Today's Paper

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THE OLDEST COLLEGE DAILY · FOUNDED 1878 CROSS CAMPUS MORE ONLINE cc.yaledailynews.com y Today’s the day! Hip college students across New Haven, rejoice: the iPhone 5 is out today at 8 a.m. At the Apple Store on Broadway Avenue, a few brave fans began forming a line early Thursday evening; just before midnight, four people had lined up. Black curtains in the windows prevented passersby from seeing inside the store. Predictions. A group of sportswriters from the Ivy League’s student newspapers are predicting that Cornell will defeat Yale in tomorrow’s football game; only Dartmouth thinks the Elis will prevail. She had money problems? Linda McMahon, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate who became a multi-millionaire as the leader of World Wrestling Entertainment, decided Thursday to repay $1 million in debts she walked away from in a 1975 bankruptcy that has become a part of her campaign narrative, the Hartford Courant reported. The announcement comes after her opponent, U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, had applied pressure on McMahon’s economic record, just as he faced criticism for failing to make payments on his home. New demographic. The New Haven-based 3Penny Orchestra, whose “Call Me Maybe” cover arranged by Arianne Abela MUS ’10 and Colin Britt MUS ’10 has scored 1.4 million hits on YouTube in just over a week, appeared on Today Thursday morning. Sorry we’re not sorry. An article in the Atlantic Wire claims that convenient access to delicious, all- natural burgers in New Haven has ruined Shake Shack for everyone else. Because the New Haven location was the chain’s 15th, New York City law demands that Shake Shacks display calorie counts on their menus. A Double Shackburger, as it turns out, is 770 calories. More election troubles. The election saga continues in the fifth Assembly District. One vote originally marked “deceased” turned out to be from an elderly woman who is not, in fact, dead. The vote could have broken a 774-774 tie in the race between Leo Canty and Brandon McGee for the Democratic nomination, except that it was cast for a third candidate. Now, there will be a revote on Oct. 2 to determine the winner, the Hartford Courant reported. Yes sir. A ribbon-cutting ceremony today at 11:30 a.m. on the Hewitt Quadrangle will welcome ROTC to campus. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY 1980 “The Yale College Council has gotten a reputation for blowing a lot of hot air around,” YCC Chairman Dan Meyer says. “This year we need to develop more concrete programs.” Submit tips to Cross Campus [email protected] INSIDE THE NEWS ENTREPRENEURS TREKKING OFF THE BEATEN PATH? PAGE B3 WEEKEND A NEW REUNION Ezra Stiles to mark 50th anniversary with college- specific reunion PAGE 5 NEWS GRASS ROOTS WARD 1 DEMS GATHER TO PLOT ELECTION MOVES PAGE 7 CITY FOOTBALL Following Georgetown win, Yale travels to Cornell for Ivy opener PAGE 12 SPORTS MORNING SUNNY 60 EVENING SUNNY 69 NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 18 · yaledailynews.com BY JANE DARBY MENTON AND TAPLEY STEPHENSON STAFF REPORTERS Yale’s next president will have the chance to reevaluate an athletic recruit- ment policy that has sparked contro- versy and frustration among many members of the University’s athletic community. During University President Rich- ard Levin’s tenure, the percentage of athletic recruits at Yale has decreased from 18 percent in the class of 1998 to 13 percent in the class of 2015. Follow- ing his direction, the University has recruited fewer athletes in recent years than the maximum number allowed by Ivy League regulations. regulations. “[Levin] certainly knows there are, at times, people who disagree with him, and I would be one of those who disagree with him on the limits we have on stu- dent athletes to this great place,” Beck- ett said. While Beckett said Levin reevaluates the recruitment policy each year through When Daniel Magaziner wakes up in his Brooklyn apartment, he hopes it is not raining. An assistant professor in the His- tory Department, Magaziner faces a two- and-a-half-hour commute to his oce in the Hall of Graduate Studies every Tues- day and Thursday. When it rains, Maga- ziner said, he cannot use his bike to get to the subway, which adds another half an hour to the trip. On sunny days, Magaziner leaves by 7:40 a.m. and bikes for five minutes to the Nevins Street subway stop, where he locks his bike before the 25-minute ride to Grand Central Station. He boards the 8:34 a.m. Metro North train, and always sits in the same spot: the window seat of the second three-seater row on the right through the second door of the last car. At 10:36 a.m., the train pulls into the New Haven State Street stop, and Magaziner walks from there to his oce, arriving by 9:30 a.m. “I get a lot of exercise,” he said, laughing. While the majority of Yale’s faculty live on campus, Magaziner is one of at least 25 Yale professors who commute from New York to teach. Some only travel for the day, while others split their nights between the two cities — all overcoming the physical distance to support students as if they lived just blocks away. FILLING OBLIGATIONS Yale has no policy stipulating where pro- fessors must live. The Yale Faculty Hand- book requires that full-time faculty spend “most days of the work week” on campus to fulfill all duties required of all faculty BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS CONTRIBUTING REPORTER After faltering in late August, President Barack Obama appears to have rearmed his grasp on the state’s electorate. A poll released Wednesday by the Univer- sity of Connecticut and the Hartford Cou- rant, found Obama leading Republican chal- lenger Mitt Romney by 21 percentage points, 53 to 32, among Connecticut voters. That result came less than a month after a Quin- nipiac University poll put Obama only seven points ahead in a state that the president carried by 22 points in 2008 and is consid- ered to be among the safest states for Demo- crats. Experts and politicos on campus sug- gested that, beyond the presidential race, these numbers could bear on the race for the state’s open Senate seat. Gary Rose, a professor of government and politics at Sacred Heart University in Fair- field and frequent commentator on polling data, attributed Obama’s gains in Connect- icut primarily to a successful Democratic National Convention. The convention, a three-day event held in Charlotte, N.C., in early September, gave the Obama cam- Obama races ahead of Romney in Conn. polls BY GAVAN GIDEON AND DANIEL SISGOREO STAFF REPORTERS Before the School of Manage- ment moves to its new campus in December 2013, administrators are planning how best to repur- pose the classrooms and oce space that the school will leave behind. The classroom facilities in the school’s main building at 135 Prospect St. will likely remain classrooms, some for use by Yale College, Deputy Provost for Aca- demic Resources Lloyd Suttle said in a Wednesday email. One block over, the Jackson Institute for Global Aairs will move into Horchow Hall, the Tuscan-style mansion that SOM currently occupies at 55 Hillhouse Ave. To determine the future of the other SOM buildings, the Provost’s Oce is forming a faculty com- mittee to determine options for both the short-term and long- term, Suttle said. “It’s a hodgepodge of inter- esting buildings that range from grand mansions to excellent modern classroom facilities,” Yale College Dean Mary Miller said. The buildings could serve well as a “swing space” for depart- ments located in facilities that require renovation, Miller said, adding that the Hall of Grad- M ost commuters travel into New York City from its suburbs. But a small group of Yale professors make the reverse trip — from their homes in the Big Apple to their classrooms in New Haven. JULIA ZORTHIAN reports. SEE LEVIN PAGE 11 SEE GENDER GAP PAGE 4 SEE COMMUTES PAGE 6 SEE SOM PAGE 6 SEE OBAMA PAGE 6 Future of SOM facilities weighed Athletes question admit policy after Levin BY CLINTON WANG STAFF REPORTER While a gender gap still exists in the sciences, female students in science, technol- ogy, engineering and math fields are better represented at Yale on average than at other colleges and universities nationwide. The percentage of female STEM majors in the senior class at Yale has hovered between 39 and 46 percent — slightly above the national average — for the past six Yale closes gender gap in sciences Yale has made advances with regards to gender quite frankly by being Yale. VINCENT WILCZYNSKI Deputy Dean, School of Engineering and Applied Science COMMUTING TO CLASS A tale of two cities ANDREW GOBLE/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER Athletes interviewed said they hope that University President Richard Levin’s successor will reverse his policy on athletic recruitment so that Yale teams can be more competitive within the Ivy League. TOMAS ALBERGO/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER Oce space in T.M. Evans Hall, located at 56 Hillhouse Ave., will open up when the School of Management moves to its new campus in 2013.

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Sept. 21, 2012

Transcript of Today's Paper

Page 1: Today's Paper

T H E O L D E S T C O L L E G E D A I L Y · F O U N D E D 1 8 7 8

CROSSCAMPUS

MORE ONLINEcc.yaledailynews.com

y

Today’s the day! Hip college students across New Haven, rejoice: the iPhone 5 is out today at 8 a.m. At the Apple Store on Broadway Avenue, a few brave fans began forming a line early Thursday evening; just before midnight, four people had lined up. Black curtains in the windows prevented passersby from seeing inside the store.

Predictions. A group of sportswriters from the Ivy League’s student newspapers are predicting that Cornell will defeat Yale in tomorrow’s football game; only Dartmouth thinks the Elis will prevail.

She had money problems? Linda McMahon, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate who became a multi-millionaire as the leader of World Wrestling Entertainment, decided Thursday to repay $1 million in debts she walked away from in a 1975 bankruptcy that has become a part of her campaign narrative, the Hartford Courant reported. The announcement comes after her opponent, U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, had applied pressure on McMahon’s economic record, just as he faced criticism for failing to make payments on his home.

New demographic. The New Haven-based 3Penny Orchestra, whose “Call Me Maybe” cover arranged by Arianne Abela MUS ’10 and Colin Britt MUS ’10 has scored 1.4 million hits on YouTube in just over a week, appeared on Today Thursday morning.

Sorry we’re not sorry. An article in the Atlantic Wire claims that convenient access to delicious, all-natural burgers in New Haven has ruined Shake Shack for everyone else. Because the New Haven location was the chain’s 15th, New York City law demands that Shake Shacks display calorie counts on their menus. A Double Shackburger, as it turns out, is 770 calories.

More election troubles. The election saga continues in the fifth Assembly District. One vote originally marked “deceased” turned out to be from an elderly woman who is not, in fact, dead. The vote could have broken a 774-774 tie in the race between Leo Canty and Brandon McGee for the Democratic nomination, except that it was cast for a third candidate. Now, there will be a revote on Oct. 2 to determine the winner, the Hartford Courant reported.

Yes sir. A ribbon-cutting ceremony today at 11:30 a.m. on the Hewitt Quadrangle will welcome ROTC to campus.

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY1980 “The Yale College Council has gotten a reputation for blowing a lot of hot air around,” YCC Chairman Dan Meyer says. “This year we need to develop more concrete programs.”

Submit tips to Cross Campus [email protected]

INSIDE THE NEWS

ENTREPRENEURSTREKKING OFF THE BEATEN PATH?PAGE B3 WEEKEND

A NEW REUNIONEzra Stiles to mark 50th anniversary with college-specific reunionPAGE 5 NEWS

GRASS ROOTS WARD 1 DEMS GATHER TO PLOT ELECTION MOVESPAGE 7 CITY

FOOTBALLFollowing Georgetown win, Yale travels to Cornell for Ivy openerPAGE 12 SPORTSMORNING SUNNY 60

EVENING SUNNY 69

NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · VOL. CXXXV, NO. 18 · yaledailynews.com

BY JANE DARBY MENTON ANDTAPLEY STEPHENSON

STAFF REPORTERS

Yale’s next president will have the chance to reevaluate an athletic recruit-ment policy that has sparked contro-versy and frustration among many members of the University’s athletic community.

During University President Rich-ard Levin’s tenure, the percentage of athletic recruits at Yale has decreased from 18 percent in the class of 1998 to 13 percent in the class of 2015. Follow-ing his direction, the University has recruited fewer athletes in recent years than the maximum number allowed by Ivy League regulations.regulations.

“[Levin] certainly knows there are, at times, people who disagree with him, and I would be one of those who disagree with him on the limits we have on stu-dent athletes to this great place,” Beck-ett said.

While Beckett said Levin reevaluates the recruitment policy each year through

When Daniel Magaziner wakes up in his Brooklyn apartment, he hopes it is not raining. An assistant professor in the His-tory Department, Magaziner faces a two-and-a-half-hour commute to his o!ce in the Hall of Graduate Studies every Tues-day and Thursday. When it rains, Maga-ziner said, he cannot use his bike to get to the subway, which adds another half an hour to the trip.

On sunny days, Magaziner leaves by 7:40 a.m. and bikes for five minutes to the Nevins Street subway stop, where he locks his bike before the 25-minute ride to Grand Central Station. He boards the 8:34 a.m. Metro North train, and always sits in the same spot: the window seat of the second three-seater row on the right through the second door of the last car. At 10:36 a.m., the train pulls into the New Haven State

Street stop, and Magaziner walks from there to his o!ce, arriving by 9:30 a.m.

“I get a lot of exercise,” he said, laughing. While the majority of Yale’s faculty live

on campus, Magaziner is one of at least 25 Yale professors who commute from New York to teach. Some only travel for the day, while others split their nights between the two cities — all overcoming the physical distance to support students as if they lived just blocks away.

FILLING OBLIGATIONSYale has no policy stipulating where pro-

fessors must live. The Yale Faculty Hand-book requires that full-time faculty spend “most days of the work week” on campus to fulfill all duties required of all faculty

BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMASCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

After faltering in late August, President Barack Obama appears to have rea!rmed his grasp on the state’s electorate.

A poll released Wednesday by the Univer-sity of Connecticut and the Hartford Cou-rant, found Obama leading Republican chal-lenger Mitt Romney by 21 percentage points, 53 to 32, among Connecticut voters. That result came less than a month after a Quin-nipiac University poll put Obama only seven points ahead in a state that the president carried by 22 points in 2008 and is consid-

ered to be among the safest states for Demo-crats. Experts and politicos on campus sug-gested that, beyond the presidential race, these numbers could bear on the race for the state’s open Senate seat.

