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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, DECEMBER 4, 2013 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 62 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

FOG RAIN

49 39

CROSS CAMPUS

THEATER STUDIES HARVARD MAY SOON COMPETE

RIFLE

SIGNAGE

TUNISIA

A week after Yale’s own gun scare, a potential threat shuts down UNH

CITY HOPES TO SOON REPAIR DILAPIDATED SIGNS

Middle eastern scholars discuss Islam and democracy

PAGE 8-9 CULTURE

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 5 CITY

PAGE 5 NEWS

Jovin ’99 remembered

FIFTEEN YEARS AFTER BRUTAL MURDER, ‘COLD CASE’ REMAINS ACTIVE

Oh, the places Yalies go!

Parker Liautaud ’16 is trying to set a record for the fastest trek to the South Pole. He is already in Antarctica and preparing to begin the nearly 400-mile journey on Sunday. Liautaud has hiked to the North Pole three times in the past.

BY RISHABH BHANDARI AND ADRIAN RODRIGUES STAFF REPORTERS

entists living in Goettingen, Germany, where Suzanne grew up. Reached Sunday, the Jovins said their daughter’s death was heartwrenching then — and remains so today. “It’s not something I can put into words that would even make sense,” Mr. Jovin said. “When you’re a parent and you lose a child, nothing can make it okay.” The last time they saw their daughter was over the Thanksgiving holiday at the end of November 1998, the Jovins said, when the family gathered in California to visit Jovin’s younger sister, Rebecca, who was studying at Stanford University. Suzanne

As the University looks to close its budget deficit, student jobs and financial aid will remain safe, at least for now. Although officials and faculty members said current levels of student employment and financial assistance have not changed significantly in recent years, they are not certain how new budgets for fiscal 2015 will affect these resources. In a Nov. 18 memo sent to all Yale faculty and staff, University President Peter Salovey and University Provost Benjamin Polak said a $39 million budget deficit will require cuts across the University’s 40 units, which include Yale College, each of the graduate and professional schools, each of Yale’s galleries and museums as well as several large administrative units like Facilities and Human Resources. “There are no plans to change financial aid at this point for any of our current students,” Director of Student Financial Services Caesar Storlazzi said. “Two or three years from now, might there be some changes to financial aid services? Sure, but that depends on how the economy is performing and how Yale’s economy is performing.” Storlazzi said that if Yale’s endowment performs poorly in future years, cuts made to the University’s financial aid services would be administered gradually and would be spread across the board. Options available to the Financial Aid Office include tuition hikes, raising the amount Yale expects students on financial aid to contribute from their summer earnings and re-evaluating the ways the office calculates the need of each accepted student for financial aid, Storlazzi added. Still, Salovey has insisted that financial aid will not be touched. “We’ll always protect [financial aid],” he told the News in November. Yale College’s financial aid costs have almost quadrupled

SEE JOVIN PAGE 6

SEE FINANCIAL AID PAGE 4

Hello darkness, my old friend. Astronomy professor

Priyamvada Natarajan has received a $1.5 million grant to study black holes. Hopefully the researchers understand the irony of literally throwing over a million dollars into a black hole. May the odds be ever in their favor. Grand Strategy

acceptance emails went out on Monday. Accepted students are advised to scope out their competition like Katniss preparing to enter the Hunger Games. In this scenario, John Gaddis is President Snow. Charles Hill is Plutarch. As one application closes, another opens. The Adopt-

A-Prefrosh program is now accepting applicants, offering the perfect opportunity for messing with high school students during Bulldog Days later this year. One point for getting prefrosh to do your laundry, two points for losing your prefrosh at a frat, a hundred points for showing them the time of their lives and inducting them into the cult of Yale.

Top Chef: New Haven. The

fifth annual Chili Throwdown was hosted by Yale Dining over the break. Over 300 attended the event, which raised $3,060 for United Way. Stephen Ackley-Ortiz, director of alumni affairs at the Law School, took first place. William Ojeda, a cook at Davenport College, won the People’s Choice Award.

Meanwhile at the Vatican.

