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 · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 71 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
RAINY RAINY
40 45
CROSS CAMPUS
IRRATIONALITY ‘X EFFECT’ SKEWS ECONOMIC CHOICE
SOM
DIABETES
M. HOCKEY
Dean Synder gets to know students, shares vision over breakfast, tea
NON-MEDICAL DISADVANTAGES DISCOVERED
Yale slips in standings after disappointing weekend road trip
PAGE 6 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
PAGE 3 NEWS
PAGE 5 SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
PAGE B1 SPORTS
Sunday liquor ban may end
Snow, finally! Full-grown
children across campus got all giddy with the first snowfall in New Haven since October’s freak Nor’easter. Around an inch fell by midnight. The snow is expected to turn to rain Tuesday morning.
Superstar. New Haven
resident Betty Broadnax was named the Shubert Theater’s millionth patron on Saturday. Broadnax received a “special gift pack” for the honor, the New Haven Register reported.
Golden Elis. Two Yalies walked away with Golden Globe awards Sunday night, proving once again that Yale’s finest artistes aren’t always doomed to starvation in Brooklyn. Meryl Streep DRA ’74 was crowned best actress in a drama for her role as former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher in “The Iron Lady,” and Claire Danes ’02 won best actress in a TV drama for her performance in Showtime’s “Homeland.” Hooligans! Alex Fisher ’14 said he submitted a proposal to the Yale College Council’s 10K Initiative calling for the installation of a controlledaccess gate on the path from York Street to Morse and Stiles. The gate would be placed “near the rear boundary” of Toad’s and be activated between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Way too popular. Though
584 students tried to shop Professor Alexander Nemerov’s “Introduction to the History of Art: Renaissance to the Present,” the professor capped the class at 270 — the maximum number of students that the Yale University Art Gallery auditorium can hold. “In the past many students in the lecture were doing Facebook or email or all kinds of things on their computers,” Nemerov said. “So for me it’s better if there’s a room where that is not possible.”
Rock the vote. Gov. Dannel
Malloy and Secretary of the State Denise Merrill outlined plans on Monday to expand the state’s voter rolls. Proposed legislation would allow for web-based voter registration and registration on Election Day, as well as expand access to absentee ballots.
Harvard looks abroad.
Harvard Business School professor Krishna Palepu was named President Drew Gilpin Faust’s senior adviser for global strategy on Wednesday, the Crimson reported. Early admissions get tougher.
A larger, more diverse group of early applicants to America’s most elite universities has made early admission more elusive, according to a New York Times article Friday. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1917 After beating Princeton a few days prior, the undefeated Yale men’s hockey team loses to the Tigers, 4–3. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com
Two aid choices for NROTC BY TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTER
states previously had similar laws banning Sunday liquor sales, but all three legislatures have repealed the regulations since 2002. Connecticut is one of only 13 states that still prohibit the sale of alcoholic beverages on Sundays. According to Malloy, the current state regulation results in $570 million of lost revenue annually for state retailers as customers flock to stores across the border, though the governor did not cite a source for that figure. “As the years go by and other states modify their laws to reflect modernday realities, our statutes have collected dust,” he added.
For students enrolling in Yale’s Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps unit next fall, active duty commitments after graduation will partly hinge on their financial aid choices. The Naval ROTC offers two types of funding to its students. The “scholarship program” pays four years of college tuition in exchange for five years of active duty service after graduation, while the “college program” supplements institutional financial aid with just a small stipend and requires only a three-year active duty commitment. Naval administrators said in December that they expect the scholarship program — which is widely used on a national scale — to be less popular at Yale because of the University’s generous financial aid policy. But Lt. Molly Crabbe, who will oversee Yale’s Naval ROTC unit, said all but one of 24 prospective Yale students interested in the program have already applied for the scholarship option. The Navy’s scholarship program pays for a student’s tuition and books while also providing a monthly stipend that starts at $250 during freshman year, and increases by $50 each subsequent year. The college program gives students a comparable stipend beginning in a midshipman’s junior year, but does not
SEE LIQUOR PAGE 8
SEE ROTC PAGE 8
YDN, COLLEGE WINE, ODD BINS
Over the weekend, Gov. Dannel Malloy announced his support for a repeal of the longstanding ban on Sunday liquor sales. BY BEN PRAWDZIK STAFF REPORTER After the Connecticut state legislature repealed the ban on Sunday liquor sales last year, Gov. Dannel Malloy announced a renewed push on Saturday to undo the ban, prompting a mix of reactions from small retailers, lobbyists and consumers. Allowing Sunday alcohol sales was one of several “consumer-friendly” policy changes Malloy outlined at an Enfield, Conn. town hall meeting over the weekend. The governor also proposed legislation that would allow liquor stores to remain open until 10 p.m. instead of 9 p.m. and would permit restaurants and bars to serve cus-
tomers until 2 a.m. every day instead of only during weekends. Malloy hopes to lift further regulation stipulating how alcohol is to be handled by distributors, wholesalers, and retailers. “These laws are outdated and they artificially increase the price of alcohol to Connecticut consumers,” Malloy said in an official statement. “By allowing Sunday sales, by removing distribution and sale restrictions and by amending permit regulations, we’re going to help Connecticut regain its competitive edge in this industry, and we’re going to give consumers a break.” Malloy’s proposal comes amid claims that Connecticut retailers are losing Sunday sales to New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. These
Mayor seeks boost for ex-prisoners BY NICK DEFIESTA AND JAMES LU STAFF REPORTERS Mayor John DeStefano Jr. is set to bring a bill to the Board of Aldermen Tuesday night that would make it easier for people with criminal records to get licenses and permits from the city. The ordinance amendment — which DeStefano and Amy Meek LAW ’09, the director of the city’s Prisoner Reentry Initiative, announced at City Hall Friday afternoon — would specifically seek to clarify and minimize the long-term consequences of a criminal conviction. The proposal, called “Collateral Consequences,” would make it easier for former prisoners to obtain food cart and vendor permits, DeStefano said, thereby enhancing employment opportunities for those returning to the community from incarceration. “There is a group of individuals, those who have older convictions on their records, who continue to face barriers to employment and stable success,” DeStefano said. “The city benefits as a whole when all residents have opportunities for stable employment.” The proposal builds on the city’s 2009 Ban the Box ordinance, which limits the factors that can be considered in the employment of the reentry population for public
sector jobs, Meek said. Under the ordinance, the nature of an job applicant’s conviction, the length of time since the conviction, the age at the time of the offense and additional information about rehabilitation and good conduct after release cannot be discussed during the hiring process.
I think there’s support [on the board] for people who have done their time to come back to society and assimilate as best they can. JORGE PEREZ Ward 5 Alderman, Board of Aldermen president In particular, the new bill will make it easier for former prisoners seeking to get a food cart or street vendor license, she said, adding that in the past, one out of every seven applicants for such a license was denied because of a prior criminal conviction. “When deciding whether or not to plead guilty to a particular charge, people look at the SEE REENTRY PAGE 8
Alumni summer programs expand BY JANE DARBY MENTON AND ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTERS After last summer’s Directed Studies program garnered enthusiastic reviews from alumni participants, Yale will also offer summer courses in Grand Strategy and Shakespeare for alumni, their spouses and parents of Yale students this year. All 18 spots in Grand Strategy have been filled since registration opened in December, and more than half of the 15 participants who took last summer’s Directed Studies course have signed up for one of the new courses, said Pamela Schirmeister, director of the programs and an associate dean for Yale College and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Schirmeister added that Yale may continue to expand its summer educational opportunities for alumni depending on alumni and faculty interest and the availability of space on campus. “The whole idea of this is to expose alumni to what’s being taught at Yale,” said John Gaddis, a history professor who teaches Grand Strategy and will lead sessions during the summer. The “Grand Strategy for Life” and “Shakespeare for Life” seminars will meet from May 27 to June 2 and each cost $4,800, while “Directed Studies for Life” will run from June 3 to June 15 at a cost of $6,500. After full days of class, participants in the courses will also be treated to evening activities and entertainments, such as a gala opening reception and cocktails on the Quinnipiac schooner on Long Island Sound, according to the Yale for Life program website. The Grand Strategy summer program will cover about one-third of the academic year syllabus, which spans two semesters, and include classic works by Thucydides, Virgil, Machiavelli, Kant and Clausewitz, said
Charles Hill, a diplomat-in-residence who co-teaches Grand Strategy with Gaddis and will also teach the course with him this summer. Schirmeister called the alumni response to the new Grand Strategy offering “immediate and overwhelming,” which she attributed to its name recognition among multiple generations of alumni. “The idea was to try to offer courses that alumni would recognize and think, ‘Oh, I wish I’d taken that,’” Schirmeister said. While the Directed Studies and Grand Strategy summer seminars mirror courses already offered at Yale, Schirmeister said, the Shakespeare course will be designed specifically for alumni. The seminar will examine both literary and theatrical elements of Shakespeare’s plays, she said. David Kastan, an English professor who will co-teach the course, said that participants will be able to supplement their study by viewing exhibits remaining from this spring’s Shakespeare at Yale festival, which showcases the University’s Shakespeare collections. Professors slated to lead the summer seminars said teaching alumni is exciting since people of varied ages can bring fresh perspectives to discussions. Jane Levin GRD ’75, who oversees the undergraduate Directed Studies program and taught the literature seminar to alumni last summer, said she was struck by how alumni drew on their life experiences to form interpretations much different from those of college freshmen. “The frustration of the meaning of life, one of the central questions to many of these works, has a particular kind of urgency when you are older,” she said. Schirmeister added that for alumni, many SEE DS FOR LIFE PAGE 8
PAGE 2
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
OPINION
“Whatever “global engagement” Harvard has in mind, one doubts they .COMMENT will sell out the brand to an authoritarian regime for money.” ‘OBSERVER’ yaledailynews.com/opinion
ON ‘NEW HARVARD ADMIN FOCUSES ON GLOBAL STRATEGY’
MLK, God A specious case for science and morality GUEST COLUMNIST MICHAEL MAGDZIK
Yale students received their first Martin Luther King Jr. Day off a decade ago. Since then, we have seen 10 years of Sunday night parties and Monday morning hangovers. Some have participated in the Dwight Hall Day of Service; many have honored civil rights with typical weekend flair. After the first couple of years of no class Monday, even the contrarians stopped writing to these pages in protest. Everyone knew the old arguments, so why rehash? Yes, MLK day did awkwardly elevate one holiday over others (for example, Veterans Day). Oh sure, it contorted shopping period into Houdini-esque convolutions. Yup, the Day of Service could just as easily occur on the Sunday prior to MLK Day. Not to mention the bugbear known as diversity. All this was boring, culturally insensitive news. And somehow we still fail to have meaningful discussions about civil rights. So, instead of restarting this dead debate whole hog — which would end with me being termed a racist, classist, sexist or some other -ist in tomorrow morning’s paper — I’ll take a few moments to reflect on a deeper message we can draw from MLK day. Martin Luther King Jr. fought for civil rights, but Yalies little understand the sources of these rights. With the rise of social sciences, studying political philosophy has become less than sexy. Number crunching gobbledygook is in; great dead males are out. Students can and do graduate without ever studying the foundations of Western rights and governance. Ask them to articulate the first principles of their moral systems and they will stand agape. They may mumble something about human rights, dignity and other jazz. Poke a pin into the fluff and pop goes the logic. This is not a new or radical conclusion. Just last week, Harry Graver (“Lucretius at Yale,” Jan. 12) grappled with some of these issues. He came close to explicitly making the case for a core curriculum. I’ll take the extra step: Yale desperately needs one. But the faculty, mostly in the social sciences, will never agree to a core curriculum — the current, à la carte system allows their departments to grow because of student interest in cool-sounding topics. If Yale will not (or cannot) make students take classics, where else might they find discussion of first principles? Here again, we can look to Dr. King for the answer: in religion. For MLK, rights came from God. His famous “I Have A Dream” speech likened the
Declaration of Independence to a check promising African Americans their rights, a check he NATE in ZELINSKY cashed close to two centuries On Point later. He consciously e c h o e d Thomas Jefferson, who wrote that rights derived from a Maker. As a man of faith, MLK knew the source for his moral system — Christian scripture and belief. Indeed, churchgoers of all creeds tend to grapple with existential dilemmas in sermons and study groups, the same type of conversations we want students having in our classrooms. If we cannot make these conversations happen in academic environments, maybe we can foster them in religious ones? Until 1926, Yale mandated church attendance, precisely because the Corporation understood that contact with faith helps breed more moral students. Even afterward, many used to attend services. In his time, University Chaplain William Sloan Coffin, Jr. ’50 packed Battell with undergraduates who heard him preach on a weekly basis. (Side note: Coffin marched alongside MLK in many of the protests for rights, propelling Yale’s chaplain onto the national stage.) Yale will not reintroduce mandatory services, even if it included an option for agnostics or atheists. To suggest such an idea would be as naïve as to ask for a core curriculum. But maybe our current Chaplain, Sharon Kugler, might be able to take a leaf out of Coffin’s book. Maybe voluntary Yale-wide sermons can make a comeback. In order to be effective, Kugler will need to unabashedly honest about her own morality, just as MLK was unafraid to blend his own religion, politics and the philosophy that connects them. She will have to alienate some (maybe many) who disagree with her stance. The result might be controversial, but at least she would force students to confront the ethical underpinnings of the civil rights movement we supposedly commemorated with our day off. NATHANIEL ZELINSKY is a junior in Davenport College. Contact him at nathaniel.zelinsky@yale.edu .