Gary Rose, a professor of government and politics at Sacred Heart University in Fair-field and frequent commentator on polling data, attributed Obama’s gains in Connect-icut primarily to a successful Democratic National Convention. The convention, a three-day event held in Charlotte, N.C., in early September, gave the Obama cam-

Obama races ahead of Romney in Conn. polls

BY GAVAN GIDEON AND DANIEL SISGOREO

STAFF REPORTERS

Before the School of Manage-ment moves to its new campus in December 2013, administrators are planning how best to repur-pose the classrooms and o!ce space that the school will leave behind.

The classroom facilities in the school’s main building at 135 Prospect St. will likely remain classrooms, some for use by Yale College, Deputy Provost for Aca-demic Resources Lloyd Suttle said in a Wednesday email. One block over, the Jackson Institute for Global A"airs will move into Horchow Hall, the Tuscan-style

mansion that SOM currently occupies at 55 Hillhouse Ave. To determine the future of the other SOM buildings, the Provost’s O!ce is forming a faculty com-mittee to determine options for both the short-term and long-term, Suttle said.

“It’s a hodgepodge of inter-esting buildings that range from grand mansions to excellent modern classroom facilities,” Yale College Dean Mary Miller said.

The buildings could serve well as a “swing space” for depart-ments located in facilities that require renovation, Miller said, adding that the Hall of Grad-

Most commuters travel into New York City from its suburbs. But a small group of Yale professors make the reverse trip — from their homes in the Big Apple to their classrooms in

New Haven. JULIA ZORTHIAN reports.

SEE LEVIN PAGE 11 SEE GENDER GAP PAGE 4

SEE COMMUTES PAGE 6

SEE SOM PAGE 6

SEE OBAMA PAGE 6

Future of SOM facilities weighed

Athletes question admit policy after Levin

BY CLINTON WANGSTAFF REPORTER

While a gender gap still exists in the sciences, female students in science, technol-ogy, engineering and math fields are better represented at Yale on average than at other colleges and universities nationwide.

The percentage of female STEM majors in the senior class at Yale has hovered between 39 and 46 percent — slightly above the national average — for the past six

Yale closes gender gap in sciences

Yale has made advances with regards to gender quite frankly by being Yale.

VINCENT WILCZYNSKIDeputy Dean, School of Engineering and

Applied Science

C O M M U T I N G T O C L A S S

A tale of two cities

ANDREW GOBLE/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Athletes interviewed said they hope that University President Richard Levin’s successor will reverse his policy on athletic recruitment so that Yale teams can be more competitive within the Ivy League.

TOMAS ALBERGO/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

O!ce space in T.M. Evans Hall, located at 56 Hillhouse Ave., will open up when the School of Management moves to its new campus in 2013.

Page 2: Today's Paper

OPINION .COMMENTyaledailynews.com/opinion

“Doesn’t Matter; Had Burrito Cart.” ‘RIVER_TAM’ ON ‘CHIPOTLE TO COME TO

NEW HAVEN’

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We’ve been seduced: by a 6.8 percent acceptance rate, by the extracur-

ricular bazaar and by the career fair. Most of all, we’ve been seduced by Tony Blair and Stan-ley McChrystal. We’ve been con-vinced, whether we ever think of ourselves in these terms or not, that we are, to use a phrase once employed to describe my high school, the “joyful elite;” that we are engaged, that we are passion-ate and that we are on our way to careers of real worth and stand-ing.

We’ve been seduced — and we’ve been silenced.

Yesterday afternoon, Jim Sleeper, a lecturer in the Political Science Department, spoke to a seminar-sized group of students about what he terms “the corpo-ratization of Yale.”

In Sleeper’s account, the Uni-versity, in pursuing legitimate ends such as global engage-ment and fundraising, has been caught in a tide overwhelming all academia. Yale has been car-ried away from the values that undergird its educational mis-sion, towards a model of opaque authority that treats students as customers.

While Sleeper’s critique focuses on the Yale administra-tion, he contends that corpora-tization has also crept into the student body. Students ingrati-ate themselves to authority fig-ures and take care not to jeop-ardize their eventual senato-rial prospects. But the confusion about the purpose of the Uni-versity runs deeper: Too often, we at Yale forget that we came here because we are intellectual omnivores.

We prioritize the extracur-ricular over the curricular. We are overwhelmed as freshmen by the number of organizations in Payne Whitney — most gen-uinely interesting, most of gen-uine value. Nothing wrong with that: Yale really is one of the few places on Earth where so many smart, motivated people are together in one place.

Yet somewhere between being swept away by the energy of our peers and the feeling of obliga-tion to do great things with our lives, we develop unctuous hab-its of mind and action. We seek to distinguish ourselves within a narrow conception of pro-fessional success, prizing high grades over challenging courses, default subjects of study over those that might truly interest us and e-board meetings over o!ce hours. These habits draw us away from the very reason Yale attracts us in the first place: academic excellence.

In short, we come to feel that what sets us apart from the rest of the world — those who didn’t

get in — isn’t our intellectual prowess but what we surely will accomplish as alumni. Intrinsic motivation is crowded out by the extrinsic. Who, after all, remem-bers what Tony Blair studied in his Oxford days?

Hopefully, some among us will do great things in and for the world. But for many, the price of that opportunity is too dear: How many of us would say that, above all else, we are seeking out the kind of first-rate education Yale can still o"er?

The Yale administration abets this. It hires with pride world leaders who bring titles with enough sheen to surpass the blemishes of their blunders on the world stage, including such gems as the Iraq War. It gestures towards educational princi-ple by instituting distributional requirements and then abandons all pretense of rigor by o"ering An Issues Approach to Biology and Planets and Stars.

Even Provost Peter Salovey’s signature class, Great Big Ideas, is based on the premise that intellectual exploration is some-thing students can’t be bothered to do outside a class.

Perhaps worst of all, the Admissions O!ce fails to emphasize — the way, say, the University of Chicago or Swarth-more does — that one comes to Yale to learn.

It’s easy to treat educa-tion solely as a path to gainful employment, especially when that’s so hard to find. But Yale can provide haven from those practi-cal pressures. These are the only four years in our lives when we can devote ourselves to thinking.

As the University selects its 23rd president, we students must do everything in our power to ensure that the first priority of those who lead our institution is to rejuvenate its intellectual climate. Of course, President Levin, over the last two decades, has been invaluable in ensuring that the facilities and faculty are of the highest caliber. But those e"orts will have been wasted on Yale College if we take no joy in the life of the mind. Now, from the bottom of this University, we must reclaim our highest intel-lectual ideals and demand that those at the top do the same.

GABRIEL LEVINE is a junior in Trumbull College. Contact him at

[email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T G A B R I E L L E V I N E

A more intellectual Yale

[email protected]

WRITE TO USAll letters submitted for publication must include the author’s name, phone number and description of Yale University a"liation. 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.

Welcome, ChipotleDear Yale, New Haven, and all lovers of

Chipotle,You’re welcome. Obviously, Chipotle’s

decision to open the company’s first loca-tion in New Haven had everything to do with our column several months ago (“Yale needs Chipotle,” Feb. 22). Really, we’ll also go ahead and take credit for Shake Shack, Tomatillo and cheese polenta in Commons too. So, if you wanted to buy us each a burrito (or at least just pay for our guacamole) as a sign of your gratitude, we think that would be appropriate.

We’re genuinely excited about the new Chipotle. It will be a tasty, quick and rela-tively cheap dining option for both Yale stu-dents and the residents of New Haven. Along with the spacious new Shake Shack, the new Chipotle marks quite an industrious year of investment and development on the section of Chapel Street south of the Green.

On a more serious note, this bodes well for other properties in the area as well as down-town commercial and retail development. We hope the new Chipotle will serve as a com-mon meeting place for Yalies and locals, fos-tering an atmosphere in which both are com-fortable. Additionally, with the new loca-tion situated just a few blocks from campus, students will hopefully have more interest in

Film at YaleIn my enthusiasm to support

Patrice Bowman’s enthusiasm for students to watch more films on the big screen during their years at Yale, (“A collection of screenings for the rest of us,” Sept. 14) I gave out the wrong impression. Class screenings are not “open screen-ings” except when the material shown has been cleared or pur-

On Wednesday night, I was in Battell Chapel with several other Yale stu-

dents, sipping barley tea and watching the flickering candles as Omer Bajwa, Yale’s Muslim chaplain, led a discussion. He was wearing a kufi — a Mus-lim head-covering men often wear during prayers and which he usually wears when he repre-sents Islam in an o!cial capac-ity — and he has had a beard for years.

Bajwa said some Muslim students make assumptions because of his traditional dress, which is sometimes associated with more conservative, stern and fundamentalist orienta-tions. As he explained where these students were coming from and what experiences they might have had with other Mus-lim men who had beards and wore kufis, I was struck by his sympathy. This was not a man who dismissed these students as prejudiced and intolerant. While it saddened him that they might not take the opportunity to get to know him better, he recognized how his appearance might cue di"erent assumptions for them.

We all judge people based on appearance, and often we feel bad about it. After all, isn’t judgment wrong? We’re told not to judge others, and we tell others not to judge us. Judging harshly, unfairly or quickly is

one of the more dangerous ten-dencies a person can possess.

But dispensing with judg-ment altogether is not the answer either. Dress is a pow-erful way for human beings to express themselves and their values. To deny that your appearance has significance or is embedded with cultural signifi-ers is naive. This blanket rejec-tion of the right to judge and be judged not only strips others’ personal choices of meaning but also allows us to evade responsi-bility for our own choices.

The associations people have between clothing and values can undeniably be seen in the way various social groups on cam-pus are defined by stereotypical dress. Most students could at a glance roughly distinguish the hipsters from the jocks. This is not to say that most of us don’t have overlapping identities, but our typical dress tends to align us with certain social communi-ties and their values.

You must take responsibility

for the message your appearance sends, whether or not you agree. People are allowed to surprise or undercut communal assump-tions, but it is ridiculous to pre-tend those assumptions don’t — or shouldn’t — exist.

Attention to appearance is not material or vain. The most com-mon argument against school uniforms is that they restrict student expression. Shouldn’t we take that self-expression seriously, both for others and for ourselves? By suspending all judgment that may be derived from clothing, we are deny-ing the power of appearance to express who we are. Dyed hair, briefcases, tattoos, piercings, heels, three-piece suits, jeans and sneakers all say something about us, as do very revealing or extremely modest clothing. Outrageous or subdued, dress is the world’s first impression of who we are.

I find that members of reli-gious communities, often dressed in overt symbolism, are most sensitive to the signifi-cance of clothing. Just as Omer Bajwa was conscious that his decision about his dress had wider associations, most reli-gious clothing carries connota-tions of which the wearer must be conscious.

As part of a senior project in high school, I spent a few weeks at a very religious all-girls school in Brooklyn. On the sub-

way to and from the school every day I wore the school uniform of an ankle-length plaid skirt, black tights and a long-sleeve white button down shirt. Men kept their distance. Even my friends were less comfortable telling crude jokes; they were subtly influenced by my shield of modesty. Because my dress really didn’t reflect personal values, it was easier to compare how people reacted to me di"er-ently. But even if I notice it less, it is no di"erent when I wear everyday clothing and signify to others that I am willing to hear vulgar language and hug male friends.

Dress is powerful, and it is wrong to be angry with those who find meaning in how others present themselves to the world. Others have the right to make assumptions about us based on how we dress. The danger lies in refusing to allow for self-determination and not respect-ing an individual’s interpreta-tion of her own dress once we get to know her. Our assump-tions must be subject to change if we encounter new informa-tion. But judgment in of itself is not wrong, and it can play an important role in prompting self-reflection.

SHIRA TELUSHKIN is a junior in Pierson College. Contact her at

[email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T S H I R A T E L U S H K I N

Clothing has consequences

exploring what else downtown New Haven has to o"er.

This is not to say that we’ll turn our backs on our old favor-ites. Since the publication of our February column, we have become big fans of the bur-rito cart, but another option is always nice. Come opening day, if you want to find us, we’ll be in line.

Your faithful burrito connois-seurs,

GORDON MCCAMBRIDGE AND MICHAEL WUSEPT. 20The writers are sophomores in Bran-ford College .

chased for public performance rights or is in the public domain. I meant to indicate that I wasn’t policing the room if a student on occasion brought a visitor (or par-ent), just as they sometimes do, with permission, to class. In fact, the screenings of “Film and Fic-tion” involve short introductory lectures and post-screening dis-cussion, making these de facto class sessions where regular audi-tors are permitted.

Patrice Bowman is on target overall. If you aren’t in a film stud-ies class, you can and should still explore cinema at Yale, where you can watch movies in the best con-ditions. Beyond the News, con-sult the weekly notices sent out by The Whitney Humanities Center, which sponsors or co-sponsors a fantastic set of films, most shown in stunning 35mm. Like Bowman, I urge students to make cinema (and film-going) part of their Yale experience. It’s worth it for a life-time.

DUDLEY ANDREWSEPT. 16The writer is a professor of film and comparative literature .

News travels faster than ever. People used to wait for the postman, then the

evening news. Now, my iPhone pushes me the latest New York Times headline before I have a chance to look at the newspaper.

This was not the case when I woke up to the news that Chris Stevens, the United States’ ambassador to Libya, had been killed within our own consulate while protesters were massing around our embassies through-out the Muslim world — all due to some video I’d never heard of.

Maybe it was the shock of the news that made it feel far, far worse than the headlines we see and ignore each day, detailing unspeakable atrocities in every part of the world.

