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BY AKBAR AHMEDSTAFF REPORTER
Last fall, the Theater Studies pro-gram underwent a thorough curric-ulum review in which every part of the program was “scrutinized and assessed,” said Toni Dorfman, direc-tor of undergraduate studies for the program.
In doing so, the program reaf-firmed what it sees as a defining characteristic of theater instruction at Yale. In Dorfman’s words: “This is not vocational training. We don’t see it that way.”
Instead, the program will uphold
its view of theater “as a branch of the humanities and as a complex cultural practice [that] claims a rich history and literature and an equally rich rep-ertoire of embodied knowledge and theory,” as the Blue Book states.
Yale’s promise to students of a lib-eral arts education is very di!erent from what they might receive at more career-focused conservatory pro-grams.
According to Sarah Lovely, direc-tor of college counseling at the Wal-nut Hill School for the Arts in Natick, Mass., a conservatory education pro-vides a “very high level of training at least five days per week, with the option of acting or singing or dancing in a lot of performances in between.”
The Yale program is a far cry from that practice-oriented structure.
Majoring in theater studies, students said, is not enough to learn the skills that are integral to a career in the field.
“As far as getting the best training, you really need to participate in The-ater Studies, but not just stay there. You absolutely need to do extracur-ricular theater,” said Timmia Hearn Feldman ’12, who will go into profes-sional theater after she graduates this May. “It’s a combination. One with-out the other is useless.”
For these students, preparing for a career in the theater while at Yale means navigating a complicated tan-gle of theater studies teaching and involvement in student-produced shows in their free time.
Every college. Ezra Stiles College held Medieval (K)night this weekend, bringing out Stilesians dressed in yellow and black garb and bearing swords and shields. The students marched throughout campus and eventually swarmed the courtyards of “every college.” “A big, big, big thanks to those of you who participated in Medieval Knight, who jousted in the courtyard, who donned helmets, and who raised swords & shields to expand this benevolent empire — leaving no doubt about Moose Dominance,” Ezra Stiles Master Stephen Pitti wrote in an email to students.
Tangled Up in Crowds. Folk singing group Tangled Up in Blue held its bi-annual “Bees and Cheer” concert Saturday evening. The concert marked the 25th anniversary of TUIB, bringing out alumni like TUIB founder Nerissa Nield ’89. For many seniors, the night was emotional: A number were spotted crying after a particularly energetic rendition of “Wagon Wheel.”
Champion. Kate Falkenstein ’12 placed as the top speaker at the American Parliamentary Debate Association’s championship tournament held at Wesleyan University this weekend.
Relay results. Friday’s Relay for Life saw a smaller turnout than last year’s. The event brought in over $51,000 for cancer research, while last year’s Relay for Life raised $85,000 for the cause.
He’s got wings. Jack Hart ’12 won the honor of representing the United States in the Red Bull Paper Wings worldwide paper airplane contest. Hart won his spot in the distance category, constructing a paper airplane that travelled 45.11 meters. He’ll travel to the world championships in Salzburg, Austria, in May.
Vandalism. Calhoun College Dean Leslie Woodard’s apartment was vandalized on Sunday morning around 5 a.m., according to an email from Calhoun Master Amy Hungerford. An unknown culprit threw two bricks through the apartment’s windows from the walkway between Calhoun and Berkeley. No one was hurt, and the culprit has not been apprehended.
A winner. “The Island President,” a documentary about the e!orts of the president of the Maldives to save his low-lying island from rising sea levels, was named best feature film at the fourth annual Environmental Film Festival at Yale.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY1968 Between 250 and 300 students stand around trees on Cross Campus, blocking bulldozers from uprooting them for a full hour before work crews head home.
Submit tips to Cross Campus [email protected]
M. LACROSSEYale topples Bryant in 2OT with last-second goal by Matt Gibson ’12PAGE B3 SPORTS
NEW HAVEN POLICECOPS ARRAIGNED IN OFF-DUTY GUNPLAY INCIDENTPAGE 5 CITY
MEDICAL MARIJUANAFinance Committee approves bill supported by Malloy; House to votePAGE 3 CITY
W. TENNISELIS CLINCH IVY LEAGUE TITLEPAGE B1 SPORTSMORNING RAINY 58
EVENING WINDY 55
NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · VOL. CXXXIV, NO. 130 · yaledailynews.com
JENNIFER CHEUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
KEIL ’12 WINS MR. YALESaybrugian Marty Keil ’12 won the title of Mr. Yale Sunday after an hour-long talent com-petition against members of all 12 residential colleges. Present-ing his talent as “dating,” Keil won over the judges by reen-acting a fake date that involved a prop master, strawberries and a Titanic painting scene.
BY ANTONIA WOODFORDSTAFF REPORTER
Five years after the University instituted a tenure-track system, professors and administrators said the perception that “nobody gets tenure at Yale” is fading.
Under the tenure-track sys-tem adopted in 2007, tenure decisions are no longer depen-dent on departmental resources, and each junior faculty mem-
ber must be evaluated for ten-ure by their eighth year at Yale. Since the change, Yale College Dean Mary Miller said more fac-ulty members — particularly in the humanities, which histori-cally had low tenure rates at Yale — are rising through University’s ranks to receive tenure, and six recently tenured professors said morale among junior faculty in their departments has improved.
At the most recent meeting
of the Board of Permanent O"-cers on March 29, five of seven professors awarded tenure were from humanities departments.
“There was a perception in my department for many years that it was impossible to get tenure from the junior rank,” said Ian Quinn, a professor of music who was awarded tenure last month. “I believe it happened once in the last 40 years before me.”
Before 2007, Yale was
extremely unusual in not hav-ing a defined tenure track, said Jon Butler, a professor of Ameri-can studies and history and for-mer dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, who co-chaired the committee that drew up Yale’s new tenure pol-icy. Rather than automatically considering professors for ten-ure after a certain period of time, Yale could only o!er tenure when departments had a tenured slot
available. The University was also “completely abnormal” in that it would call a nationwide search to fill open tenured posi-tions, to which junior faculty could apply, rather than assess-ing junior faculty’s scholarship independently, Butler said.
Miller said the changes, which also made Yale more generous in
Tenure system a boon for humanities
UPCLOSE
BY ANDREW GIAMBRONESTAFF REPORTER
After a successful pilot pro-gram last summer, the Univer-sity will expand the number of online courses offered for credit through Yale Summer Session this year.
The University will offer nine Yale College courses online for credit — up from two last year — that will be open to both Yale students and those from beyond the Yale commu-nity at a cost of $3,150 each, the same as other Summer Session courses held on campus. Dean of Yale Summer Session Wil-liam Whobrey said the online courses, which are still in an
experimental phase, “mimic the effects of a seminar” by allowing students and profes-sors to interact via video chat and instant messaging.
“This is an opportunity for Yale students to get credit towards their degrees even if they’re not in New Haven,” Whobrey said. “I’m sure there are students and faculty who prefer to be in the class and to see each other face-to-face, but this isn’t meant to replace that.”
The nine online classes, which will be capped at 25 stu-dents each, represent eight dif-ferent departments, includ-
Three years ago, administrators at the School of Architecture turned back to the drawing board.
Students and professors had raised concerns about the undergraduate archi-tecture major’s sequence of courses, said Bimal Mendis ’98 ARC ’02, the major’s current director of undergraduate studies and an assistant dean at the Architecture
School.This May marks the graduation of the
first class to have completed the restruc-tured major, which includes a new pre-requisite sequence and an updated his-tory survey taught through the School of Architecture.
As members of the first class to complete the redesigned architecture major prepare for graduation this May, stu-dents within the program have noted an increasingly pre-
professional feel. NATASHA THONDAVADI reports.
L I B E R A L A R T S
Redrawing the architecture major
SEE ARCHITECTURE PAGE 4SEE ONLINE COURSES PAGE 4
While opportunities in undergraduate theater abound on campus, aspiring actors may find themselves underprepared relative to their peers in conservatories.
SEE TENURE PAGE 4
SEE THEATER PAGE 6
JACOB GEIGER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
In late January, Jamie Biondi ’12 starred in “Macbeth,” his senior project for the theater studies major.
For thespians, Yale degree not enough Mr. Yale crowned
Online courses for credit expand
OPINION .COMMENTyaledailynews.com/opinion
“Dude, you can’t just pull out the Billy Madison line on a one-sentence response.” ‘CHRISPAG’ ON ‘OCCUPY FORCED OUT, BUT FOR WHAT?’
PAGE 2 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
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The News congratulates its newest sta!ers
On Friday, the Oldest College Daily held its spring semester sta! inductions. It is with great pride that we announce the newest
inductees to the Yale Daily News.
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Kirsten AdairGreenwich, Conn.
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Last week, Zachary Brunt ’15, a kind, gifted and beloved student, died much too
soon. At Thursday’s vigil, Zach’s father had a single request: “Please don’t let this happen again.”
His request reminds us to think about the many people at Yale who are struggling now or will be in the future. Yale is a won-derful place, but it can be frus-trating and isolating. Yalies tend to talk freely about achievement but remain silent about hard-ship. In this stoic culture, people easily slip through the cracks. We notice when it becomes a tragedy of the magnitude of last week’s, but there are people all over Yale who need some support, compas-sion and relief.
You can’t provide this support only in the toughest moments. It’s when people are in trouble that they are least likely to feel com-fortable speaking up. Openness, encouragement and understand-ing need to be cultivated long before hardship hits.
During my most di"cult semester, I dealt with a type of obsessive-compulsive disor-der that nobody around me knew existed. As scary as that was, I was
privileged to have a few friends who possessed an extraordinary quality: They were comfortable being around pain without need-ing to resolve it. They weren’t looking to fix their friends’ prob-lems, to move quickly past the di"culties to immediate posi-tivity. They were just there, for as long as I needed them, with-out expecting change. Their sim-ple presence was the best gift they had to o!er, and they o!ered it freely.
These people were also extraordinary because of their ability to be vulnerable. This is where true support starts. By being open about your own di"-culties, you’ll create an environ-ment where your friends aren’t scared to talk about theirs. As it stands, Yalies’ tendency to down-play hardship fuels a cycle of dis-honesty in which people refrain from talking about what’s really going on in their lives for fear of judgment.
But if we don’t talk about prev-alent insecurities, how will peo-ple ever feel safe enough to dis-cuss deeper issues? Who will they turn to when those prob-lems grow, when they start get-ting depressed or when their anx-
iety becomes overwhelming? And if they can’t speak when an issue begins, why will they suddenly feel liberated once it starts to get out of hand?
This is a di"cult cycle to end. Change will require both comfort with vulnerability and willing-ness to be nonjudgmental. Both depend on compassion and kind-ness — towards others and your-self. Until you learn to give your-self a break, it’s hard to truly put yourself out there, and it’s hard to be there for others when they need you.
Remember that building real compassion means acquiring an ability to separate people’s worth from their grades, work habits and standing in extracurricular orga-nizations. People matter — you matter — at a more basic level. In the pursuit of perfection, it’s easy to forget what real worth looks like. And it becomes di"cult to relinquish judgment in favor of understanding and humility.
