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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 · THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 83 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SUNNY CLOUDY

39 42

CROSS CAMPUS Springtime in February?

Temperatures in the mid50s led to a springtime feel throughout campus Wednesday, with many students taking to various courtyards and public areas to play soccer without shirts. Quite. The weather was so balmy Wednesday that some members of the Elizabethan Club, declaring themselves “most handsome and sporting,” took out the club’s croquet set and played a game in their garden. Conflicting accounts have emerged: one camp says James Campbell ’13 won, while others report that Miranda Lewis ’12 emerged victorious. Down with weenie bins.

Around 25 students, faculty and administrators celebrated the opening of a new study space for history graduate students Wednesday. The space — a suite of three former dorm rooms on the second floor of the Hall of Graduate Studies — is now available for graduate students in the History Department to study, meet with undergraduates and socialize. Celeb status. Kevin Olusola

’11, who gained renown as part of the “Pentatonix” group that won last fall’s edition of NBC’s “The Sing-Off,” was interviewed by Jenna Bush Hager on the Today Show Wednesday morning. Earlier in the week, he was named to The Grio’s list of 100 young people who will shape the next generation of black history in America.

Vacation, all he ever wanted.

Mayor John DeStefano Jr. is in Seattle this week, speaking about school reform alongside a dozen other American mayors at a conference hosted by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

W. HOCKEY TEAM REFLECTS ON STRUGGLES

THEATER

AUTISM

M. BASKETBALL

Office of Undergrad Productions’ new head seeks to improve ties

NEW DEFINITION MAY CHANGE DIAGNOSES

After difficult weekend, Elis refocus in pursuit of Ivy League title

PAGE 12 SPORTS

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 3 NEWS

PAGE 12 SPORTS

Fall ExComm report released GRAPH FALL 2011 EXCOMM CASES, BY CATEGORY 17

Alcohol Violations 11

Defiance

11

Trespassing Cheating

A greener UConn. According

to the Hartford Courant, the University of Connecticut has changed its policies to issue the same punishment for possession of small amounts of marijuana as it doles out for underage drinking.

Goodbye, Petesia. After 10 months on the job, Petesia Adger, the assistant chief of the New Haven Police Department, put in for retirement Wednesday per the request of NHPD Chief Dean Esserman, the New Haven Independent reported.

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

SEE EXCOMM PAGE 5

SEE LOVE WEEK PAGE 6

2

Hazing

5

Illegal Downloads 3

Improper Emails 0

5

10

15

The Yale College Executive Committee saw 52 cases in fall 2011, some of which spanned multiple categories. BY ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTER In an effort to increase transparency in how Yale handles disciplinary matters, the Yale College Executive Committee documented a single semester’s cases in its inaugural semiannual report released this week. The committee adjudicated 52 cases — including alcohol violations, defiance of authority and trespassing — involving 59 students during the fall of 2011, according to the report.

Seven of these cases involved plagiarism or cheating, compared to over 50 in the full 2010-’11 academic year, but administrators said it is hard to tell from one semester if this represents a downward trend. ExComm Chairwoman Carol Jacobs recommended in the report that Yale provide more detailed reminders to students about the misuse of alcohol, which accounted for 17 of the cases, as well as additional education on plagiarism. In the addition to the alcohol-related cases heard by the committee, Jacobs

Yale-NUS launches special app round BY ANDREW GIAMBRONE AND TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTERS Though students will not arrive at Yale-NUS College until fall 2013, the college opened its first batch of applications to students on Wednesday. The online applications are part of a special admissions round that ends April 1, marking the first effort to recruit students to the liberal arts college jointly operated by Yale and the National University of Singapore. The school’s first full cycle of applications, consisting of three rounds, will begin in fall 2012, and administrators have said

YA L E - N U S A P P L I CAT I O N QUICK TAKES

Students must answer a series of short answer questions called “Quick Takes,” using 30 words or fewer for each. ESSAY QUESTION