But as the days passed after that horrible murder in Beng-hazi, my shock didn’t dissipate. True, the discussion among much of the more informed punditry turned to the politics surrounding the event. First, there was Mitt Romney’s piti-ful attempt to make political hay of the incident. Then talk turned to the politics in the countries where the protests were tak-ing place — was the attack the spontaneous work of violent protesters or was it planned by terrorists? Were the protests organic or highly choreographed by people with specific agendas?

I’m sure politicians have tried

to harness anti-Ameri-can rage at a video deni-grating the p r o p h e t M u h a m m a d for their own political gain. I also trust our i n te l l i ge n c e services that there’s good e v i d e n c e the attack in Libya may

have been planned. Neither of these points, however, can belie the fact that there has clearly been a humongous, spontane-ous and very popular surge of anti-American vitriol.

I remember being in England the summer after eighth grade and seeing protests calling Pres-ident Bush the world’s number one terrorist. Anyone who grew up in the age of Iraq is used to an immense amount of antipathy towards America.

But what’s been most shock-ing to me about the last few days is not the idea that there are people who are so enraged by a dumb video that they want to see its maker punished. We all know about the fatwa on Salman Rushdie and incidents closer to home where violence has been provoked by mere words. This is something we can deplore but

still comprehend. What is fundamentally more

shocking is the collective blame protesters have been leveling on American society for refus-ing not to consider that vio-lent reaction a legitimate act of social justice. By not infring-ing upon the free expression of some bigoted individuals, we are, by this narrative, infringing upon the freedom of the Muslim religion.

The very idea that America could have o"ended Islam by allowing this video to be aired is un-American. Our concep-tions of individual liberties and freedom of expression — rights we treat as universal — are very much the result of a few early Americans’ decision to embrace specific Enlightenment philoso-phies.

The economic rise of China and India, the pro-democracy protests throughout the Mid-dle East, the fall of the USSR — any number of events in most

Yale students’ lifetimes — have created the impression that the world is converging to some relatively wealthy and rela-tively free state of being. No one has second thoughts any more about traveling, doing business or living in vastly di"erent parts of the world, where millions of people still lack basic political and economic freedoms we take for granted.

I’ve generally found the con-cerns about freedom of speech at Yale-NUS College to be over-stated, because it seemed as if the world was on an inertial track towards American liberal values.

Well, it’s pretty clear now that much of the world still does not share our conception of political and human rights.

I still don’t think the way to change that is by refusing to engage with the world or by only speaking with others for the sake of preaching to them. But let’s not delude ourselves that Je"erson, Adams and Madison have become universal over the last 200 years. In some parts of the world, their ideas are just as revolutionary as they were in 1776.

HARRY LARSON is a junior in Jonathan Edwards College. Contact

him at [email protected] .

AMERICAN FREEDOM DOES

NOT EXIST EVERYWHERE

Speech, violence and revolution

HARRY LARSON

Nothing in Particular

WE FORGET THAT WE CAME TO

YALE TO LEARN

IT IS IMPORTANT TO JUDGE PEOPLE

BY WHAT THEY ARE WEARING

Page 3: Today's Paper

FRIDAY FORUM

When University Pres-ident Richard Levin retires at the end of the

academic year, he will leave much to thank him for: The University is doing well financially. Much of the infrastructure has been rebuilt. There are better relations with New Haven, a new science campus and a rescued divinity school. But shouldn’t we pause and think carefully about what students need to know when they graduate so they can begin to participate in the workplace, contribute productively to soci-ety, and do well in life?

The presidential search com-mittee should select a president with a commitment on teach-ing Yalies to be good citizens and contribute to America’s success. The next president should work with the faculty to train students in, among other things, western civilization and civics.

Yale gave me a lifelong love for

learning and scholarship, but the study of western civilization and civics was not part of my Yale education, nor was it part of my daughter’s education at Yale 40 years later. I have had to learn those subjects since graduating, not only because I now see their intrinsic value but also because they are essential in my business. It would have been so much more productive to have studied these areas in core courses in my col-lege years.

When we seek to hire people today in my venture capital busi-ness, one thing we look for is a grounding in such core concepts. Some years ago, Tommy Davis, a top-performing venture capital-ist, asked me to study the most successful companies he had backed. Those companies’ CEOs attributed their success to tra-ditional, uniquely western val-ues. Most of the undergraduates we review at my firm don’t know

about these values and are thus rejected.

Yale has o!ered Directed Studies since before I was a freshman. But it should o!er a similar course that includes the economic impact of western civilization. That knowledge is essential for all freshmen. They should study the great 20th-century thinkers who wrote about hard work, property rights and freedom. They should read Friedrich Hayek, C.S. Lewis and Francis Schae!er. Most impor-tant, students should read about Andrew Carnegie, David Rock-efeller, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, who provided great products and value to millions of people and made America an economic power.

Students need to understand the impact of Western civiliza-tion and how it has dramatically increased the per capita wealth of all people in the West since the

16th century. This influence has eluded Africa and, until the last 30 or so years, China and India. Similarly, students should dis-cuss the political philosophies that led the Soviet Union to col-lapse and the United States to become the economic leader and leader in innovation in the world.

In 2007, the nonprofit Inter-collegiate Studies Institute noted that college freshmen averaged a score of 50.4 percent on a broad-based civic literacy test, and seniors averaged 54.2 percent — both failing grades. But our gov-ernment’s structure was based

on the founders’ deep and care-ful understanding of world his-tory and political philosophy. It was carefully crafted by peo-ple who didn’t always agree with each other but who understood the issues at hand.

“Should we wander from [these principles] in moments of error or of alarm,” Thomas Jef-ferson said in his first inaugural address, “let us hasten to retrace our steps and to regain the road which alone leads to peace, lib-erty and safety.” How can we retain our government and way of life if we don’t understand it?

When I was at Yale, the Uni-versity was very proud of the fact that the largest number of For-tune 500 CEOs came from Yale. This was approximately 10 years before the School of Management was established. The humanities that CEOs had studied at Yale had led them to big success in busi-ness. The decline of the humani-

ties is not a good trend if Yale is to sustain its leadership in business.

As we look to Yale’s future, we should consider what an edu-cated person must know. We should address the decline of survey courses. We must not overlook the steady decline of the humanities, especially at a time when the Singaporean gov-ernment has decided that, to be world leaders, Asians need a strong grounding in the Western tradition of the humanities.

What is the value — the uniqueness — of a Yale education in training leaders for tomorrow? That is the question the next president must answer, and the question the search committee must ask.

CHUCK STETSON is a 1967 grad-uate of Branford College. He is a man-aging director of PEI Funds and CEO

of Essentials in Education .

WINSTON CHURCHILL“It is a good thing for an educated man to read books of quotations.”

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 3

Every day this summer, it felt like another woman was sharing her story of

being harassed on the street. There were accounts from high schoolers on the teen blog Rookie and first person arti-cles on jezebel.com. Then, in August, filmmaker Sofie Peeters documented the catcalls she received throughout her day in Brussels, and the video hit a nerve across Europe. And for the first time, I was angry about it.

Yale has a!orded me the opportunity to live and work abroad for nearly a third of the time I’ve been a student here — in London, Rome, Madrid, Ath-ens, the United Arab Emirates and many countries in between. I go because I love it, and because these experiences will help me get a job in nine months.

At odds with the excite-

ment of living in new places and new cultures, however, has been the dreary normalcy of street harassment no mat-ter where I go: getting my butt slapped by a passing biker at 9 a.m. in Barcelona, long invasive stares in Sharjah despite layers of shapeless clothing, getting approached on the metro day after day, country after coun-try, in language after language. The content of the harass-ment doesn’t really matter here (although it matters massively that women keep talking about it) so much as the relentless-ness and pervasiveness of that harassment.

As I’ve talked to my female friends who have also studied and worked in various places around the world, the fact that harassment is a problem uni-versal to women, regardless of

race, nationality and sexual ori-entation has only become more obvious. A friend working in Morocco told me about having her crotch grabbed by strang-ers on the street in full daylight while no one batted an eye.

A friend studying in Bristol, England wasn’t allowed to walk across parts of campus at night because she was told matter-of-factly that she would “probably get raped.”

Another spoke rapturously about her year in India but also remembered “standing in front of the Taj Mahal and being nothing but mad, just because of what some stranger had said earlier that day.”

And every girl I’ve ever met who’s been to Paris comes home with more harassment stories than photographs of pastries on Instagram. These stories are

the same in China, Brazil, Can-ada and Kenya. And also in the United States.

This is insane. But rather than discouraging you, Yale women, from traveling, I hope you take advantage of the chance to go abroad while you have this Uni-versity to make it easier for you to do so. The benefit of living around people of a di!erent cul-tural background from yours is that it teaches you to appreci-ate the humanity of everyone, not merely those like you. In turn, the sooner we (and by we, I mean educated women who live in the U.S. at least nine months out of the year) stop thinking of feminism as merely a mat-ter of national policy, the bet-ter. “Women’s issues” don’t uniquely and suddenly emerge during election years; neither are “women’s issues” limited

to specific if important agendas like birth control, abortion and equal pay.

Instead, we need to shout about those issues in the con-text of how female humans are treated as a whole, glob-ally. There is a sense in Amer-ica and other developed nations that feminism has won, and this allows us to roll our eyes when a woman uses groaners like patri-archy or privilege, and it allows a male-dominant Congress to treat things like female health care as if they don’t a!ect the fundamental well-being of half of the population.

I stopped wishing feminists would be just a little quieter, however, when I realized that regardless of how developed a country was, what religion its people practiced or whether or not we could communicate,

I could reliably expect to be harassed at some point in time.

The problem, of course, isn’t street harassment in itself but the fact that the attitude that perpetuates street harassment tells women they are less than people and should be ashamed for the crime of walking around. (In some less repressed coun-tries, laws make women explic-itly less than people.)

I went abroad to a"rm the humanity of my fellow humans, but, more important, I learned to assert my own as well. So study abroad because you can, and maybe you’ll become a fem-inist too— because it’s the only conclusion that remains.

HALEY THURSTON is a senior in Ezra Stiles College. Contact her at

[email protected] .

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T H A L E Y T H U R S T O N

How studying abroad made me a feminist

S T A F F I L L U S T R A T O R T A O T A O H O L M E S

G U E S T C O L U M N I S T C H U C K S T E T S O N

Preparing Yalies for business

TEACH STUDENTS TO SUCCEED IN

THE WORKFORCE

11 p.m. Friday night: What everyone wants to do…

… what everyone actually does

Page 4: Today's Paper

years. In last year’s graduat-ing class, 43 percent of STEM majors were female, as com-pared to 38 percent nationally. But even though the ratio of male to female STEM majors is evening out at Yale, students say that a noticeable divide remains in postgraduation career oppor-tunities for men and women in the sciences.

“Yale has made the advances with regards to gender quite frankly by being Yale — by being a place that values and supports diversity and makes opportu-nities available to all,” Deputy Dean of the School of Engineer-ing and Applied Science Vin-cent Wilczynski said. “As far as things still being a challenge, here Yale is perhaps no different than other institutions where there is a lack of equal repre-sentation of gender in our dis-ciplines.”

Though women have a rela-tively strong presence in STEM fields at Yale, they are less well represented in science and engi-neering jobs nationwide. In 2009, women filled less than 25 percent of STEM jobs in the U.S. economy, according to a 2011 report from the U.S. Depart-ment of Commerce. The report also noted that women have a “disproportionately low share of STEM undergraduate degrees,

particularly in engineering,” but Yale’s School of Engineering and Applied Science countered that trend last year, when 38 percent of its graduates were women — more than double the national average for female engineering graduates.

Connie Wu ’13, a chemical engineering major and mem-ber of Undergraduate Women in Science at Yale, said her group holds networking events and conferences to educate and sup-port female undergraduates in the sciences. She said the gen-der gap in STEM fields is not a large issue at Yale.

Several other organizations geared toward women in the sci-ences exist on campus, includ-ing a new one — Women in Physics — that started last fall. Like Undergraduate Women in Science at Yale, Women in Physics also seeks to provide female students with support, networking and career oppor-tunities.

“When you go to gradu-ate school and industry or aca-demia, then gender differences become more pronounced,” Wu said. “We want to help female students prepare for any poten-tial obstacles.”

Ariel Ekblaw ’14, a physics major who cofounded the orga-nization, and Wu said that male and female STEM students have similar opportunities while at Yale, adding that they do not know of any female students who hesitated about majoring in a STEM field because of a gender gap. Ekblaw said the 43 percent of female physics majors in her year doubles the national aver-age. Biology and environmen-tal studies are the only STEM majors at Yale that consistently have a majority of women.

Women are less present in Yale’s STEM faculty than they

are in the undergraduate body, with women holding only 20 percent of those positions.

Among that 20 percent, the University has a number of prominent female STEM fac-ulty members, such as Phys-ics Department chair Meg Urry, Sterling Professor of Molecu-lar Biophysics and Biochemis-try Joan Steitz, and SEAS Dean Kyle Vanderlick. Steitz won two prizes earlier this month — the Pearl Meister Greengard Prize of Rockefeller University and the Vanderbilt Prize in Biomedical Science — in honor of her con-tributions as a female scientist.

Last year, around 20 percent of female seniors graduated with a STEM degree, compared to around 25 percent of male seniors.

Contact CLINTON WANG at [email protected] .

FROM THE FRONTPAGE 4 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

5.2Percent of Americans commute via public transportation According to the United States Census Bureau statistics on commuting, the percentage of Americans who used public transportation to get to work in 2009 was 5.2 percent.