One of the other unfortunate consequences of a perfection-ist culture is that people in trou-ble often try to mask the extent of their su!ering or think they somehow deserve it. But for those who are struggling, it is real, it
is hard and you don’t deserve it. Period.
It can be di"cult to let people into your life when you’re feel-ing so o!, but take it one step at a time. Begin with even a single line: “I’m struggling right now, but I’m not ready to talk about it.” Gradually reach out to friends and family. Make an appointment with a therapist. No matter what the extent of your di"culties, if you’re unhappy, get the help you deserve.
I didn’t know Zach, but by all accounts he was the type of per-son who took care of the peo-ple in his life. Honor his memory by doing the same for the people in yours. Be kind to yourself and others. Ease up on judgments. Talk about your faults and fears once in a while. Do whatever you can to make the people around you feel at ease.
Start small. Create the type of culture in your own life that you want to see across this cam-pus. But start immediately. Peo-ple close to you might need you more than they’re able to admit right now.
KATE MCDERMOTT is a 2011 graduate of Calhoun College .
G U E S T C O L U M N I S T K A T E M C D E R M O T T
Learn to be vulnerable
A few days ago, one of my campers visited me at school. He’ll be
coming to Yale in the fall and was full of the joy I remem-ber feeling the first time I stepped on the Yale cam-pus after being accepted. We were drinking tea outside in the glorious sunshine and he asked me what appeared to be an innocuous ques-tion: “Are you going back to camp?”
I paused, uncertain of how to respond. “No,” I said, “but I would like to.”
It was a moment of cogni-tive dissonance for me. In my mind, summer means Seeds of Peace, the conflict reso-lution camp located by a lake in Maine where I’ve spent three of the last six summers. Summer means the large expanse of blue water that catches the early morning light and the stars after sun-set, the creaky wooden cab-ins with the finicky plumb-ing and the high-polished dining hall where we do table cheers. Summer means fall-ing asleep at night to the sound of gentle lake waves and waking up each morning to loon cries.
These images hung before my eyes as I turned back to this camper, who loves Seeds of Peace as I and vir-tually everyone who have gone through the program or worked there do. Yet all of us have had to face a moment, either as a camper or coun-selor, when we realized that it was time for us to stop going back.
I’m in the process of rede-fining what summer means to me. This year, it will mean putting on collared shirts instead of dirty T-shirts, working in an o"ce instead of the great outdoors and cooking for myself in an air-conditioned apartment. I’m not unhappy about any of these things — in fact, I’m profoundly excited about the work that I get to do this summer at an art museum in New York — but I also feel a sense of loss.
Not going back signals the end of an era and the need to look towards a future in which I have to balance what I love with what pays the rent and is an appropriate next step on a career trajectory. Ambition, I told my camper, can be a mixed blessing: While it spurs me to reach for greater accomplishments, it makes me self-conscious. I don’t like admitting to myself or to others that the major reason I’m not returning to camp is that it’s time to add another line to my resume, to embrace adult work and
a d u l t r e s p o n -sibilities in spite of my love for the M a i n e woods.
M o s t Yalies I know are s t r u g -gling with s i m i -lar ques-tions of
how we adjust to the high expectations for success that we impose on ourselves and have imposed on us with our desire to pursue passions. Grownups are saying two things at once: Follow what you love relentlessly, because otherwise life isn’t worth living, and make a comfort-able life and living for your-self — even if it means let-ting go of earlier dreams. For some of us, the two mindsets will be possible to reconcile. But for many of us, there may be di"cult choices ahead.
Summers in college are some of the first of these decision points. Senior year and life after graduation will be full of them. If I am strug-gling with this cognitive dis-sonance now, how much worse will it be when I have to decide about graduate school (Ph.D. or MBA?), whether to have children (do I stay at home or keep working?) and when to retire (more finan-cial stability or more time to spend with the family?). I’m looking at what I hope will be a long, happy life with a cer-tain amount of dread for the choices that my peers and I will have to make.
My camper listened thoughtfully as I spoke, but didn’t say much of any-thing. He’s not yet in col-lege; these decisions aren’t yet very real for him. Com-promise is only a peripheral part of his vocabulary, while it is becoming an essential part of mine. I feel grate-ful to have options, but at the same time, I am almost overwhelmed by these same options and the questions they pose.
This, then, is what I said to my camper as we walked back through the Yale cam-pus: Hold on to what you love for as long as possible.
I smiled. I’m already deciding which weekend to visit.
ZOE MERCER-GOLDEN is a junior in Davenport College.
Contact her at [email protected] .
In our age of digital depen-dence, the Computer Science Department should be one of
the most popular at Yale. From political revolutions fueled by social networking to indie bands raising funding on Kickstarter, computers and the Internet are transforming every aspect of how we live, work and play. Yalies of all stripes are clamoring to engage with these trends, but the Computer Science Department is dooming itself to irrelevance by refusing to provide the tools stu-dents need to be successful.
Code is the lingua franca of the 21st century. Whether it’s putting together a website for an advo-cacy campaign, writing a script to analyze some economic data or creating an app to help kids learn math, programming fluency has become a required skill for any-one looking to have an impact on the world.
The Yale student body under-stands this and desperately craves some structured way to learn these skills. Because the Computer Science Department
refuses to meet this demand, some Yalies took matters into their own hands and founded the enormously popular HackYale group. The organization recruits tech-savvy students to run semester-long classes to teach fellow students basic proficiency in scripting and Web technology.
Last fall, HackYale taught two Web development classes to 60 students. They had to turn away over 500 other students who wanted to learn. This spring, they expanded to teach five classes but still had to turn away over 400 students. Yale administrators, take note: More than 10 percent of the undergraduate student body wanted to learn these skills so badly that they signed up to take an additional class above and beyond their regular schoolwork.
In the words of one faculty member I spoke to, the Computer Science Department’s posi-tion is that it isn’t in the busi-ness of teaching these “trade school skills.” While I certainly agree that Yale computer sci-ence shouldn’t be trying to pump
out programmer worker bees, the department has a role to play in o!ering a few practical classes to give non-majors the program-ming proficiency they need to drive change in their world.
The department’s decision has repercussions outside of the Yale bubble as well. By failing to provide practical program-ming classes, Yale is contribut-ing to New Haven’s economic irrelevance. When startups can’t find people with even basic cod-ing skills, they leave New Haven for the greener pastures of Bos-ton and Silicon Valley. As former president of the Yale Entrepre-neurial Society, I saw countless Yale student startups sputter and die without because they couldn’t find a technically proficient co-founder. Less than 10 percent of ventures had founders that could actually build a product.
The good news is that there’s an easy first step that Yale com-puter science could take to start addressing this issue. It pains me to say it, but we could learn a thing or two from a certain insti-
tution in Cambridge. One thing that Harvard has absolutely got-ten right is its introductory CS50 class that teaches students of all majors the practical script-ing and Web programming skills they need to apply tech to their other interests. My sister — who chose Harvard over Yale par-tially because of classes like CS50 — started the semester knowing almost nothing about program-ming and finished with a job o!er from a tech startup. She might not even end up being a computer science major, but the class gave her a solid set of skills that she’s already putting to work.
It would be simple to create a class along the lines of CS50 here at Yale. By refusing to do so, Yale is doing a huge disservice to its students and leaving them at a significant disadvantage out in the real world.
MAX UHLENHUTH is a senior in Timothy Dwight College. Contact him
at [email protected] .
G U E S T C O L U M N I S T M A X U H L E N H U T H
Making Yale comp sci relevant
ZOE MERCER-GOLDEN
Meditations
A grown-up summer
PAGE THREEYALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 3
TODAY’S EVENTSMONDAY, APRIL 2311:00 AM “Empire and Emancipation: Catholic Britons in the 19th Century.” This talk, by Beinecke visiting fellow S. Karly Kehoe, considers the role played by the religious periphery in the development of modern Britain by focusing on the extent to which the parliamentary union with Ireland in 1801 transformed Britain’s civil and religious landscape. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (121 Wall St.), room 38.
11:45 AM “Microfranchising: Delivering Life Changing Products to the Doorsteps of the Poor.” The Net Impact Club and the School of Management are hosting Chuck Slaughter ’85 SOM ’90, the founder and CEO of Living Goods. Open to students only. Admission is free, but registration on the Yale School of Management website. Yale School of Management (60 Sachem St.), room A51
C O R R E C T I O N
FRIDAY, APRIL 20The article “Citizens testify against DeStefano budget” misrepresented the conversion of the mill rate to property taxes. A mill rate of 1 means $1 in property taxes per $1,000 in the property’s assessed value, meaning that New Haven’s base property tax rate is 4.9 percent.
“When I was a kid I inhaled frequently. That was the point.” BARACK OBAMA PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
BY JAMES LUSTAFF REPORTER
On a day celebrating canna-bis culture — 4/20, or April 20 — a bill permitting the medical use of marijuana sailed through the state legislature’s Finance Com-mittee.
The committee voted 36 to 15 in favor of the bill, which would permit patients with certain debilitating illnesses to obtain marijuana from a licensed phar-macist to use for medical pur-poses. The bill now heads to the state House of Representatives for debate.
State Sen. Toni Boucher, Republican of Wilton, one of the bill’s most vocal opponents, spoke for about an hour about the financial pitfalls of medi-cal marijuana, according to the Associated Press.
“We are contemplating mak-ing a very costly public policy change, which will put the state of Connecticut also in direct conflict with the United States Department of Justice as there appears to [be] growing resis-
tance to these bills from state to state,” she said.
Boucher proposed several amendments to the bill, includ-ing one that would limit its application to those with ter-minal illness. Other amend-ments she proposed would have increased fees on marijuana pro-ducers to help pay for additional
enforcement measures and anti-addiction programs. None of her amendments passed.
Under the bill, a new system will license medical marijuana producers and register quali-fied patients, which are limited to those su!ering from certain specified illnesses such as AIDS or cancer. Doctors would then be permitted to prescribe marijuana to patients, who can possess a one-month supply of the drug.
The bill has widespread sup-port among residents of Con-necticut, according to a Quin-nipiac University poll released March 21. Sixty-eight percent of the poll’s 1,622 respondents said they support allowing patients with a chronic illness to obtain small amounts of marijuana with a prescription, while only 27 per-cent said they oppose medical marijuana.
That same day, the legis-lature’s Judiciary Committee approved the bill allowing med-ical marijuana after hearing tes-timony from Connecticut res-idents who said they would be positively impacted by the leg-
islation. According to committee testimony, the drug is one of the only sources of relief from pain and other side e!ects of certain kinds of treatments.
The legislature has attempted to pass similar bills in the past. In 2007, lawmakers passed a med-ical marijuana bill, but it was vetoed by then-Gov. Jodi Rell, a Republican.
Gov. Dannel Malloy, who took o"ce in 2011, has indicated his support for medical marijuana and said he would sign the bill if the legislature passes it. Last June, the legislature passed a bill that decriminalized the posses-sion of less than half an ounce of nonmedical marijuana in a move that Malloy said reflected the reality that the previous law, under which first-time o!end-ers faced up to a year in prison and fines up to $1,000, did “more harm than good.”
Sixteen states have legalized medical marijuana.
Contact JAMES LU at [email protected] .