YALE DAILY NEWS PUBLISHING CO., INC. 202 York Street, New Haven, CT 06511 (203) 432-2400 Editorial: (203) 432-2418 editor@yaledailynews.com Business: (203) 432-2424 business@yaledailynews.com EDITOR IN CHIEF Max de La Bruyère MANAGING EDITORS Alon Harish Drew Henderson ONLINE EDITOR Daniel Serna OPINION Julia Fisher DEPUTY OPINION Jack Newsham NEWS David Burt Alison Griswold CITY Everett Rosenfeld Emily Wanger FEATURES Emily Foxhall CULTURE Eliza Brooke
SCI. TECH Eli Markham SPORTS Zoe Gorman Sarah Scott ARTS & LIVING Nikita Lalwani Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi Chase Niesner Erin Vanderhoof MULTIMEDIA Christopher Peak Baobao Zhang MAGAZINE Eliana Dockterman Molly Hensly-Clancy Nicole Levy PHOTOGRAPHY Brianne Bowen Zoe Gorman Kamaria Greenfield Victor Kang Zeenat Mansoor
PRODUCTION & DESIGN Sophie Alsheimer Mona Cao Raahil Kajani Mason Kroll Cora Ormseth Lindsay Paterson Yoonji Woo
PUBLISHER Preetha Nandi
COPY Illyana Green Nathaline Levine
BUSINESS DEV. Lily Mu
LEAD WEB DEV. Mike DiScala
DIR. FINANCE Albert Chang DIR. PRINT ADV. Matthew Hoffer-Hawlik
DIR. ONLINE BUSINESS Max Cho
ILLUSTRATIONS David Yu
PRINT ADV. MANAGER Sophia Jia NATIONAL ADV. MANAGER Julie Kim ONL. DEV. MANAGER Devon Balicki ONLINE PRODUCT MGR. Gwendoline Tilghman SPECIALTY MARKETING MGR. Gabriel Botelho
ASSOCIATE EDITOR Sam Greenberg INSIDER’S GUIDE Hai Pham
THIS ISSUE PRODUCTION AND DESIGN STAFF: Scott Stern, Rebecca Levinsky, Annie Schweikert NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT EDITORIALS & ADS
COPYRIGHT 2012 — VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 71
The News’ View represents the opinion of the majority of the members of the Yale Daily News Managing Board of 2013. Other content on this page with bylines represents the opinions of those authors and not necessarily those of the Managing Board. Opinions set forth in ads do not necessarily reflect the views of the Managing Board. We reserve the right to refuse any ad for any reason and to delete or change any copy we consider objectionable, false or in poor taste. We do not verify the contents of any ad. The Yale Daily News Publishing Co., Inc. and its officers, employees and agents disclaim any responsibility for all liabilities, injuries or damages arising from any ad. The Yale Daily News Publishing Co. ISSN 0890-2240
SUBMISSIONS
All letters submitted for publication must include the author’s name, phone number and description of Yale University affiliation. Please limit letters to 250 words and guest columns to 750. The Yale Daily News reserves the right to edit letters and columns before publication. E-mail is the preferred method of submission. Direct all letters, columns, artwork and inquiries to: Julia Fisher, Opinion Editor, Yale Daily News http://www.yaledailynews.com/contact opinion@yaledailynews.com
As my sixth shopping period experience winds to a close, I want to give some attention to perhaps one of the most despised components of the Yale undergraduate experience: the mandatory science credits. In theory, the two required science credits serve to ensure “diverse intellectual pursuits for all Yale College students while encouraging flexibility and freedom to expand on individual interests, explore new curiosities, and take academic risks.” Hogwash. In practice, the science credits as they work now fail on all these counts and do active harm to the academic mission of Yale College. For dedicated science students, the science requirement is meaningless. To non-science majors, however, they constitute a severe burden. There are huge drawbacks to the option of taking legitimate science courses like organic chemistry or molecular biology. First, they tend to be very harshly curved, carrying the potential for devastating a semester GPA. This is doubly true insofar as one has to compete with much more dedicated students who are certainly not there to casually explore new curiosities but rather to continue their inexorable march to medical school and aren’t going to let 800 pages of rote memorization
stop them. To get a decent grade, a humanities student would have to structure his schedule around such a course — hardly a desirable outcome. Second, it’s bound to be harder work insofar as the humanities student in question is not used to doing science work. What are the alternatives? Large lecture classes taught essentially at high school levels, or seminars of the same stripe. Everyone knows about them, and everyone goes to them when in need of science credits. The work is rarely, if ever, intellectually stimulating for the student, and, perhaps worse, these courses are a waste of time for the unlucky professors stuck teaching them. Instead of spending more time on their truly interested and more advanced students or on personal research, they need to engage with students who refuse to answer even the most basic questions when the teacher tries to have some interaction in lecture. No doubt the astronomy professors have cursed the requirement more than once during their respective stays at Yale. But worse, the science credit often gets in the way of classes the student would find more interesting and derive more intellectual stimulation from. There’s such a wealth of offerings at Yale
that every little spot in someone’s four-year schedule is a highly coveted prize. If we eliminated the science requirement, perhaps the security-track global affairs major would take a course on education policy and decide he wanted to become a school administrator instead of secretary of defense. The opportunity to experiment should not be confined to the strict boundaries of the Yale administration’s vision. Instead, the administration should trust students to take those different classes themselves. For those who find the suggestion of doing away with the science distributional requirement altogether unpalatable, I have another proposal. The Yale website suggests that “close study of a science develops critical faculties that educated citizens need,” including an ability to evaluate expert opinion, distinguish demagoguery from science and develop new modes of thought via theoretical inquiry and experimental analysis. If Yale College is interested in producing educated citizens, then instead of the hodgepodge of random lectures on topics that will never pertain to most humanities majors’ careers and lives (and let’s not kid ourselves — “Galaxies and the Universe” is not going
to inspire confidence from major engineering or biotech companies), Yale should reduce the required science credits to one, get rid of the usual courses for non-science majors and create SCIE100 — “Public Science.” The course could be a general overview of a bunch of aspects of science about which active citizens need to be informed. A survey of the technologies and processes behind genetically modified foods, global warming, clean energy and fossil fuel production, DNA as applied to criminal cases and paternity tests, and many more everyday topics would be far more beneficial than many of the current offerings. By comparison, the quantitative reasoning distributional requirement leads humanities majors to learn important skills like basic microeconomics, statistics and programming. The classes currently offered in that field fulfill their stated mission. But, by and large, the current classes non-science majors take fail the task they were created to carry out. They deserve reconsideration – and perhaps, ultimately, the axe. MICHAEL MAGDZIK is a junior in Berkeley College. Contact him at michael.magdzik@yale.edu .
NASA is still a go My friends and family keep throwing cold water on my passion for space exploration. They believe news reports that President Obama cancelled the human spaceflight program, dooming NASA to slowly wither and die, and they try to nudge me away from denial. Fortunately, their narrative is wildly inaccurate; space exploration is poised for an exciting future. The national media confuses the deserved cancellation of the space shuttle program with the death of space exploration. In reality, commercial companies will soon replace the outdated space shuttle to launch cargo and crew into orbit around Earth. NASA will no longer focus on providing taxi service to the International Space Station. Rather, a quest to explore the uncharted cosmos with both robots and humans will exploit the imaginative possibility of space. In short, NASA is recapturing the excitement of the Space Race — without the fear of the Cold War. When the Soviet Union launched Sputnik in 1957, Americans panicked because the shiny, beeping satellite represented an existential crisis. People evolved with a basic urge to explore the unknown, and their ability was threatened. Desperate to preserve American preeminence, NASA executed the spectacular Apollo Program, culminating in the 1969-’72 series of moon landings. Most scientists never lost the drive to push the envelope in space, making the last four decades a golden age of exploration. Spacecrafts have visited every planet in our solar system; the Hubble
YOUR LETTERS opinion@yaledailynews.com
WRITE TO US All letters submitted for publication must include the author’s name, phone number and description of Yale University affiliation. Please limit letters to 250 words. The Yale Daily News reserves the right to edit letters before publication. E-mail is the preferred method of submission.
telescope collected breathtaking images of distant galaxies and nebulae. Planetary scientists have explicitly prioritized freJOE smallO’ROURKE quent to mediumscale missions Rock Bottom over occasional flagship efforts, ensuring the steady return of engaging science. With the ongoing detection of shockingly diverse planets orbiting distant stars, the possibilities for discovery are virtually limitless. In contrast, the human spaceflight program lost luster in 1975 after American and Soviet spacecraft docked above the Earth, ending the Space Race. Lacking either an obvious threat from a foreign superpower or an ambitious new goal, public interest in human spaceflight quickly waned, prompting advocates of space exploration to hype engineering advances in lieu of novel excursions. But technology development is only exciting if conducted in pursuit of an accessible, exciting goal. The space shuttle was the most complex machine ever built, yet launches soon seemed routine and even boring. The International Space Station is closer to Earth than Los Angeles is to San Francisco. So a new emotional focus for the space program would be cause for celebration, not despair. Although the national media enjoys blaming President Obama
Personability matters in educators Antonia Woodford’s article, (“Admins divided on interviews,” Jan. 11) reveals a disturbing aspect of graduate work in the humanities. Faculty opposition to the policy of interviewing applicants illuminates how we have neglected the role of teaching in scholarship. Faculty insistence that “personabilty” is irrelevant to work in the humanities (as opposed to the sciences, where students work in communal labs) neglects that serving as teaching fellows, working with colleagues and applying for faculty jobs are all integral elements of graduate work. While charisma and extroversion should not be primary criteria for acceptance, we must acknowledge that a severe inability to communicate will prevent a scholar from making as significant a contribution to her or his field, limit job placement and hinder teaching. If Yale is already investing approximately $143,000 in each humanities student, it is worth the time and funding to assure that we acquire the most qualified applicants. Professor Eckart Frahm’s notion that, “Occasionally genius hides behind awkwardness, while inversely silver-tongued applicants can turn out to be shallow scholars,” implies that well-
for killing the shuttle program, credit actually belongs to President George W. Bush, who scheduled its cancellation for 2011 to liberate funding for the Constellation Program to return astronauts to the moon. President Obama took decisive action in 2010 after an independent review panel concluded that the Constellation Program was hopelessly over budget and behind schedule. Instead of killing NASA, he committed to increasing overall funding by $6 billion over five years. The International Space Station will be operated as a national laboratory for science research through 2020 and NASA will continue designing a powerful rocket capable of reaching destinations beyond Earth’s orbit, such as asteroids and Mars. Most importantly, President Obama strongly supports contracting with commercial companies to transport crew and cargo to orbit around Earth. Private entities are demonstrating impressive capabilities. For example, SpaceX, one of many commercial spaceflight corporations, launched its Dragon spacecraft into orbit around Earth and recovered it safely in 2010. Cargo delivery to the International Space Station should occur this year and the first crewed Dragon flight is planned for 2015. Space tourism and trips beyond the earth/moon system will follow. Of course, you will not cheer the continuation of a vigorous space program unless you consider it a worthwhile endeavor. After all, reasonable people have criticized the space program since its birth as a tremendous waste of
money. According to several studies, however, the average American overestimates the percentage of the federal budget allocated to NASA (roughly 0.6 percent) by at least a factor of 10. Compared to expenditures like wars and bank bailouts, NASA appropriations might as well be a rounding error. Eliminating funding for space exploration would not increase spending on other worthy causes, despite rhetorical attempts to pit NASA’s funding against domestic programs. In the current political climate, the money would likely be thrown into the pit of deficit reduction and tax cuts. Conventional defenses of space exploration are pragmatic: Dollars are spent on Earth, not in space, to employ skilled workers. Commercial spinoffs from NASA technology — everything from life rafts to clean energy technology — improve lives every day. Without satellites, our ability to navigate, communicate and predict weather would vanish. But none of these reasons ignited the Space Race. Ultimately, to support space exploration is simply to be human. Footprints on the moon and the tracks of Mars rovers both provide an unadulterated, natural thrill. People and robots in space are uniquely capable of expanding our imagination, inspiring life-changing technology, motivating science and engineering education. Thanks to President Obama, the stage is set for decades of adventure.
spoken applicants are necessarily inferior academics. It is time that we overcome intellectual prejudice against personability and admit that social skills do not preclude genius, but often aid its effectiveness.
graduate school education and guarantees teaching positions to graduate students in their third and fourth years, we have an obligation to admit students who have no obvious and insurmountable obstacles to becoming effective teachers in the classroom. What is at stake is not simply the protection of the graduate students from anything that could be interpreted as violating the rights of the disabled; what is at stake is the right of undergraduates to instructors who are not just “the best minds” on paper, but exemplary presenters of material and leaders of discussion. Though interviews are not perfect tools, they can reveal important information that will help faculty members make more informed choices about the students one can imagine placing in front of the classroom in a couple of years.
ANN PHELPS JANUARY 13 The writer is a 2009 graduate of the Institute of Sacred Music and a Saybrook graduate affiliate and research fellow.
Interviews show commitment to teaching Dean Thomas Pollard’s directive that candidates for places in the graduate programs be interviewed should be welcome news to undergraduates. Since Yale considers teaching to be a part of
JOSEPH O’ROURKE is a senior in Silliman College. His column runs on alternate Tuesdays. Contact him at joseph.orourke@yale.edu .
LESLIE BRISMAN JANUARY 11 The writer is the Karl Young Professor of English.
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
PAGE 3
PAGE THREE TODAY’S EVENTS TUESDAY, JANUARY 17 12:00 PM “Simple Steps to Reducing Clutter — At Work and Home.” Susan Abramson, manager of the Yale WorkLife and Child Care Programs, will give this workshop focused on the different types of clutter that can affect your life, both at home and at work. William Wirt Winchester Buidling (25 York St.), Room 208. 12:30 PM “The Ancients: Fraternalism, Faith, and Friendship.” This “Art in Context” talk will be given by Rosie Ibbotson, postdoctoral graduate fellow at the Yale Center for British Art. Yale Center for British Art (1080 Chapel St.).
CORRECTIONS FRIDAY, JAN. 13
The article “Leaving society behind in ‘reWilding’” misstated the year of Adina Verson DRA ’12.
