday to find that their elevator was not working. The elevator was out of service all day, and students who spoke with facilities staff over the phone were told that the it would not be fixed until today at the earliest. Yale’s next top. Y Fashion House released the announcement video for its Winter 2016 show “Synthesia,” which will take place on Feb. 5 in the Silliman dining hall. The student group also shared an album of models’ headshots on Facebook. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1994 The Yale Corporation approves a $25 million project to begin renovations on Sterling Memorial Library, the Law School, the A&A library, five residential colleges and two Old Campus buildings. Follow along for the News’ latest.

Twitter | @yaledailynews

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Grad student wins 18th place in national figure skating competition PAGE 12 SPORTS

Yale-NUS revamps curriculum BY QI XU STAFF REPORTER

the sponsorships that the conference develops with corporations, according to JMI Sports President Tom Stultz. “The key is that we wanted to partner with a company that was really interested in understanding what the Ivy League is as a conference, what we are going for as a league and who really wanted to respect the brand that we are and

Yale-NUS’s Common Curriculum, a signature of the young liberal arts college, will adopt a more condensed form next academic year. Announced last Thursday, changes to the Common Curriculum program — a set of courses compulsory for all Yale-NUS students — will include reducing its current size, designating an inaugural director of the Common Curriculum and designing a common science class for both science majors and non-science majors. The changes follow months of review by the Yale-NUS internal review committee and an external review committee made up faculty members from Yale and the National University of Singapore. Yale-NUS President Pericles Lewis said the results of the two committees showed that the Common Curriculum has been successful since the school opened in 2013. But the school will not share a summary of the reports submitted by the two committees, which was meant for “internal circulation only,” according to Yale-NUS spokeswoman Fiona Soh. “The primary finding of the self-study committee was that the Common Curriculum seems to be working quite well over-

SEE IVY LEAGUE PAGE 4

SEE YALE-NUS PAGE 4

Not-so-lucky seven.

Presidential candidate Ben Carson ’73 has fallen 15 points to 7 percent among likely primary voters according to a ABC News and Washington Post poll released yesterday. Donald Trump continues to lead the Republican race with 37 percent of the vote. In the poll, 67 percent of Republican primary voters said they expect Trump to win the nomination.

ICE SK8R BOI

KEN YANAGISAWA/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Though no specific plans have been made yet, JMI Sports will seek more Ivy League corporate sponsors in the near future. BY DANIELA BRIGHENTI STAFF REPORTER In the same month that Yale revealed a historic apparel deal with Under Armour, the Ivy League as a whole was finalizing a brand-new partnership of its own. The Ivy League announced last Tuesday that JMI Sports, an athletics marketing firm that also holds partnerships with the Pac-12 athletic conference, the University of

Kentucky and Arizona State University, has become the conference’s official marketing-rights agency. The conference had previously worked with the Leverage Agency, which became partners with the Ivy League in March 2012 and helped secure its first-ever corporate sponsorship, with footwear brand JP Crickets, in January 2014. The agreement, which originated from an Ivy League initiative last summer, is meant to enhance

Infant ingests PCP-laced cigarette BY CAITLYN WHERRY STAFF REPORTER On Jan. 19, emergency medical technicians hurried an 18-month-old boy to Yale-New Haven Hospital after he consumed a phencyclidine-laced cigarette belonging to his father. Police arrived at Brookside/ West Hills apartments last week after a 27-year-old mother called the New Haven Police Department to report that she believed her baby to be high. In a press release published last week, the parents said the infant was “acting oddly — as if he

was high” before he fell unconscious. The mother said she smelled phencyclidine, a hallucinogenic commonly referred to as PCP, on the child’s breath. She added that the contraband cigarettes were available in their home and within the child’s reach. When emergency medical professionals arrived, the boy had a pulse and was breathing on his own, but was still taken to the hospital. Since being admitted to Yale-New Haven, the child’s condition has stabilized, according to a news release from NHPD spokesman David Hartman.

Admins talk faculty diversity BY VICTOR WANG STAFF REPORTER “Yale has problems, serious problems,” Deputy Provost for Faculty Development and Diversity Richard Bribiescas admitted at a Tuesday evening panel about faculty diversity at the University. In light of recent campus controversies about racial justice and public calls for increased diversity among faculty and students, top administrators met with graduate students Tuesday to discuss the ways in which faculty members are hired, promoted and retained, particularly when it comes to building a diverse faculty. Around 150 students attended the panel discussion, titled “Building a Diverse Faculty: Recruitment, Tenure and Retention,” and attendees posed questions on topics ranging from the tenure-track system to diverse faculty-student mentorship to details of the recently announced $50 million faculty diversity initiative, which

some have found confusing and opaque. The trajectory of the discussion centered on two overarching questions regarding faculty diversity and the tenure system: how the tenure system is currently set up and how the system can be altered to improve the diversity of the Yale faculty. “I was extremely impressed by the insight that the questions showed and the commitment by those in the room to what I think is a University-wide shared goal of getting a faculty that represents the full diversity of our nation and world,” Faculty of Arts and Sciences Dean Tamar Gendler said after the meeting. “I thought the tone in the room was respectfully challenging in exactly the way that is appropriate for an academic conversation.” The panel consisted of Gendler, Bribiescas, FAS Dean of Academic Affairs John Dovidio and Associate Dean for Graduate Student Development and SEE DIVERSITY PAGE 6

“It is critical to provide [substance-abuse recovery support] to families, especially those with the most vulnerable — younger children,” said Mary Painter, director of substance abuse treatment and recovery at the Connecticut Department of Children and Families. Both parents were taken into custody on Jan. 19 and are facing charges for risk of injury to a minor. Furthermore, the 28-year-old father was charged with possession of narcotics, Hartman said. Hartman declined to comment further on the case, but noted that similar

situations “[are] not common.” Under Connecticut law, specific information about the case is confidential, Painter said. While the unintended ingestion of contraband by a youth may be rare, DCF Communications Director Gary Kleeblatt said that 60 to 70 percent of children in child welfare programs come from homes with substance abuse. The DCF could not comment on whether the child admitted to Yale-New Haven Hospital last week will be streamlined into a child welfare program. “There is a tremendous inter-

sect between child welfareinvolved families and substance abuse, so we have a pretty large service array in Connecticut to try to address parental substance-abuse, as well as adolescent substance-abuse, issues,” Painter said. Painter said the DCF does not look to remove children from their homes unless it is absolutely necessary. Cases such as these are the reason behind the DCF’s commitment to developing services to address the needs of families impacted by SEE CIGARETTE PAGE 6

Workers weather storm

FINNEGAN SCHICK/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Yale hires workers to shovel, plow, salt and sand the campus when snowstorms hit. BY FINNEGAN SCHICK AND DAVID SHIMER STAFF REPORTERS Marco Olivar leaned on his shovel outside an entryway in Timothy Dwight on Saturday, standing with a half dozen fellow snow shovelers. It was 7 p.m., the snow was only inches deep, and the night was far from over.

When snowstorms come to New Haven, Yale hires a veritable army of workers to shovel, plow, salt and sand the campus at any time until the snow stops. These workers are not full-time Yale employees, but are hired from a variety of outside sources — often contractors — said Senior Advisor to the President Martha High-

smith. Most of the 10 workers interviewed during the storm Saturday night speak only Spanish, and nearly all live outside the city. “We come from all over,” said Olivar, who was called to work shortly before the snow began to fall Saturday morning. The work done by this SEE FACILITIES PAGE 6


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