Committee OKs medical marijuana
BY DANIEL SISGOREOSTAFF REPORTER
With the School of Manage-ment’s new international network set to launch Thursday, SOM is creating 20 new spots in its pre-MBA summer program for under-graduates from member schools.
The two-week summer pro-gram, which launched in 2007 and is designed to introduce col-lege students and recent graduates from minority groups to the basics of business education, will admit roughly 20 international students from business schools in SOM’s new global network this year. SOM Dean Edward Snyder said inter-national students from the net-work — a partnership of roughly 20 international business schools that will collaborate on a range of projects — will bring a global per-spective to discussions of business issues, and also add a “completely di!erent dimension” to the part-nership by including not just MBA students but also undergraduates affiliated with member institu-tions.
“Having participants from the network schools could position us to better explore issues of diver-sity and develop a better under-
standing of business issues,” Sny-der said.
Heidi Brooks, an SOM lec-turer and faculty director for the pre-MBA program, said expand-ing enrollment from an average of 40 American students to include 20 international students will increase the diversity of the pro-gram. She said working with stu-dents from institutions abroad will expose the program’s typical American participants to interna-tional perspectives on business.
Sergio Rosas, a former Stan-ford University undergraduate who participated in the program last summer and is also helping establish a new alumni association for graduates of the program, said building relationships with inter-national students will be benefi-cial for the program’s participants, given that business is becoming increasingly internationalized. Brenda Castillo, a University of California, Berkeley, graduate who enrolled in the program in 2010 and is also involved in creating the alumni association, said meeting international students might help the other students adapt to future career changes, as many who pur-sue business need to travel and move abroad.
As the program prepares to increase enrollment by about 50 percent, organizers said they will work to ensure that all students become acquainted with each other during their two weeks in June.
Jim Baron, an SOM professor who helped run the pre-MBA pro-gram in previous years, said the program will try to create a “broad climate” that accommodates all students.
“In an intense program where people are thrown together, there
are going to be cliques that form,” he said. “I think that the best you can do is to try to identify themes that are of broad interest and incentives for people to want to get to know as many people as possi-ble.”
Brooks said program organiz-ers have not determined methods for shaping this summer’s group dynamic. She added that the new student composition of the pro-gram will be similar in size to that of an SOM “cohort” — a group of first-year students who take core classes together. As a result, she said teaching the pre-MBA group of students will “feel very familiar” to faculty involved in the program.
Former participants said they did not think the program’s growth in size from roughly 40 students would impact students’ experi-ences this summer.
“When you’re expanding a pro-gram, the curriculum is bound to change,” Rosas said. “But Yale does a great job of paying very particular attention to our needs and under-standing our needs.”
The 2012 program will take place from June 10 to June 23.
Contact DANIEL SISGOREO at [email protected] .
JEFF CHIU/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Coinciding with Friday’s 4/20 holiday celebrating marijuana, the state legislature’s Finance Committee passed a bill permitting medical marijuana.
We are contemplating making a very costly public policy change, which will put the state of Connecticut also in direct conflict with the United States Department of Justice.
TONI BOUCHERState Senator (R-Wilton)
BY TAPLEY STEPHENSONSTAFF REPORTER
The Yale Corporation con-vened over the weekend to dis-cuss the University’s budget for the 2012-’13 academic year and student life policy changes made this year.
University President Richard Levin said Sunday that the Cor-poration met with represen-tatives of Yale Health, Under-graduate Career Services and the college masters to discuss student life. The Corporation also addressed Yale’s budget for the coming academic year, which Levin said is almost final-ized, and preliminary plans for resuming work on major proj-ects that were stalled after the onset of the recession in 2008.
University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said in a Sunday email the topic of mental health services was placed on the agenda last sum-mer. The death last Wednesday of Zachary Brunt ’15 — ruled a suicide by the state medical examiner’s office — was also discussed at the meeting, she added.
“Of course, the recent trag-edy was referenced,” Lorimer said. “The members of the Cor-poration expressed their condo-lences to Zachary’s family.”
As part of the weekend’s meeting, Corporation fellows attended a panel featuring Yale College Dean Mary Miller and three college masters, and then had breakfast with all 12 mas-ters. Levin said the conversa-tion over breakfast was “very general,” focusing on the demo-graphics of the student body and “the special needs students have today.”
The Corporation’s Insti-tutional Policy Committee, which considers the Univer-sity’s administrative policies, met with Jane Edwards, dean of international and profes-sional experience and associate dean of Yale College, to review recent changes to Yale’s career services and with representa-
tives of mental health counsel-ing at Yale.
“There was recently an exter-nal review of the mental health services, which was very posi-tive,” Levin said. “And there’s been a number of initiatives to improve career services and broaden the menu of job oppor-tunities available to undergrad-uates, beyond the typical finan-cial or consulting jobs.”
Yale College Council Presi-dent Brandon Levin ’13 said the Corporation also met with the YCC for roughly one hour on Friday to discuss the council’s annual report, which reviewed initiatives such as gender-neu-tral housing and the mental health fellows program.
As for capital construction, Levin said administrators are “beginning to analyze” when work can resume on the proj-ects. He added that it is still too soon to evaluate the Univer-sity’s capacity to finance these projects, though they were also addressed at the Corporation’s April meeting last year.
“It was a very preliminary discussion,” Levin said. “Most likely it will lead a more detailed discussion over the summer and hopefully some decisions in the fall, but we’re not there yet in terms of completing work.”
Seven major capital proj-ects were postponed when the recession hit, and five of these projects remain stalled: the new residential colleges, the ren-ovation of Hendrie Hall, the new biology building, the new School of Drama building, and additions to Kline and Ster-ling Chemistry Laboratories. The University already resumed work on the new School of Management building and the Yale University Art Gallery ren-ovations after raising su"cient funds to continue the projects.
The Yale Corporation meets five times per year and is com-prised of 19 fellows.
Contact TAPLEY STEPHENSON at
Corporation discusses budget, student life
EARL LEE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
At its weekend meeting, the Yale Corporation discussed capital proj-ects delayed by the recession, such as the renovation of Hendrie Hall.
Pre-MBA program broadens membership
Having participants from the network schools could position us to better explore issues of diversity and develop a better understanding of business issues.
EDWARD SNYDERDean, Yale School of Management
SHARON YIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The School of Management’s pre-MBA program will expand with 20 new slots reserved for students from schools in its new international network.
ing English, Music, Psychology and Economics. Lucas Swin-eford, director of digital media and dissemination at the Yale Broadcast & Media Center, which helped design the inter-face for the courses, said the online courses a!ord students the ability to take classes while pursuing other activities outside of New Haven, such as intern-ships, research projects or com-munity service.
Whobrey said the expansion was partly motivated by similar projects at other universities: Over the past several years, Har-vard, Stanford and Columbia all began offering online courses for credit. The total number of online courses for credit will likely not expand beyond 20 per summer, Whobrey said, adding that such courses could poten-tially become available to Yale students during the academic year.
Three of the nine courses have versions of the classes avail-able on Open Yale Courses — which currently has lectures for 42 courses online for free — so students will watch the prere-corded lectures before attend-ing the online discussion ses-sions, Swineford said, and four other online courses this sum-mer will incorporate online lec-tures posted exclusively for the summer program.
Four professors who will teach online courses this sum-mer said they are excited about the program’s “interactive” nature. Even though they will not meet those students in per-son, they added that the small classes will likely provide better settings than large lecture halls to form personal relationships with students.
Music professor Craig Wright, who taught “Brains of Genius: Mozart and Friends” online in last year’s pilot program, said he received “uniformly positive reviews” from students. Wright, who will o!er the online class “Listening to Classical Music” this summer, said he found that meeting only through online forums did not detract from the educational experience.
Political Science profes-sor Ellen Lust, who will teach her “Introduction to Middle East Politics” course online for a second time this summer, said she her online course was more “diverse” than her typical Summer Session course in New Haven, with students partici-pating from around the world. She added that the online dis-cussion threads allowed her to keep a “track record” of her students’ progress, which does not exist in in-class discussion groups.
“I am convinced that stu-dents can get as much out of online courses as they can from those in the classroom,” Lust said. “In fact, if there is one message to be sent to students considering an online course, it is that the course is not ‘easy.’ Online courses require as much, if not more, time and dedication as in-class courses do.”
For Laurie Santos, a psychol-ogy professor who will be o!er-ing her “Sex, Evolution, and Human Nature” course online this summer, the new medium will be “a unique way to teach [a] big lecture course in a format that allows [her] to get to know [her] students a bit more per-sonally.”
Frequent small discussions between students and professors provided in the online format will likely enhance the learn-
ing experience, echoed Kristina Olson, a psychology professor who is o!ering an “Introduction to Psychology” course this sum-mer. Still, she said the online forum limits the scope of pos-sible demonstrations, which she said she often uses for students in her normal lectures.
The online Summer Session options uses the Pearson eCol-lege Learning Management Sys-tem, a standard platform used for online education.
Contact ANDREW GIAMBRONE at [email protected] .
FROM THE FRONTPAGE 4 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
While the standard five-year undergraduate program o!ered at other universities enables students to obtain the license for professional practice with-out any further training, archi-tecture major Kevin Adkisson ’12 said, Yale undergraduates do not graduate with enough skills to compete with those students.
Instead, students at Yale are meant to benefit from a liberal arts education and only begin taking prerequisite architecture courses in their sophomore year, Mendis said, adding that only about half of the students in the program are planning to become professional architects.
Still, Yale’s new undergradu-ate architecture program treads a fine line between Yale Col-lege’s liberal arts philosophy and the preprofessional cul-ture of its home in the Architec-ture School’s Rudolph Hall. Due to the major’s rigorous course-work early on and focus on pro-duction, six undergraduate stu-dents in the major interviewed said that they feel the program is more “preprofessional” than other majors at Yale.
“I think compared to the gen-eral Yale major, it’s more geared toward going to professional school,” Sydney Shea ’14 said. “But I personally don’t want to be an architect. I’m really inter-ested in it, but I don’t enjoy it enough to do it as a career.”
A NARROWER FOCUS
Mendis said that one of the most significant changes the program made was to move “The Analytic Model,” a course in which students study one canonical building in depth and use it to practice architec-tural production techniques, to the sophomore year. The early placement of the course, which is now a prerequisite to the major, has discouraged stu-dents uninterested in learning the techniques of design from applying to the program.
“You realize whether or not architecture is right for you as a student,” Scott Simpson ’13 said of the course’s role in students’ decisions to apply. “It’s a really honest perspective on what the major is really like.”
Mendis said that since the course — known for its empha-sis on drawing and modeling
skills — was moved to soph-omore year, the program has grown smaller. Prior to the class of 2012, the first class to study in the revamped major, between 20 and 25 students entered the architecture program each year. Now, he said, that number has been reduced to between 16 and 19.
Although over 50 students enrolled in the fall 2011 sopho-more prerequisite “Introduc-tion to Architecture,” a survey course that involves basic draw-ing assignments, only about 22 decided to take “The Analytic Model,” which requires even more drawing technique, cur-rent students in the major said. Eighteen students applied to the major this April, yet two of five sophomore applicants inter-viewed saying they are not sure they will continue with the major next year.
Once accepted into the major, students choose between three tracks — architecture and design; history, theory and crit-icism; and architecture and urban studies. While the total number of students in the major has decreased, a larger percent-age of those enrolled have opted for the design track, Mendis said.
