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 · MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2013 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 55 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
RAIN CLEAR
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CROSS CAMPUS
MEN’S HOCKEY YALE BEATS SACRED HEART
AFRICA WEEK
VERITAS
ART SHOW
Students gather to celebrate diversity of African culture
SCHOLARS DEBATE MEANING OF HUMANITY
Undergraduate students display work at track house
PAGE B1 SPORTS
PAGE 3 NEWS
PAGE 5 NEWS
PAGE 7 CULTURE
Inaugural gala honors women
Chairigami, beware! Scott
Stern ’15, president of the Student Origami Society and staff columnist for the News, has published his second how-to origami book. Released last week by Tuttle Publishing, “Fabrigami” teaches the magic craft of paper folding with no paper (just fabric). Now students can add new terms like “squash fold,” “insidereverse fold,” and “blintz base” to their vernacular with no fear of paper cuts.
Making money. Fewer than 30 lucky people work for Snapchat, which Google and Facebook recently offered billions of dollars to acquire. Chloe Drimal ’13 is one of them. Most recently, Business Insider named her “The Luckiest College Graduate of 2013” for snagging the job straight out of graduation. Here’s hoping the sudden success of Snapchat won’t disappear in 10 seconds or less. Burning money. It appears
that both Yale and Harvard are either burning money for fun or tossing cash into a black hole. The two schools reported deficits above $30 million for the 2013 fiscal year. Harvard’s deficit quadrupled to $34 million, but Yale’s $39 million topped even that amount. If Yale loses the game this year, at least students can brag that the University spent more money! Explaining the burning of the money. Meanwhile, President
Salovey has announced that he will soon begin sending campus-wide updates about Yale’s budget. Uh-oh. “From Jail to Yale.” In a
profile from the New Haven Register this weekend, George Chocos DIV ’16 recounted his journey “from jail to Yale.” The 39-year-old student spent years in and out of the system. Yet after meeting Reverend Martin Copenhaver DIV ’80, a member of the Divinity School’s Board of Advisers, he applied and was accepted on full scholarship last January. A meal of miles. The School of Forestry & Environmental Studies celebrated a “100-mile Thanksgiving” on Sunday. All students were encouraged to bring their own dish for the massive potluck affair. One Moore ranking. A blog post from the Brown Daily Herald ranked the Ivy League universities on “who wore it best” in terms of Henry Moore sculptures. Yale came in fourth with “Draped Seated Woman,” probably because the ranking was biased. Topping the list was the gender neutral fit of abstractionism “Ra Ra Brunonia!” that graces Brown’s campus. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1964 Talks between Yale administrators and the Spanish government on the ownership of the allegedly stolen Saragossa manuscripts commence. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
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Mixed mandates in Ward 1 BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER
Rhythm and a keynote speech from entrepreneur Katie Rae SOM ’97 — aimed to promote the appreciation of women at Yale, recognizing female undergraduates for their leadership roles and encouraging more women to become leaders in the Yale community. Rae urged the audience to become leaders by surrounding themselves with support-
When asked if she wants to run for mayor of New Haven, Ward 1 Alderwoman Sarah Eidelson ’12 lets out a short laugh. “People are still surprised when I say that I don’t want to run for higher office,” she says over the buzz of Blue State Coffee on a Thursday afternoon, where she is holding her weekly office hours just over a week after winning re-election to the Board of Aldermen. “I’m 22 and, like most recent grads, I don’t have a 10-year plan.” But for at least two more years, Eidelson is staying in New Haven — in the same High Street apartment she lived in as a student — to represent almost three-quarters of Yale’s student body on the city legislature. Eidelson is the first Ward 1 representative in almost a decade to seek a second term, and if she completes it, she will be the first since the turn of the century to round out two terms on the Board. Ben Healey ’04 was first elected in 2001 and won re-election in 2003. But he vacated the seat in August of 2005 before the end of his second term. Each Ward 1 representative since has called it quits after just a single term: Nick Shalek ’05, Rachel Plattus ’09 and Mike Jones ’11.