35

38

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2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Yale National

GENDER GAP FROM PAGE 1

recycleyourydndaily recycleyourydndaily recycleyourydndaily recycleyourydndaily recycleyourydndaily recycleyourydndaily

Students and faculty laud Yale’s STEM gender parity

When you go to graduate school … then gender di!erences become more pronounced.

CONNIE WU ’13

YALE UNIVERSITY

Joan Steitz, Sterling professor of molecular biophysics & biochemis-try, won two prizes this month for her work as a female scientist.

GRAPH PERCENTAGE OF FEMALE STEM GRADUATES

Page 5: Today's Paper

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 5

CORREC T ION

FRIDAY, SEPT. 14The article “Post o!ce struggles to keep up” quoted United States Postal Service spokeswoman Christine Dugas as saying that students should contact the supervisor of Yale Station with questions about the status of their packages and lists Mike Madera as that supervisor. In fact, Madera is Yale’s supervisor for campus mail services.

NEWS “Is there any more important problem than our lack of need-based scholarships? I think not.” JAMES ROGERS FORMER CHANCELLOR, NEVADA SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION

BY SOPHIE GOULDSTAFF REPORTER

A new kind of reunion will happen at Yale this fall.

An estimated 150 to 200 Ezra Stiles alumni are expected to attend Yale’s first residential col-lege reunion Oct. 5-7 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Ezra Stiles College. Depending on the success of the event — which will include tours of the recently ren-ovated college, musical perfor-mances and panel discussions about Ezra Stiles and Yale — other colleges may follows Stiles’ example in years to come, orga-nizers said.

The reunion is the brainchild of Ezra Stiles Master Stephen Pitti ’91 and Association of Yale Alumni directors Jenny Chavira ’89 and Mark Dollhopf ’77 — all of whom are Stilesians.

“We started talking about how exciting it would be to hold an event to gather Stilesians from across the decades,” Pitti said, adding that the reunion will be held at Yale while school is in ses-sion, allowing current Stiles stu-dents to participate in the event and Stiles alumni to see their old college in action.

Though Pitti said the idea for a Stiles reunion first arose four years ago, he and the AYA decided to postpone the event until the 50th anniversary of the college.

The Stiles reunion is a “pilot project” for the AYA, said Mark Branch ’86, executive editor of the Yale Alumni Magazine, intended to see whether alumni are enthusiastic about the idea of attending residential college-specific reunions in addition to the traditional class reunions that are held every five years.

Early registration numbers for the event already suggest that there is significant interest. As of Thurday afternoon, the AYA website listed 128 registered par-ticipants, and registration does not close until Sept. 28. AYA senior director of strategic initia-tives Stephen Blum ’74 said the ideal turnout for the event would be in the “low 100s,” because there is limited space on campus for alumni while the school year is in session, even though the visitors will be arranging their own accommodations in New

Haven.Blum added that that the AYA

is already “having discussions” with the masters of Pierson Col-lege and three other colleges.

“We have a runway for hav-ing this initiative take off, and we’re so excited with the way this first [residential college reunion] seems to be shaping up,” he said.

Pitti said he hopes attendees will leave the event feeling “ener-gized about being Stilesians.”

Margaret Chen ’90, a Stiles alum who served on the reunion planning committee, said she remembers Stiles as hav-ing had “a ton of enthusiasm and spirit relative to other res-idential colleges” while she attended Yale, and said she is looking forward to meet-ing Stilesians from other eras. Branch, a Stiles alum, said he thinks the reunion will be “fas-cinating” because Stiles has changed a lot over the years. For example, Branch said students were initially disappointed to be placed into Ezra Stiles in his day because of its modern archi-tecture. Nowadays, he said he is pleased to overhear students say to each other, “You’re in Stiles? Oh, you’re so lucky!”

As of now, students will par-ticipate in the reunion by serving on panels, leading tours and giv-ing performances, among other activies. Still, the role for current

students in the Stiles reunion is not yet completely set, said Lee Kennedy-Shaffer ’13, Ezra Stiles College Council president and one of the student panelists involved with planning the event.

Kennedy-Sha"er said ideally the reunion could provide men-toring and networking opportu-nities for students. Though Stiles students are all aware of the upcoming reunion thanks to Pit-ti’s emails, Kennedy-Sha"er said he thinks many Stiles students expect to be largely una"ected by the reunion. Others, however, are looking forward to seeing recent graduates such as their old fresh-man counselors return, he said.

2012 also marks the 50th anni-versary of Morse College, but Pitti said Morse is not hosting a reunion this fall because of the demands associated with transi-tioning to a new master. English and American Studies professor Amy Hungerford assumed the post July 1.

“Planning for this reunion has been pretty intensive for the past nine months,” Pitti said, “so it was di!cult for Morse College to consider participation, given the change in leadership.”

Renovations of Stiles, which opened in 1962, were completed in fall 2011.

Contact SOPHIE GOULD at [email protected] .

Stiles to hold first college reunion

BY BEN PRAWDZIKSTAFF REPORTER

New Haven Promise will dole out $323,807 in tuition checks this year — more than triple the amount the schol-arship program distributed in 2011 — and at the same time relax its GPA requirements, administrators announced Wednesday.

The Promise program, which awards college tuition scholar-ships to New Haven public high school graduates and is funded by Yale, has been implement-ing a tiered phase-in sys-tem for students. Graduating seniors are eligible for differ-ent funding amounts based on how long they have been in high school since the pro-gram’s announcement, which is a driving factor behind this year’s spike in scholarship outlays, program administra-tors said. Promise students from the graduating class of 2011 receive up to 25 percent of the full scholarship award and incoming college freshmen from the class of 2012 receive up to 50 percent. A total of 220 students at 17 different col-leges and universities across the state are receiving Promise scholarships, program admin-istrators said.

“This renewed commit-ment to offer access to higher education is reassurance to our young people that, if they work hard and stay committed and dependable, then oppor-tunities to maximize their full potential are inevitable,” said Dorsey Kendrick, president of Gateway Community College and a Promise board member.

Promise executive direc-tor Patricia Melton ’82 added that she is pleased with the size of the funding increase, as “it captures how the bene-fit will substantially grow until

it reaches 100 percent in 2013-’14.”

But increased funding is not the only change Prom-ise administrators are over-seeing — the program’s board of directors has also decided to lower the GPA requirement Promise freshmen must meet in order to continue receiv-ing the scholarship, Melton said. Previously, college stu-dents receiving Promise funds were required to maintain a 2.5 GPA, but that minimum has now been decreased to 2.0 for a recipient’s freshman year. Melton said the change will allow 17 current Promise bene-ficiaries to stay in the program.

“The change in GPA require-ments for college freshmen recognizes the fact that the transition to college life can be challenging, both socially and academically,” said Mary Papazian, Southern Connect-icut State University president and a Promise board member.

Though Promise adminis-trators have previously said that high academic standards — such as a 3.0 high school GPA requirement — ensure that the program remains an achievement to be proud of, Melton maintained that the lower college freshman GPA requirements will not weaken the program.

“ New H ave n P ro m i se requires a consistently strong performance in high school over four years, just as com-petitive colleges do,” Melton said. “We require that the GPA be met along with a sizeable community service and atten-dance criteria … It is still an achievement to be proud of to ‘win’ a New Haven Promise scholarship.”

Melton added that the new 2.0 GPA requirement is actually more aligned with achievement criteria at most colleges. She said that “it is universal across institutions that a 2.0 GPA is considered to be in good academic standing.”

New Haven Promise was announced on Nov. 8, 2010 at a ceremony at Cooperative Arts and Humanities High School on Crown Street.

Contact BEN PRAWDZIK at [email protected] .

Promise funds grow as GPA minimum shrinks

It is still an achievement to be proud of to “win” a New Haven Promise scholarship.

PATRICIA MELTON ’82Executive director, New Haven Promise

We started talking about how exciting it would be to… gather Stilesians from across the decades.

STEPHEN PITTI ’91Master, Ezra Stiles College

ZOE GORMAN/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR; EMILIE FOYER/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

In a few weeks, Ezra Stiles will become the first college to hold a reunion event for alumni of a single residential college.

BY NITIKA KHAITAN AND NICOLE NAREACONTRIBUTING REPORTERS

Jonathan Gibbons, owner of french fry vendor Fryborg and a newcomer to the New Haven food truck scene, bus-tled about his mobile kitchen on Thurs-day, flinging bacon bits and ruby toma-toes onto a mound of hand-cut crispy fries embellished with swirls of mayon-naise. For the finish, he impaled his BLT fries with a plastic fork and handed it to a customer with a smile in a manner typi-cal of the Elm City’s street food culture — quick, no-fuss and friendly.

A proliferation of new food trucks hit the city streets this past year, including Fryborg, Mrs. G’s Vegan Cuisine, Szabo’s Little Red Seafood Truck and the Sugar Cupcakery & Bakery. Mostly o"shoots of local restaurants seeking to expand their customer base, the trucks contribute to New Haven’s vibrant foodie culture by o"ering gourmet on the go, using high-quality ingredients and forging “inti-mate” relationships with their custom-ers, Gibbons said. Food carts, such as those operated by Tacuba Taco Bar, have existed in New Haven for decades, but the latest batch of food trucks are compara-tively upscale, a trend that owners said may have begun with Caseus Fromagerie & Bistro’s Cheese Truck in 2010.

“People are changing the way they think about street food,” said restaura-teur Arturo Franco-Camacho, who first brought Tacuba Taco Bar carts to New Haven 16 years ago. “They used to be too

scared to eat from a food cart, but now they embrace it.”

Food trucks owe their popularity in part to social media, which plays an integral role in helping owners “stay in touch with customers” by informing them of trucks’ locations and special dishes daily, said Tom Sobocinski, co-owner of Caseus. Rated one of New Haven’s top 10 culinary retailers on Yelp, Caseus’ Cheese Truck has accumulated over 3,400 Twitter fol-lowers and 2,700 Facebook likes, even attracting customers from out of town.

Dan Szabo, owner of Szabo’s Seafood Truck, who also posts daily on Twitter, said he sometimes feels like “a deer in the headlights” when he opens up before noon and “20 people have already lined up” for fresh lobster rolls and clam chow-der. The truck, affiliated with Szabo’s Seafood Restaurant in Fairfield, Conn., opened last November and now has up to 60 steady patrons daily, which has encouraged Szabo to expand. He said he hopes to refurbish a schoolbus by ripping out all of the seats and installing a mobile kitchen inside, parking it permanently in a local lot.

As the city’s food truck culture has continued to grow, owners have collab-orated to increase their sales by parking within the same vicinity. Gibbons claimed to “piggyback” with Michael Debonte, operator of the Sugar cupcake truck, which won the Food Network’s Cupcake Wars and opened in April. Debonte said the variety among the food trucks works in favor of their businesses.

The city’s flourishing food truck indus-try, however, poses a threat to local small businesses, said Tony Scha"er, owner of the Four Flours Cookie Truck.

“The retailers pay rent and taxes, so it’s important that they don’t get over-whelmed with too many trucks,” said Schaffer, who is also a member of the Town Green’s Special Services District. “The city needs to exercise a sense of con-trol with these trucks, but I also feel that there is room for them.”

Food truck owners said they are well-received by the Yale community, but stu-dents said the price of venturing out of the dining halls can deter them from fre-quenting food trucks.

Madelaine Taft ’13 said some members of her friend group are especially fond of particular street food, but that dining halls are more convenient and, as an o"-campus resident, she finds that cooking for herself is cheaper.

Though Josh Eisenstat ’15 said he usu-ally eats in the dining halls, he has relished his visits to the Cheese Truck.

“I wish they had a [meal] swipe at food trucks,” he said.

Another recent entrant into the New Haven street food scene is Nuts 4 Nuts, a New York City-based food cart chain, which opened its first two Connecticut locations in the Elm City.

Contact NITIKA KHAITAN at [email protected] and

NICOLE NAREA at [email protected] .

YDN

Students line up for lunch at an Indian food cart outside the School of Management. Street food has been an increasingly popular element in New Haven’s culinary scene.

As demand grows, food trucks flock to New Haven

Page 6: Today's Paper

FROM THE FRONTPAGE 6 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

“Educational politics makes corporate poli-tics look like a sandbox.” MARY FRANK FOX PROFESSOR IN

THE SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY, GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

members, such as advising students and attending departmental meetings.

Anthony Smith, director of under-graduate studies in economics, said his department does not take where profes-sors live into account during the hiring process.

Instead, Smith said his goal is to ensure the best professors are recruited to give undergraduates the best educa-tion possible.

“If they want to live in New York, or if they want to live in Branford, it doesn’t really matter,” Smith said. “We figure they’ll be able to meet their responsibil-ities; how they do it is up to them.”

Professors who commute said they make a point to be as available as pos-sible. Magaziner said he spends 16 to 20 hours a week in his o!ce in order to be available to students. English profes-sor David Kastan, who commutes from Morningside Heights, said he tries to meet with each of his students for co"ee or a beer at least once during the semes-ter. College seminar lecturer Thomas Herman ’68 arrives a few hours before his first class to meet with students. If a large number of students request con-ferences, he comes the day before.

Herman and journalism teacher Ste-ven Brill ’72 LAW ’75, who also travels from New York, said that their primary careers in New York also give them the opportunity to spend one or two classes per semester visiting newsrooms in New York City.

Carolyn Brown ’13, who took Her-man’s “Press, Business, and the Econ-omy” course, called the trips to New York “applicable and career-altering” because they provided insight into a city to which she had little exposure.

English professor Anne Fadiman commutes to New Haven from Pioneer Valley, Mass., taking the train down Wednesday morning and staying for one night. She maximizes her time by allow-ing individual students to walk with her

to the train station.“Those are my o!ce hours,” Fadiman

said, explaining that she usually reserves that time to talk with former students, while current students generally meet with her on campus.