Alyssa Navarro ’14 said that she began the sophomore sequence at the beginning of the year, intending to major in architecture after learning about the history of architecture in her history of art courses. But though Navarro wanted to pur-sue the history, theory and criti-cism track, she felt intimidated by the production requirements of the sophomore sequence.
Now, Navarro said she plans to study of the history of archi-tecture through the Department of the History of Art, adding that neither option is a perfect fit for her interests because the his-tory of art major does not o!er as many courses that focus on architecture as she would like.
“I’m not a drawer, so I was already a step behind,” Navarro said.
Robert A.M. Stern, dean of the School of Architecture, said the undergraduate architecture program should emphasize the production elements of archi-tecture. It is possible to study other aspects of the discipline through a variety of majors, he added, noting that many stu-
dents interested in urban stud-ies but not architectural design apply to the ethics, politics and economics major.
“An architecture program has to be about design,” Stern said.
NEW WAY OF THINKING
While the program does place a significant amount of emphasis on design, Simpson, a junior in the major, said that he does not believe undergrad-uate architecture students feel forced into a professional track. Both students and faculty mem-bers said that the critical think-ing skills developed in a design education are useful in careers other than architecture.
Cynthia Deng ’14 said that while she is devoted to learning about architecture through the
lens of production, she does not plan on entering the field.
“I think it teaches you a dif-ferent way of thinking and gives you a set of skills you couldn’t get anywhere else,” Deng said. “Learning to think about build-ings from so many different
angles teaches you how to think critically.”
Mendis emphasized that stu-dents still take many classes in Yale College other than the 15 architecture courses required for the major, giving them a true liberal arts experience.
In comparison to five-year u n d e rg ra d u a te p ro g ra m s, Adkisson said, the Yale architec-ture program still adopts a much broader definition of architec-ture. Since so many courses from a other disciplines count towards the major’s require-ments, he added, the program adopts a liberal arts approach within the major itself.
Although the program’s recent focus on design has made visualization a larger part of majoring in architecture, Men-
dis added that creating drawings and models is as much a form of expression as practice for a pro-fessional education.
“Here, you’re articulat-ing your ideas visually, and you’re analyzing things visu-ally. The studio environment is where that takes place,” he said. “But that’s no di!erent from a humanities major expressing their ideas in writing.”
Adkisson said that if he decides not to become an archi-tect, he may never make a model again, but he will still gradu-ate with an enhanced ability to think creatively that he can carry into other areas of his life.
Contact NATASHA THONDAVADI at
granting junior faculty leave time, especially benefited humanities professors. Unlike in the sciences, where it is common to take a post-doctoral position between getting a Ph.D. and becoming an assistant professor, junior faculty in the humanities who came to Yale straight out of graduate school often found it di"cult to work their way to tenure at the University, she said.
Of 22 professors who have been promoted internally and awarded tenure since Decem-ber 2010, 11 have been from science and engi-neering departments, and 10 have been in the humanities, according to a list Miller provided the News.
History professor Beverly Gage ’94, who came to Yale in 2004 and was awarded tenure last month, called the generous leave policies “really critical” in allowing junior faculty to complete the type of scholarship expected of them before they are evaluated for tenure.
Recently tenured professors said junior fac-ulty are now more optimistic about their ability to achieve tenure if they maintain a high level of scholarship.
Jing Yuen Tsu, a professor of East Asian lan-guages and literatures who received tenure last spring, said “the morale around junior fac-ulty was quite low” when she came to Yale in 2006. Back then, junior faculty members did not make long-term plans to stay at Yale, she said, adding that the new tenure system has changed this attitude and made the University more appealing for incoming faculty.
English professor Stefanie Markovits ’94 GRD ’01, who was awarded tenure last spring, said she has noticed fewer junior faculty leav-ing her department before the time when they could be considered for tenure. She said last year was the first year since she began teaching in 2001 that no junior faculty members left the English Department, adding that this is indic-ative of “a change in the culture of the depart-ment.”
“I have the feeling my junior [faculty] col-leagues are now much more hopeful about the prospect of getting tenure at Yale,” Markovits
said. “They don’t assume they’ll jump some-where else the moment they get the first good chance.”
Mentoring for junior faculty members has also improved, professors interviewed said, and some observed that there is less of a divide between junior and senior faculty members in their departments.
Quinn said there used to be a “vast gulf” between junior and senior faculty in his department, “largely because it was seen as next to impossible to move from one popula-tion to the other.” He said he now feels junior faculty members in his department are con-sidered “full members” of the department and have the potential to move up the faculty ranks.
Quinn added that a report released by the Provost’s Office this March that reviewed the faculty budget and accounting system also reflects a change in how junior faculty are perceived, since it proposed a new fac-ulty accounting system in which senior faculty members are no longer counted as the equiva-lent of two junior faculty members.
The report, produced by a committee chaired by economics professor William Nor-dhaus ’63, also addressed the concern that Yale might have too many tenured professors and not enough fresh talent at the junior level if tenure rates continue to rise. The report rec-ommends that the establishment of tenure ratio guidelines for each department and hav-ing departments conduct searches at the junior faculty level when their tenure ratio exceeds their guideline. Administrators are currently reviewing the report and have yet to make any policy changes.
Cases for promotion to tenure are consid-ered by the Board of Permanent O"cers after being approved by a professor’s department and a Tenure Appointments and Promotions Committee for each academic division. The Board of Permanent O"cers is a committee of all tenured, full professors in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
Contact ANTONIA WOODFORD at [email protected] .
Redesigned architecture major sees fewer students
[The architecture major] teaches you a di!erent way of thinking and gives you a set of skills you couldn’t get anywhere else.
ALYSSA NAVARRO ‘14
Profs see benefits from tenure-track system
Distance learning grows
KAMARIA GREENFIELD/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
A restructuring of the architecture major three years ago emphasized design techniques within the undergraduate program.
“A man of 80 has outlived probably three new schools of painting, two of architecture and poetry and a hundred in dress.” LORD BYRON POET
SUMMER ONLINE COURSES
Milton, John Rogers
Jazz and Race in America, Tom Du!y
Introduction to Psychology, Kristina Olson
Sex, Evolution and Human Nature, Laurie Santos
The Welfare Economics of Public Policy, Don Brown
Introduction to Green Energy, Yehia Khalil
Listening to Classical Music, Craig Wright
Moralities of Everyday Life, Paul Bloom
Introduction to Middle East Politics, Ellen Lust
TENURE FROM PAGE 1
ONLINE COURSES FROM PAGE 1
ARCHITECTURE FROM PAGE 1
NEWSYALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2011 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 5
800 Hospitals su!ering from drug shortage More than 800 hospitals associated with the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacists reported drug shortages.
BY JAMES LUSTAFF REPORTER
Two New Haven Police Department o!cers charged with the unlawful dis-charge of a firearm, reckless endan-germent and interfering with an o!-cer were arraigned in the New Haven Superior Court Friday morning.
O!cers Charles Kim and Lawrence Burns, who were both put on admin-istrative leave and arrested for their alleged involvement in an off-duty shooting incident at the State Street bar Christopher Martin’s on April 1, made their first court appearance but did not enter a plea on Friday. Along with o!cer Krzysztof Ruszczyk, who is charged with interfering with a police o!cer but did not appear in court Fri-day, they are due to appear in court next on May 11.
“[The case has] been difficult for him, his family, and I’m sure all of the other o!cers,” said Michael Georgetti, Burns’ Hartford-based attorney.
In addition to unlawfully firing a city-issued gun, Burns is charged with lying to a superior about his involve-ment in the incident, according to a warrant affidavit submitted to the court.
Sgt. Steven Teague told Burns to return to State Street to “talk about what happened” in a phone call about 15 minutes after the initial gunfire, but
Burns said, “I wasn’t at State Street, Sarge,” and denied involvement several more times, according to the a!davit.
Georgetti told the New Haven Inde-pendent his client would plead not guilty “at the appropriate time,” leav-ing open the possibility of a plea deal.
Both Georgetti and Rosemarie Paine, Kim’s New Haven-based attorney, noted their clients’ past records with the NHPD.
“[Kim] has lived a life of public ser-vice — first in the U.S. Marine Corps, and then as a public servant,” Paine told the Independent.
Ruszczyk, Kim and Burns all grad-uated from the police academy’s 2008 class and have served nearly four years with the NHPD.
Contact JAMES LU at [email protected] .
NHPD o!cers arraigned in gunplay incident
BY HOON PYO JEONSTAFF REPORTER
Though it is faring better than most other states, Connecticut has not escaped the nationwide drug shortage.
Connecticut hospitals are not experiencing severe short-ages that risk patients’ imme-diate treatments, according to pharmacy directors from Hart-ford Hospital and Saint Raphael’s Hospital in New Haven. But those two hospitals have been forced to ration certain drugs because of the shortage, they said, add-ing that the government needs to rectify the shortage by restruc-turing incentive mechanisms for pharmaceutical companies and by legislating regulations that enforce improved communica-tions between hospitals and drug manufacturers.
“Drug shortages are inherent in the drug delivery system,” said Janet Kozakiewicz, pharmacy director at Saint Raphael’s. “But unfortunately, the numbers per year have increased to unprece-dented levels.”
That drug shortages persist across the state does not nec-essarily mean that patients are not receiving the medications they need, because of hospitals’ rationing strategies. According to Kozakiewicz, Saint Raphael’s holds weekly meetings to review stock levels and evaluate reports from various health organiza-tions, including the FDA. The hospital also sends out weekly updates to alert patients if a medication is in short supply and notify them of possible alterna-tives.
“Selecting the right alterna-tives is the most common way of managing drug shortage,” said Mike Rubino, pharmacy director at Hartford Hospital. “Of course it’s not ideal, but it will be much
better than giving nothing to the patients who can do just fine with the alternatives.”
Rubino added that economics is the leading cause of the drug shortage. Since pharmaceutical companies can reap bigger profit margins with non-generic drugs, he said, there are few incentives for the companies to keep pro-ducing generic drugs. Because of this, many companies have discontinued the production of generic drugs, even though demand remains high, Rubino said. At the same time, he added, there has been an unanticipated surge in demand for drugs, which caused the gap between supply and demand to widen dramati-cally in 2006-’07.
Recent raw material short-ages have also resulted in lower production rates, Kozakiewicz said. Although sudden disrup-tions in raw material supplies would not be a problem if phar-maceutical companies reported to the FDA about the quantity they will be able to produce, there are frequent miscommunications between companies and the FDA.
“The law states that if a com-pany is the only supplier of a drug, it legally must notify the FDA six months before it antici-pates a shortage of the medica-tion,” Kozakiewicz said. “Since there are no consequences, this oftentimes does not happen in a
timely manner, if at all.”Additionally, concerns regard-
ing the quality of drugs produced has prompted the FDA to toughen its regulatory practices, delay-ing or stopping pharmaceutical companies’ production if they fall short of the FDA’s standards. According to the FDA’s website, sterile injectable drugs — which are particularly dangerous if not properly manufactured — make up roughly 80 percent of the drugs a"ected by the shortage.
