NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVII, NO. 37 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLOUDY
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CROSS CAMPUS Chag Sameach! The News
was visited yesterday evening by a celebration that marked the end of the annual cycle of public Torah readings.
where does the time go?
MEDIA MATTERS DOES FACEBOOK CONSUME YALE?
DEVELOPMENT
SEXUAL MISCONDUCT
City looks to empower neighborhood residents, but faces challenges
YALE ADAPTS TO NEW FEDERAL, STATE LAWS
PAGE B3 WEEKEND
PAGE 3 CITY
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
FOOTBALL After Dartmouth loss, Elis look to jumpstart momentum PAGE 12 SPORTS
NO EBOLA IN NEW HAVEN
Graduate student tests negative for virus
The Promised Land. Y PopUp’s latest project, named “Ash & Honey,” will go live tomorrow. The group’s first Saturday restaurant will be run out of the Morse buttery — convenient for the five Morse-Stiles members on Ash & Honey’s staff. Featuring a picture of “spiced, poached peach & cookie crumb ice cream,” the gastropub’s Facebook page opened reservations for Saturday night tables earlier this week. Saving room. The Yale Hunger
and Homelessness Action Project’s semi-annual fast takes place today. Students can choose to donate the money from their Yale Dining meal swipes to homelessness relief and prevention programs at local non-profit organizations through the effort.
Keeping it charitable. The
Whaling Crew is collaborating with Yale Relay for Life to host a Pink-Out Tailgate on Saturday before the football game against Colgate University at the Yale Bowl. Cookies will supplement the usual tailgate fare to raise funds to donate to breast cancer research drives.
Froad’s. Your plans might change tonight, with the arrival of Toad’s on a Friday. The reason? The South Asian Society’s Bollywood Beats party in Lily’s Pad. Seize the day. Tea Party. This afternoon, Morse will host a Master’s Tea with Honest Tea founder and one-time ECON 159 professor Barry Nalebuff. All are welcome, though Snapple lovers should not expect the game theory expert to be similarly full of fun facts. Color us excited. The annual
FCC Freshman Barbeque on Old Campus is this Sunday. In addition to the standard offerings of food, freshmen and frivolity, this year’s rendition will include a photo booth, raffle competitions and apparently “LOTS of paint,” perhaps legitimizing the event’s name: “Color me Yale.”
HENRY EHRENBERG/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
Thursday, University and public officials called a 12:30 conference to allay concerns over a Yale researcher with Ebola-like symptoms, which were later proven to be from another illness. BY STEPHANIE ADDENBROOKE, APARNA NATHAN, STEPHANIE ROGERS AND RACHEL SIEGEL STAFF REPORTERS After local, state and federal health officials scrambled to address a possible case of Ebola, they found that the disease has
not yet spread to the Elm City. Initial test results for a Yale graduate student suspected of having Ebola have come back negative, Yale-New Haven Hospital announced shortly after 5 p.m. Thursday. The patient, one of the two graduate students who recently returned from
researching the Ebola outbreak in Liberia, was admitted to YNHH with “Ebola-like symptoms” on Wednesday night. Both graduate students are currently in isolation. A press release from the Connecticut Department of Public Health at 5:44 p.m. confirmed the nega-
tive result, adding that further test results from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are expected tomorrow. “All present protocols, including the isolation order issued by DPH Commissioner Dr. Jewel Mullen today, will remain in place pending the
results of laboratory testing at the CDC,” the statement said. State and hospital officials have declined to comment as to the identity of the graduate student. Dana Marnane, the direcSEE PATIENT PAGE 4
Two researchers quarantined On Ebola, Yale panel calls for solidarity BY SARAH BRULEY AND APARNA NATHAN STAFF REPORTERS
Thursday’s Ebola scare — which -instantly triggered statewide concern about the spread of the disease — has brought Yale-New Haven Hospital, the University, the city and their plans to prevent the proliferation of the virus under scrutiny. In particular, Thursday’s uncertainty has raised ques-
tions about University officials’ determination that two graduate students returning from Liberia did not need to isolate themselves for 21 days, the incubation period for Ebola. Late Thursday afternoon, University President Peter Salovey announced in a University-wide email that the students would in fact be sequestered for 21 days, as required by the state of Connecticut. Shae Selix SPH ’15 said the negative result of the test did
not completely excuse the original decision to cancel sequestration. “The fact that he didn’t get Ebola probably shows that the initial judgment not to quarantine him was correct, but that seems to go against precautionary principle and would have initiated some kind of panic,” he said. Selix added that students at the public health school disSEE PREVENTION PAGE 4
BY LIONEL JIN CONTRIBUTING REPORTER In the midst of a false alarm over the possibility of a patient with Ebola in New Haven, panelists at the Yale Ebola Task Force’s first event yesterday afternoon made a resounding call for solidarity and rationality in the face of the current epidemic.
Across campus, students reacted to news that Yale-New Haven Hospital had admitted a Yale graduate student exhibiting Ebola-like symptoms, and awaited announcement of the patient’s test results. Some had faith in the hospital’s ability to respond, but others wondered SEE PANEL PAGE 4
Juniors joining in. Not to
be outdone by their 2018 counterparts, the Junior College Council will also be holding its first event of the year. “Monster Munch,” a Halloween-themed festival in the Branford Courtyard, takes place on Sunday for juniors to celebrate their new status as campus veterans together.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1994 Yale announces two initiatives, partnering with New Haven to help develop some of the Elm City’s neighborhoods through a federal housing and urban development grant. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus
CONCUSSIONS
Head-On: Tackling concussion policy BY BEN FAIT AND MARC CUGNON STAFF REPORTERS It was mid-July, and Isaac Morrier ’17 found himself sitting in the Acute Care room at Yale Health. He had hit his head on a stone archway 72 hours earlier, and he felt disoriented and was having problems with his shortterm memory. When he was brought into the examination room, the nurse told him he was fine, and gave the goahead to keep working out, Morrier said. He asked the nurse to double check — she confirmed again that he was fine. But as he learned from a private doctor a week and a half later, he was not — he had a concussion.
W
ith increased media scrutiny levied on concussions, states across the country have imposed new policies and regulations to deal with concussions. While Yale has done the same, the future of the University’s concussion policy remains an open question. BEN FAIT and MARC CUGNON report.
YALE’S POLICY EFFORTS
Morrier said his concussion was not diagnosed until more than a week and a half after his visit to Yale Health. His lightweight crew teammates had noticed him acting strange and
exhibiting symptoms, he said. He felt as though the concussion test administered by Yale Health was not as comprehensive as the one that he received upon visiting Yale Athletic SEE CONCUSSIONS PAGE 6
HENRY EHRENBERG/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
Some Yale athletes have only been diagnosed with concussions after their friends or teammates noticed that they were acting unusually.