Today's Paper

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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 · WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 107 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS

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More changes. Daniel Mcphee,

the director of the Yale Farm for the past three years, will leave the farm at the end of March to farm with his family in Maine, the Yale Sustainable Food Project announced Tuesday. Jeremy Oldfield will become interim farm coordinator in Mcphee’s absence.

DNA DISCOVERER WATSON TALKS FUTURE OF FIELD

Days after end of college career, Brian O’Neill ’12 debuts as a pro

PAGES 8-9 CULTURE

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 5 NEWS

PAGE 14 SPORTS

Yale lures humanities postdocs 88 7

GRAPH ACLS FELLOWSHIPS AWARDED IN 2011, BY SCHOOL

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66 55 44

BY CLINTON WANG STAFF REPORTER

22 1 1

Duke

Columbia

Stanford

UC Santa Barbara

Brown

Cornell

Princeton

MIT

IT

Yale

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SOURCE: AMERICAN COUNCIL LEARNED SOCIETIES

Yale attracted seven of the 64 ACLS fellowship recipients in 2011 — more than any other university. BY ANTONIA WOODFORD STAFF REPORTER

A temporary program by the nonprofit American Council of Learned Societies is boosting the number of postdoctoral fellows in the humanities and social sciences at Yale. The ACLS, a group of scholarly organizations that promotes the humanities, launched the New Faculty Fellows

program in 2009 to help support recent Ph.D. graduates in the humanities and humanistic social sciences as the academic job market grew weaker during the recession. Yale failed to attract any ACLS fellowship recipients during the competition’s first year, but last year and this year administrators have considered the winners’ applications more fully and tried harder to make offers to people who are “good matches for Yale,”

Yale College Dean Mary Miller said. Seven of the 64 recipients in 2011 came to Yale last fall — more than went to any other university. Miller said the program is helping to build a “critical mass” of postdocs in the humanities at Yale. The winners of the ACLS fellowships are selected from a pool of hundreds of Ph.D. graduates nominated by their SEE POSTDOCS PAGE 6

Moving up. The former

Winchester Repeating Arms factory, vacant for nearly 50 years, was officially dedicated as new headquarters for New Haven-based financial services company Higher One on Tuesday. The renovations required to transform the factory into an office space for the company, which was founded by Yale students, cost $45 million.

Where Irish Mouths are Drinking. Anna Liffey’s, an

Irish pub on Whitney Street famous for its trivia nights, was named one of the top 10 Irish pubs by the Boston Globe. Diplomatic. A music video

called “We Are Ready” posted to YouTube by Dancefloor Diplomacy, a 20-person band founded by Jakob Dorof ’12, is racking up the hits and garnering attention from big media outlets. The video debuted last Tuesday, and as of Tuesday afternoon, it’s notched over 26,100 views.

Back in the game. Pierson

custodian Jackson Mills, also known as “Buck Breeze,” released a new music video this month for the track “Feeling Myself.” The video features Yale students and was filmed on campus.

Braniacs. The Moose of Ezra

Stiles College won the Gimbel Cup for the highest GPA in the spring and fall of 2011, Stiles Master Stephen Pitti announced in a Tuesday email. To celebrate Stiles’ second annual victory in the Gimbel, the college hosted a Taco Bell study break on Tuesday night.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

2001 The city establishes a new civilian complaint review board to monitor the activity of the New Haven Police Department. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE cc.yaledailynews.com

Science survey courses to begin

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um bi a U St C Sa anf nt ord a Ba rb ar a Br ow n Co rn e Pr ll in ce to n

Dean Conor Frailey GRD ’12 will leave Yale at the end of the academic year, he announced in an email to the JE community on Tuesday. After Yale, Frailey will move to Chicago, as he said he has planned for several years.

Ernesto Garcia opens Rubamba in old Ay! Salsa location on High Street

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Changes. Jonathan Edwards

M. HOCKEY

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Passion Pit are slated to perform alongside T-Pain at Yale on April 24 — the Tuesday of the spring term reading week and the traditional date of Spring Fling — according to a listing on the concert website songkick.com Tuesday morning. The listing was removed during the day on Tuesday.