Stalin archive nears completion BY SHARON YIN STAFF REPORTER The Yale University Press will likely make the Stalin Digital Archive, which will contain more than 28,000 documents related to former Soviet Union Premier Joseph Stalin, available for purchase by this summer, according to John Donatich, director of the Yale University Press. The project is the culmination of over 20 years of collaboration between Yale University Press and the Russian State Archive of Social and Political History (RGASPI). David Schiffman, Yale University Press director of digital publishing, said students and faculty will gain access to the archive for free since Yale University Press provides all publications to Yale University Library. “The main goal is to provide students and scholars access to the very important set of primary sources without the need to travel to Moscow,” Donatich said. “It is a new way of doing research made possible by the rapid development of digital tools that did not exist even 10 years ago.” The archive includes Stalin’s personal papers, letters and private notes in the margins of various books, in addition to documents related to his work in government and foreign affairs, Schiffman said, comparing it to a presidential library. Though discussions about exploring and digitizing the Stalin papers began around 2005, and a formal agreement to digitize them was signed in 2009, the Stalin Digital Archive is the result of a much longer relationship, Donatich said. After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Yale University
Press began working with RGASPI to create the Annals of Communism, a series of 25 volumes about the history of Soviet and international communism. When the Stalin papers were declassified, RGASPI approached Yale University Press with a proposal to digitize the documents, Donatich said. The Annals of Communism series will be included in the Stalin Digital Archive, according to a YUP press release. University Librarian Susan Gibbons, who has seen several demonstrations of the archive and is a member of the Yale University Press Board of Governors, said the archive includes social media tools to allow researchers to interact and discuss the archive’s materials. “The Stalin Digital Archive is not the digital equivalent of a traditional book,” Gibbons said. Though Tatjana Lorkovic, Slavic and East European Collections curator at the Yale University Library, said she believes the Stalin Digital Archive is not “complete,” she said the information is “very useful” for students and faculty searching for primary source materials. John MacKay and Vladimir Alexandrov, Slavic Languages and Literatures professors, added that the period of Soviet history covered by the archive had far-reaching effects on the rest of the world, making it an important resource for researchers. The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York were among donors to the project.
“Education is a weapon whose effects depend on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed.” JOSEPH STALIN FORMER PREMIER OF THE SOVIET UNION
Synder engages students over tea BY DANIEL SISGOREO STAFF REPORTER Throughout his inaugural year as School of Management dean, Edward Snyder has welcomed small groups of students into his office over breakfast or tea. In an effort to address student concerns and get to know the school’s student body, Snyder has hosted informal 10-person meetings since the start of the fall. Snyder said the meetings are designed to help him gauge the pulse of the school as he embarks on several new projects, such as building partnerships with international business schools, and give students information about administrative proceedings. Students who have attended the meetings say they appreciate seeing Snyder’s interest in meetingthem and having the opportunity to share thoughts about the future of their young and developing business school. Before coming to Yale, Snyder served as dean of the University of Chicago’s business school — a school known for placing emphasis on consulting and finance. Yale has traditionally attracted students interested in the public sector or in nonprofit work. Michael Gitner SOM ’13, who attended one of the meetings, said he was curious to hear how Snyder plans to adapt his previous experience to Yale’s business school philosophy. “He came from Chicago, which is a very different business school than SOM in a lot of cultural aspects,” Gitner said. “I wanted to see whether he was buying into our culture, and if he thought that our culture was valuable.”
Since the first breakfast meeting in October, Snyder has met with approximately 40 of the school’s roughly 450 MBA students over the course of four gatherings. At those meetings, discussions have included Snyder’s travels, SOM’s reputation and student life concerns. “I like conversations on that scale,” Snyder said. “Students have to know that I care about them and that I like them.” While former SOM Dean Sharon Oster met all students pursuing Master of Business Administration degrees when she co-taught “Basics of Economics,” a required class for all first-year MBA students, Snyder is not currently teaching any classes and traveled extensively overseas on administrative business during his first semester. He said holding small meetings with students has helped him structure times for getting to know them. The meetings have been extremely oversubscribed so far, said Samantha Piro SOM ’13, the SOM student government member who coordinates the meetings, with over 80 students registering for the past three meetings. Students are admitted by lottery, she said, with five slots reserved for first-year students and five for second-year students. The meetings are informal and guided entirely by students’ questions, Snyder said. “It was a mix of first- and second-years and [Snyder] really just kind of said, ‘You know, at the end of the day, we’re really both new here,’” Anna Grotberg ’08 SOM ’13 said. “He basically just asked us, ‘Do you know what’s going on? What can I tell you?’” Sura Tilakawardane SOM ’13, who attended Snyder’s first
SNIGHDA SUR/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
School of Management Dean Edward Synder has been holding informal meetings to share his vision for the school with students. meeting in the fall, said he and the other attendees were curious to hear about Snyder’s travels. After that initial meeting, Tilakawardane said Snyder sent an email update to students about the projects he worked on while abroad. Five students who have attended the meetings said the open format allowed them to raise concerns about problems they have noticed at SOM and ask about Snyder’s goals moving forward. Jason Harp SOM ’12 said he
thinks Snyder’s transparency will help him transition smoothly into the deanship. Oster held similar meetings during her tenure. He added that in his experience, the questions that students asked Oster focused on her, but the breakfast meeting Harp attended with Snyder seemed to focus more in his plans for the school. Snyder took office this fall, after a yearlong sabbatical. Contact DANIEL SISGOREO at daniel.sisgoreo@yale.edu .
Green energy to power City Hall
Contact SHARON YIN at sharon.yin@yale.edu . EARL LEE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
City Hall and the Hall of Recrods will now be powered by an environmentally-friendly fuel cell manufactured by UTC Power.
Fill this space here. JOIN@YALEDAILYNEWS.COM
BY LILIANA VARMAN STAFF REPORTER A 66,000-pound fuel cell arrived at Millennium Plaza behind City Hall Sunday morning. The fuel cell will provide the majority of electricity to City Hall and the Hall of Records at 200 Orange St., as well as 60 percent of the heat and 30 percent of cooling for the buildings, said Christine Eppstein Tang, director of the city’s Office of Sustainability. The fuel cell is expected to save between $500,000 and $1,000,000 throughout its 10-year lease period and reduce the pollution generated by both buildings, said Giovanni Zinn ’05, a consultant employed by the city’s Office of Sustainability. “We’re really excited to finally have it here,” Eppstein Tang said. “It’s a great achievement for the city.” Eppstein Tang said the Sustainability Office and engineering department worked with Connecticut-based company UTC Power — which manufactured the fuel cell — for the past year to bring the fuel cell to New Haven. She added that the city benefits not only from having the cell but also from the included maintenance contract that states that UTC must fix
the cell if it is damaged. Eppstein Tang said the decision to get a fuel cell was not motivated by government regulation, but made “perfect sense,” as it demonstrates the city’s commitment to renewable energy while reducing costs. Since pollution-reducing technology is likely to change in the future, she added that the sustainability office and the city’s Department of Engineering decided that leasing the fuel cell would be the best course of action. Initially, officials considered other environmentally friendly and money-saving options such as building a high-efficiency boiler and chiller plant, Zinn said. But, he said, the fuel cell “leapt out immediately” because it saves money, helps the environment and is less disruptive to install. Other advantages of a fuel cell, he added, are its compactness and low emissions and noise levels. The fuel cell is a combined heat and power fuel cell system generating heat that can be used for space or water heating as well as for driving an absorption chiller to provide cooling, said Jennifer Sager, spokeswoman for UTC Power. She added that the fuel cell’s ability to utilize the heat byproduct increases its efficiency, and that the PureCell
Model 400 system used in City Hall has industry-best system efficiencies of up to 90 percent. The PureCell Model 400 system also functions without consuming or discharging water in normal operations, she said, resulting in approximately 1.6 million gallons of saved water per year compared to the U.S. electric grid. Though there are currently no estimates as to how much pollution the fuel cell will reduce, “every little bit helps,” Zinn said. The fuel cell will result in a net reduction of carbon dioxide and nitrous oxide emissions, said Rich Shaw, UTC’s regional sales director. Due to its downtown location near City Hall, the fuel cell can
also serve an educational purpose, Eppstein Tang said. Once the fuel cell is in operation, she added, signs explaining the cell’s purpose to the public will be put up nearby. Zinn said he sees the addition of the latest fuel cell as part of a citywide shift towards sustainability. “New Haven is a leader in renewable technology, and this is continuing the trend,“ he said. The fuel cell will be operational within the next two months, according to Eppstein Tang. Contact LILIANA VARMAN at liliana.varman@yale.edu .
BY THE NUMBERS CITY HALL FUEL CELL 5001000 66,000 60% 30%
Thousands of dollars in energy costs the city expects to save throughout its 10-year lease period as a result of the fuel cell. Pounds the fuel cell weighs.
Portion of heating the fuel cell will provide for City Hall and the Hall of Records. Portion of cooling the fuel cell will provide for City Hall and the Hall of Records.
PAGE 4
NEWS
YALE DAILY NEWS 路 TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 路 yaledailynews.com
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
NEWS
8.3
Study ties diabetes to non-medical effects BY MARIANA LOPEZ-ROSAS STAFF REPORTER After almost 15 years of research, Yale scientists have found that diabetes causes substantive non-medical consequences. In a study published in this month’s issue of the Journal of Health Affairs, researchers from the School of Public Health found that people suffering from diabetes face significant non-medical consequences, including higher high school dropout rates and lower employment rates. These findings could influence future public health policies and clinical practices related to diabetes, the study’s authors said. “Our results highlight two relatively understudied aspects of diabetes — its educational consequences and the fact that they accumulate as early as adolescence and young adulthood,” said Jason Fletcher, professor at the School of Public Health and the study’s lead author. The report states that the high school dropout rate for young adults with diabetes is 6 percent higher than with those without the disease. The team also found that on average a person with diabetes earns $160,000 less than a person without diabetes over the course of his or her working life. By age 30, people with diabetes are 10 percent less likely to be employed than their peers without diabetes. The study does not distinguish between Type I and Type II diabetes, Fletcher said. The researchers tracked 15,000 young people over a period of 14 years — from their high school years to their mid-30s — before arriving at these conclusions. Fletcher said that the non-medical consequences of diabetes, mainly its educational consequences, are not commonly studied. Meredith Hawkins, a professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, N.Y., who heard the authors present their work at the
PAGE 5
Percentage of U.S. population with diabetes
The American Diabetes Association reports that 25.8 million adults and children in the United States, or 8.3 percent of the nation’s population, suffer from diabetes.
FIRST SNOWFALL OF WINTER
publication’s release conference, said the trends found by the study could have been a result of its subjects’ difficult economic and social situations — which may have made them more likely to become diabetic — rather than the disease itself.
Our results highlight two relatively understudied aspects of diabetes — its educational consequences and the fact that they accumulate as early as adolescence. JASON FLETCHER Professor, School of Public Health Fletcher said that although there might be factors other than diabetes to account for their results, the team’s research was limited to examination of patients with similar health backgrounds who attended the same high school, minimizing the effect of other factors. “Our findings suggest that researchers, clinicians and policy makers may need to consider the early, non-medical consequences of diabetes in constructing new policies and clinical practice,” said Michael Richards SPH ’16, one of the paper’s authors. Approximately 16 percent of the New Haven population has diabetes, according to a 2009 survey conducted by the Community Alliance for Research and Engagement at the School of Public Health and the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation. Contact MARIANA LOPEZ-ROSAS at mariana.lopez-rosas@yale.edu .
KAMARIA GREENFIELD/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
WINTRY WEATHER LIGHTS UP CAMPUS The Elm City got its first true taste of winter as snow, sleet and freezing rain fell throughout the Northeast. While the storm, which dropped less than an inch of snow in New Haven Monday night, drew many students to the outdoors to play in the snow, the snow was expected to turn into rain by Tuesday morning.
CROSS CAMPUS THE BLOG. THE BUZZ AROUND YALE THROUGHOUT THE DAY.
cc.yaledailynews.com
PAGE 6
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
PAGE 7
SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
“Every night, I have to read a book so that my mind will stop thinking about things that I stress about.” BRITNEY SPEARS RECORDING ARTIST
Behavioral econ research flourishing at SOM Indoor tanning linked to skin cancer BY DAN WEINER STAFF REPORTER “A bat and a ball cost $1.10 in total. The bat costs a dollar more than the ball. How much does the ball cost?” Ten cents is the wrong answer, but don’t feel too bad if that was the answer that came to mind: more than half of more than 3,000 college students selected that option, according to Shane Frederick, an associate professor of marketing at the Yale School of Management, who designed the question in 2005 to test the ability of subjects to think rationally despite incorrect intuitions. The high portion of subjects that select the wrong answer illustrates one of the main findings in contemporary behavioral studies, humanity’s frequent irrationality, said Frederick. Researchers at the Yale School of Management, including Frederick, are at the forefront of the growing field of behavioral economics, which studies the often irrational nature with which people make economic decisions. Frederick recently completed a roughly nineyear project, which will appear in the Journal of Consumer Research in June 2012, in which he is the first researcher to show what he calls the “X effect” — that humans overestimate by an average of 40 percent how much other people will pay for items ranging from a box of gourmet chocolates to a pill that would increase one’s height by two inches. For example, the average person said they would only pay $191 for a pill to gain two inches of height, but that other people would spend $895. While Frederick said there is little doubt that the “X effect” exists, he said he was frustrated that it was so “stunningly difficult” to figure out why people commit this error. Drazen Prelec, a professor of management science and economics at MIT, said he knew the “X effect” as the “Shane effect” when Frederick was an assistant professor of management science at
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS The field of behavioral economics challenges the classical economics assumption that humans are rational decision makers. Incorporating insights from both economics and psychology, behavioral economics seeks to uncover the hidden heuristics and biases that shape our decisions. Below are a few examples of the most important concepts of behavioral economics as well as studies that support the findings. ANCHORING Humans incorporate arbitrary figures, or “anchors,” when making decisions. STUDY In a study at MIT, students bid on a range of items in an auction from $1 to $99 dollars. Before placing bids, they recorded the last two digits of their social security numbers on the bid sheet. Those students with higher numbers bid higher, and those with lower digits recorded on their sheets bid lower; for instance, when bidding for a cordless keyboard, those students with social security numbers ending between 80-99 bid an average of $55.64 while those ending between 00-19 bid $16.09 on average. FRAMING A given situation can be described, or “framed,” in different ways and elicit very different decisions. STUDY In a 1981 study, participants were asked to consider the following two responses to a disease that effects 600 people. In scenario A, participants could either save 200 people for sure or have a 1/3 chance of saving 600 and a 2/3 chance of saving none. In scenario B, participants could either let 400 people die for sure or have a 1/3 chance that nobody will die and a 2/3 chance that 600 people will die. Even though both “for sure” situations are equivalent and both gamble situations are the same, most participants in scenario A chose the “for sure” option while most participants in scenario B chose the “gamble.”