Fadiman stays in the guest suite in Branford College on Thursday nights, so she said she has met with students until 11 p.m.

“I can grab a roll or cup of soup from Au Bon Pain and run back to my o!ce to have two more conferences after dinner,” Fadiman said.

THE COMMUTEProfessors interviewed provided a

variety of reasons for why they chose to accept jobs in New Haven without mov-ing permanently from their homes in New York City. Some have spouses who hold jobs in New York, some have chil-dren enrolled in New York City schools, and some simply prefer the bigger city.

Their commutes, while sometimes arduous, can be productive and enjoy-able. Many said living so far from cam-pus means they spend their time at Yale more e!ciently.

Magaziner said he views his commute as an opportunity to work. His rules for the hour-and-45-minute train ride include no conversations on the phone or with other commuters. Instead Mag-aziner, who has two young children, said he likes to put on headphones while on the train and get work done without interruption.

Economics DUS Smith added that recruiting professors who live in New York City can be difficult, given the competition from schools like Colum-bia University and New York University. For potential hires from anywhere else, he considers New Haven’s proximity to New York a “selling point.”

Magaziner said he hopes to sustain the commute as long as possible, but did not believe such travel would be possible if he were a science professor who needed to spend more time on campus in labs.

“You’ll find most people who com-mute are part of humanities or social sciences who don’t have to be in a place touching something to be [doing] work,” Magaziner said.

Assistant mathematics professor Alex Kontorovich, who also takes the train from Grand Central to New Haven because his wife works in New York, said he does not know of any other math pro-fessors at Yale who commute between the two cities.

Though Kontorovich hopes to move closer to Yale soon, he and Magaziner had similar schedules last year, so they formed a friendship based on their walks between campus and the station.

“On the train, [Magaziner and I] will say hey, and we sit, and we do our work,” Kontorovich said. “If you’re riding with people, you’re talking with them, you’re not working, and the train time is golden work time.”

Kastan also takes the train occasion-ally, but usually he chooses to drive on Tuesday mornings from his Morningside Heights apartment to his apartment near campus in New Haven, where he stays until Friday or Saturday. He called the commute by car “seductively simple,” adding that walking outside and jump-ing in the car is easier than walking to the Harlem train station, especially since he’s usually carrying a load of books.

Kastan said he enjoys his early-morn-ing rides with co"ee and music on the radio.

“I see a lot of birds — red-tailed hawks, occasionally wild turkeys on the side of the road. It’s all very exciting,” he said.

He enjoys the split-city lifestyle, he added, because there are more good res-taurants within walking distance of his New Haven apartment and “it is much, much easier to go to the movies here than in NYC.”

Contact JULIA ZORTHIAN at [email protected] .

paign significant media attention and an opportunity to present its message to voters.

Meanwhile, Rose added, Sep-tember has been Romney’s “worst month of the entire campaign.” Over the last sev-eral weeks, he said, Romney’s momentum has been stalled due to his premature reaction to the killing of American ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens and the release of a video in which he is seen characterizing 47 percent of Americans as parasitic on gov-ernment entitlement programs at a fundraiser.

Romney’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment.

The Courant poll represents a significant shift in the state from last month. The late August Quinnipiac poll “was not an out-lier” at that time, according to The New York Times polling blog FiveThirtyEight, whose track-ing average of Connecticut polls put Obama ahead by 9.4 points on Sept. 16. In her post on the blog, contributing writer Micah Cohen attributed the Democratic Party’s weakening hold on Con-necticut since 2008 to the state’s struggling economy — the state’s current unemployment rate of 8.5 percent is nearly a quarter of a percentage point higher than the national average — and a “unique bloc of affluent, Wall Street-connected voters with whom Mr. Romney may hold special appeal.”

Rose noted that Obama’s lead in Connecticut is likely to set-tle slightly as the boost from the convention fades, reflecting national polls in which Obama’s “post-convention bounce” has dissipated, with his lead over Romney in national tracking polls declining to 1 percent or an even tie, down from a high of a seven-point lead a week ago.

Rose predicted that while Obama will almost certainly carry Connecticut in November, the margin of victory will likely fall between the seven-point spread of the Quinnipiac poll and the 21 points of the Courant poll.

According to the Courant poll, there is significant electoral diversity throughout the state, with Obama only leading by seven points in the wealthy and

suburban Fairfield and Litchfield Counties, traditional areas of Republican strength in the state.

The recent rise in support for Obama in Connecticut might have consequences for the tight Senate race between Demo-cratic U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy and Republican former wrestling executive Linda McMahon. Rose noted that because most voters decide which presidential can-didate to support and then vote down party lines — a phenom-enon called the “coattail” e"ect — Obama’s success could benefit Murphy.

“An enthusiastic vote for Obama will have a positive e"ect for not just Chris Murphy,” but also Democratic candidates fur-ther down the ticket, said Jona-than Harris, executive director of the Connecticut Democratic Party.

The Yale College Democrats, who canvass throughout the state each election cycle, frequently invoke Obama when talking to voters about the Senate race, according to Dems President Zak Newman ’13.

“Obama does a lot for Chris Murphy,” Newman said.

Yale College Republicans Chairwoman Elizabeth Henry ’14 disagreed, suggesting that the contests are independent of each other and that recent criticism of Chris Murphy’s financial past leveled by McMahon was mov-ing the Senate race in the “oppo-site direction” of the Connecticut presidential polls.

Connecticut last voted for a Republican in a presidential elec-tion in 1988, when it supported George H. W. Bush ’48.

Contact MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS at

[email protected] .

uate Studies is an example of one building in need of renova-tion that will require short-term housing before construction can begin. Miller added that she has thought less about how the build-ings could be used in the long-term.

The decision to move the Jack-son Institute, which is currently housed in part of Rosenkranz Hall, was made during discus-sions between University Pres-ident Richard Levin and Susan and John Jackson ’67 when a $50 million gift from the couple cre-ated the institute in 2009. James Levinsohn, director of the Jackson Institute, declined to comment on the future move to Horchow Hall.

SOM’s current facilities, which line Prospect and Sachem Streets and Hillhouse Avenue, span 110,000 square feet, less than half

the size of the school’s new cam-pus on Whitney Avenue. While SOM’s central building on Pros-pect contains classrooms, the Hillhouse mansions primarily house faculty o!ces.

Faculty that move into the vacated spaces may find infra-structural problems with the facilities, many of which were built in the 1800s, SOM profes-

sors said. “The heating and the cool-

ing system — that breaks down about twice a year,” said Ahmed Mobarak, an SOM economics professor who works in 55 Hill-house. “And I’m not exaggerating that, it actually does break twice a year.”

Still, Roger Ibbotson, an SOM professor who works in the Inter-national Center for Finance at 46 Hillhouse Ave., said he is “happy where he is.”

“My office has wood panel-ing and built-in extensive wood bookcases and a corner with nice windows that you can see every-where,” he said.

The new SOM campus will cost roughly $222 million in total.

Contact GAVAN GIDEON at [email protected] and

DANIEL SISGOREO at [email protected] .

Profs find joy in daily commute After dip, Obama gains on Romney in Conn.

ED ANDRIESKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS

President Barack Obama is gaining in Connecticut polls after a dip that sug-gested the state had a chance of turning red for the first time in decades.

SOM FROM PAGE 1

OBAMA FROM PAGE 1

Admins plan for future of SOM facilities

An enthusiastic vote for Obama will have a positive e!ect for … [Senate candidate] Chris Murphy.

JONATHAN HARRISExecutive director, Connecticut

Democratic PartyCOMMUTES FROM PAGE 1

SARAH STRONG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Assistant professor of history Daniel Magaziner commutes toYale from his Brooklyn apartment by bike, subway and Metro-North Railroad.

The heating and the cooling system — that breaks down about twice a year.

AHMED MOBARAKEconomics professor, School of

Management

TOMAS ALBERGO/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Steinbach Hall, located at 52 Hillhouse Ave., currently houses o!ces for professors in the School of Management.

Page 7: Today's Paper

NEWSYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 7

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS MALCOLM STEVENSON FORBES

The editor in chief of business magazine Forbes as well as president and CEO of its publisher Forbes, Inc., he has twice been a candidate for the nomination of the Republican Party for president.

BY MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMASCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

After delivering a scathing critique of cur-rent government policies, publishing exec-utive and conservative thinker Steve Forbes told a room of over 200 Thursday evening that “one way or another, we will get back on track.”

Forbes, who serves as editor-in-chief of Forbes Magazine and CEO of its publish-ing company, Forbes, Inc., spoke for over an hour in Linsly-Chittenden Hall on the econ-omy and the nation’s political climate in a talk titled “How Capitalism Can Save Amer-ica.” Throughout the address, Forbes, who ran unsuccessfully for the Republican presiden-tial nomination in 1996 and 2000, fiercely advocated for free markets and harshly crit-icized the policies of the Obama administra-tion and the Federal Reserve Bank.

Forbes began his talk by making several predications about the upcoming election, suggesting that Republicans will expand their majority in the House of Representatives, take control of the Senate and win the presidency. He emphasized that the American people are “not happy with the direction of the country.”

Turning his attention to the economy, Forbes said policy makers should take mea-sures to stabilize the U.S. dollar. He recom-mended that the dollar be re-linked to the gold standard, and predicted this will hap-pen within the next five years. The economy is not moving at “full speed,” he said, because of fluctuation in the value of America’s currency.

“Imagine what your life would be like if Washington did to the clocks what it does to

the currency,” Forbes said, referring to the ever-changing value of the dollar.

Forbes also suggested that principles of free markets should be extended to the health care system. Under the current system and government regulations, Forbes said many consumers do not pay attention to the costs of their medical care. Forbes said there is a “dis-connect” between health care providers and consumers, which prevents free market com-petition from driving down costs.

Toward the end of his discussion, Forbes emphasized the importance of recognizing innovations and seizing opportunities. He cited McDonald’s, which he said was the first restaurant chain to standardize and simplify a menu, as a company that exemplifies creative thinking and business development.

Four students interviewed said they found Forbes to be an engaging speaker, though they had mixed feelings about his policy positions.

“I didn’t come because I agree with him, but he’s a very talented speaker,” Josh Clap-per ’16 said.

The talk was part of the Irving Brown Lec-ture Series, which has brought conservative speakers such as Karl Rove and Ann Coulter to Yale since 2008. The event was sponsored by the Federalist Society at the Yale Law School, Young America’s Foundation, which brings conservatives to college campuses, and the William F. Buckley Jr. Program.

Forbes Magazine was founded in 1917 and publishes articles on business and politics, among other topics.

Contact MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS at [email protected] .

Steve Forbes sings praises of free market

ANNELISA LEINBACH/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Steve Forbes, the editor in chief of Forbes Magazine, came to Linsly-Chittenden Thursday to give a talk titled “How Capitalism Can Save America.”

BY AMANDA CHANCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

At the first Ward 1 Demo-cratic Committee meeting of the school year, members planned to assist their party’s e!orts at the state and national levels one vote at a time.

On Thursday evening, the committee met at Yale’s Afro-American Cultural Center to discuss their plans for the upcoming presidential and Sen-ate elections. The meeting was led by Ben Crosby ’14 and Nia Holston ’14, the co-chairs of the committee, a component of New

Haven’s Democratic Town Com-mittee, which elects delegates for state primary elections and endorses local candidates. Much of the meeting focused on get-ting out the vote for Democratic Senate candidate Chris Murphy.

“We’re trying to build in New Haven a politics that is transfor-mative,” said Hugh Baran ’09, who attended the meeting as the coordinator of New Haven For Chris Murphy .

To that end, New Haven “needs to turn around,” he said. Baran emphasized the need for high voter turnout, stating that his goal this election is for

41,000 people to vote for Pres-ident Barack Obama and Chris Murphy in New Haven, a much higher citywide Democratic voter turnout than the last pres-idential election. He also noted the low voter turnout in Ward 1 in 2008. “Students don’t feel invested in this place,” he said.

But Baran said he is increas-ingly optimistic about the vot-ers of Ward 1, citing the record-breaking voter turnout for the Ward 1 aldermanic election last year. To the attendees of the meeting, he mentioned that each team of students canvassing on Yale campus is able to register 10

new voters each time on average.“It’s really up to you guys

how many people you want to get engaged and voting,” he said. “The Democratic Party is depending on us.”

A major obstacle to increasing turnout is misconceptions about convicted felons’ voting rights, a significant issue in New Haven that is “brought up in every Democratic Ward Commit-tee meeting,” said Holston, who organizes registration drives for this very purpose.

“The misconceptions out there are staggering,” said Melissa Lavoie ’12, who works

part-time at the New Haven Reentry Initiative, a non-par-tisan program that serves ex-felons looking for housing and employment, and Unlock the Vote, a program engaging peo-ple with criminal records in the political process. “If you’re done with [your] sentence and you’re done with parole, you can vote.”

Ward 28 Democratic Com-mittee Co-chair Jess Corbett also attended the meeting and stressed the importance of reg-istering “sporadic voters.”

“They’re the voters in your ward who didn’t even exist three months ago,” he said. “We need

to go outside what the current polls are showing.”

At the end of the meeting, Christofer Rodelo ’15, a coordi-nator of the Ward 1 committee, held a forum for tips and expe-riences on canvassing. The most di"cult part of canvassing, he said, is encountering “apathy.”

Beginning this past week, the Ward 1 Democratic Commit-tee plans to lead Yale students in canvassing every Wednesday from 7 to 9 p.m. until voter reg-istration closes.