“There have been a lot of crit-icisms of FDA that they are not doing their job thoroughly over the past five, six years,” Rubino said. “So the FDA hired more people, checked more companies and found errors, contaminations and frauds. Then the FDA told the companies to stop producing and they’re now really enforcing it.”
Rubino added that the govern-ment must incentivize produc-tion of low-profit generic drugs by giving out subsidies to phar-maceutical companies. He added that he supports bills currently in the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate that would penalize companies that do not notify the FDA of upcoming drug shortages.
“Drug shortage is actually costing us quite a sum of money,” Rubino said. “An estimate of the cost of shortage is roughly 1 per-cent of our [drug] budget, which is $25 million. Drug prices keep rising, and we need to put more work into rationing our stockpiles and finding the right substitutes for our patients.”
Currently, there are more than 200 drugs on the Food and Drug Administration’s list of drug shortages. In 2010, there were 178 drug shortages reported to the FDA, 132 of which involved sterile injectable drugs.
Contact HOON PYO JEON at [email protected] .
Hospitals su!er from drug shortages
JACOB GEIGER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Connecticut hospitals are among those feeling the pinch of a national drug shortage.
JACOB GEIGER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The New Haven Police Department has put two o!cers on administrative leave for their alleged involvement in an o"-duty shooting.
Unfortunately, the [drug shortage] numbers have increased to unprecedented levels .
JANET KOZAKIEWICZPharmacy director, St. Raphael’s Hospital
CROSS CAMPUSTHE BLOG. THE BUZZ AROUND YALE THROUGHOUT THE DAY.
cc.yaledailynews.com
[This case has] been di!cult for [NHPD O!cer Lawrence Burns], his family, and I’m sure all the other o!cers.
MICHAEL GEORGETTIAttorney for NHPD O!cer Lawrence Burns
“When I was doing theater, I was very suc-cessful at believing that I was great, God’s gift to the theater.” MORGAN FREEMAN AMERICAN ACTOR
Olivia Scicolone ’14, a the-ater studies major who starred in “Sweeney Todd,” last fall’s main-stage production for the Yale Dra-matic Association, said she plans to pursue a career in the theater. For her, as for other majors in the program, having to seek out opportunities in the field after graduation seems daunting.
“I worry about post-gradua-tion,” Scicolone said.
And not all alumni can assuage her fears. A number of graduates said they found the preparation provided by the Theater Studies program and Yale-funded student productions did not ready them for the challenges of the field.
“My main complaint is that it doesn’t prepare you for the real world,” said Allison Goldberg ’06, who now runs a production com-pany in New York. “It’s a very theoretical education that talks a lot about art, but not as much about marketing yourself as a per-former… the program is not about the business side, it’s about mak-ing art, which is lovely, but doesn’t really prepare you.”
NOT A CONSERVATORYIrene Casey ’14, the president
of the Yale Drama Coalition and a theater studies major, said she believes the Theater Studies pro-gram was upfront about its focus when she considered Yale during her college selection process.
“The strength of the program is on the academic side, and they make it clear,” Casey said. “It must have been said to me 10,000 times.”
Dorfman said the program is about the study of theater as a branch of the humanities, one that suggests broader lenses through which to approach human civili-zation.
“Theater is not just about the theater. We don’t want to ‘theater everything down,’ because what theater is about in distillation is what it is to be human,” she said, citing studies in literature, art, history and the physical sciences as key to a student’s understand-ing of what theater can bring to the world.
The structure of the the-ater studies curriculum reflects a holistic approach grounded in a liberal arts education: all theater studies majors must enroll in a year-long survey on the history of drama and the range of aesthetic theories. Following this prereq-uisite, students are required to enroll in at least four more courses in dramatic history or literature, resulting in a split of six courses in theory and six courses in practice
that add up to the 12-credit major, Dorfman said.
David DeRose, who served as director of undergraduate studies for the Theater Studies program from 1985 to 1993, said he is not familiar with the program’s oper-ation today, but expressed ideals similar to Dorfman’s.
“My vision of the program was always that we were exposing stu-dents to the many possibilities of the theater as a means of artistic and personal expression,” DeRose said. “I refused to see the major as a ‘training program’ in any specific discipline of theater — either act-ing, directing, what have you.”
Several students interviewed said they believe the program’s academic focus has definite merit, although it does not focus as heav-ily as conservatories on practical work.
“[The prerequisite] Theater Studies 110 is kind of a pain, but I needed it,” said theater studies major Mary Bolt ’14, who acted in last weekend’s “Glass Act” and will perform in the Dramat’s 2012 Commencement musical, “Hair.” Bolt chose to attend Yale instead of the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University, a leading conservatory, because, she said, she “couldn’t really pass Yale up.”
Because she attended a public high school and not a specialized arts school, Bolt said she did not have experience reading plays rap-idly or recognizing di!erent peri-ods in the development of theater, as students who attended arts-oriented high schools might.
“I know as I approach theater today that having a solid under-standing of history enriches my understanding of how I can cre-ate theater,” Scicolone said. “With [Theater Studies 110], I wasn’t feeling it; I had a chip on my shoulder. But then I realized how beneficial a class like this can be: it is very, very helpful to have a knowledge of theory and history and that kind of stu!, and that’s lacking in programs where stud-ies [are] secondary to vocational training.”
Theater studies professor Deb Margolin, an OBIE award-win-ning playwright, said she “feels very passionate” about the way theater is approached in the class-room at Yale.
“The informed actor, the expe-rienced actor, is the talented actor,” Margolin said, adding that she distrusts actors without defining real-life experiences out-side theatrical training.
Margolin said her experiences teaching at conservatories left her disillusioned about the environ-ment of such programs, question-ing whether they are conducive to
producing a broad-minded stu-dent.
“You may be able to sing ‘Okla-homa’ in pitch or something, but if you cannot create an eloquent English sentence, that is a major drawback,” Margolin said.
Lisa Siciliano ’05, who cur-rently works as an education man-ager for the Emerald City The-atre Company in Chicago, said she counts Dorfman and Margo-lin among her mentors to this day, and credits them with shaping her approach to theater.
“They taught me that the love of the theater is not just being a star on Broadway,” Siciliano said.
ENTERING THE REAL WORLDBut Siciliano said that once she
entered the professional world, she found her Yale preparation lacking.
“In terms of learning how to get work, I was clueless,” she said. “I was asking, ‘If I get a head-shot, what do I do with it?’ I didn’t know how to attach a headshot to a resume.”
Theater studies major Sci-colone, who chose Yale over the theater conservatory program at Carnegie Mellon University and has close friends at other conser-vatory programs, said she believes Yale theater students do not have the sort of vocational skills in their repertoire that their competi-tors from other educational back-grounds may have.
She added that she became increasingly concerned about that deficiency last year, after speak-ing with a professional actor from New York who came to New Haven to talk about the musical theater field.
“She expressed concern about how theater studies students here perceived their abilities,” Scico-lone said, adding that the speaker said Yale students are not aware that their skill sets may prove lacking in the real world.
Hearn Feldman said she believes “a community of con-gratulation” in the undergraduate theater scene causes some in the Yale theater community to stop being critical and pushing them-selves to work harder.
“There’s the ability to think you’re really good as a Yale under-grad,” she said. “If you come into Yale as a pretty talented actor, you can get snapped up by a show, get cast again and again and graduate thinking you’re the best — and not be.”
According to Allison Goldberg ’06, co-artistic director of Lively Productions in New York, one of the skills Yalies may lack is a cer-tain savoir-faire when entering cities with large theater scenes
such as New York.“I really recall feeling, when I
was new to the city, that NYU stu-dents knew what was up, because they were taught about the busi-ness and about headshots, which photographers to go to and who’s trying to rip you o!,” said Gold-berg, who originally moved to the city to pursue acting.
Goldberg said that she chose to enroll at Yale because she sought a university with strength in both theater training and academics as a whole. But this education was something of a disappointment once she graduated, she said.
Dorfman said she believes stu-dents will have time to receive the skills a conservatory can pro-vide after they receive a thorough liberal arts education. DeRose agreed, referring to an instance from his time at Yale when Earle Gister, former chair of the acting program at the School of Drama, warned theater studies majors against specializing too early.
“Both Gister and Judith Malina (the artistic director of the legend-ary Living Theatre) spoke to the undergrads and strongly, strongly urged our students to get a good liberal arts education, spend a few years working in the theater after graduation, and then, once they were sure this was what they abso-lutely had to do with their lives, go back and get the advanced train-ing,” DeRose wrote in an email to the News.
For Kate Pitt ’12, a former pres-ident of the Yale Drama Coalition, the fact that a Yale degree o!ers her options if she chooses not do theater is a key benefit of the pro-gram here.
But for those completely certain that they want to go into theater after graduating, the opportuni-ties they receive at the undergrad-uate level are critical. And time may be of the essence.
“Youth sells,” Scicolone said. “And if you’re graduating [from graduate school] at 26, you lose some of the prime years of your life as far as if you want to ‘make it.’”
One benefit of a conservatory program that Yale theater stu-dents do not receive is a showcase in which students travel to New York or Los Angeles to perform before and network with agents and casting directors, said Michael Knowles ’12. This lack of exposure to real-world players, who may sign students to their agencies on the spot, has been a sticking point in the Yale theater community for years, Knowles added.
Knowles, who plans to be an actor, said he majored in Italian literature and history rather than theater studies because Yale pro-vides “endless theater opportu-nities outside of the [theater] pro-gram.” At the same time, he added, his liberal arts education is di!er-ent from the conservatory act-
ing training he received during his senior year of high school at the Stella Adler Studio of Acting in New York, which he said he found “very limiting.”
Still, Knowles noted that “the top agents, if they are hiring in this economy, are going to be see-ing the CMU, Juilliard and NYU showcases.”
Jamie Biondi ’12, a theater stud-ies and English double major who plans to go into publishing, said Yale’s theater preparation often ends up producing smart actors as opposed to “good” ones.
“The program is like ‘Do your theory credits and do your prac-tice credits,’” Biondi added. “There isn’t that step in between that takes you from knowing what exactly Shakespeare means in that speech to translating that into your body.”
Such differences in training may affect Yale graduates com-peting with conservatory alumni for scarce jobs in the field.
Lovely, the college counselor at Walnut Hill School for the Arts, said the students she advises gen-erally believe that training at lib-eral arts schools is not “as high-caliber as at a conservatory.” She added that while she works to combat this misconception, it is a consequence of the knowl-edge that conservatory students spend over 75 percent of their time developing their craft.
Corey Cott, a senior at Carne-gie Mellon, did not mince words: “You can really tell the di!erence between conservatory-trained actors and non-conservatory-trained actors.”
“Usually, I feel like the conser-vatory-trained actors have a little bit more of a grasp on what they’re doing,” he said.
LEARNING OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM
A large part of the practi-cal training Yale theater students receive comes from their work in what Dorfman, the DUS for the Theater Studies program, called Yale’s “distinctive student-ini-tiated curricular theater season,” largely funded by Creative and Performing Arts awards distrib-uted by the residential colleges.
“Something I constantly hear is that Theater Studies takes care of a lot of the theoretical, academic and intellectual [aspects] and that it’s really through the opportuni-ties provided through the Dramat and CPA funds that people get to apply what they’re learning in their classes,” said Meredith Davis ’13, president of the Dramat.