MIT from 2002 to 2008, and praised the article for how it dealt with the lack of a definite explanation for the effect. “What’s really special about this article is that it almost reads like a mystery story, and the mystery is why do people have this illusion,” Prelec said. “The article goes through one suspect explanation after another and more or less dismisses every one. We [only have] some clues about what might be the explanation.” Others experts in the field found the lack of a definite conclusion more frustrating than Prelec did. Joachim Krueger, a professor of psychology at Brown University, said that while the article describes a “beautiful phenomenon,” its ultimate failure to propose a reason for the bias was “anticlimactic.” Frederick said one of the possible reasons for the bias could be what his article calls “Asymmetric Salience of Expressions of Liking and Disliking.” In other words, individuals only see the people waiting in line for coffee at Starbucks and not those who go elsewhere for their caffeine drinks, causing the observers to overestimate the percentage of people who would pay $4 for a cup of coffee. Both Prelec and Frederick also identified the paper as having important practical implications in business negotiations. “This is an important finding in itself, namely that in negotiations if people think that other people are willing to pay more, when someone is giving you their honest estimate, you will not believe them,” Prelec said. Frederick’s paper is an example of behavioral economics challenging classical economic theory’s assumption that humans are capable of unlimited rational thought. In the second half of the 20th century, the concept of bounded rationality — that individuals are unable to consider all of the relevant information when making decisions — began to challenge the classical assumption of total rationality, according to Ravi Dhar, a professor of management and marketing at the Yale School of Management. These first advances in behavioral economics came not from economists but from psychologists who identified the common biases and heuristics that humans use to make decisions under pressure. “Behavioral economics is just an attempt to make our models of economic behavior psychologically more realistic,” said Nicholas Barberis, a professor of finance at the Yale School of Management. “We hope that by doing so we can understand the world better and make smarter predictions about how the world works.” Researchers at the Yale School of Management focus not only on behavioral economics, but also in the related fields of behavioral finance, which studies how people invest, and behavioral decision theory, a more abstract study of decision making. Both Dhar and Frederick attribute the strength of overall behavior sciences research at the School of Management to the presence of this range of disciplines. “If you pool across several departments — finance, organizational behavior, marketing, economics — I think it’s arguably the best in the world,” Frederick said. “[We have] the strongest group of behavioral people in many disciplines.” Echoing Frederick, Prelec said that the School of Management features one of the world’s best groups of behavioral economics researchers. Barbaris said that behavioral research at the School of Management has taken off in recent years thanks in part by a $1.6 million donation by Yale alum Andrew Redleaf ’78 in 2004. All of the Yale faculty interviewed for this article have either recently completed or are currently undertaking research. Apart from facilitating behavioral economics research, the Yale School of Management offers related courses open to undergraduate students, including “Foundations of Behavioral Economics,” which Frederick teaches. Contact DAN WEINER at daniel.weiner@yale.edu .
BY MICHELLE HACKMAN STAFF REPORTER Indoor tanning may significantly increase the risk of developing early-onset skin cancer, a new Yale study has found. A team of researchers from the Yale School of Public Health reported that individuals who used tanning beds at least once are at a 69 percent greater risk of developing basal cell carcinoma, the most common form of skin cancer, before the age of 40. The study, published in the December issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, found skin cancer risk was correlated with frequency of tanning, and the effect was especially pronounced for women. Experts interviewed say that the study’s findings are unsurprising, given past research on the dangers of indoor tanning, but will still help raise public awareness of the issue. “This study, in combination with the research done on melanoma, reinforces how dangerous indoor tanning can be,” said Leah Ferucci GRD ’09, a postdoctoral fellow at the School of Public Health and lead author of the study. “If we prevent the initiation of indoor tanning, we could prevent many, many cases of skin cancer.” The researchers interviewed 376 community members under the age of 40 with a history of basal cell carcinoma and 390 with no history of the disease. Each participant provided information on how frequently they visited tanning salons, as well as their age of initiation, duration, and history of burns while tanning. An increase of any of these factors was associated with elevated risk of developing BCC. For example, participants who had reported visiting tanning beds for at least six years were twice as likely to develop the disease as those who had never tanned indoors. Additionally, indoor tanning was associated with lesions in areas that sunlight would not normally reach, such as the limbs and trunk area, while naturally occuring lesions are generally found on the face or neck. The cancer manifests itself as mole-sized skin lesions that are rarely fatal but costly to remove. Treatment costs can often be staggering, as people diagnosed with the disease often develop more than one lesion. Ferucci said that one-quarter of early-onset BCC could be prevented if the threat of indoor tanning was eliminated. Women in the study were much more likely
LAB
Not as bad as smoking, study finds
“So what we smoke weed?”: Wiz Khalifa, a rapper from Pittsburgh, now has science to validate his question. Smoking marijuana may not be as harmful as smoking cigarettes, according to a study released last week by the Journal of the American Medical Association. In an analysis of 20-years of data from more than 5,000 men and women, researchers concluded that the ‘occasional’ joint may actually increase lung capacity and air flow. Yale School of Medicine assistant professor Jeanette Tetrault commented that the study doesn’t “really paint the entire picture of the potential effects of marijuana on the lungs”. -Jacqueline Sahlberg
Contact MICHELLE HACKMAN at michelle.hackman@yale.edu .
Racial education gap Regardless of their income, black school children, especially boys, receive less attention, harsher punishments and lower grades than white school children, a recent study by the Yale Child Study Center said. Judith Browne Dianis, co-director of the Advancement Project, said in an interview that one of the reasons for these numbers is the perception of black boys that teachers carry into their classrooms. Rather than suspending or even arresting these children for misbehavior at school, she said that they should receive support from parents, counselors and teachers. “We need to put common sense back into the school codes,” she said. -Jacqueline Sahlberg
Unpublished scientific studies stack up Do researchers who are given funding by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) actually have to publish their findings? Joseph Ross GRD ’06, assistant Professor of Medicine at Yale, led a study focused on the topic of unpublished evidence. The study, which used projects registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, a trial registry and results database maintained by the US National Library of Medicine, found that less than half of NIH funded trials were published in a peer reviewed journal.
Just about everyone should jog more Exercise is not just beneficial for your looks, but your health too. Thomas Gill, a professor at the Yale School of Medicine, led a study which found that people who have chronic conditions, women, those who are hospitalized, and people who lack physical activity are most likely to develop a disability in their later years. Gill’s research team also found that an illness, injury or other potential causes of disability which cause hospitalization can increase by six times the likelihood of an individual being disabled in their old age. -Mohammad Salhut
SHANE FEDERICK AND YALE SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
A new School of Management study illustrates the irrational manner in which most people make economic decisions.
YALE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS AND COMMUNICATIONS
A team of researchers from the Yale School of Public Health has found a link between early-onset skin cancer and indoor tanning.
BY JACQUELINE SAHLBERG STAFF REPORTER
Stress has deleterious effects on brain function even in healthy individuals, a new study by researchers at the Yale Stress Center shows.
that burn-free tanning carries no risks. In fact, he said, all ultraviolet light exposure carries a risk of cancer. Tanning salons are especially important to public health experts because people are more likely to make indoor tanning a part of their routine than outdoor tanning, said Bryon Adinoff, professor of psychiatry at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and Veteran’s Association North Texas Health Care System. For example, approximately 30 million Americans tan indoors each year, but on any given day, 1 million will visit a tanning salon. The desire to frequent tanning beds may be driven by motives other than the appeal of a tanned complexion, Adinoff said, because ultraviolet light rays have the potential to become addictive. Adinoff’s research shows that exposure to the light activates areas in the brain associated with drug addiction. “It would explain why people continue to frequent indoor tanning salons despite known risks such as skin cancer,” Adinoff said. Seventy percent of early-onset basal cell carcinomas occur in females.
FROM THE
-Mohammad Salhut
Stress causes brain shrinkage
YALE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS AND COMMUNICATIONS
to report having visited tanning salons, and they were found to be twice as likely to develop BCC after a single indoor tanning session. A strong association was not found in men, though this does not necessarily suggest that men are immune to tanning-related skin cancer, as the population of tanning males was too low to find a significant result, Ferucci said. Alan Fleischer, professor of dermatology at the Wake Forest Baptist Health Center, said that although the results did not shed new light on the issue, they can nevertheless help focus the public’s attention on the dangers of indoor tanning. “Knowledge by itself is generally ineffective in changing behavior, but knowledge is required to effect change,” Fleischer said. Recent data show that instances of BCC are on the rise, with 1 million cases reported in the United States each year — a 300 percent increase since 1994, according to a recent article in the journal Archives of Dermatology. The public’s perception of the desirability and safety of tanning — be it indoors or outdoors — must be changed in order to decrease future instances of skin cancer, Fleischer said. He explained that too many Americans wrongly believe that burns are dangerous and
LEAKS
A new Yale study shows that stress can reduce brain volume and function, even in otherwise healthy individuals. Researchers from the Yale Stress Center analyzed the effect of experiencing stressful life events. The study, published Jan. 5 in the journal Biological Psychiatry, concluded that stress can decrease the amount of gray matter in the brain and make it more difficult for people to manage stressful situations in the future. It also may aid efforts to prevent stressrelated disorders through screening and vigilance. According to Rajita Sinha, program director for the Yale Stress Center and professor of psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine, the study is unique in analyzing a healthy human population. While past studies have demonstrated that stress reduces brain volume in animals and psychiatric samples of patients, Sinha said that the study is the first to show the impact of cumulative stress on the brain in otherwise healthy subjects. Study candidates completed psychiatric and physical health assessments that prescreened the population for substance abuse and head injuries, among other factors. Each of the 103 healthy participants then participated in a cumulative adversity interview that estimated the degree of stress in their life through questions
about “traumatic” and “recent” occurrences, such as as parental divorces and financial crises. Researchers compared the results of the interview to magnetic resonance imaging scans of participants’ brains and determined that higher levels of cumulative stress were associated with less gray matter in the prefrontal cortex. “We found that the accumulation of stressful life events was affecting key regions of the brain,” said Emily Ansell, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Yale School of Medicine and co-author of the study. “These key regions are the regions we believe regulate our emotions, help us control our impulses and help us process our daily experience. They also control our physiology. These regions have implications for long-term health.” Researchers also determined that the changes in brain volume can serve as warning signs for future mental and social disorders, and chronic diseases. Sinha said that because the reductions in gray matter impair brain function, the body is less prepared to respond to stressful situations. Sinha stated that the study may help in preventative treatment for stress-related disorders, such as depression and drug addiction. In the same way that doctors can treat people with high insulin levels to prevent diabetes, Sinha said that the study could enable doctors to monitor patients at risk for stress-related disorders. “It’s difficult to think of any disease in
which stress cannot play an aggravating or causative role,” Paul Rosch, president of the American Institute of Stress, wrote in an email to the News. Rosch added that the paper confirmed previous studies on the negative effects stress has on the prefrontal cortex. Bruce Compas, professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University, said that anything that leads to a reduction in the number of connections between neurons, such as a decrease in gray matter, hurts the brain’s ability to store information and respond quickly to the environment. He also commended both the design and measurements of the study. “So much of the function of different organ systems is really related to what we do to ourselves, to our behavior and the choices we make.” said Sinha. “This is very exciting to us and to the field because it opens up testing and interventions for brain-related disorders.” Sinha and her fellow researchers at the Yale Stress Center are now looking to find potential moderators that could potentially reduce the negative effects of cumulative stress on the brain. Thirty-nine percent of Americans report that their stress level has increased over the past year, according to a report released by the American Psychological Association on Jan. 11, 2012. Contact JACQUELINE SAHLBERG at jacqueline.sahlberg@yale.edu .
Autopsy director discusses falling rates BY CYNTHIA HUA STAFF REPORTER A recent report from ProPublica revealed that the frequency of autopsies in the United States has declined over the past century. What was once a typical hospital procedure is conducted on only 5 percent of patients today. The News sat down with John Sinard, director of Yale-New Haven Hospital’s autopsy service, to discuss the implications of this trend. Sinard, could you give us QDr. some background on the issue — how long have autopsy rates been decreasing, and why is this happening?
A
Autopsy rates in the United States in general have been decreasing since around the 1950s. The most commonly cited reason is that autopsies aren’t as necessary as they used to be. With all the new imaging technology, the perception is that we already know what is wrong by the time the patient dies. A number of studies however have shown this is not the case. Typically in 40 to 50 percent of autopsies, something is clarified or found that was not clinically known prior to the
patient’s death.
QWhat can an autopsy reveal?
A
A
There are some cases where it’s particularly recommended: if there’s uncertainty as to why the patient is dead, if it’s not clear where and how extensive cancer was at the time of death or if there’s any suspicion that the patient may be suffering from a hereditary disease. Even an autopsy that finds nothing unexpected could be comforting for the family so they know patient was treated correctly.
Autopsies are not like they are often portrayed on TV. The autopsy is an anatomic examination. It can address anatomic causes of death, such as infectious diseases, and it can determine the extent of disease, such as in the case of cancer. What it can’t do is identify physiological causes of death such as cardiac arrhythmia or a seizure.
autopsies benefit medical QDo research?
A
A
Also, in hospital autopsies, we don’t do the types of expensive pharmacological work that would be done for forensic autopsies. Occasionally we have families who request an autopsy because they’re concerned a patient has received too much of a drug, either in the hospital or in the nursing home, and an autopsy isn’t going to be able to answer those questions. It’s important not to confuse hospital autopsies with forensic autopsies; forensic autopsy rates in comparison have remained steady.
Q
In your opinion, under what circumstances would an autopsy be beneficial?
In general, the autopsies can be a source of tissue for medical research. Of course, when tissue is released for medical research from an autopsy, it’s always deidentified so researchers don’t know where the tissue came from. In general, over the years autopsies have helped in understanding the course of disease and why some tumors respond to certain therapies.
often does Yale-New Haven QHow Hospital conduct autopsies?
A
We do approximately 220 a year. For this last year, 13.5 percent of hospital deaths were autopsied, but that’s not just Yale-New Haven
Hospital deaths – it also includes patients from other hospitals in the areas or patients who died outside of the hospital. addition to changes in medical QInpractice, are there also financial reasons for this decrease?
A
From a financial perspective, families are not typically charged for autopsies. Insurance companies don’t pay for autopsies because they are included in quality assurance payments to hospitals. The hospitals get these payments regardless and so have no financial incentives to do autopsies.
you believe autopsies are QDo worth the cost?
A
When one considers the cost of medical care, I think that the autopsy is a great way to assess the care that a patient received and to a certain extent the appropriateness of that care. On a cost-by-cost basis, it’s one the least expensive thing that can be done. It’s a high yield for a low financial cost. Contact CYNTHIA HUA at cynthia.hua@yale.edu .