Contact AMANDA CHAN at [email protected] .

As Election Day nears, Ward 1 Dems plan next moves

BY RISHABH BHANDARICONTRIBUTING REPORTER

On Thursday night, the Board of Aldermen’s finance commit-tee took the first step toward raising the salary of the city’s director of public works.

At the committee’s monthly caucus, which took place at the Clemente Leadership Academy on Columbus Avenue, alder-men assembled with the inten-tion of discussing pension policy for New Haven Police assistant chiefs. Instead, a last-minute change of plans struck the item from the docket, and the com-mittee turned instead to a dis-cussion of the director of pub-lic works’ salary and a report on the city’s employee healthcare plans. Ultimately, the commit-tee passed both proposals, which will now go to the full Board for consideration.

In an interview with the News prior to the meeting, NHPD Union President Louis Cav-liere Jr., whose rank and file have lacked a contract for nearly a year and a half, said the com-mittee would not discuss NHPD pension policy because “signif-icant progress has been made in negotiations a few days ago.” At the committee meeting, the city’s Chief Administrative O"-cer Robert Smuts ’01 refused to divulge more information about the deal, saying that it “should be announced in the near future.” Cavliere and Smuts said both parties would prefer to deal directly with each other rather

than to go through the Board.With pension policies o! the

table, the committee turned to a debate over the salary of New Haven’s director of public works — $98,000, which the city fears is too low to attract high-quality candidates to replace Jon Pro-kop, who is retiring in January.

“We have a terrific Director of Public Works [John Prokop], but … we haven’t found anyone who is good enough to replace him because we’re not financially competitive,” said Smuts, add-ing that the committee should expect a qualified replacement to cost the city $125,000.

Ward 5 Alderman Jorge Perez agreed, citing a survey of other Connecticut Directors of Pub-lic Works’ salaries. New Haven is the second largest city in Con-necticut with 130,000 people, he said, but 38 other towns and cit-ies in the state pay their directors more than New Haven, includ-ing two towns with populations under 10,000.

But New Haven resident Kevin Joyner argued that if the Depart-ment of Public Works had to be strengthened, there are better ways to do it.

“In front of my house, there’s a sign that says the streets will be swept on the first and third Thursdays of the month. We’re lucky if they sweep once a month,” said Joyner, adding that a few years ago the city was ful-filling this promise.

Ward 15 Alderman Ernie San-tiago concurred, suggesting that the city fill department vacan-

cies below before increasing the director’s salary. He added that “$98,000 isn’t peanuts” and the city should look look internally for Prokop’s replacement.

But the story of former Dep-uty Public Works Director John Lawlor undermines this argu-ment, Ward 10 Alderman Justin Elicker FES ’10 SOM ’10 said.

“Lawlor — a good friend of mine — was a deputy we trained to succeed Prokop, but we weren’t able to financially compete,” Elicker said, add-ing that while New Haven could only a!ord to pay him $86,000, Bloomfield, a town with only 33,000 people, offered him $126,000 a year. Smuts said San-tiago’s view promotes “penny-pinching” — an ostensible sav-ings of $30,000 a year could end up costing New Haven millions in lost e"ciency, he said.

Eventually, Smuts’ request prevailed in a 6-2 vote. Ward 16 Alderwoman Migdalia Castro joined Santiago in dissenting.

The proposal will now move to the Board as a whole, which will hold its next meeting in the first week of October.

The finance committee also approved Ward 9 Alderwoman Jessica Holmes’s and Ward 25 Alderman Adam Marchand’s submission of a report from the Health Benefits Review Task-force which proposed research-ing ways to lower the city’s healthcare costs.

Contact RISHABH BHANDARI at [email protected] .

RISHABH BHANDARI/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

The Board of Aldermen’s finance committee moved Thursday night to raise the salary of the public works director in a bid to attract top talent for the retiring Jon Prokop, who is paid $98,000.

City moves to attract successor at helm of public works

Page 8: Today's Paper

NATIONPAGE 8 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

Dow Jones 13,596.93, +0.14% S&P 500 1,460.26, -0.05%

10-yr. Bond 1.78%, -0.01NASDAQ 3,175.96, -0.21%

Euro $1.30, +0.11Oil $91.87, 0.00%

At town hall, Obama suggests Romney is out of touch with U.S.BY DAVID ESPO AND KEN THOMAS

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — President Barack Obama cast Mitt Romney on Thursday as an out-of-touch challenger for the White House and an advocate of education cuts that could cause teacher strikes to spread from Chicago to other cities. The Republican countered that the U.S. economy “is bump-ing along the bottom” under the current administration and he predicted victory in the fall.

The two men eyed each other across hotly contested Florida, a state with 29 electoral votes, more than any other battle-ground in the close race for the White House.

“When you express an attitude that half the country considers itself victims, that somehow they want to be dependent on gov-ernment, my thinking is maybe you haven’t gotten around a lot,” the president said. That was in response to a question about Romney’s recent observation that 47 percent of Americans pay no income tax and believe they are victims and entitled to an array of federal benefits.

Obama spoke at a town hall-style forum aired by the Spanish-language television network Uni-

vision.For his part, Romney was

eager to move past that contro-versy, which has knocked him o! stride. He disclosed plans for a three-day bus tour early next week through Ohio with running mate Paul Ryan and sought to return the campaign focus to the economic issues that have domi-nated the race all year.

At a fundraiser in Miami, Rom-ney looked ahead to his televised head-to-head encounters with Obama this fall. “He’s a very elo-quent speaker, and so I’m sure in the debates, as last time … he’ll be very eloquent in describ-ing his vision,” the Republican said. “But he can’t win by his words, because his record speaks so loudly in our ears. What he has done in the last four years is establish an economy that’s bumping along the bottom.”

Less than seven weeks before Election Day, polls make the race a close one, likely to be settled in eight or so swing states where neither man has a solid edge. Obama has gained ground in polls in some of those states since the completion of the Democratic National Convention two weeks ago, while Romney has struggled with controversies of his own making that have left Repub-

licans frustrated at his perfor-mance as a candidate.

Still, there were fresh signs of weakness in the nation’s job mar-ket as the two candidates vied for support in Florida.

The Labor Department said the number of Americans seeking unemployment fell only slightly last week, to a seasonally adjusted level of 382,000, suggesting that businesses remain reluctant to add to their payrolls. The four-week average rose for the fifth straight week to the highest level in nearly three months.

After more than two days of struggle, Romney seemed eager to leave the 47 percent contro-versy behind as he appeared at the Univision forum Wednesday night. “My campaign is about the 100 percent in America,” he said firmly.

But Obama made his most extensive comments to date on the subject since the emergence of a video showing Romney tell-ing donors last May that as a can-didate his job wasn’t to worry about 47 percent of the country.

“Their problem is not they’re not working hard enough or they don’t want to work or they’re being taxed too little or they just want to loaf around and gather government checks,” the presi-

dent said.”“Are there people that abuse

the system? Yes, both at the bot-tom and at the top,” he added, including millionaires who he said pay no income taxes. He said many at the low end of the income scale pay other forms of taxes, and some who don’t pay taxes are senior citizens, stu-dents, disabled, veterans or sol-diers who are stationed overseas.

“Americans work hard, and if they are not working right now I promise you they want to go to work,” he said.

As for education, the presi-dent said Romney and running mate Ryan advocate a budget that would cut federal funds for schools by about 20 percent.

“And you could see potentially even more teachers being laid o!, working conditions for teachers becoming even worse and poten-tially for more strikes,” he said.

The president added that under his administration, “what we say to school districts all across the country is we will pro-vide you with more help as long as you’re being accountable, and as far as teachers go, I think they work as hard as anybody, but we also want to make sure that they are having high standards of per-formance in math and science.”

BY ROBERT BURNS AND BEN FELLERASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Images of angry mobs in Arab cities burning Ameri-can flags and attacking U.S. diplomatic posts suggest the Muslim world is no less enraged at the United States than when President George W. Bush had to duck shoes hurled at him in Baghdad.

But more than three years after Presi-dent Barack Obama declared in Cairo that he would seek “a new beginning” in U.S.-Muslim relations, a closer look reveals strides as well as setbacks.

One U.S.-led war is over and another is receding, although there are questions about whether America has made last-ing gains in Afghanistan. The Arab Spring revolution, a spontaneous combustion that happened independent of Western influence, has given people new power and hope as well as democratic elections that the U.S. supports.

But peace between Israel and the Pal-estinians is nowhere in sight, Iran is seen as a menace, and broad mistrust with America is still deep and explosive across much of the Muslim world.

As nations across North Africa and the Middle East move chaotically toward democracy, they and Washington have settled into a wary, redefined relationship. Obama is not ready to call Mohammad Morsi, the popularly elected Egyptian president, an ally, and the democratically elected Iraqi president, Nouri al-Maliki, has dismissed U.S. demands that he stop Iran from using Iraqi airspace to fly weap-ons to Syria for use against anti-govern-ment rebels.

Such is the complicated progress

report that Obama carries toward the United Nations General Assembly next week, his final moment on a world stage before the U.S. election on Nov. 6. For that election, Pew Research Center poll-ing shows Obama has a clear edge over Republican Mitt Romney in handling for-eign policy in general and problems in the Middle East specifically.

Across the world his standing remains markedly lower in predominantly Mus-lim nations. However, Leila Hilal, a Mid-east expert at the New America Founda-tion, said Obama may have made more progress toward improving relations than critics say.

“Obama inherited a very damaged U.S. credibility in the region,” she said, and so

it would be unrealistic to think that his “new beginning” would take hold fast.

“There’s only so much one presi-dent can do, given the history” of per-ceived insults by the U.S., she said. Those include events as major as the American invasion of Iraq and as recent as the pri-vately made anti-Islam video that ridi-cules the prophet Muhammad and trig-gered major protests across the Muslim world.

The question of the Obama admin-istration’s relationship with that Mus-lim world came under new election-year scrutiny when four Americans, including Ambassador Chris Stevens, were killed in a Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

Mixed record for Obama in Muslim world

BY KAREN MATTHEWSASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — A provocative ad that equates some Muslim radicals with savages is set to go up next week in the New York City subway system, just as violent protests in the Middle East are subsiding over an anti-Islamic film ridiculing the Prophet Muhammad.

A conservative blogger who once headed a campaign against an Islamic center near the Sept. 11 terror attack site won a court order to post the ad in 10 subway sta-tions on Monday. It reads, “In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel. Defeat Jihad.”

The ad was plastered on San Francisco city buses in recent weeks — prompting some artists to deface the ads and remove some of the words, including “Jihad.” The blogger, Pamela Geller, said she filed suit Thursday in the nation’s capital to post the ad in Washing-ton’s transit system, after o"cials declined to put up the ad in light of the uproar in the Middle East over the anti-Islam film.

Abdul Yasar, a New York sub-way rider who considers himself an observant Muslim, said Geller’s ad was insensitive in an unsettling climate for Muslims.

“If you don’t want to see what happened in Libya and Egypt after the video — maybe not so strong here in America — you shouldn’t put this up,” Yasar said.

But “if this is a free country, they have the right to do this,” he said. “And then Muslims have the right to put up their own ad.”

Geller, executive director of the American Freedom Defense Initia-tive and publisher of a blog called Atlas Shrugs, called a New York judge’s order allowing the ads “a victory for the First Amendment” and said she wasn’t concerned that her ad could spark pro-tests like the ones protesting the depiction of Muslims in the video “Innocence of Muslims.” Violence linked to the movie has left at least 30 people in seven countries dead, including the American ambassa-dor to Libya.

“If it’s not a film it’s a cartoon, if it’s not a cartoon it’s a teddy bear,” she said. “What are you going to do? Are you going to reward Islamic extremism? I will not sac-rifice my freedom so as not to o!end savages.”

New York City police aren’t anticipating adding any security to subways when the ads go up and have received no threats or reports of violence relating to them, chief spokesman Paul Browne said.

recyclerecyclerecyclerecycleYOUR YDN DAILY

CAROLYN KASTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Obama participates in a town hall hosted by Univision America.

MOHAMMAD SAJJAD/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Pakistani protesters hold a banner depicting U.S. President Barack Obama.

Anti-Jihad ‘savage’ ads going up in NYC Subway

Page 9: Today's Paper

BULLETIN BOARDYALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 9

Partly sunny, with a high near 73. Wind 6 to 8 mph in the afternoon. Low of

56.

High of 78, low of 61.

High of 69, low of 48.

TODAY’S FORECAST TOMORROW SUNDAY

CROSSWORDACROSS

1 Collected5 Tilting tool

10 Swift14 Apple application

no longer in use15 Eponymous

William’sbirthplace

16 Gospel writer17 One who illegally

brings home thebacon?