That distinction soon became very clear to Jessica Miller ’15, who starred in “A Prayer for Owen Meany,” the Dramat’s freshman show for this year, and attended the South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humani-
ties.“It’s very di!erent from an arts
program,” Miller said. “One of the first things that’s di"cult to nav-igate is that the director is a stu-dent.”
Miller said working with stu-dents leads to a more relaxed envi-ronment than she was previously used, one that is more open and conducive to discussions.
“I very much believed a teacher would tell me what is right, when it would be right, which is the com-plete opposite of how I feel now. There isn’t a single right thing; you’re always trying new things, and that’s what great about being an undergrad at Yale,” Miller said.
But being “laid-back,” she added, can a!ect the process and the quality of the productions that go up.
Andrew Freeburg ’13, a board member for the Yale Drama Coali-tion and a student interested in acting and design, said the extra-curricular scene lacks rigor.
“It’s awesome that so much stuff happens, but it’s good by coincidence,” Freeburg said. “It’s good because of the people, not because it’s well-organized.”
Hearn Feldman said she has faced challenges directing because she has had to work with individ-uals who are not as serious about her productions as she would like them to be.
Jokingly referring to herself as “the meanest director on campus,” she cited the example of one actor she worked with who often arrived late to rehearsals without having learned their lines. When Hearn Feldman told the actor the pro-duction was su!ering due to his or her behavior, the response she said she received was, “This is just the haphazard way we do theater.”
“A lot of directors say to their actors that shows won’t be a huge time commitment,” Hearn Feld-man said. “I say it’s going to be a massive time commitment.”
When considering the shows going up in any given semes-ter, students who most want to engage in a professional environ-ment tend to select those shows with the most serious production teams, six students interviewed said.
“I’m definitely selective in what I audition for,” said Scico-lone, adding that she feels a need to supplement her theater stud-ies classes with theater on campus that can be of varying quality.
“Sometimes great stuff hap-pens, other times not-so-great stu! happens and it turns out to be not worth the time and energy, and you don’t grow,” Scicolone added.
As a freshman, Miller said she is still attempting to identify indi-viduals with whom she enjoys
FROM THE FRONTPAGE 6 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
You can’t practice the prac-tice without knowing the theory. You can’t under-stand why it‘s important to do theater and why we feel that theater is a jewel in the crown of civilized human beings.
TONI DORFMAN, DIRECTOR OF UNDER-GRADUATE STUDIES, THEATER
STUDIES PROGRAM
It’s really about your work, what you bring. In the the-ater, people don’t look at your degree or your pedi-gree. People look at your humanness.
DEB MARGOLIN, PROFESSOR, THEATER STUDIES PROGRAM
It’s almost too easy to put up a production, where I feel like instead of going through multiple phases of “I need to revise this because it’s not exactly what how I want to it to be,” it’s about, “we’ve got the fund, we’re putting it up in a couple of weeks and then we’re moving on to our next project.”
MARY BOLT ’14, STUDENT ACTRESS
After Yale, actors compete with conservatory alums
SEE THEATER PAGE 7
CHRISTOPHER PEAK/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
With funds from a Calhoun College Creative and Performing Arts award, a group of students staged a production of “Cabaret” in the first week of April.
THEATER FROM PAGE 1
FROM THE FRONTworking. A key factor, she added, is “to find people who take things seriously.”
Davis said she believes some students feel more comfortable doing shows with the Dramat, run like a production company with a seven-show season, because of the structure it o!ers.
“There is this board that is there as a support and safety net; the director doesn’t have to worry about the set being built,” Davis said. “People can really focus on exactly what they’re going to be doing, and don’t have to focus on aspects of the show that are not under their jurisdiction.”
Pitt, the graduating senior and former YDC president, said the Dramat is integral to a theater education at Yale because it pro-vides students with the experi-ence of working in a professional environment.
“It’s nice doing a Dramat show because of the professional factor and because of the commitment it requires from everyone involved,” Scicolone said.
Knowles, who plans to go into film acting once he graduates, said Dramat productions are known to be the most selective on campus, partly because of their large bud-get and access to theater spaces such as the Yale Repertory The-atre.
“The Dramat is an invaluable resource,” Knowles said.
But Davis admitted that not all students want to be involved with Dramat shows and their structure.
“Some people don’t like think-ing of a group of people choosing shows,” Davis said. “Or they want to rehearse at weird hours, or think of things that are maybe a little riskier than what we do.”
In terms of CPA-funded shows, Knowles said, the quality of the experience varies with the student director involved.
“I don’t try and expect a lot from anyone I’m working with,” Miller said. “There are varying levels of commitment, which is something you just have to realize going in. Not everyone wants to be an actor.”
Freeburg said the number of activities Yalies try to balance alongside their schoolwork, such as theater shows and comedy troupes, results in students often giving short shrift to their extra-curricular productions.
“The fact that everything is last-minute means awesome crunch-preparation skills, but it’s horrible for production values, professionalism, and your sanity,” Freeburg added.
To those like Hearn Feldman, the solution lies in students being involved in fewer productions.
“If we don’t do too many shows per semester, we would have much better theater at Yale,” Hearn Feld-man said.
REINING IN THE CPA SCENEThe job of coordinating non-
Dramat extracurricular theater falls to the Yale Drama Coali-tion, which helps publicize CPA-funded shows and holds theater training workshops. Casey, the coalition’s current president, said she sees her job as helping stu-dents “make” undergraduate the-ater, adding that she is aware of
the recent debate over the number of shows being produced.
“This semester, there has been some talk about having too much theater and not enough quality control, and that people should be stricter about who gets to put up shows,” Casey said. “While it may cause some problems and may stretch designers thin, to limit the theater would be mistake.”
Speaking as both a student director and YDC president, Casey said she believes the fact that undergraduates have the opportunity to put on shows of their choice and “take chances” is a strength of Yale theater.
Miller, a freshman actor, said the “vibrant,” student-based Yale theater scene makes exploration and pushing boundaries possible.
“After I directed my sec-ond show [‘A Streetcar Named Desire’], I suddenly thought that there was nowhere else I could have directed ‘Streetcar,’ ” Hearn Feldman said. “I realized I would never had this much freedom at a conservatory.”
Casey, who considered conser-vatory programs during her col-lege application process, said she could not think of another pro-gram that enables a volume of the-ater comparable to Yale’s.
Yet quantity may not mean quality, a number of students said.
Student actor Biondi said more productions may simply result in fewer shows having strong teams.
“Because the Yale extracurric-ular world is so filled with people who do [theater] for fun, for those of us who want to do it profession-ally, the options are really limited,” Hearn Feldman said.
Davis, who manages the Cal-houn Cabaret theater space, said there would be benefits to hav-ing each show run for two weeks as opposed to the current norm of one.
“The tech week, one weekend thing is great, because a lot of peo-ple get to use the spaces, but what frustrates me is that spaces don’t get used to the best of their abil-ity,” Davis added. More time spent in the theater means that pro-duction teams have more time to develop and perfect set and light-ing designs, she said.
But considering the limited number of venues for undergrad-uate theater, Davis said that would involve limiting the number of shows. Obtaining CPA funding would therefore have to become significantly more di"cult than it is currently.
Faculty involvement in extra-curricular theater may be another way to boost the quality of pro-ductions, said Bolt, who plans to go into musical theater. She added that at present she does not feel that her Yale experience gives her a chance to understand what the professional theater world looks like, which could change with the presence of instructors active in the field.
“I’m looking for guidance,” Bolt said. “I’m not ready to go out into the world and be like ‘I feel I’ve had the experience to be in a Broadway show,’ and the faculty are the peo-ple I’m looking to.”
Yet the division between the extracurricular scene and the Theater Studies program leaves Bolt confused: “I don’t know if they’re available.”
Playwright and professor Mar-golin said she is “always glad to support a student production,” if she’s invited to do so.
“I only want to involve myself in a student’s project if they want me,” she added. “If they just want to stand up and paint the town red, well, the theater is a place of pos-sibility.”
Margolin cited the senior proj-ect, for which theater studies majors are provided a faculty advi-sor, as a good example of student-faculty cooperation on shows.
But, Davis said, faculty involve-ment even before the senior proj-ect could be very useful.
“It’s kind of silly that it isn’t until your senior year that the fac-ulty is seeing your skills in a full-blown show,” she said. “When you have someone like [professor] Daniel Larlham or [professor Rob-ert] Woodruff look what you’re directing, that’s how you’re going to learn.”
Still, the spirit of the under-graduate theater scene could be lost with increased faculty involvement, Miller said.
“I like that the undergrad the-ater scene and the college side are two distinct worlds for me, because theater doesn’t become an academic thing. It’s still some-thing you’re pushing yourself to explore, and it’s a kind of an escape to just do what you love to do and not have to worry about being graded on it.”
Another option, students said, may be attempting to get support from the School of Drama.
James Bundy, dean of the School of Drama, said, “The School of Drama, Yale Rep and Yale College together certainly comprise the most complete cre-ative community of professional practice and training, scholarship and extracurricular theatre in the English speaking world.”
But Freeburg, who has been involved in projects with YSD stu-dents before, said it takes e!ort to access the School’s resources, and students interested in doing so must make it a priority.
“You can take YSD classes if you smile right,” Hearn Feldman said. “If you want to do it, there’s noth-ing stopping you, but you have to fight for it.”
Alumna Siciliano said she found a di!erent attitude at the School of Drama when she asked professors there to teach workshops to stu-dents in the early 2000s.
She added that she thinks ask-ing School of Drama students to mentor undergraduates could be helpful to students looking for assistance in fine-tuning resumes or audition pieces.
Casey, the YDC president, said establishing such a program is a priority for the coalition, as part of its mission to help students.
“We look at what the gaps are,” Casey added.
MAKING CONNECTIONS FOR TOMORROW
One way the YDC is trying to plug those gaps is by working with the seven-year-old Creative Yale Alumni Network and Undergrad-uate Career Services.
“If you go to a conservatory, it’s basically a hotbed of network-ing and practical advice and con-nections to existing industries,” said Timothy Cooper ’02, head of
CYAN. “We formed CYAN when we realized that if alumni from our own school don’t [help us net-work], no one will.”
Associate Dean Allyson Moore, director of UCS, said CYAN and UCS first collaborated in 2010, and are looking to further develop their relationship through career panels and internship opportu-nities for students interested in going into theater.
Casey said speaking with indi-viduals in CYAN has convinced her that graduating from Yale leaves one in “a pretty good place.”
“It is true that you may not have that intensive training, but I have to admit that I haven’t heard any people from CYAN say there was a huge deficit in their education,” she added.
Cooper said the alumni hope to give students a real-world per-spective that leaves out any illu-sions while remaining positive. He added that a common response has been surprise, with stu-dents coming up to him and other alumni and talking about all the myths their advice debunked.
Still, a future in the field poses unique challenges after gradua-tion from Yale, alumni and stu-dents said.
“I didn’t feel as prepared as someone coming out of a BFA pro-gram, who was connected with people in cities already,” Siciliano said. “At my first audition, I was like ‘what the heck is this?’ because I was not prepared to sit for hours.”