YALE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
John Sinard directs Yale-New Haven Hospital’s autopsy service.
PAGE 8
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
FROM THE FRONT
125
Gov. pushes for Sunday liquor sales LIQUOR FROM PAGE 1 But two liquor stores in New Haven — New Haven Wine & Liquor and the Grand Vin liquor store — told the News that Malloy’s proposal is misguided and will hurt small “mom and pop” retailers. Chris Grandvin of the Grand Vin liquor store said that Connecticut stores are not losing business because of Sunday hours but instead because of prices. He said state regulations governing the distribution and pricing of alcoholic beverages make liquor purchased in Connecticut 20 to 30 percent more expensive than in border states. “[Malloy] is lying to the public about this,” Grandvin said. “We can’t compete with Massachusetts or New York because of a state price structure — it has absolutely nothing to do with Sunday sales.” Sunday liquor sale regulation has been debated in the Connecticut legislature for years, but political influence from the Connecticut Package Stores Association — the lobbying body that represents many state liquor stores — has thwarted past efforts. Carroll Hughes, chief lobbyist for the CPSA, has stated previously that if similar legislation passed, market forces would push liquor stores to stay open seven days per week, creating an undue fiscal and time bur-
den for retailers. Grandvin agreed, arguing that Malloy’s proposed changes would effectively extend a six-day work week to a seven-day work week with no significant increase in foot traffic, leading to “the same amount of business but with more expenses.” “[The proposed legislation] will only be advantageous for big liquor stores who have big pockets, and because of the price structure, it’s going to kill small business,” Grandvin said. “It’s not going to help the small guy, and there are a lot of small guys struggling right now.” Hughes said last year that Sunday sales would put an estimated 300 to 350 of the state’s 1,100 liquor stores out of business. Malloy has dismissed this concern, pointing out that the proposed legislation would not require stores to sell liquor on Sundays but would give them the option to do so. Grandvin said that the proposed changes stem from consumer convenience and not the health of Connecticut businesses as Malloy claims. “In this day and age convenience is everything — everyone wants immediate service,” Grandvin said. Student reaction to Malloy’s proposal was mixed — of seven students interviewed, three said that the change would be convenient while
Every year 125 lucky freshmen are accepted into the selective Directed Studies program, according to the program’s website.
Grand Strategy joins DS for alums
four said that they do not find the issue particularly important. “I don’t think the [current law’s] repeal will have a big difference on my life,” said Paul Joo ’12. “I normally get alcohol around twice a month, and I can generally expect when I want something on hand.” Other students said allowing Sunday liquor sales would be a nice change and would make it easier to schedule Sunday night social events. The repeal has more public support today than at any other point in the issue’s history, according to recent polling data. A March 2011 Quinnipiac University poll shows that Connecticut residents support Sunday sales by a margin of 66 to 31 percent, up from 56 to 39 percent when similar legislation was debated last year. A December 2009 study from the state’s General Assembly, titled “Connecticut’s Economic Competitiveness in Selected Areas,” concluded that Connecticut could collect an additional $2.5 to 3.1 million annually in excise tax revenue and approximately $5 million in added sales tax revenue if Sunday liquor sales were allowed — a total revenue increase of $7 to 8 million.
DS FOR LIFE FROM PAGE 1 of whom have “high-powered jobs,” summer courses provide a unique opportunity to return to the classroom and ponder “big ideas.” “[Alumni] may eke out the time to read, or even to occasionally write something, but what they probably don’t have is an opportunity to talk about what they’re reading and thinking,” she said. Andrew Lipka ’78 and John Boardman ’64, who both attended Directed Studies last summer and will return for the Grand Strategy course, said the intensity of the program and the continuous nature of discussion helped them rediscover the thrills of classroom learning. Lipka maintains an active online discussion group for former students and faculty in the program, he said. As of last Thursday, 24 people had registered for one of this summer’s three courses. Contact JANE DARBY MENTON at jane.menton@yale.edu and ANTONIA WOODFORD at antonia.woodford@yale.edu .
Contact BEN PRAWDZIK at benjamin.prawdzik@yale.edu .
Aid choice to impact service term ROTC FROM PAGE 1 cover tuition costs. “The two programs are very different from a financial standpoint, but both will start students on a level playing field,” Crabbe said. “If they don’t want the scholarship money, maybe because they’re uncertain if they want to make a career out of naval service or not, it’s a completely viable and respectable way to go.” Students can apply for an ROTC scholarship as high school seniors, Crabbe said, and, if awarded the scholarship, must decide whether to accept the military’s assistance and longer term of service it requires. University President Richard Levin said Monday that the Yale administration had “detailed conversations” about financial aid with Naval officials over the summer. As Yale’s policy is needbased, Levin emphasized that students enrolled in the Naval ROTC program will get no less than their full need, regardless of who provides the funding. Still, military aid packages can bolster the financial support that Yale offers. While there are no Naval ROTC midshipmen currently at Yale, Andrew Hendricks ’14, an Air Force ROTC cadet who commutes to the University of Connecticut’s program, said his military scholarship made Yale a more realistic option. “For me, personally, it was a big motivating factor, because my [Yale] financial aid package came in and it wasn’t that great, but the ROTC scholarship made Yale a lot more financially feasible,” he said.
Students accepted into Directed Studies
Rage? Goddess, you misheard. Sing of age, not rage. Tell how Dean Miller summoned splendid scholars, the fifteen finest, culled from class ’45 to ’99. How to Eli they returned, to DS and Yale’s narrow beds. Begin Muse, with how the deathless gods now live atop East Rock, their Olympian summit seized when Greece went bust. How Zeus and family for Yale work serving Directed Studies, immortal but untenured, so that when Dean Miller, wily as Odysseus, conceived DS for Life, Athena she dispatched. “Tap fifteen,” the dean directed. –Alex Troy ’81, adapted from Homer’s “The Iliad”
Proposal seeks to ease reentry REENTRY FROM PAGE 1
YALE OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS AND COMMUNICATIONS
Lt. Molly Crabbe, pictured here at Yale’s Veterans Day ceremony last November, will oversee the new NROTC unit. Hendricks said most ROTC cadets he knows applied for and received a military scholarship, though he added that accepting the ROTC scholarship decreased his financial aid package from Yale. Crabbe noted that accepting an ROTC scholarship does not bind students to the program. If a student receiving an ROTC scholarship chose to drop out of the program during freshman year, the student would not be obligated to pay back any funding received from the military, Crabbe said. “If they decide it’s not for them, they can leave [Naval] ROTC at the end of their freshman year with no obligation,” Crabbe said. “A student could go for an entire year of college paid for, say ‘thank you,’ leave and not have to repay any of that.” From sophomore year on, Crabbe said students receiving Naval ROTC scholarships could
COMPARISON ROTC AID OPTIONS ROTC Scholarship
Yes Fr. 5
College Full tuition scholarship Year monthly stipend begins Active duty commitment, in years
still drop out of the program without having to complete the service requirements, but would be required to repay the Navy for all tuition that the military had previously covered — freshman year included.
Our staffers don’t look like this anymore.
No Jr. 3
Students will receive the rank of ensign in the Navy or second lieutenant in the Marine Corps upon completing the NROTC program. Contact TAPLEY STEPHENSON at preston.stephenson@yale.edu .
FROM DS FOR LIFE 2011
short-term consequences, but later say they wish someone had told them all the other consequences of having a conviction,” Meek said. “An old record can follow somebody for a long time.” Meek added that the proposal is in line with current recommendations from national organizations like the American Bar Association and the Uniform Law Commission that address the national legal regime. Ward 5 Alderman Jorge Perez, who was elected president of the Board of Aldermen earlier this month, said while the ordinance will be introduced to the board at its second meeting Tuesday night, no action will be taken until after public hearings have been held. While Perez said he supported the idea behind the ordinance “conceptually,” its ultimate passing will depend on the ordinance’s details, which he said he had not seen. “I think there’s support [on the board] for people who have done their time to come back to society and assimilate as best they can,” Perez said. The new ordinance is
not the Elm City’s only strategy for tackling the prison re-entry population, New Haven Police Department spokesman David Hartman said. The NHPD will work with officers from probation and parole to keep tabs on New Haven residents who have recently been released from prison. “It is not a scare tactic, it is simply to make the recently released prisoners understand that police are watching them and that we know who they are and that individual officers know where they are and what they’ve done and what to look out for,” Hartman said. DeStefano said several times last year that around 70 percent of New Haven’s crime comes from either the narcotics trade or the re-entry population. This statistic has been cited repeatedly by municipal officials as the Elm City’s murder rate rose to a 20-year high in 2011. Tuesday night’s Board of Aldermen meeting begins at 7 p.m. Contact NICK DEFIESTA at nicholas.defiesta@yale. edu and JAMES LU at james.q.lu@yale.edu .
CROSS CAMPUS THE BLOG. THE BUZZ AROUND YALE THROUGHOUT THE DAY.
cc.yaledailynews.com JOIN@YALEDAILYNEWS.COM
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
PAGE 9
BULLETIN BOARD
TODAY’S FORECAST Rain, with a high near 44. Southwest wind between 8 and 11 mph.
TOMORROW
THURSDAY
High of 39, low of 17.
High of 34, low of 25.
MIDWESTERN NERD AT YALE BY ERAN RAE MOORE
ON CAMPUS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18 2:30 PM “Galileo, Mathematics, and the Arts.” Mark A. Peterson, physics chair at Mt. Holyoke College, will give this talk. Whitney Humanities Center (53 Wall St.), Room 208. 4:00 PM “Who Speaks African? Language Diversity in Africa and its Implications.” Ann Biersteker, associate professor of African studies and instructor of Swahili, Sandra Sanneh, director of African languages and instructor of Zulu, and geography teacher Laura Krenicki will speak on a panel at this CAS-PIER workshop for educators. RSVP to oluwadamilola.oladeru@yale. edu. Luce Hall (34 Hillhouse Ave.), Room 102.
WATSON BY JIM HORWITZ
THURSDAY, JANUARY 19 4:00 PM “Dominicanos Unidos: The Island — Diaspora Continuum in Dominican Literature and Culture.” Dixa Ramirez of the University of California, San Diego will speak. Hall of Graduate Studies (320 York St.), Room 401. 7:00 PM “Othello.” This 1952 film, directed by Orson Welles, is being screened as part of Shakespeare at Yale. Whitney Humanities Center (53 Wall St.). 8:00 PM Mindfulness Meditation Group. Sitting meditation followed by a discussion and informal lecture on the practice of mindfulness meditation (vipassana). Meditation instruction will be provided for beginners. Bring your own meditation cushion or bench. Dwight Chapel (67 High St.).
FRIDAY, JANUARY 20 11:30 AM “Systematic Reviews and Public Policy.” Researcher Angeli Landeros-Weisenberger will speak as part of the series “Current Work in Child Development and Social Policy,” sponsored by the Edward Zigler Center. William L. Harkness Hall (100 Wall St.), Room 116.
THAT MONKEY TUNE BY MICHAEL KANDALAFT
4:00 PM “Are You Grieving?” A Conversation for Yale Students. Open to any student who is grieving the death of a loved one. Conversation led by Associate University Chaplain Callista Isabelle and Dr. Karen Hoffman of the Department of Mental Health & Counseling. Battell Chapel (400 College St.), Lovett Room.
y SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS ONLINE yaledailynews.com/events/submit ZERO LIKE ME BY REUXBEN BARRIENTES
To reach us: E-mail editor@yaledailynews.com Advertisements 2-2424 (before 5 p.m.) 2-2400 (after 5 p.m.) Mailing address Yale Daily News P.O. Box 209007 New Haven, CT 06520
Questions or comments about the fairness or accuracy of stories should be directed to Max de la Bruyère, Editor in Chief, at (203) 432-2418. Bulletin Board is a free service provided to groups of the Yale community for events. Listings should be submitted online at yaledailynews.com/events/ submit. The Yale Daily News reserves the right to edit listings.
To visit us in person 202 York St. New Haven, Conn. (OppositeFOR JE) RELEASE JANUARY 17, 2012
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
CLASSIFIEDS
CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis ACROSS 1 __ Romeo: sports car 5 Cleveland NBAers 9 With 66-Across, actress born 1/17/1922 14 Weevil’s target 15 __ II razor 16 Love, in Italia 17 Fit to __ 18 20-Across role for 9-Across 19 Infuriates 20 Sitcom costarring 9/66Across 23 Really revel in 24 Neptune’s realm 25 NFL position 27 “Baby and Child Care” author 30 Entertain in style 33 Congestion site 36 Frasier’s brother 37 Dramedy on which 9/66Across had a recurring role 40 Buckeye State sch. 42 Miss America accessory 43 Message on a dirty car 45 Becomes fond of 50 White House advisory gp. 51 Skater Midori 54 Went out with 55 Sitcom costarring 9/66Across 60 Suppress 61 55-Across role for 9-Across 62 “American ___” 63 Fur tycoon 64 Lender’s security 65 Canadian vocalist Vannelli 66 See 9-Across 67 Not as much 68 Political cartoonist Thomas DOWN 1 Died down 2 Mandrake the Magician’s assistant
CLASSICAL MUSIC 24 Hours a Day. 98.3 FM, and on the web at WMNR. org. “Pledges accepted: 1-800-345-1812” Tuesday is Opera night!
HOUSEKEEPING Weekly, bi-weekly, monthly. Detailed, dependable. Earth-friendly products used. English-speaking staff. Fully insured. Free quote. 203.647.0383 www.bellehome.net
CALL (203) 432-2424 OR E-MAIL BUSINESS@ YALEDAILYNEWS.COM
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
SUDOKU MEDIUM
8 7
(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
38 “That’s amazing!” 39 Generation 40 BYOB word 41 Cannabis preparation 44 German article 46 Bad-mouth 47 Ballparks 48 Dovetail sections 49 Less than 100 shares of stock
THE TAFT APARTMENTS Studio to 2BR styles for future & immediate occupancy at The Taft on the corner of College & Chapel Street. Lease terms available until 5/31/12. It’s never too early to join our preferred waiting list for Summer/Fall 2012 occupancy. Public ministorage available. By appointment only. Phone 203-495-TAFT. www. taftapartments.com.