19 God in bothEddas

20 The orange kindis black

21 Tape deck button23 Uno e due24 Fairy tale baddie25 Mistakes in

Dickens, say?33 Sound, perhaps34 Insect-eating

singers35 Rapper __ Jon36 Lasting

impression37 Just a bit wet38 Stove filler39 “__ American

Cousin,” playLincoln wasviewing whenassassinated

40 Go green, in away

41 Linney of “TheBig C”

42 When to send anerotic love note?

45 English classassignment word

46 Ottoman title47 Remote insert50 By oneself55 Big-screen format56 “Something’s

fishy,” and a hintto this puzzle’stheme

58 Pantheon feature59 “Fear Street”

series author60 Modernize61 Tools for ancient

Egyptianexecutions

62 16th-centuryEnglisharchitectural style

63 Zombie’s sound

DOWN1 Andy of comics2 Soothing agent3 Bird symbolizing

daybreak4 ’70s TV teacher5 Idle6 Farm unit7 Sports gp. with

divisions8 Garfield, for one9 Budding

10 Blossom11 European

wheels12 Crispy roast

chicken part13 Take care of18 1996 Reform

Party candidate22 Messes up24 Short tennis

match25 Biker helmet

feature26 Provoke27 Nurse Barton28 Willing words29 Stand30 Not just mentally31 Papal topper32 Soothe37 Lauded Olympian

38 One might keepyou awake at night

40 Fishing gear41 By the book43 Prehistoric

predators44 Like Everest, vis-

à-vis K247 Musical with the

song “AnotherPyramid”

48 Hebrew prophet

49 Pitch a tent,maybe

50 Enclosed in51 TV host with a

large carcollection

52 Circular treat53 Bupkis54 David Cameron’s

alma mater57 Early Beatle

bassist Sutcliffe

Thursday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Neville L. Fogarty 9/21/12

(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 9/21/12

CLASSIFIEDS

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INSERT TITLE BY YOU

THAT MONKEY TUNE BY MICHAEL KANDALAFT

SCIENCE HILL BY SPENCER KATZ

DOONESBURY BY GARRY TRUDEAU

21 3

8 1 4 5 76 3 5

8 5 3 27 4 6

41 6 2 75 7 1

SUDOKU EXPERT

ON CAMPUSFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2112:00 PM “Relics: Travel in Nature’s Time Machine.” Entomologist Piotr Naskracki will give this Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies/Environmental Sciences Center Seminar. A light lunch will be provided. Class of 1954 Environmental Sciences Center (21 Sachem St.), room 110.

4:00 PM “The Intersection of International Relations Scholarship and Policymaking.” University of Virginia politics professor and Security Studies editor-in-chief John M. Owen IV, Jackson Institute senior fellow Alexander Evans and political science assistant professor Jessica Chen Weiss will speak at this panel discussion celebrating the release of the Yale Journal of International A!airs’ fall 2012 scholars’ forum issue. Reception to follow. Luce Hall (34 Hillhouse Ave.), room 101.

7:15 PM “How Do You Find Purpose?” Timothy Dwight College Dean John Loge and local pastor Matt Croasmun GRD ’13 will speak about where they find purpose in life and will take questions from the audience. Hosted by the Yale Christian Fellowship. Connecticut Hall (1017 Chapel St.), faculty room.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 221:30 PM Yale College Chess Club presents: Chess Simul with Robert Hess. Come play chess with grandmaster Robert Hess at the same time as up to 50 other Yalies! First 40 spots are first come, first served. Guranteed spot if you bring your own board. Cash prizes for wins and chess gear for draws. Old Campus.

8:00 PM “American Night: The Ballad of Juan José.” Written by Richard Montoya, developed by Culture Clash and Jo Bonney, and directed by Shana Cooper. Tickets $20-$96. University Theatre (222 York St.).

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 238:00 PM “Crossing the Rhine.” Eighteenth-century music of France and Germany, performed by Wieland Kuijken (viola da gamba), Eva Legene (recorder), and Arthur Haas (harpsichord). Tickets $10-$20. Yale Collection of Musical Instruments (15 Hillhouse Ave.).

SUBMIT YOUR EVENTS ONLINEyaledailynews.com/events/submit

y

NOT THE NORMAL minimum wage job, check out www.greatcollegejob.com

drawingDaily News?

Interested infor the Yale

CONTACT DAVID YU AT [email protected]

cartoons

Page 10: Today's Paper

AROUND THE IVIESPAGE 10 YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

“The road to success is always under con-struction.” LILY TOMLIN AMERICAN WRITER AND ACTRESS

BY MERCER COOKSTAFF WRITER

At the end of last spring, the new Charlesview housing site in Allston was only marked by some ground level foun-dation and the steel frame of an under-ground garage. Now, a few months later, the sight is impossible to miss, marked by a completed steel frame of three mid-rise buildings and several smaller townhouse buildings.

The project, which was slated to be finished in the fall of 2013, has remained ahead of schedule according to Je!rey J. Beam, the project manager for The Com-munity Builders Inc., the organization supervising the construction.

Beam added that consultants to the project are currently considering moving in the first tenants to the new buildings in the spring of 2013.

He attributed the project’s rapid prog-ress over the summer to a “good, coordi-nated team.”

“We had good communication and a good plan of execution,” Beam said.

In 2007, Harvard reached a land-swap agreement with Charlesview’s board of directors. The university received the

site of the current Charlesview resi-dential complex, a five-acre plot that abuts Harvard Busi-ness School, in return for a par-cel it owned near the Brighton Mills

shopping center, the site for the new Charlesview complex.

Some of the brick and windows have been installed, which gives the commu-nity a better sense of how the project will appear upon completion, said John Viola, the Charlesview project supervisor at John Moriarty and Associates, the con-struction firm associated with the new Charlesview project.

“You can get a sense of how the build-ings will look when they are finished,” Viola said.

Viola also said that he believed that residents of the current Charlesview site would begin to be moved in on a staggered schedule, as more and more buildings will look when they are finished,” Viola said.

Viola also said that he believed that residents of the current Charlesview site would begin to be allowed to move in on

a staggered schedule, as more and more buildings are being completed.

Beam echoed this statement, but said there would be an emphasis on making sure that Charlesview residents still felt that they were part of a residential neigh-borhood.

“The goal is to not have people living in a construction site,” Beam said. “We want to be able to complete an entire city block and then shrink the construction site so those people are actually living in a nor-mal, functional, completed set of build-ings while the other buildings are setting up.”

The new housing complex will consist of 240 mixed-income units, which will be spread across 22 buildings made up of anywhere between two and 84 units.

Additionally, it will contain a number of parks and public recreational spaces.

These recreational areas are consis-tent with some of the original goals of the new site, which, in addition to providing housing, are also meant to help “reinvig-orate pedestrian and commercial activity in this [Allston-Brighton] neighborhood,” according to the master plan for the proj-ect filed by The Community Builders with the Boston Redevelopment Authority.

Allston project moves forward

BY LILLIAN CHENSTAFF WRITER

At 3 a.m. on Wednesday, Columbia opened registration for its first two massive open online courses.

The university is offering the two courses — Financial Engi-neering and Risk Management and Natural Language Processing — through Coursera, an online edu-cation platform founded by Stan-ford University professors Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng last year. It’s Columbia’s first major venture into the online education market in a decade.

“We’re doing a pilot program in the MOOC stage — massive open online course — and the idea there is to see … the potential of the MOOC stage for education,” said Sree Sreenivasan, who was appointed Columbia’s first chief digital o"cer in July. “What I’m trying to do in my position is to help see what’s working, try new things and to expand and enhance what we’ve already done and built at Columbia.”

Sreenivasan said that sev-eral Columbia schools, including the School of Continuing Educa-tion, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, the School of Journalism and Teachers College, have had assorted online educa-tion o!erings for years. But this is the first time Columbia is o!er-ing courses that are free and open to anyone in the world with Inter-net access.

Both courses will begin on Feb. 11, 2013, and run for 10 weeks. According to descriptions on Coursera’s website, the workload for each course will be eight to 10 hours per week. Industrial engi-

neering and operations r e s e a r c h p ro fe sso rs Garud Iyen-gar and Mar-tin Haugh will teach F i n a n c i a l

Engineering and Risk Manage-ment, and computer science pro-fessor Michael Collins will teach Natural Language Processing.

“The plan is to give peo-ple a broad introduction into the method of financial engineering and risk management and option pricing for portfolio optimiza-tion … and also a healthy degree of skepticism,” Haugh said of his course. “Obviously, these models have come under a lot of criticism in the last few years … so we hope to address some of these issues as well.”

Thirty-three schools — includ-ing the California Institute of Technology, Duke University and Princeton University — cur-rently o!er or are planning to o!er classes on Coursera. The more than one million people who have enrolled in the site’s courses are expected to pay attention during video lectures interspersed with interactive exercises and com-plete homework assignments in between lectures.

Kyle Rego, SEAS, called Colum-bia’s new online courses a “fantas-tic opportunity,” noting that he is currently enrolled in the in-per-son version of Natural Language Processing.

“If I didn’t have the opportu-nity to go to Columbia … I would definitely take a course” online, he said. “I could easily see other peo-ple wanting to.”

University trying hand at online education

COLUMBIA

HARVARD

T H E H A R VA R D C R I M S O N T H E C O L U M B I A S P E C T A T O R

DANIEL LYNCH/THE HARVARD CRIMSON

Harvard is planning to build a new science building in Boston’s Allston neighborhood.

Page 11: Today's Paper

SPORTS

ent in the video that the Elis have been watching.

Sandquist went on to say that Cornell also mixes up its cover-ages, but that one of Williams’ strengths as a quarterback was read-

ing defenses and taking what he saw, rather than “step[ping] out of what he sees on the field.”

Finally, Sandquist stated that Yale will try to control the tempo of the game.

“We’re going to establish our identity and go from there,”

Sandquist said. “We’re going to try and dictate the game ourselves.”

Kicko! in Ithaca, N.Y. is at 1 p.m. tomorrow.

Contact CHARLES CONDRO at [email protected] .

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 11

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS BILLY GILLISPIEThe men’s basketball coach at Texas Tech resigned from his post due to health concerns, the school announced Thursday. Gillespie, who had made his name by turning around basketball programs at UTEP and Texas A&M, led the Red Raiders for one disappointing season.

Keys to the Game

BY CHARLES CONDROSTAFF REPORTER

DON’T LET MATHEWS BEAT YOUAlthough it is only their first Ivy

League game, the Bulldogs will face possibly the most talented player they will see this season in Cornell Univer-sity’s Je! Mathews. As last year’s Ivy League O!ensive Player of the Year, he has shown no signs of a recession this season. Mathews threw for 489 yards and three scores while rushing for another touchdown against Ford-ham University last weekend. If the Bulldogs want to win in Ithaca tomor-row, they are going to have to dis-rupt Mathews and keep the Big Red on the ground. Cornell managed just 29 rushing yards last week, so if the Elis can make this weekend a ground game, the duo of running backs Tyler Varga ’16 and Mordecai Cargill ’13 can help Yale steal a win on the road. The key to all of this is taking the ball out of Mathews’ hands. Not only will the pass rush have to get to Mathews before he can pick apart the secondary, but the o!ense will also have to make sustained, time-consuming drives. Mathews cannot score when he is not on the field, so keeping him on the sidelines will be crucial.

TAKE CHANCES ON OFFENSEHead coach Tony Reno made sev-

eral bold play calls last weekend, and they worked out for the Bulldogs. Reno called for a deep pass instead of trying to run and get breathing room from the Yale two-yard line. He was rewarded with the longest play from scrim-

mage in Yale history when receiver Cameron Sandquist ’14 hauled in the tipped pass from Eric Williams ’16 for a 98-yard score. Earlier in the game he called for a fake punt, and safety John Powers ’13 — the same player who ran the fake punt in the infamous “fourth-and-22” play against Harvard three years ago — dashed for 24 yards. The irony of Powers gaining the yard-age that would have vindicated for-mer head Coach Tom Williams in The Game notwithstanding, Reno dis-played a knack for taking risks at the right time. That could come in handy against an inexperienced Cornell sec-ondary that is starting two freshmen at corner.

EXECUTE ON SPECIAL TEAMSLast week Yale won because kicker

Philippe Panico ’13 made his field goal while his Hoya counterpart missed both of his attempts. With the excep-tion of giving up a punt return for a touchdown when Kyle Cazzetta ’15 outkicked the coverage, the Elis played well on special teams, but this week they will need to be mistake-free. Giv-ing a quarterback like Mathews a short field to work with does your defense no favors, so the Bulldogs must focus on pinning Cornell deep within its own territory on punts and kicko!s. Last week showed the Elis the di!erence between scoring a touchdown and set-tling for a field goal attempt, and they need to take that to heart.

Contact CHARLES CONDRO at [email protected] .

regulations.“[Levin] certainly knows there

are, at times, people who disagree with him, and I would be one of those who disagree with him on the limits we have on student ath-letes to this great place,” Beckett said.

While Beckett said Levin reevaluates the recruitment pol-icy each year through discussions with students and coaches, Levin said in March that the number of recruits has remained low because of an increasingly selective appli-cant pool and a higher “opportu-nity cost” for each admit. For the class of 2015, Yale recruited only 177 of a total 230 athletes allowed by the Ivy League.

Levin declined to comment Tuesday on whether the Univer-sity’s recruiting policy will change after he leaves, saying he would leave the choice to his successor, but 10 athletes interviewed said they believe the turnover in lead-

ership will o!er a chance to recon-sider Yale’s recruiting policies.

“We won’t know exactly what will happen with the program until we see who gets the job,” softball outfielder Riley Hughes ’15 said. “But it’s definitely an opportunity for the athletic pro-gram.”

Matthew Thwaites ’13, a mem-ber of the varsity track and cross country teams, said the track team has su!ered from a shortened ros-ter since its allotted number of recruits is not enough to fill all 17 events in a track meet. The team forfeited points in three events

at last year’s Ivy Championships, he said, because it didn’t “have enough bodies to put in uniform.”

Chris Gobrecht, the head coach of the women’s basketball team, said she was sad to hear the news of Levin’s resignation because she thinks his tenure has been largely beneficial for the University, but added that his recruitment poli-cies have made it more challeng-ing for Yale athletic teams to suc-ceed, especially for sports that require a larger roster.

“If everyone stayed healthy and everyone [on the team] stayed all four years, [recruitment] wouldn’t be a big deal,” Gobrecht said. “But there is a lot of natural attrition, and that can present problems for you.”