CANCER RESEARCH

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MORNING EVENING

ART AT OCCUPY PROTEST FINDS CREATIVE VOICE

Sunday liquor sales appear likely BY MASON KROLL CONTRIBUTING REPORTER With bipartisan support, the General Law Committee voted Tuesday in favor of a bill revising Connecticut’s liquor laws to allow, among other measures, sale of alcohol on Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. The bill passed in committee 15 to 3, with two Democrats and one Republican against the measure. Last year, similar legislation aimed at repealing the state’s blue laws, which forbid the sale of alcohol on Sundays, did not even make it out of committee, faliling by a vote of 13 to 2. Though several local liquor store owners believe the bill in its current state is an improvement to legislation suggested by Gov. Dannel Malloy in January, four owners and managers interviewed said they still did not support the bill. They said that allowing Sunday liquor sales, as well as some of the bill’s other provisions, including one that increases the number of package stores that can be owned by a single person, put small businesses at a competitive disadvantage with respect to larger chains. “I’m very happy with the liquor law bill that passed today,” state Sen. Kevin

A new set of science survey courses will debut next fall, with the goal of improving the introductions to various scientific fields in Yale’s undergraduate curriculum. Three new survey courses — one in engineering and two in biology — will each seek to provide freshmen with broader entries into scientific studies at the University. Though specific departments have introductory classes, the only integrated undergraduate survey course Yale currently offers in the sciences is “Perspectives on Science and Engineering” — a yearlong lecture series on various areas of active scientific research that students apply to before starting their freshman year. Associate Provost for Science and Technology Timothy O’Connor praised the development of the three new survey courses, which he called “independent grassroots efforts” and said will strengthen science offerings for freshmen.

All three courses reflect the trend towards becoming more interdisciplinary. TIMOTHY O’CONNOR Associate Provost for Science and Technology

reform began when Malloy proposed what Witkos called aggressive changes in January. Small liquor storeowners turned up en masse at a 10-hour public hearing held Feb. 28, many in protest of

“All three courses reflect the trend towards becoming more interdisciplinary … and developing more innovative pedagogical methods and approaches,” O’Connor said. “The fact that [reports] have shown that the quality of introductory courses is key to increasing the retention of [science and engineering] majors makes these new courses especially valuable.” The School of Engineering & Applied Science will offer a new engineering course that examines the design process common to all of the engineering fields, while Yale’s biology departments

SEE LIQUOR LAWS PAGE 4

SEE SURVEYS PAGE 6

SARAH ECKINGER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The repeal of Connecticut’s blue laws, which prohibit Sunday liquor sales, appears likely. Witkos, a ranking Republican on the committee, said. “It’s evident that it’s a true bipartisan measure. Whenever we work together collectively, we seem to be able to pass great legislation by a large majority.” The recent push for liquor law

In redistricting, shape of Ward 1 hangs in balance BY NICK DEFIESTA STAFF REPORTER New Haven’s political map will likely look different in two months. The Board of Aldermen’s special committee on ward redistricting held its second meeting at City Hall Tuesday night to hear residents’ concerns over the redistricting process currently underway. As the committee redraws the boundaries between the city’s 30 wards, it could potentially split Ward 1 — historically known as the “Yale ward” — into three pieces. According to the city’s charter, the Board must redraw ward boundaries every 10 years after the state legislature changes the state representative districts, which happened last November. Aldermen have six months

after the state district changes to approve a new ward map, setting the deadline for a final map for the end of May. Of primary concern for the committee, chaired by Ward 6 Alderwoman Dolores Colón, is the population of each ward. With a city population of 129,779 residents according to the census, each of the 30 wards should have around 4,326 people, plus or minus about 200 people. Due to uneven city population growth over the past decade, some wards are above or below the target population range. Fair Haven’s Ward 14, with 5,350 residents, is almost 1,000 people above where it should be, while West Rock’s Ward 30’s population of only 2,690 is more than a third below its target population. SEE WARDS PAGE 4

Wards State representative districts SOURCE: NEW HAVEN BOARD OF ALDERMEN

Because of redistricting, state representative district lines now cut through Ward 1, home to Old Campus and eight residential colleges. The “Yale Ward” may split as a result as aldermen redraw the map .


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