BEAUTIFUL ONE BEDROOM apartment with garage in North Haven call for info 203 8044093
1/17/12
By Matt Skoczen
3 Armadas 4 Good thing to get in competition 5 PC corner key 6 Yankee slugger, familiarly 7 Flower holders 8 Public embarrassment 9 Italian seaport 10 Mideast VIP 11 One in a phone bill list 12 Bridge support 13 “That’s affirmative!” 21 Marsupial that plays dead 22 Long-snouted swimmer 26 Legal thing 28 Op. __: footnote abbr. 29 Necktie feature 31 Fencing challenge 32 Italian actress Scala 34 Prefix with form 35 Cabbagy side dish 37 Dunkable Italian cookies
Want to place a classified ad?
1/17/12
52 Immune system agent 53 Kukla’s puppet pal 56 __ one’s own horn 57 About, on a memo 58 Barely gets, with “out” 59 Soccer moms’ rides 60 Went out with
6
5 8 9 3 5 7 6 6 9 7 5 4 8 5 3 6 7 7 4 9 8 2 1 6 2 4 1 9 3 5 9 3 7
PAGE 10
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
NATION
T
S NASDAQ 2,710.67, -0.51% S Oil $100.12, +0.43%
GOP maps strategy in wake of tax debacle BY DONNA CASSATA ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — When last seen in Washington, House Republicans were furious with their own leader, Speaker John Boehner, and angry with their Senate Republican brethren over how the showdown over the Social Security tax cut turned into a year-end political debacle. The holidays and three weeks away from the Capitol have tempered some of the bad feelings, but several GOP lawmakers’ emotions are still raw as Congress returns for a 2012 session certain to be driven by election-year politics and fierce fights over the size and scope of government and its taxing, spending and borrowing practices. In the week before Christmas, House Republicans revolted against the Senatepassed deal to extend the payroll tax cut for two months for 160 million workers and ensure jobless benefits for millions more long-term unemployed. Facing intense political pressure, Boehner, R-Ohio, caved, daring tea partyers and other dissenters to challenge his decision to pass the short-term plan without a roll-call vote. None stepped forward to stop him. “A lot of us who went into battle turned around and no one was behind us,” freshman Rep. Mick Mulvaney, R-S.C., said last week, sounding like the fight was still fresh and insistent that leadership had abandoned them. “A lot of us are still smarting,” he added. The two-month extension that Senate Republican and Democratic leaders Mitch McConnell and Harry Reid had characterized as a draw ended up as a big victory for President Barack Obama at the end of a year in which Republicans had forced him to accept a series of spending cuts. Grievances are certain to be aired at a House GOP retreat in Baltimore later this week. The strategy and agenda session also will be a gripe session for some of the 242 House Republicans. “It might be a little more spunky than normal,” said Rep. Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah. Senators come back to Capitol Hill on Jan. 23.
Dow Jones 12,422.06, -0.39%
The wave of Republicans who lifted the GOP to the House majority in the 2010 elections emerged from their first year frustrated by the limitations of divided government and the recurring, down-to-the-wire fights over spending - in April, the squabble was over keeping the government operating, and in August lawmakers dueled over increasing the nation’s borrowing authority. And at year’s end, there was another rhetorical shoot-out over keeping the government running.
A lot of us who went into battle turned around and no one was behind us… A lot of us are still smarting. MICK MULVANEY U.S. Representative, South Carolina Tea partyers who came to Washington intent on deep cuts to counter the growing deficit railed against the budget numbers and the all-too-frequent fights. “There was a Groundhog Day quality to 2011,” said freshman Rep. Nan Hayworth, R-N.Y. Boehner, who frequently had to rally the disparate elements of his caucus, was a bit bruised by the year’s final act. Still, he remains well in control of his caucus, with Republicans recognizing that any leadership challenge or internal strife now would be politically disastrous. In the coming year, House Republicans remain doubtful about accomplishing anything more than the must-do spending bills and a year-long extension of the Social Security tax cuts, unemployment benefits and a reprieve in the cuts to doctors for Medicare payments. Congress faces a Feb. 29 deadline to agree on a new extension, no easy task after last year’s deep divisions but politically inevitable as lawmakers would be loath to raise taxes in an election year.
S S&P 500 1,289.09, -0.49% T T
10-yr. Bond 2.000, +0.02% Euro $1.27, +0.50%
SC rally marks MLK day BY JEFFREY COLLINS ASSOCIATED PRESS COLUMBIA, S.C. — Thousands commemorating the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday Monday outside South Carolina’s capitol heard a message that wouldn’t have been out of place during the halcyon days of the civil rights movement a halfcentury ago: the need to protect all citizens’ right to vote. A similar tone was struck at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, where King preached from 1960 until his death. There and in South Carolina, speakers condemned the voter identification laws they said are meant to suppress black voter turnout. For most of 13 years in South Carolina, the attention at the NAACP’s annual rally has been on the Confederate flag that still waves outside the Statehouse. But on Monday, the civil rights group shifted the focus to laws requiring voters to show photo identification before they can cast ballots, which the group and many other critics say is especially discriminatory toward African-Americans and the poor. South Carolina’s new law was rejected last month by the U.S. Justice Department, but Gov. Nikki Haley vowed to fight the federal government in court. At least a half-dozen other states passed similar voter ID laws in 2011. “This has been quite a faithtesting year. We have seen the greatest attack on voting rights since segregation,” said Benjamin Todd Jealous, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. The shift in tactics was also noted by the keynote speaker, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder. Last month, Holder said the Justice Department was committed to fighting any laws that keep people from the ballot box. He told the crowd he was keenly aware he couldn’t have become the nation’s first African-American attorney general without the blood shed by King and other civil rights pioneers. “The right to vote is not only the cornerstone of our governance, it is the lifeblood of our democracy. And no force has proved more powerful, or more integral to the success of the great American experiment, than efforts to expand the franchise,” Holder said. “Let me be very, very clear — the arc of American history has bent toward the inclusion, not the exclusion, of more of our fellow citizens in the electoral process. We must ensure that this continues.” Texas’ new voter ID law is currently before the Justice Department, which reviews changes in voting laws in nine mostly Southern states because of their history of discriminatory voting practices. Other states that passed such laws in 2011 included Alabama, Kansas, Mississippi, Rhode Island, Tennessee and Wisconsin. Similar laws already were on the books in Georgia and Indiana, and they were approved by President George W. Bush’s Justice Department. Indiana’s law, passed in 2005, was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2008. Critics have likened the laws
MARY ANN CHASTAIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Benjamin Todd Jealous, president and CEO of the NAACP, addresses the crowd during a rally at the South Carolina statehouse on Monday. to the poll taxes and tests used to prevent blacks from voting during the civil rights era. Supporters, many of whom are Republicans, say such laws are needed to prevent fraud. “I signed a bill that would protect the integrity of our voting,” Haley said in a statement welcoming Holder to South Carolina.
You cannot celebrate Dr. King on Monday, and undermine people’s ability to vote on Super Tuesday. RAPHAEL G. WARNOCK Reverend At the Atlanta church where King once preached, the Rev. Raphael G. Warnock said some in America disrespect King’s legacy by “cutting off those for whom he died and the principles for which he fought.” He called voter ID laws an affront to the memory of the civil rights leader. “You cannot celebrate Dr. King on Monday, and undermine people’s ability to vote on Super Tuesday,” Warnock said. The King Day rally in South Carolina took place in the shadow of Saturday’s Republican presidential primary. State NAACP President Lonnie Randolph said people should vote any time they can, but said his group is nonpartisan. He said officials wouldn’t encourage its members — a generally Democratic voting bloc — to disrupt the GOP’s process of choosing its nominee because “we don’t do the mean things.” Jealous made one of the few references to the GOP field during Monday’s rally, saying he was tired of attacks on the movement, such as cuts to education funding. “And I’m real tired of dealing with so-called leaders who talk out of one side of their mouth about celebrating the legacy of
Dr. King and then do so much out the other side of their mouth to block everything the man stood, fought and died for,” Jealous said. The King Day rally in South Carolina was first held in 2000 to call for the Confederate flag to come down off the capitol dome, and has continued after state leaders decided instead to place the flag on a 30-foot pole on the Statehouse lawn near a monument to Confederate soldiers. The flag was mentioned Monday — North Carolina NAACP president the Rev. William Barber called it a “terrible, terroristic banner” — but it was not the focus. The Confederate flag and voter ID laws are all examples of how blacks cannot stop fighting for civil rights, said 39-year-old Llewlyn Walters of Columbia, whose grandmother watched King speak and whose mother told him stories of the civil rights movement as he grew up. “People’s hearts and minds change, but then they forget. The movement was great, but that one single generation couldn’t stop all the discrimination in this country any more than one single dose of antibiotic can fight a disease,” Walters said. In Washington, President Barack Obama and his family commemorated the day by helping to build bookshelves in a local school’s library. The president said there was no better way to celebrate King’s life than to spend the day helping others. Obama’s attorney general ended his speech on a positive note, saying Americans can’t forget the progress this nation has made. After all, the nation elected a black president just 40 years after King was assassinated. “In the spirit of Dr. King, let us signal to the world that, in America today, the pursuit of a more perfect union lives on,” Holder said. “The march toward the Promised Land goes on, and the belief not merely that we shall overcome, but that, as a nation, we will all come together, continues to push us forward.”
YALE DAILY NEWS 路 TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 路 yaledailynews.com
NEWS
PAGE 11
PAGE 12
NEWS
YALE DAILY NEWS 路 TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 路 yaledailynews.com
IF YOU MISSED IT SCORES
NCAA B Syracuse 71 Pittsburgh 63
NCAA B Missouri 70 TX A&M 51
SPORTS QUICK HITS
PROFESSIONAL LACROSSE SENIORS PICKED IN MLL DRAFT Major League Lacrosse teams have their eyes on two Elis. Matt Gibson ’12 and Greg Mahony ’12 were among 12 Ivy League lacrosse players selected in the MLL draft. Gibson was drafted by Chesapeake and Mahony by Boston.
NBA Orlando 102 New York 93
y
NBA Memphis 102 Chicago 86
NBA Houston 114 Washington 106
FOR MORE SPORTS CONTENT, VISIT OUR WEB SITE yaledailynews.com/sports
“[Brown was] playing not to lose and not necessarily to win.... I went for [the steal] and fortunately it worked out. REGGIE WILLHITE ’12 CAPTAIN, M. BASKETBALL
SARAH HALEJIAN ’15 ROOKIE OF THE WEEK, AGAIN Halejian, a member of the women’s basketball team, was named the Ivy League’s top rookie for the second consecutive week after scorin a career-high 18 points and shooting 50 percent from the field as Yale kicked off Ivy League play with a win over Brown.
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
MEN’S BASKETBALL
DOWN TO THE WIRE
Despite trailing for most of the game, Yale stormed back against Brown in its Ivy League opener. PAGE B3 MARIA ZEPEDA/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Basketball captain Reggie Willhite ’12 led the Bulldogs’ come-from-behind victory against Brown on Saturday with two late steals that helped the Elis erase a three-point deficit in the last three minutes of play.
Painful weekend for men’s hockey BY KEVIN KUCHARSKI STAFF REPORTER The Bulldogs’ trip to the North Country began with a blizzard, a delayed game and a seven-hour power outage at their hotel.
MEN’S HOCKEY Things continued to look bleak for the men’s hockey team on Saturday when it faced a 3–1 deficit with eight minutes left in the second period against St. Lawrence (8–11–3, 4–5–1 ECAC), the ECAC’s 10th-place team. Though Yale (8–6–2, 5–3–1) came back to salvage a 3–3 tie, the result still
YALE 3, ST. LAWRENCE 3 YALE
1
1
1
3
ST. LAWRENCE
1
2
0
3
CLARKSON 5, YALE 4 CLARKSON
0
3
1
1
5
YALE
2
1
1
0
4
Bulldogs take down Bears BY JOHN SULLIVAN CONTRIBUTING REPORTER It was a tale of two halves Friday night at the Brown’s Pizzitola Sports Center as the women’s basketball team faced off against the Bears (9–5, 0–1 Ivy).
dropped them to sixth place in the conference standings. Things did not improve the next night as Yale let Clarkson come from behind and beat Yale in overtime, 5–4 Yale is now just 2–2–1 in its last five league games and hovering in the middle of the ECAC pack.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL After going into halftime down by one, the Bulldogs (9–6, 1–0 Ivy) rallied down the stretch to come away with a 75–65 victory and a 1–0 start to their conference schedule. The Elis seemed to be well in control of this game during the opening minutes as they built up an early lead that Sarah Halejian’s ’15 two free throws stretched to 11 with 11:35 remaining in the first period. But from then on, Brown went on a 21–9 run to erase Yale’s lead and go into halftime with a narrow, one-point lead. “We went out with the mindset that we had to win on defense,” guard Aarica West ’13 said. “They have good guards and good three-
DROPPING TO SIXTH
The Elis’ contest with Clarkson was scheduled for 7 p.m. Friday night, but a blizzard in upstate New York pushed the game back to Sunday afternoon. When the Elis returned to the ice against St. Lawrence Saturday night, they showed signs of rush. The Saints jumped on Yale early in the game with a goal from Pete Child just 1:38 into the first period. “They scored right off the bat, so we were on our heels right away,” head coach Keith Allain ’80 said in a press release. “Our guys did a great job of battling back. This is a tough place to play.” The Bulldogs regained some momentum when forward Andrew Miller ’13 scored with only two seconds remaining in the first period. But the Elis’ momentum would not last. On one of its SEE M. HOCKEY PAGE B3
YALE 75, BROWN 65 YALE ATHLETICS
Amanda Tyson ’14 came off the bench to score 12 points and grab eight rebounds as Yale opened Ivy League play with a defeat of Brown.
STAT OF THE DAY 5
YALE
31
44
75
BROWN
32
33
65
point shooters, and we knew that we had to stop them to give ourselves a chance to win.” The Bulldogs struggled to do this early on and allowed the Bears to shoot 60 percent from the field in the first half while managing only a 34.3 percent mark themselves. Yale kept itself in the game by grabbing 10 offensive rebounds, allowing it to attempt 15 more field goals than Brown before halftime. After halftime, the Elis stepped up their defensive effort and held the Bears to 33.3 percent shooting for the second half. They forced eight Brown turnovers while committing only one themselves and continued to dominate the offensive glass. The team amassed a 21–6 edge in offensive rebounds for the game. Head coach Chris Gobrecht, who could not be reached for comment Monday, told Yale Athletics that Brown dictated the pace of the game in the first half, but Yale was able to gain control of the action later in the match. “Even when we had the lead [in the first half], it wasn’t our tempo,” Gobrect said to Yale Athletics. “It was still very much favoring them, so I didn’t feel very good about that lead and sure enough it didn’t hold up. I thought we worked a lot harder SEE W. BASKETBALL PAGE B2
NUMBER OF POINTS THE MEN’S HOCKEY TEAM IS OUT OF FIRST PLACE IN THE ECAC AFTER EARNING A LOSS AND A TIE IN UPSTATE NEW YORK THIS WEEKEND. Yale now sits at sixth place in the conference, though its has played fewer games than three of the teams ahead of it.