SEE LEADING LADIES PAGE 6
SEE EIDELSON PAGE 4
LEON JIANG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The inaugural Leading Ladies Gala, hosted by the Women’s Leadership Initiative, was held Saturday in Silliman. BY STEPHANIE ROGERS CONTRIBUTING REPORTER The lights came down, a hush fell over the audience, and three words flashed across a television screen: “Look around you.” This was the introduction that kicked off the first-ever Leading Ladies gala, hosted by the Yale Women’s Leadership Initiative in the Silliman dining hall on Saturday
night. The short video at the beginning of the gala urged women to look around and draw inspiration from one another, because many attendees could go on to become future senators, Nobel prize winners or multimillionaire founders of new startups. The event — which featured rousing speeches, a slam poetry performance, musical renditions from all-female a capella group Whim’n
Mental health dialogue continues at forum BY HANNAH SCHWARZ STAFF REPORTER Following on the heels of the Yale College Council Mental Health Report release in September, the YCC hosted a forum on Saturday afternoon to bring together mental health and well-being organizations on campus. The meeting of roughly
30 students at 17 Hillhouse Ave. was the first ever to bring together these organizations to brainstorm ideas about how to implement specific, concrete solutions to address mental health issues on campus. Over the nearly two-hour gathering, students discussed initiatives including creating a centralized mental health website, holding mental health work-
shops and encouraging wellness habits. Many of the students in attendance came from a range of campus organizations including Mind Matters, YMindful, Inspire Yale, Flourish, the Calhoun Happiness Project, Communication and Consent Educators, Chaplaincy Fellows and Freshman Counselors. “We knew coming in that our primary goal was to leave with
More grads call New Haven home BY RISHABH BHANDARI AND POOJA SALHOTRA STAFF REPORTER AND CONTRIBUTING REPORTER When Mayor-elect Toni Harp ARC ’78 and President Peter Salovey begin their partnership in January, the two will look to continue a trend that began over the past two decade under their predecessors. Over the past two decades an increasing number of Yale students choosing to work in the Elm City after graduation.
New Haven is becoming a very attractive destination for our students because of its affordability and … culture. JEANINE DAMES Director, Undergraduate Career Services
Although Undergraduate Career Services did not track the occupations and residence of Yale graduates before last year, all nine administrators and students interviewed said
that they have seen a gradual pattern of more students leaving Yale but not New Haven. According to data compiled by UCS for the postgraduate plans of the Class of 2013, 78 students of the 1,066 who responded to the first annual UCS survey of the senior class are still working in New Haven. “What we’re seeing is that increasingly students are wanting to stay in New Haven and contribute to what has become their home away from home,” said UCS Director Jeanine Dames. “New Haven is becoming a very attractive destination for our students because of its affordability and the culture it offers.” Though Dames said that 30 of the 78 students who remained in New Haven are working at Yale, she has also noticed that recently more students are working for companies in New Haven that are unaffiliated with the University. The University is the largest employer of Yale graduates, ahead of other popular destinations such as Teach For America, JP Morgan, and McKinsey & Company, according to UCS data. Dames SEE ALUMNI PAGE 4
concrete, actionable goals,” said Reuben Hendler ’14, one of three authors of the mental health report. “It’s important to move from a larger focus [on mental health] to implementational issues.” Students discussed the idea of a workshop that would teach participants how to reach out to a friend about whom they are concerned and how to consis-
tently practice mood-boosting habits, such as sleeping sufficiently, eating healthfully and exercising frequently. The forum also brought up working on increasing publicity for mental health resources by pulling together links to campus resources to create a centralized website, putting up stickSEE MENTAL HEALTH 6
Bourbonais off hockey team
BRIANNE BOWEN/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Forward Clinton Bourbonais ’14 is no longer a member of the Yale Hockey Team, according to the University. BY GRANT BRONSDON CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Yale forward Clinton Bourbonais ’14 is no longer a member of the men’s hockey team, according to the University. Associate Athletics Director Sports Publicity Steve Conn said that the University was unwilling to comment further on the situ-
ation. “All I can tell you is that he is no longer a member of the team,” Conn said. “That’s all I can say.” Calls to Bourbonais and head coach Keith Allain ’80 were not answered. Before committing to Yale, BourSEE BOURBONAIS PAGE 6