Chawwadee Rompothong ’00, head coach of the women’s golf team, said she hopes to see Yale’s teams on a more level playing field with its competitors in the future.

“I think athletics will continue to do what they do right now, con-trolling what they can control,

trying to recruit best student ath-letes they can get,” Rompothong said. “Hopefully there will be more spots available for all the athletic teams so that we’re at least competitive with other

teams, and we can put a little more emphasis on winning on the field.”

Yale won two Ivy League Championship titles in the 2011-’12 school year, while Harvard and Princeton won 10 each.

Contact JANE DARBY MENTON at [email protected] and TAPLEY STEPHENSON at [email protected] .

LEVIN FROM PAGE 1

FOOTBALL FROM PAGE 12

YALE

In June, University President Richard Levin will step down after serving 20 years in o!ce. He is pictured here at a Yale football game.

BY ASHTON WACKYMCONTRIBUTING REPORTER

Coming o! a three-game winning streak, the Bulldogs (5–3) will take on the Princeton Tigers (3–3) this week-end — the beginning of Ivy League play for both teams.

In the past four seasons, each com-petition between Princeton and Yale has resulted in a victory for the away team.

“We’ve got to try and break that curse,” head coach Rudy Meredith said.

In their attempt to do so, the Bull-dogs will have to out-will the Tigers and play solid team defense. Judging from their last three games, the Bull-dogs seem to be on the right track. The Tigers’ five yellow cards and the Bull-dogs’ three this season foreshadow a fierce game.

Meredith added that the Tigers have an aggressive mentality on the field that leads to their scoring touch.

“They have scored a lot of goals this year,” Meredith said.

But they are not the only scorers on the field. With an 8–1 blowout over the Saint Peter’s Peacocks on Sept. 11, the Elis have demonstrated their scoring prowess.

Despite the high scoring both teams have demonstrated this year, a high-scoring game on Saturday is unlikely. In the past seven years of matchups between Princeton and Yale, scoring deficits have been held to two or fewer

every game.In preparing for

the tough compe-tition that faces them this weekend, the Elis have been focusing on team defense, and for good reason. On the

Tigers’ roster is the Ivy League’s lead-ing scorer Jen Hoy, who has already put away nine goals this season.

In contrast, goals from the Bulldogs have been well-distributed across the team. When the Bulldogs defeated the Peacocks by a seven-goal margin, just one player scored twice.

The Elis treat defense the same way — winning for the Bulldogs is a team

e!ort.Rachel Ames ’16 and Elise Wilcox

’15 have been splitting time in the net. All of the players that have played in a game have also started for the Bull-dogs.

By continuing their team momen-tum, the Elis are looking to outplay the Tigers across the field. Ball movement, similar to that displayed in the last couple of games, coupled with deliber-ate spreading of the field will bode well for the Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs will kick o! against the Tigers at 3 p.m. on Saturday at Reese Stadium.

Contact ASHTON WACKYM at [email protected] .

two Bulldogs for their performances. Setter Kelly Johnson ’16 shared her first Rookie of the Week award with Columbia’s Atlanta Moye-McLauren and outside hitter Mollie Rogers ’15 was named to the conference’s honor roll.

In just her first season, Johnson has been a key player for the Bulldogs. Fol-lowing the nonconference portion of their schedule, Johnson is second on the team in kills with 78 and second on the team in assists with 161. Head coach Erin Appleman said that she feels the entire freshman class is ready to take on Ivy opponents.

“I think [the freshmen] are getting more mature as we keep playing,” she said. “Jesse [Ebner], Karlee [Fuller] and Kelly [Johnson] have all played club ball at a really high level, so I think the pressure of the Ivy League is not going to a!ect them as much as it would young freshmen.”

Brown is currently mired in an early slump. In their past six matches, the Bears have won just three of a possi-ble 18 sets and been swept five times. However, three of those squads were from the West Coast, where the qual-ity of collegiate volleyball tends to be higher, and two were from major con-

ferences.T h a t s t r e t c h

includes a trip to New Haven for the Yale Invitational two weeks ago. While at Yale, Brown was defeated 3–0 by both Northwestern

and Villanova. In that same weekend, Yale won a set from Northwestern and defeated Villanova with a 3–1 come-from-behind victory.

“Brown is on the upswing and they’ve definitely improved,” Apple-man said about the Bears. “They played tremendous defense [at the Yale Invitational], and Maddie Lord is a very good o!ensive threat for them.”

Lord led Brown in kills last year and finished fourth in the conference with 3.28 per set. But she did not find suc-cess against the Bulldogs last season. Instead, Lord had two of her worst performances of the season. In the Ivy opener, Lord recorded two kills and eight errors for an abysmal -0.316 hit-ting percentage.

The action begins at 2 p.m. on Fri-day in Brown’s Pizzitola Sports Cen-ter.

Contact KEVIN KUCHARSKI at [email protected] .

HENRY EHRENBERG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

The women’s soccer team has won all of its home games so far this season.

YDN

Last season against the Big Red the Bulldogs won at home 37-17 on the heels of a victory against Georgetown.

VOLLEYBALL FROM PAGE 12

W. soccer to face PrincetonWomen’s Soccer

Saturday, 3 p.m.vs.

Princeton

Yale takes on Big Red

Elis face Bears in away match

Athletes look beyond Levin

VolleyballSaturday, 2 p.m.

at

Brown

Hopefully there will be more spots available for all the athletic teams.

CHAWWADEE ROMPOTHONG ’00Head coach, women’s golf team

Page 12: Today's Paper

SPORTSIF YOU MISSED IT SCORES

FOR MORE SPORTS CONTENT, VISIT OUR WEB SITEyaledailynews.com/sports

y

BY CHARLES CONDROSTAFF REPORTER

The Bulldogs face a long, hard drive to Ithaca this weekend, but the trip will get even harder when they take the field to face Cornell.

Although they lost their season opener to Fordham, the Big Red (0–1, 0–0 Ivy) is a dangerous team led by reigning Ivy League o!ensive player of the year, quarterback Je! Mathews.

Mathews started the season where he left o! last year, throwing for 489 yards and three scores against the Rams to give him 1,446 yards and 12 touchdown passes in his past three games. Despite Mathews’ recent

accomplishments, Yale (1–0, 0–0 Ivy) quarterback Eric Williams ’16 said that he will not change his game to compete with the Big Red signal caller.

“Throwing for 1500 yards in the last three games, that’s something you don’t do too often,” Williams said. “[But] I’m not trying to compare myself to [Mathews]. I’m just trying to play the best that I can.”

Head coach Tony Reno also praised Mathews, saying that he was an NFL prospect who combined a strong

arm with an ability to read the field. Although Mathews is a threat, wide receiver Henry Furman ’14 stated that the team will not go to extremes to counter him.

“Our identity is an aggressive defense,” Furman said. “We’re still going to run the same blitzes. We’re not going to be afraid and put more guys in coverage.”

Wide receiver Cameron Sandquist ’14 added that the offense will also maintain the balance between ground and aerial assaults that led the Blue and White to a 24–21 victory at George-town last weekend.

He added that the backfield combo of running backs Tyler Varga ’16 and

Mordecai Cargill ’13 gives the Elis an edge. The duo rushed for a combined 179 yards last week, and Williams said that the backs’ ability to gain yards after contact is especially important.

“I think we’ll fare all right [against Cornell] because we’ve got the run game with Varga and Mo that can be just deadly,” Williams said.

Although establishing the run will be important, Williams said that the Bulldogs will take more chances down the field this weekend in the pass-ing game. He and Sandquist added that although the Big Red secondary is young, the talent of the unit is appar-

THE NUMBER OF GAMES THE HOME TEAM HAS WON IN THE LAST FOUR MATCHES BETWEEN THE YALE AND PRINCETON WOMEN’S SOCCER TEAMS. The Bulldogs will look to break that pattern this weekend when they face the Tigers on Saturday at 3 p.m. in Reese Stadium.

STAT OF THE DAY 0

YALE DAILY NEWS · FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2012 · yaledailynews.com

QUICK HITS

“This weekend should be a good test...to see if we can build o! of the momentum we cre-ated... last weekend.”

NICK ALERS ’14DEFENDER, MEN’S SOCCER

WOMEN’S SAILINGELIS TO COMPETE IN BOSTONThe No. 1 women’s sailing team will compete in the Regis Bowl this week-end. The regatta is hosted by Boston University, and the competition will take place on the Charles River. The Bulldogs are undefeated in two regat-tas so far this season.

WOMEN’S TENNISYALE COMPETES IN TOURNAMENTFive members of the team, including Annie Sullivan ’14, right, will compete this weekend in in the Cissie Leary Tour-nament, hosted by Penn. Dartmouth, Columbia, and Cornell will also be among the competition, and Courtney Amos ’16 will make her collegiate debut.

MLBCleveland 4Minnesota 3

MLBTampa Bay 7Boston 4

MLBSt. Louis 5Houston 4

MLSD.C. 1Philadelphia 0

WNBATulsa 78New York 66

YDN

Mordecai Cargill ’13, shown playing against Dartmouth last season, and Tyler Varga ’16 combined to rush for 179 yards in Yale’s win over Georgetown last week.

SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 11

BY KEVIN KUCHARSKISTAFF REPORTER

After a challenging pre-season, it is finally time for Ivy League play to begin for the vol-leyball team.

The Bulldogs will begin their quest for a third straight con-ference title this Saturday, when they travel to Providence, R.I., to take on Brown (3–6). This weekend’s match is the begin-ning of a di"cult stretch of five away contests that will keep Yale on the road until Oct. 12. This represents a new challenge for the Elis, who started last sea-son by playing their first five league matches in the John J. Lee Amphitheater.

“It’s definitely going to be dif-ficult,” libero Maddie Rudnick ’15 said. “Playing on the road is always a little tougher. You have to get used to a new gym and dif-ferent lighting … but I think we can pull through and get some wins.”

This weekend’s matches will be just the second time Yale (4–5) hits the road this season after traveling to San Diego last weekend. Yale dropped all three of those matches, which contin-ues a trend the team has devel-oped over the last two years. Going back to 2010, the Elis have played to a sterling 25–4 record at home but have won just 14 of 30 matches played on the road.

Although Yale did not man-age to win a match last week-end, the Ivy League honored

Bulldogs hit the road

SEE VOLLEYBALL PAGE 11

BY EUGENE JUNGSTAFF REPORTER

The Elis will attempt to repeat last week’s sweep when they face Ford-ham and Marist this weekend.

After demonstrating noticeable o!ensive strength last weekend, with a goal apiece from forwards Scott Armbrust ’14, Peter Jacobson ’14 and Jenner Fox ’14, the team appears fit and ready to take its third and fourth consecutive wins.

“This weekend should be a good test for us to see if we can build o! of the momentum we created for our-selves last weekend,” defender Nick Alers ’14 said. “We’ve had a short week of practices, but I think each practice has been very sharp.”

The Bulldogs (2-3-1) will first face Fordham in Reese Stadium tonight. It has been more than 20 years since the two last faced o! against each other.

“Fordham is a team that tries to play good, attractive soccer,” Alers said. “That’s how we try to play too, so it should be a fun game.”

Although the Rams (3-3-0) fell to Stony Brook in their last clash, they have scored 11 goals in total so far this season. They beat Brown, 1-0, two weeks ago, whereas the Bull-dogs lost to the Bears by a 1-0 margin last year. The Rams’ player to watch is Finnish midfielder Kalle Sotka: Besides scoring two goals so far this

season — includ-ing the game sealer against Brown — he is the team’s most important play-maker who not only shoots but also provides cru-cial assists.

Although the Bulldogs will have home turf advan-tage, the Rams have not played a game since Sept. 14, giv-ing them more time to recover.

On Sunday, the Elis will make a trip to Marist (3-3-1) and attempt to repeat last season’s 7-0 shutout against the team.

“Marist will remember the 7-0 pounding and will come out very hard against us,” forward Peter Ambiel ’15 said.

In that game, Yale dominated the first half by tallying five goals, includ-ing a goal each from Jacobson, Fox and defender Milan Tica ’13. The Bulldogs added two more goals just for good measure in the second half, and Fox again contributed one of them.

Alers said Marist has some good, athletic players, so Yale will have to play smart and take advantage of its opportunities.

Although Yale undoubtedly con-trolled last year’s game, Marist recorded four more shots (22-18).

The Red Foxes have scored ten goals so far this season and in their last game, they defeated the Uni-versity of North Carolina-Asheville, 4-0.

Yale should focus on marking for-ward Stephan Brossard, who has con-tributed a third of Marist’s total goals this season, along with three assists. He was also named to the First Team All-MAAC and the NSCAA Third Team All-North Atlantic Regional Team last year. Another player to watch is Evan Southworth, who has scored three goals for his team this season.

The Bulldogs will maintain tac-tics from last weekend against their opponents.

“We had some success with the Flying V formation last week, so I think the plan is definitely to stick with it for now,” Alers said.

Ambiel added the team wants to play good, hard soccer and come out of the weekend with two wins head-ing into its game against Connecticut.

The kick-off against Fordham is slated at 7 p.m. today at home. The Elis will take on Marist on Sunday at 1 p.m.

Contact EUGENE JUNG at [email protected] .

EUGENA JUNG/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

After failing to score a goal in its first four games of the season, including a 0–0 tie against Colgate, the men’s soccer team has won consecutive games against Quinnipiac and Sacred Heart.

FootballSaturday, 1 p.m.

at

Cornell

Men’s SoccerFriday, 7 p.m.

vs.

Fordham

Sunday, 1 p.m.

at

Marist

Football faces first Ivy test

Men’s soccer looks to maintain momentum

VOLLEYBALL