PAGE B2
YALE DAILY NEWS ·
SPORTS
Nadal takes on Federer off the court Rafael Nadal accused Roger Federer of playing the “gentleman” and remaining silent regarding player grievances about the long tennis season. Nadal said that his Swiss rival is allowing the rest of the tour to “burn themselves.” The length of the professional tennis season, which begins on Jan. 1 and ends on Nov. 16, has been an annual source of annoyance for tennis players.
Elis drop two more at home BY LINDSEY UNIAT STAFF REPORTER The women’s hockey team played and lost two games of catchup this weekend, falling to Clarkson and St. Lawrence on home turf.
Elis outshoot Bears W. BASKETBALL FROM PAGE B1
WOMEN’S HOCKEY “In the past, we’ve struggled the most after getting scored on, but this weekend we managed to pick up our intensity and put pressure on our opponents,” goaltender Genny Ladiges ’12, who played in both games, said. Unfortunately, that pressure was not enough to even the lopsided scoreboard: Yale (1–17–0, 1–10–0 ECAC) lost 2–5 to Clarkson (14–6–4, 8–3–1) on Friday night, and again, 7–1, to St. Lawrence (13–7–3, 7–4–1) on Saturday afternoon. In both games, the Blue and White responded strongly to the goals of its opponents but struggled to generate its own proactive energy. The Golden Knights started off Friday’s game strongly, scoring on a power play at 5:43 in the first period. However, the Bulldogs responded quickly and forcefully, driving the game into the hash marks of the offensive zone, and forward Danielle Moncion ’13 got the puck over Clarkson goalie Erica Howe and into the net. The Bulldogs maintained the 1–1 score for the rest of the period, and forward Stephanie Mock ’15 nearly scored on a breakaway off of a two-on-one but did not make the shot, losing her stick in the process. The second period saw the Bulldogs outshot 15–5, despite attempts to come back from increasingly further behind the Golden Knights. Clarkson scored at 9:31 and defender Heather Grant ’12 unsuccessfully tried to even the score with a breakaway shot a minute later. At 15:47, Clarkson tipped the puck over Ladiges and increased its lead to
TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
JENNIFER CHEUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Lynn Kennedy ’15 scored a goal in the third period against Clarkson on Friday. 3–1. The third period opened with a Clarkson goal, but the Bulldogs still fought for the game. At 15:16, forward Lynn Kennedy ’15 got the team’s second and last goal. But with just 2.9 seconds left on the clock, the Golden Knights scored again — and there was no time left for Yale to respond. Yale was outshot45–28. Saturday’s game did not end any better. “St. Lawrence is very fast, and we had some difficulty adjusting to the higher speed of the game on Saturday,” defender Emily DesMeules ’13 said. The Bulldogs struggled to adjust to a fast eight first minutes, with the Saints dominating the game: Yale was outshot 8–0 in that amount of time. St. Lawrence scored twice in the middle of the first period, but with
three minutes left in the period and only five Yale shots-on-goal thus far, the Bulldogs reacted. Team captain Aleca Hughes ’12 scored the Bulldogs’ first and only goal, and the team tried to continue the momentum with pass interception and a breakaway shot. But for Yale, the game was over. St. Lawrence scored four times in the second period, and once more in the third. Yale was outshot52–17. This weekend marks DesMeules’s third and fourth games back from a broken ankle — an injury she incurred in the first game of the season. “It’s great to finally be back on the ice,” she said. “I knew coming back that it would take me some time to adjust, but I worked hard while I was out, so it has been easier to get back into playing shape.”
She added that she is not yet feeling 100 percent better but is focusing on day-to-day improvements. The Bulldogs are currently five points out of the eighth and final playoff spot, so it is critical for them to win within the next three away games against Union, RPI and Brown — all ranked at the bottom of the standings. The Bulldogs return to Ingalls Rink on Jan. 27 and 28 to take on Harvard and Dartmouth. “We are all working hard and we know it is going to take some time to turn this around,” head coach Joakim Flygh said in an email to the News. “Everyone is dedicated to working hard and keep building on our culture of hard work for the future.” Contact LINDSEY UNIAT at lindsey.uniat@yale.edu .
to create more [opportunities] in the second half. We attacked a little bit better and we just forced the action.” The Bulldogs’ second-half comeback got a huge boost from Amanda Tyson ’14, who came off the bench in the second half to record 10 of her 12 points and seven of her game-high eight rebounds. Her efforts helped Yale to an 11-point advantage in the half. Eight of those rebounds were on the offensive side of the ball, and Tyson had six points in a four-minute span that helped the Bulldogs pull away from the Bears for good. The 12 points, eight rebounds and seven offensive rebounds are all new career highs for Tyson. The sophomore also set new career-high marks in shots and free throws made, each at four. Gobrecht added that Tyson’s performance was a key to Yale’s victory against the Bears. “Amanda Tyson totally gets the game ball in this one,” Gobrecht said. “She was the one that came in and made things happen. She got on the offensive glass. She created some turnovers. She made some big buckets. She looks
really good in practice, so it didn’t surprise me that she came around and finally had a game that shows the player that we keep seeing in practice.” Brown pulled to within one point of Yale’s 58 with 4:08 remaining in the game on Brown guard Sheila Dixon’s layup. Dixon led the Bears’ scorers with 20 points but was unable to lead her team to victory this time. Only 13 seconds after Dixon’s layup, Michelle Cashen ’12 answered with a layup of her own and was fouled. Cashen made the free throw to complete the threepoint play and give the Bulldogs a four-point lead. Halejian scored Yale’s next seven points to outmatch Brown’s four and stretch the lead to seven. Megan Vasquez ’13, West, Halejian and guard Allie Messimer ’13 all made free throws to close out the game. Vasquez finished with a gamehigh 23 points, to which she added five rebounds, two assists and two steals. The Bulldogs return home this Friday night to face Brown again in their second league contest. Tip-off is at 7 p.m. Contact JOHN SULLIVAN at john.j.sullivan@yale.edu .
TORY BURNSIDE-CLAPP/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Sarah Halejian ’15 was named Ivy League co-rookie of the week after scoring 18 points in Yale’s game against Brown on Saturday.
Elis show promise at Invitational BY JORDAN KONELL STAFF REPORTER After a month-long hiatus, the men’s and women’s track and field teams hosted 15 men’s teams and 16 women’s teams last weekend.
TRACK AND FIELD The Elis returned to the track Saturday for the 30th Yale Intercollegiate Track Classic at Coxe Cage. The Elis hosted and competed against teams including the University of Connecticut, the University of New Haven, Sacred Heart University and Franklin & Marshall University. While the meet was unscored, the women and men had four and two firstplace finishes respectively, and the teams showed promise against upcoming stiff competition. Success in middle distance events highlighted the men’s team’s performance. Christopher Ramsey ’13 won the highly contested 800-meter run, with Julian Sheinbaum ’12 and Jacob Sandry ’15 close behind. Sheinbaum and
Sandry took second and third, respectively. “While my race could have been better, I was happy when my performance in the 800,” Ramsey said. “Regardless of time, it’s always nice to win, and I felt like it was a good rehearsal for next week when we go up against Ivy League competition and beating people who really matter.” Ramsey clocked in at 1.57.34. His personal best for the 800 is 1.52.27. On the field, Mike Levine ’13, who won the All-Ivy in discus last year, placed second in the weight throw, while Central Connecticut’s Rashad Williams, who is the reigning Penn Relays champion, took the event. Like Ramsey, Levine said he was pleased with his performance, but he is looking forward to competing against Ivy League opponents. In the relay events, the Elis capped off a third-place finish with John McGowan ’15, Charlie Jaeger ’12, Timothy Hillas ’13 and Michael Pierce ’13 in a heavily contested 4x800-meter relay race during which two other
schools claimed the lead before Yale pulled ahead to finish the race. “For me, Saturday was an opportunity get back into competition for the first time since my senior year of high school three years ago,” Mark Kaczor ’13, who claimed 13th place in the shot put, said. “I did not perform as well as I had hoped to, but I was glad to participate again in actual track meet, and for the first time in a collegiate environment.” The women’s track and field team also made impressive strides in their events and took home four first-place finishes. Lindsey Raymond ’12 topped the field in the one-mile run, and Anna Demaree ’15 followed. “The meet this weekend was a very positive way to begin the semester,” Raymond, a former city editor for the News, said. “I was happy with the team’s performance because it was a good starting point for our meet next weekend … I think everyone is looking to improve and build on their races and will continue to train hard.”
Alexa Monti ’12 placed first in a field of 38 to win the 60-meter dash, and Annelies Gamble ’13 secured a win in the 800meter race. Emily Urciuoli ’14, who competed in the pole vault, became one of four Bulldogs to secure a first-place finish for the women. Monti said she could not have asked for a better start to the season. She added that her time of 7.87 seconds in the 60-meter dash was her personal best for her Bulldog years. “Our first test as a team [is against] Dartmouth and Columbia, and I think we are in a good place to show the rest of the Ivy League that we are a force to be reckoned with,” Monti said. “If we can tap into our full potential, I think we can have a successful season.” Both the men’s and women’s teams will face Dartmouth and Columbia in Hanover on Saturday in their first scored competition. Contact JORDAN KONELL at jordan.konell@yale.edu .
SARAH ECKINGER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The women’s and men’s team had four and two first-place finishes respectively at the 30th Yale Intercollegiate Track Classic.
YALE DAILY NEWS ·
TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
PAGE B3
SPORTS
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS SIDNEY CROSBY NHL star Sidney Crosby who has not played since early December because of lingering symptoms from a concussion that kept him out of the lineup for ten months last year, will meet with a neurologist this week. There is not timetable for his return.
Elis escape Bears’ trap
S C O R E S & S TA N D I N G S
MEN’S HOCKEY IVY
OVERALL
SCHOOL
W L
T
%
W L
T
%
Cornell
4
1
1
.750
10
4
3
.676
Yale
2
4
1
.357
6
10
5
.405
Brown
2
2
0
.500
8
7
2
.529
Princeton
2
2
0
.500
7
7
3
.500
Dartmouth
1
1
1
.500
7
7
2
.500
Harvard
1
2
1
.375
4
6
6
.438
LAST WEEK
THIS WEEK
SUNDAY, JAN. 15 Clarkson 5, Yale 4
FRIDAY, JAN. 20 Union at Yale, 7:00 p.m.
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL IVY
MARIA ZEPEDA/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Guard Austin Morgan ’13 went four-for-six from three-point range and led the Eli offense in scoring with 18 points against Brown on Saturday. BY CHARLES CONDRO STAFF REPORTER Facing defeat in their first game of Ivy League play in front of a home crowd, the men’s basketball team pulled through and answered the call against Brown to win 68–64 — despite having trailed for more than 35 minutes of the game.
MEN’S BASKETBALL Down 54–47 after Brown’s guard, Matt Sullivan, hit a layup with 7:44 to play, Yale (11–4, 1–0 Ivy) initiated its comeback. Brown (5–12, 0–1 Ivy) continued to hold off the Elis and milk the
YALE 68, BROWN 64 YALE
31
37
68
BROWN
38
26
64
clock until guard Austin Morgan ’13 knocked down a three to make it 61–58 with less than three minutes remaining. Head coach James Jones then made the decision to switch captain and defensive stopper Reggie Willhite ’12 on to covering Brown guard Sean McGonagill — with immediate results. Willhite stole possession from McGonagill and slammed the ball home on the breakaway to cut the deficit to one with just 1:42 left to play. “They were playing not to lose and not necessarily to win,” Willhite said. “We weren’t going to get enough possessions in the game if we kept on letting them run the clock down and chuck up shots… I went for [the steal] and fortunately it worked out. I got a couple of steals, and we ended up winning the game.” The captain continued to take control of the game, again stripping the ball from McGonagill — who played all 40 minutes for the Bears. Willhite drained a jumper
from the elbow at the other end to give the Bulldogs a 62–61 advantage. The lead was Yale’s first since 17:26 in the first half. Guard Mike Grace ’13 and Morgan converted all six of their free throws in the last minute to preserve the win. Yale had wilted under Brown’s three-point barrage in the first half but kept the game close, trailing only 38–31 at the break. Brown shot 60 percent from beyond the arc in the first half, led by McGonagill’s perfect threefor-three. McGonagill led all scorers with 16 first-half points. The Bears continued to hold the Bulldogs at bay for most of the second half. Jones said that he became worried about the outcome of the game. “I can’t tell you that I thought we were going to pull this one out the whole time because I didn’t,” Jones said. “I thought that every time we made a run Brown had an answer. It took the last five minutes of the game for us to ratchet
things up a little bit, especially on the defensive end and make some plays to give ourselves the opportunity to win.” Since the Ivy League has no conference tournament, the regular season will decide the league champion and entrant in the NCAA Tournament in March. Center Jeremiah Kreisberg ’14 said that every game is important because the team’s goal is to win the Ivy League Championship. The Elis last won a share of the Ivy crown with Princeton and Penn in 2002, but Penn advanced through the two-game playoff and earned the right to represent the Ancient Eight in the Tournament. Yale has not been the lone Ivy League champion since 1962, a drought of 49 years. Yale will travel to Brown for a rematch next Saturday Jan. 21.