Erica James, professor in the History of Art and Af-Am Studies Departments, was granted an audience with the Pope, more or less. Actually, Pope Francis was recently given a copy of James’s book “Love & Responsibility: The Collection of Dawn Davies.” The book documents over 1,700 Bahamian artworks collected over four decades. Ask not what your student council can do for you, but

what you can do for your student council. Harvard junior Gus Mayopoulos, the vice-presidential candidate on a joke ticket that ended up winning the Harvard Undergraduate Council elections, has announced plans to take the position of the UC presidency. His original running mate Sam Clark is set on resigning. Here’s hoping Clark goes out Nixon-style.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1941 Pierson College Master Arnold Wolfers speaks on what he sees as a stalemate in WWII between Hitler’s forces and British naval power. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

Financial aid safe from cuts

JOVIN FAMILY

Wednesday marks the fifteenth anniversary of the shocking murder of Suzanne Jovin ’99. BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER This morning, a small crowd will gather in the lower courtyard of Davenport College to honor the life of Suzanne Jovin ’99, the Yale College senior who was murdered — stabbed 17 times in the back of the head and neck — 15 years ago today. On each anniversary of her death, a collection of University administrators, faculty members and staff hold vigil in front of a small plaque bearing Jovin’s name. Trading memories and leaving behind flowers, they pay their respects to a student whose life was cut short in a brutal attack that left Jovin bleeding

to death on an off-campus street corner. To this day, her murderer remains unknown. For 15 years, investigators in various precincts have probed the murder, now a cold case in the hands of the chief state’s attorney’s office, where roughly seven investigators work parttime to collect evidence and process tips, according to Deputy Chief State’s Attorney John Russotto. During a decade and a half’s time, the investigation has waxed and waned; tips have dried up and critical witnesses have yet to come forward. But the passage of 15 years has not eased the loss for Jovin’s parents, Thomas Jovin and Donna Arndt-Jovin GRD ’69, both sci-

Alcohol recommendations With book history, Yale tries delayed to make up for lost time SCHOLARSHIP

BY WESLEY YIIN CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Despite months of delay, the University Council Committee on Alcohol has still not yet finalized its advisory report on alcohol policy that was scheduled for release last spring. The committee — which consists of five members of University President Peter Salovey’s University Council and five outside experts, while also being assisted by Secretary and Vice President for Student Life Kimberly GoffCrews ’83 LAW ’86 — was announced to the Yale College student body in December 2012 by Yale College Dean Mary Miller and Goff-Crews to address growing concerns from students and other members of the Yale community about the college’s alcohol and drug policies. The committee was supposed to send its recommendations on how to improve the University’s alcohol policies to the President’s Office at the end of 2013, according to the December 2012 announcement from Miller and Goff-Crews. But the report’s submission was delayed, and its current status remains unclear. Yale College Dean’s Office fellows Hannah Peck DIV ’11 and Garrett Fiddler ’11 said that the delay in the report’s submission is not problematic. Most other committees of the University Council work for 18 months before making their recommendations, Peck said. “It was a very ambitious schedule,” Fiddler said about the committee’s self-imposed spring 2013 deadline, adding that he is not surprised that it has taken longer than projected to formulate the recommendations. Peck and Fiddler were both previously members of the Yale College Dean’s Office Task Force on Alcohol and Other Drugs, a group composed entirely of Yale College community members that submitted policy recommendations to the University Council Committee on Alcohol in April. Former Yale College Council President John Gonzalez ’13, also a member of the YCDO task force, said the delay is not an issue since the committee’s spring 2013 deadline was self-determined and unofficial. Peck said that the committee may actually benefit from taking more time to form its recommendations, since the influence of alcohol policy on the student population is so nuanced. Fiddler agreed with Peck, adding that he would have been worried, had the committee rushed to produce SEE ALCOHOL POLICY PAGE 4

AMANDA BUCKINGHAM/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

D

espite the Beinecke’s extensive collections of manuscripts and rare books, Yale has not been a leader in the field of book history. A new program sponsored by the English Department and the Beinecke seeks to promote the study of books as material objects. HELEN ROUNER reports. On a Wednesday afternoon in November, the audience at a lecture in the Beinecke received instructions they likely did not expect from an English profes-

sor: The guest speaker told them not to read the Dante excerpt before them. He asked them to look at it instead. The scholar, Randall McLeod, a professor in the Department

of English at the University of Toronto, had come to the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library to give a lecture on the relationship between text and type. McLeod — the inventor of the McLeod Portable Collator, a device that allows scholars to compare copies of printed books by merging two texts into a single perceived image — was the second of six guest lecturers this year in the “Yale Program in the History of the Book” at the Beinecke. The three founders — English professor David Kastan, CuraSEE FEATURE PAGE 4


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