Young professionals in the real world are in a very di!erent position from students in Yale’s funded extracurricular theater scene, Cooper said.
“There’s no real-world Sudler,” he said, referring to the former name of the Creative and Per-forming Arts fund. “You find out pretty quickly after you graduate that the amount of free money you get at Yale does not exist in the real world.”
Goldberg, who graduated a year after Siciliano, said she has found that the Yale name helps her in specific situations, such as when people confuse her undergraduate degree with one from the School of Drama or when she looks for influ-ential backers for productions put up by her company, Lively Pro-ductions.
In general, Cooper said, the Ivy League prestige does not guaran-tee a great deal in the world of the-ater.
“It makes you seem credible,” he added. “The hundreds of thou-sands of dollars you paid give you a brief moment of credibility in a potential employers’ eyes.”
But even as career services and the YDC strive to enhance stu-dents’ preparation for employ-ment in the theater world, Sci-colone said her peers must be realistic in their expectations.
“Theater Studies is pretty explicit. They stress that they’re not vocational,” she said. “A lot of us want to struggle against that, but we have no basis to think that
[they should be] because they don’t pitch it to us as that. It’s us wanting to be here, and we can’t blame Theater Studies.”
DeRose, the former director of undergraduate studies for the Theater Studies program, stressed that Yale undergraduates should not expect to receive the same kind of preparation as that found in conservatories.
“You don’t go to Yale College as an undergraduate if all you want to do is receive ‘training,’” DeR-ose said. Referring to his time at Yale, he added, “I wanted to cre-ate ‘theatre artists,’ people who wanted to explore artistic expres-sion through creating theatre, not people who wanted to have a ‘job’ as actors.”
But for a number of undergrad-uates, that latter path is the goal.
Asked what she thinks Yale stu-dents can do to best prepare them-selves for the field, Scicolone said she would recommend pragma-tism.
“There comes a point in your theater studies education where you accept that you can’t expect to have great vocational training as an actor here,” she said. “Accept-ing that and not struggling against it is a big part of being a grounded theater studies major here, and then you do everything extracur-ricularly that you can to fill the void.”
Contact AKBAR AHMED at [email protected] .
P O S T - YA L E : A L L I S O N G O L D B E R G ’ 0 6
ACTINGGoldberg moved to New York in 2006 to pursue a career as an actress. She performed with Disney and in a variety of new plays.
CO-FOUNDED LIVELY PRODUCTIONSIn 2007, Goldberg and Lisa Siciliano ’05 established Lively Productions, a New York-based theater company that promotes new work by emerging artists, making use of trends in media and technology to highlight innovate performance forms.
BLOGOLOGUESIn 2010, Goldberg began working with Jen Jamula ’05 on “Blogologues,” a performance that brings trendy online material to the stage. It is currently running at the Players Loft in New York, and has been featured in publications like The Observer and Metro New York.
P O S T - YA L E : L I S A S I C I L I A N O ’ 0 5
NEW YORKImmediately after graduating, Siciliano worked in the city for a year as a director, producer, actress and educator. She then moved back to Cleveland, her hometown, and worked with a number of theater companies, traveling back and forth between Ohio and New York. She also co-founded Lively Productions with Allison Goldberg ’06, and worked on various shows for the company, during this period.
CLEVELAND SHAKESPEARE FESTIVALSiciliano worked as the associate artistic director for the Festival, a non-profit theater company that is now 14 years old.
CHICAGOSiciliano worked as a writer, actress, director and educator, serving as the executive director of The State Theatre Company and studying to receive a Museum Studies certificate at Northwestern. She now works as a teacher and education manager at the Emerald City Theatre Company and is a graduate student in the Master of Science in Education program at Northwestern University.
YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 7
Morning Checklist
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Get your day started on the
right page.
Eli actors weigh value of theater studies degreeTHEATER FROM PAGE 6
“I live halfway between reality and theater at all times. And I was born this way.” LADY GAGA ARTIST
NATIONPAGE 8 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
Dow Jones 13,029.26, +0.50% S&P 500 1,378.53, +0.12%
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BY HOPE YENASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The college class of 2012 is in for a rude wel-come to the world of work.
A weak labor market already has left half of young college graduates either jobless or underemployed in positions that don’t fully use their skills and knowledge.
Young adults with bachelor’s degrees are increasingly scrap-ing by in lower-wage jobs - waiter or waitress, bartender, retail clerk or receptionist, for example - and that’s confounding their hopes a degree would pay off despite higher tuition and mounting stu-dent loans.
An analysis of government data conducted for The Associated Press lays bare the highly uneven prospects for holders of bachelor’s degrees.
Opportunities for college grad-uates vary widely.
While there’s strong demand in science, education and health fields, arts and humanities floun-der. Median wages for those with bachelor’s degrees are down
from 2000, hit by technologi-cal changes that are eliminating midlevel jobs such as bank tellers. Most future job openings are pro-jected to be in lower-skilled posi-tions such as home health aides, who can provide personalized attention as the U.S. population ages.
Taking underemployment into consideration, the job prospects for bachelor’s degree holders fell last year to the lowest level in more than a decade.
“I don’t even know what I’m looking for,” says Michael Bledsoe, who described months of fruitless job searches as he served custom-ers at a Seattle co!eehouse. The 23-year-old graduated in 2010 with a creative writing degree.
Initially hopeful that his college education would create oppor-tunities, Bledsoe languished for three months before finally tak-ing a job as a barista, a position he has held for the last two years. In the beginning he sent three or four resumes day. But, Bledsoe said, employers questioned his lack of experience or the practical worth of his major. Now he sends
a resume once every two weeks or so.
Bledsoe, currently making just above minimum wage, says he got financial help from his par-ents to help pay o! student loans. He is now mulling whether to go to graduate school, seeing few other options to advance his career. “There is not much out there, it seems,” he said.
His situation highlights a wid-ening but little-discussed labor problem. Perhaps more than ever, the choices that young adults make earlier in life - level of schooling, academic field and training, where to attend college, how to pay for it - are having long-lasting financial impact.
“You can make more money on average if you go to college, but it’s not true for everybody,” says Har-vard economist Richard Freeman, noting the growing risk of a debt bubble with total U.S. student loan debt surpassing $1 trillion. “If you’re not sure what you’re going to be doing, it probably bodes well to take some job, if you can get one, and get a sense first of what you want from college.”
Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University who analyzed the numbers, said many people with a bachelor’s degree
face a double whammy of rising tuition and poor job outcomes. “Simply put, we’re failing kids coming out of college,” he said, emphasizing that when it comes
to jobs, a college major can make all the di!erence. “We’re going to need a lot better job growth and connections to the labor market, otherwise college debt will grow.”
1 in 2 new graduates are jobless or underemployed
BY TIMBERLY ROSSASSOCIATED PRESS
In a rare and forceful act of advocacy, an Iowa newspaper devoted the entire front page of its Sunday edition to an anti-bullying editorial after a gay teen commit-ted suicide.
Relatives have said 14-year-old Kenneth Weishuhn Jr. su!ered intense harassment, including threatening cellphone calls and
nasty comments posted online, after coming out to family and friends about a month ago. He died April 15 from what the local sheri!’s o"ce described only as a “self-inflicted injury.”
The Sioux City Journal’s front-page opinion piece calls on the community to be pro-active in stopping bullying and urges mem-bers to learn more about the prob-lem by seeing the acclaimed new film, “Bully,” which documents
the harassment of a Sioux City middle school student. It notes that while many students are tar-geted for being gay, “we have learned a bully needs no reason to strike.”
“In Kenneth’s case, the warn-ings were everywhere,” the edi-torial said. “We saw it happen in other communities, now it has hit home. Undoubtedly, it wasn’t the first life lost to bullying here, but we can strive to make it the last.
Editor Mitch Pugh said the newspaper has run front-page editorials before but has never devoted the entire page to one.
“A lot of newspapers shy away from putting editorials on the front page, but we feel we have to be a strong advocate for our com-munity,” he said. “And if we don’t do that, we’re not sure who else is.”
Weishuhn’s mother, Jeannie Chambers, told the Journal last week that she and the rest of the
family knew he was being harassed but didn’t realize the extent of the bullying. His sister told a local television station that Weishuhn, a freshman, had many friends and was popular at South O’Brien High School in Paullina until he came out. Then students turned on him.
Weishuhn’s family couldn’t immediately be reached Sunday by The Associated Press.
Pugh said the newspaper didn’t
consult the family before printing the editorial.
“This was a bigger issue than one person,” he said.
Andy Marra, a spokesman for the national anti-bullying group GLSEN, said the Journal’s decision makes “complete sense.”
“Public education is absolutely vital to addressing bullying and harassment in schools,” he said, adding that community pressure could push schools to do more.
Iowa paper devotes front page to fighting bullying
ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barista Michael Bledsoe adds to his tip jar after making a drink for a customer in a co!ee shop in Seattle.
BY ALICIA CALDWELLASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The chair-man of a House committee inves-tigating an alleged Secret Service prostitution scandal predicted more firings as key lawmakers and a top adviser to President Barack Obama expressed confi-dence Sunday that the agency will e!ectively deal with the incident.
“Every possible lead is being examined,” said Rep. Peter King, who heads the House Home-land Security Committee. King, R-N.Y., said he expected that in the “near future, several other” members of the Secret Service will leave.
“What they were thinking is beyond me,” King told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
So far, the scandal includes 12 Secret Service employees and 11 military members.
Six of the Secret Service mem-bers have lost their jobs. One has been cleared and five remain on administrative leave. The main incident occurred shortly before Obama arrived for a meeting of regional presidents last weekend.
A Secret Service o"cial con-firmed Sunday that one of the 12 implicated in the scandal was staying at a di!erent hotel than the others.
He was staying at the Hilton, where Obama eventually would stay, said the o"cial who spoke on the condition of anonym-ity because the official was not authorized to discuss the mat-ter publicly. The agent is being investigated for improprieties in a separate incident that may have happened on April 9, days before the president arrived and while the hotel was still open to the general public.
Sen. Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Com-mittee, also mentioned the 12th agent under investigation in an appearance on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
“Now we don’t know at this point what that 12th agent is being charged with and why he’s been put on administrative leave. But now you’re into the hotel where the president of the United States was going to stay. And it just gets more troubling,” Lieber-man said.
Lieberman told Fox News Sun-day there is “no evidence that information was compromised” in the incidents. Those involved “were not acting like Secret Ser-vice agents. They were acting like a bunch of college students away on a spring student weekend,” Lieberman said.
King, Lieberman and other leaders of congressional com-mittees examining the scandal made the rounds on Sunday news shows. Generally, they said the scandal was being closely scru-tinized on Capitol Hill and voiced support for Secret Service Direc-tor Mark Sullivan’s handling of the matter.
Obama campaign adviser David Axelrod said the allegations are disturbing, but that the mis-deeds of a few individuals should not tarnish the overall work and reputation of the service.
Axelrod told CNN’s “State of the Union” that he always felt the agents were willing to go to great lengths to protect the president and the people around him. He called the conduct in Colombia “really disappointing.”
“I think we will get to the bot-
tom of it,” said Axelrod, who worked at the White House before leaving last year to work full time in Obama’s re-election campaign o"ce in Chicago.