M. HOCKEY FROM PAGE B1 six power plays, St. Lawrence’s Greg Carey scored to give his team a 2–1 lead. Carey struck again only seven minutes later to put Yale in a 3–1 hole. Behind netminder Jeff Malcolm ’13, who recorded 26 saves for the night, the Elis held the Saints at three and began mounting their comeback. Just under three minutes into the third period, Kevin Peel ’12 put in a power play goal to bring the Elis within one. It was the only time Yale’s normally robust power play units converted on the night despite seven opportunities. Then, with less than five minutes remaining in the game, forward Clinton Bourbonais ’14 scored the goal that ultimately sent the contest into overtime. “Clint’s goal was the result of a great sustained offensive zone shift by that line,” Allain said. “[Antoine Laganiere ’13] and [Trent Ruffolo ’15] did a great job on the forecheck to keep pucks alive. Both of them were involved in getting Clint the puck in the slot. His shot went high glove side.” Despite controlling the run of play during overtime, the Elis could not capitalize to take the win. Yale recorded four out of the five shots on target, but St. Lawrence goalie Matt Weninger managed to keep the puck out of the net.
A LAST-MINUTE LOSS
On Sunday, the Elis met a similar fate in overtime against Clarkson. But unlike Saturday night’s 3–3 draw with St. Lawrence, the Elis conceded with a minute remaining in the five-minute period to lose 5–4. The Golden Knights (10–10– 5, 4–4–3) scored the deciding goal on a controversial power play. A few minutes into the overtime period, the Yale bench was penalized for a comment directed
toward an official. Within a minute, Clarkson’s Sam Labrecque put the puck in the net to win it. “Officiating is always one of those things that you don’t have control over, and whatever the call is you just have to work past it,” Laganiere said. “I thought we did our best to try to turn it around. We were not frustrated and losing control, it was just our penalty against their power play.” The game looked promising early on for the Blue and White. Ten minutes into the game, defenseman Tommy Fallen ’15 intercepted a clearance and fired a slap shot to give the Bulldogs the lead.
Forward, men’s hockey Laganiere followed this up with a similar effort about three minutes later. After creating a turnover in Clarkson’s end of the ice, Laganiere made a move past a Golden Knights defenseman and put the puck behind the Clarkson netminder Paul Karpowich. The second period was filled with goals as the two teams combined for four tallies. Yale’s Bourbonais kicked off the scoring with his second goal in two days to put the Elis up by two once again. “He’s been doing well all season,” Laganiere said. “This weekend was particularly good statistically, but other weekends he’s done just as well.” However, the Yale offense shut down after Bourbonais’ goal. Up 3–1 with less than two minutes remaining in the second period,
W L
%
W L
%
Princeton
3
0
1.000
13
4
.765
Yale
1
0
1.000
9
6
.600
Harvard
1
0
1.000
8
6
.571
Brown
0
1
.000
9
6
.600
Penn
0
1
.000
7
6
.538
Cornell
0
1
.000
5
9
.357
Dartmouth
0
1
.000
2
12
.143
Columbia
0
1
.000
2
13
.133
NEXT WEEK
FRIDAY, JAN. 13 Yale 75, Brown 65
FRIDAY, JAN. 20 Brown at Yale, 7:00 p.m.
MEN’S BASKETBALL IVY
OVERALL
SCHOOL
W
L
%
W
L
%
Penn
2
0
1.000
9
9
.500
Harvard
1
0
1.000
15
2
.882
Yale
1
0
1.000
11
4
.733
Princeton
1
1
.500
10
8
.556
Cornell
1
1
.500
6
10
.375
Brown
0
1
.000
5
12
.294
Dartmouth
0
1
.000
4
13
.235
Columbia
0
2
.000
11
7
.611
LAST WEEK
NEXT WEEK
SATURDAY, JAN. 14 Yale 68, Brown 64
SATURDAY, JAN. 21 Yale at Brown, 2:00 p.m.
WOMEN’S HOCKEY IVY
My power play unit had trouble keeping the play going and holding on to the puck. ANTOINE LAGANIERE ’13
SCHOOL
LAST WEEK
Contact CHARLES CONDRO at charles.condro@yale.edu .
M. hockey drops in ECAC standings
OVERALL
OVERALL
SCHOOL
W L
T
%
W L
T
%
Princeton
5
2
1
.688
8
10
4
.455
Cornell
5
1
0
.833
15
2
0
.882
Dartmouth
2
1
1
.625
11
5
2
.667
Harvard
1
3
0
.250
11
5
1
.676
Brown
1
3
0
.250
5
7
6
.444
Yale
0
4
0
.000
1
17
0
.056
LAST WEEK
NEXT WEEK
FRIDAY, JAN. 20 Yale at Rensselaer, 7:00 p.m.
SATURDAY, JAN. 14 St. Lawrence 7, Yale 1 BRIANNE BOWEN/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Kevin Peel ’12 and the men’s hockey team struggled to convert on power plays this weekend in its loss against Clarkson. the Elis seemed to be in good shape. But the momentum shifted starting with a power play goal from Clarkson forward Ben Sexton. Another Yale penalty gave the Golden Knights a chance to tie things up, and Louke Oakley took advantage with 20 seconds remaining in the period. After a Sexton shot bounced off the glass, Oakley took the rebound and put it in. Only two minutes later, Oakley struck again to put the Golden Knights up 4–3. But yet again, the Elis overcame a deficit. Captain Brian O’Neill ’12 deflected a Colin Dueck ’13 slap shot to knot things up. For the second night in a row, the Elis struggled on special teams. After converting only one power play out of seven oppor-
tunities Saturday night, the Elis went 1–6 on Sunday. “My power play unit had trouble keeping the play going and holding on to the puck,” Laganiere said. “I don’t know if it was due to increased pressure, but it was just not clicking as it usually does.” On the penalty kill the Elis struggled as well. Despite having one of the best penalty killing units in the ECAC, the Elis allowed three goals in Clarkson’s five power plays. The Elis will be back in action at 7 p.m. Friday against Union and Saturday at 7 p.m. against RPI. Both games will be played at Ingalls Rink. Contact KEVIN KUCHARSKI at kevin.kucharski@yale.edu .
WOMEN’S SQUASH IVY
OVERALL
SCHOOL
W L
%
W L
%
Harvard
3
0
1.000
9
0
1.000
Yale
2
0
1.000
7
0
1.000
Penn
2
1
.667
3
1
.750
Cornell
2
1
.667
6
3
.667
5
Brown
1
1
.500
4
2
.667
6
Princeton
1
2
.333
5
2
.714
7
Columbia
0
3
.000
3
4
.429
Dartmouth
0
3
.000
2
3
.400
1
3
LAST WEEK
SUNDAY, JAN. 15 Yale 8, Williams 1
NEXT WEEK
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 18 Trinity at Yale, 6:00 p.m.
PAGE B4
YALE DAILY NEWS · TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
SPORTS Squash dominates weekend BY JAMES HUANG CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Despite numerous opponents this weekend, both the men’s and women’s squash teams remain undefeated.
SQUASH The Brady Squash center hosted three men’s teams, No. 6 Cornell, No. 16 Columbia and No. 10 Williams, and four women’s teams, No. 6 Stanford, No. 7 Cornell, No. 16 Columbia and No. 10 Williams over the weekend. By the time those opponents left, the Eli men’s record was 6–0 and the women were 7–0. The No. 2 men’s team faced Cornell on Saturday. During the first round of matches, Richard Dodd ’13, Neil Martin ’14 and Charlie Wyatt ’14 won their games at the No. 3, 6 and 9 spots, giving the Elis a 3–0 lead on Cornell. Captain Ryan Dowd ’12 and Robert Berner ’12 played the No. 5 and No. 7 games, respectively, to clinch the victory against Cornell. “It was a highly anticipated match of the season because Cornell is a good team,” Dowd said. “[Wyatt’s] win at the No. 9 spot was really clutch.” Dowd added that Wyatt had been down 0–2 against Cornell in his match and had to win his next three games to ensure his victory. “There were a few key match points [Wyatt] won, and one of the games even went to 15–13 in overtime.” The Elis managed to sneak past Cornell, 5–4. On Sunday, the men’s team played one-sided matches against Columbia at noon and
Williams later in the afternoon. In their matches against Columbia, the Bulldogs swept 9–0. Most of the matches were won 3–0, except for the No. 8 spot. Despite losing the second game, Sam Shleifer ’15 pulled off a 3–1 victory for the Elis at the No. 8 spot. The Bulldogs beat Williams 8–1. The highlight of these matches was at the No. 6 spot, played by Joseph Roberts ’15. Roberts was down 0–2 against Willams’ Andrew Maruca —the brother of former Yale squash player Mike Maruca ’11.
It was a highly anticipated match of the season because Cornell is a good team. RYAN DOWD ’12 Captain, men’s squash “We already had matches in the morning, and there wasn’t a lot of time to rest or eat lunch,” Roberts. “I was the first one to play, and it difficult at first to readjust. [My opponent] initially took me by surprise. After the first two games, I adjusted to his playing style and found my rhythm.” Roberts went on to win three games back-to-back to take the match. The women’s team also hosted games this weekend, playing Stanford on Friday in addition to Cornell, Columbia and Williams during the rest of the weekend. On Friday against Stanford,
Millie Tomlinson ’14, the No. 1 ranked player in the nation, won the No. 1 spot 3–0, with an 11–3, 11–3, 11–4 sweep. At the No. 2 spot, Kim Hay ‘14 won 3–1. Captain Rhetta Nadas ’12 lost the first two matches of the No. 3 spot 5–11, 10–12, but managed to win the next three for the match. Yale defeated Stanford soundly, 9–0. On Saturday, Tomlinson and Hay again played and won the No. 1 and 2 spots against Cornell. The Bulldogs went on to win 9–0. Against Columbia on Sunday, Tomlinson again played the No. 1 spot and won 3–0. Nadas played the No. 2 spot this time, also securing a 3–0 win. Lilly Fast ’14 played at No. 3, Issey NormanRoss ’15 at No. 4, and Aly Kerr ’12 at No. 5. The Bulldogs swept the Lions 9–0. Hay played the No. 1 spot against Williams. Nadas again played No. 2, and Alexandra Van Arkel ’12 played No. 3. Katie Ballaine ’13, Shihui Mao ’15, and Kerr played the No. 4, 5 and 6 spots. Sisters Anne Harrison ’15 and Katie Harrison ’13 played the No. 7 and 8 spots. Coco Sierbert ’14 lost a really close match of five games at the No. 9 spot; the Elis defeated Williams 8–1. The men’s and women’s teams are hoping the momentum from their undefeated season will propel them to victories against Trinity, whose men’s team is ranked No. 1. “Wednesday’s match will be tough, but we are confident in ourselves at this point,” Kenneth Chan ’13, who usually plays the top spot for the men’s team, said. Contact JAMES HUANG at jianan.huang@yale.edu .
BLAIR SEIDEMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The women’s squash team coasted to four wins, including one over No. 6 Stanford, over the weekend
Elis take down Penn and Dartmouth
YDN
The women’s swimming and diving team broke pool records in the 100-yard and 400-yard freestyle relays at Dartmouth over the weekend, while the men’s team broke records in the 200-yard individual medley, backstroke and butterfly. BY MONICA DISARE STAFF REPORTER Yale’s swimming and diving teams smashed both the competition and the record books at their meet last Saturday against Penn and Dartmouth.
SWIMMING The women’s team (3–1 Ivy) beat Penn (3–6, 2–5 Ivy) 161–138 and Dartmouth (4–2, 3–2) 174– 126, while the men’s team (5–0, 4–0) won 188–112 against Penn (5–3, 3–3) and 174–126 against Dartmouth (2–3 Ivy). The men’s and women’s teams each broke pool records along the way in events that included the 100-yard freestyle relay and the 400-yard freestyle relay for the women and the 200-yard invidiual medley, the 200-yard backstroke and the
200-yard butterfly for the men. “Going into the meet we just wanted to win,” Joan Weaver ’13 said. “We won … but it wasn’t without a fight.” The Bulldogs had more than just Penn and Dartmouth to fight at their most recent meet. Since Monday classes met on Friday because of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, many members of the the team had to be in class late, and so the Elis did not check into their hotel in Hanover, N.H. until about 11:30 p.m. the night before the meet. The swimmers were also physically tired from their recent training trip and difficult practice schedule, two team members said. “At this point in the season it’s about training hard and racing tough,” said Cristina Teuscher, the head coach of the women’s
swimming and diving team. She added that the training schedule is designed so that the swimmers will achieve their best times at Ivy League Championships.
Any time you take down someone else’s records at someone else’s pool and have your name on their wall, that’s exciting JOAN WEAVER ’13 Women’s swimming and diving
Despite these difficulties, both teams had strong performances at
Dartmouth. Alexandra Forrester ’13 set the pool record in the 100yard freestyle with a time of 51.14. The relay team of Forrester, Cassidy Lapp ’15, Hayes Hyde ’15 and Weaver also broke a pool record in the 400-yard freestyle relay with a time of 3:28.67. While she said Dartmouth is not known to host fast meets, Weaver said, it was still satisfying to break a record at another school. “Any time you take down someone else’s records at someone else’s pool and have your name on their wall, that’s exciting,” she said. The men’s team had its fair share of record-breaking excitement as well. Alwin Firmansyah ’15 broke two pool records in the 200-yard butterfly and 200-yard individual medley with times of 1:48.17 and 1:50.37, respectively.
Both records were almost 30 years old, men’s captain Christopher Luu ’12 said, and Firmansyah beat both records by over a second. Another freshman, Rob Harder ’15, set the pool record in the 200yard backstroke at 1:49.88. “The freshmen once again proved to be a strong force,” Luu said. But it was not just the freshmen who had an outstanding meet. Goksu Bicer ’12 won all three of his events. For his first event of the day, the 200-yard medley relay, he teammed up with three freshmen — Mike Lazris ’15, Andrew Heymann ’15 and Firmansyah — to win with a time of 1:32.78. Bicer continued his win streak with a victory in the 100yard freestyle, which he swam in 45.47, and the 100-yard butterfly, when he clocked in at 49.36. The divers also had a suc-
cessful meet. Women’s captain Rachel Rosenberg ’12 won both the 1-meter and the 3-meter diving events for the women’s team, with respective scores of 271.95 and 270.45. For the men’s team, Tyler Pramer ‘14 took second in both the 1-meter and 3-meter events. Yale now looks ahead to the Harvard-Yale-Princeton meet, which is traditionally the toughest league meet for the Bulldogs. “We’re all excited to get up [to Boston] and swim,” Weaver said, adding that she hopes “the whole team is ready to throw it out there and see what happens.” The team will take on Harvard and Princeton in Cambridge, Mass. from Feb. 3 through Feb. 5. Contact MONICA DISARE at monica.disare@yale.edu .