Like the Common Application, the Yale-NUS application requires students to write a longer personal essay in response to a prompt or a topic of their choosing. STANDARDIZED TESTS

Submit tips to Cross Campus

said ExComm referred another 56 cases of intoxication and alcohol possession to residential college deans. ExComm heard 31 alcohol-related cases during the 2010-’11 academic year. While many of the alcohol-related cases involved violations of rules for buying or serving alcohol, such as using false identification or serving alcohol to minors, Jacobs said the committee also sees “cases in which intoxicated students have put themselves either in

One day after Sex Week 2012 launches this Saturday, students will have the chance to attend an alternative set of activities organized by a group of students who say Sex Week inappropriately emphasizes “sheer, gratuitous and physical pleasure.” True Love Week, sponsored by Undergraduates for a Better Yale College, will hold seven events between Feb. 5-14 focused on promoting fidelity and love, said Eduardo Andino ’13, co-founder of UBYC. But Sex Week co-director Connie Cho ’13 said in a Wednesday email that she disagreed with UBYC’s characterization of Sex Week, saying that the event will not advocate any particular sex practices but instead offer students the opportunity to discuss sex openly. “It is not appropriate to characterize Sex Week as trivializing sex simply because we have not taken up arms for a very narrow set of beliefs,” she said. “Opportunities for education and reflection on sex [do] not

8

Harassment

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1942 The Yale College Council calls on “all physically able Yale men” to donate a pint of blood to the Red Cross to help with the war effort. The YCC had promised 300 pints of blood to help the city prepare for any potential raid.

BY CAROLINE TAN STAFF REPORTER

7

Squishy. “Sex, Evolution and

Human Nature,” fondly known as “Sexy Psych,” showed a video of how garden slugs mate. It was slimy, and over pretty fast.

SEX WEEK ALTERNATIVE TO RUN AT SAME TIME, PROMOTE FIDELITY

5

Drugs

Students from Singapore or countries that do not offer the SAT are not required to submit standardized test scores, but all other applicants must submit SAT scores and either two SAT II subject tests or ACT scores.

they intend to enroll 150 students in the school’s initial class. Jeremiah Quinlan, Yale-NUS dean of admissions and financial aid, said officials at the school will evaluate candidates through a “holistic admissions process,” much like the one used by the Yale Admissions Office. As Yale-NUS is only beginning to recruit student applicants, Quinlan said the first round of admissions may not be a “great gauge” of how future admissions cycles will run.

‘Love Week’ planned

LIFELONG LEARNING

Professors seek continuing education

More important than how selective it is, is the type of student we’re trying to attract. JEREMIAH QUINLAN Dean of admissions and financial aid, Yale-NUS College

VICTOR KANG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Professors meet over lunch for discussions ranging from dark matter to Renaissance music in one of Yale’s many working groups for faculty and grad students.

E

“We’re doing this for the first time, so we don’t have any idea about how selective the process will be,” Quinlan said. “But more important than how selective it is, is the type of student we’re trying to attract. We want pioneers interested in creating a Yale-NUS culture and environment and experience.” The first round of applications is mainly geared toward 18-year-old male Singaporean students who must complete the nation’s two-year military service commitment, Quinlan said. Those students typically apply to college before serving in the military and, if accepted through this round, would

ducation at Yale is not only for students. In between teaching classes and conducting research, professors are educating one another by choosing among over 40 regularly scheduled opportunities for learning over lunch. LINDSEY UNIAT reports.

SEE YALE-NUS PAGE 6

SEE LUNCHES PAGE 5

On Monday at 12:30 p.m., as the bells of Harkness Tower began to ring, a group of professors and graduate students gradually filed down the length of the Saybrook dining hall with trays in hand, heading toward the fellows’ lounge. They settled into chairs around a long table for a discussion of the Latin poet Catullus.

The biweekly Greco-Roman lunch, one of over 45 lunchtime groups known as “working groups” that meet regularly, alternates every week with the Renaissance studies seminar in the Saybrook fellows’ lounge. Tuesdays bring discussions of Jew-


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