He later told NBC that “on the whole, the Secret Service does heroic work. This is quite dis-turbing. We have to get to the bottom of this, and I’m sure we will.”
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., a frequent critic of the presi-dent, declined to fault the White House’s response. “You know, I’m not critical of what the adminis-tration has done thus far,” he told CBS. “I think what we’re seeing is an aberration.”
Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, the senior Republican on the Homeland Security Commit-tee, and Rep. Carolyn Malo-ney, D-N.Y., both said that more female Secret Service agents might help guard against such incidents from happening again.
“I can’t help but wonder if there had been more women as part of that detail, if this ever would have happened,” Collins said on ABC’s “This Week.”
Maloney told the same pro-gram that only 11 percent of the Secret Service’s agents are women.
“I can’t help but keeping ask-ing this question: Where are the women? We probably need to diversify the service and have more minorities and more women,” Maloney said.
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Com-mittee, told NBC that the episode was “something the Secret Ser-vice can fix. We have confidence that it will be fixed.”
“The most important thing is that this never happens again,” Issa said.
Ralph Basham, a former Secret Service Director, told CBS the behavior of those implicated in the scandal “could have compro-mised the trip and the safety of the president.”
More firings expected in
I can’t help but wonder if there had been more women as part of that detail, if this ever would have happened.
SUSAN COLLINSU.S. Senator (R-Maine)
Fill this space [email protected]
WORLDYALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2011 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 9
“I am not more ambitious than the others, at least not those who are doing the same job I am. Only I have chosen not to negate this part of myself that has always driven me to move forward.” NICOLAS SARKOZY PRESIDENT OF FRANCE
BY ANGELA CHARLTONASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS — Socialist Francois Hollande and conservative Pres-ident Nicolas Sarkozy are head-ing for a runo! election in their race for France’s presidency, according to partial official results in a vote that could alter the European political and eco-nomic landscape.
French voters defied expec-tations and handed a surpris-ingly strong third-place show-ing to far-right candidate Marine Le Pen, who has run on an anti-immigrant platform aimed largely at Muslims. That could boost her influence on the French political scene, hand her party seats in parliament and
a!ect relations with minorities.With 75 percent of the vote
counted, Hollande had 27.9 per-cent of ballots cast and Sarkozy 26.7 percent, according to fig-ures released by the Interior Ministry after final polls closed.
Le Pen was in third with 19.2 percent of the vote so far. In fourth place was leftist firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon with 10.8 percent, followed by centrist Francois Bayrou with 9.2 per-cent and five other candidates with minimal support.
Turnout was also surprisingly high, projected by polling agen-cies at about 80 percent, despite concern that a campaign lacking a single overarching theme had failed to inspire voters.
Hollande, a 57-year-old who
has worried investors with his pledges to boost government spending, pledged to cut France’s huge debts, boost growth and unite the French after Sarkozy’s divisive first term.
“Tonight I become the candi-date of all the forces who want to turn one page and turn another,” Hollande, with a confidence and stately air he has often lacked during the campaign, told an exuberant crowd in his home-town of Tulle in southern France.
Sarkozy said he recognized voters’ concerns about jobs and immigration, and “the concern of our compatriots to preserve their way of life,” he told sup-porters at his campaign head-quarters in Paris’ Left Bank.
Ten candidates faced off for
Sunday’s first round of voting, a referendum on Sarkozy at a time when many French voters are worried about high joblessness and weak economic prospects and the president is seen as too cozy with the rich.
The top two candidates head to a runo! May 6.
The race is on now to sway Le Pen’s voters for the decisive sec-ond round. Le Pen herself told AP last week that she was not going to give instructions to her voters.
While Sarkozy has borrowed some of her anti-immigrant rhetoric and campaign themes of national identity, Le Pen has repeatedly criticized Sarkozy and says he is a has-been with no chance of returning to o"ce.
France headed to presidential runo!
BY HEIDI VOGTASSOCIATED PRESS
KABUL, Afghanistan — The U.S. and Afghanistan reached a deal Sunday on a long-delayed strategic partnership agreement that ensures Americans will pro-vide military and financial sup-port to the Afghan people for at least a decade beyond 2014, the deadline for most foreign forces to withdraw.
The pact is key to the U.S. exit strategy in Afghanistan because it establishes guidelines for any American forces who remain after the withdrawal dead-line and for financial help to the impoverished country and its security forces.
For the Afghan government, it is also a way to show its people that their U.S. allies are not just walking away.
“Our goal is an enduring part-nership with Afghanistan that strengthens Afghan sovereignty, stability and prosperity and that contributes to our shared goal of defeating al-Qaida and its extremist affiliates,” said U.S. Embassy spokesman Gavin Sun-dwall. “We believe this agree-ment supports that goal.”
After 10 years of U.S.-led war, insurgents linked to the Tali-ban and al-Qaida remain a threat and as recently as a week ago launched a large-scale attack on the capital Kabul and three other cities.
The draft agreement was worked out and initialed by Afghan National Security Adviser Rangin Dadfar Spanta and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker. It must still be reviewed in both countries and signed afterward by the Afghan and American presidents.
U.S. forces have already started pulling out of Afghani-stan, and the majority of combat troops are scheduled to depart by the end of 2014. But the U.S. is expected to maintain a large presence in the country for years after, including special forces, military trainers and govern-ment-assistance programs.
The agreement is both an achievement and a relief for both
sides, coming after months of turmoil that seemed to put the entire alliance in peril. It shows that the two governments are still committed to working together and capable of coming to some sort of understanding.
“The document finalized today provides a strong founda-tion for the security of Afghan-istan, the region and the world and is a document for the devel-opment of the region,” Spanta said in a statement issued by President Hamid Karzai’s o"ce.
Neither Afghan nor U.S. o"-cials would comment on the details of the agreement. A Western official familiar with the negotiations said it outlines a strategic partnership for 10 years beyond 2014.
Reaching any agreement is likely to be seen as a success given more than a year and a half of negotiations during which the entire e!ort appeared in danger of falling apart multiple times.
Since the beginning of the year, U.S.-Afghan relations have been strained by an Inter-net video of American Marines urinating on the corpses of pre-sumed Taliban fighters, by Quran burnings at a U.S. base that sparked days of deadly protests and by the alleged killing spree by a U.S. soldier in a southern Afghan village.
Tensions were further height-ened by a spate of turncoat attacks by Afghan security forces on their international counter-parts.
White House National Secu-rity Council spokesman Tommy Vietor said President Barack
Obama expects to sign the doc-ument before a NATO summit in Chicago next month, meet-ing the deadline set by the two sides. Many had started to worry in recent weeks that Karzai and Obama would miss that goal as talks dragged on and Kar-zai continued to announce new demands for the document.
Much of the disagreement was about how to handle activities that the Afghan government saw as threatening its sovereignty, in particular, night raids and the detention of Afghan citizens by international forces. Those two major issues were resolved ear-lier this year in separate memo-randums of understanding.
But closed-door talks contin-ued for weeks after those side-deals were signed. And then as recently as last week, Karzai said that he wanted the agreement to include a dollar figure for fund-ing for the Afghan security forces - a demand that would be hard for the Americans to sign o! on given the need for congressional approval for funding. U.S. o"-cials have said previously that they expected the document to address economic and develop-ment support for Afghanistan more generally.
The final document is likely to be short on specifics. U.S. o"-cials involved in the negotiations have said previously that the strategic partnership will pro-vide a framework for future rela-tions, but that details of how U.S. forces operate in the country will come in a later agreement.
The initialing ceremony means that the text of the doc-ument is now locked in. But the countries will have to go through their own internal review pro-cesses, Sundwall said.
“For the United States, that will mean interagency review, consultation with Congress as appropriate and final review by the president,” Sundwall said.
In Afghanistan, the agree-ment will have to be approved by parliament. The Afghan for-eign minister will brief Afghan lawmakers about the document Monday, the Afghan president’s statement said.
US, Afghanistan reach pact
BOB EDME/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
French socialist presidential candidate Francois Hollande arrives at Brive airport after the first round of voting on Sunday.
The document finalized today provides a strong foundation for the security of Afghanistan, the region and the world.
RANGIN DADFAR SPANTAAfghan National Security Adviser
BY ABBY ABRAMSSTAFF WRITER
Chants and whistles permeated Morningside Heights on Thurs-day night, as students and local residents held the 24th annual Take Back the Night March. The march, which was completely gender-neutral for the first time this year, aims to raise awareness about sexual violence and create a safe space for survivors of rape and sexual assault.
“I’ve known a lot of survi-vors, and I think it’s important to bring the community together for something like this,” Rachel Her-zog, BC ’15, said.
The march, an international event founded in 1978, was held at Barnard for the first time in 1988. TBTN was opened to all genders for the first time in 2008, but until this year, the front of the march had remained a women-only space.
“I think it’s awesome,” Marcus Hunter, CC ’15, said of the change. “Everyone is implicated in rape culture, so it’s good to see that the movement is inclusive of everyone now.”
In the spirit of the march’s gen-der-neutrality, TBTN reached out to the Men’s Peer Education pro-gram this year to encourage peer educators to participate.
As participants marched through the streets, they chanted, “Two, four, six, eight! Stop the violence! Stop the hate!” and “Rape is a felony, even with CUID!” They also started a spon-taneous chant of “Take back all the nights,” in reference to a speech given by Heben Nigatu, CC ’13, at the pre-march rally.
First-time marcher Frank Pinto, SEAS ’12, said he enjoyed
his expe-rience as a m a r s h a l , responsible for directing the march-ers and the chanting.
“I liked the energy,” he said. “It felt like the crowd was just as excited as the marshals were.”
At one point during the night, Pinto said, people started throw-ing eggs at the marchers. Despite this, many marchers said that neighborhood residents showed support for their cause.
“It was great to see the com-munity supporting this. When we walked by the brownstones and they had Take Back the Night banners, I got teary-eyed to see all these people who aren’t even marching with us supporting us,” said Lea Farrell, BC ’13 and co-coordinator of this year’s march.
At the pre-march rally, Nigatu talked about combatting the rape culture on Columbia’s campus, challenging students to “be self-critical and to interrogate your own organizations and your own actions” when it comes to being aware of sexual violence.
The march was followed by a “speak-out” in Barnard’s LeFrak Gym, where survivors and those close to them shared their stories anonymously.
“I think it [sexual violence] a!ects a lot of people,” said Gita Deo, BC ’12 and the other TBTN co-coordinator. “It’s really all around us, but nobody notices it, and this is a way to make people notice.”
April is Sexual Assault Aware-ness Month, which is sponsored by the University’s Sexual Vio-
lence Response Program. Other events have included perfor-mances, lectures, and spoken-word poetry gatherings.
University President Lee Bol-linger expressed support for TBTN and SAAM in an email to Colum-bia students on Thursday, urg-ing them to “consider participat-ing in Sexual Assault Awareness Month and doing your part to help prevent sexual assault.” He added that it has lon g been a priority at Columbia to “increase awareness about sexual assault, decrease its frequency, support survivors of violence, and hold accountable students who violate University policies.”
The march took place less than a week after an attempted sexual assault in Riverside Park. A Bwog post on the attack sparked dozens of comments debating whether the woman who was attacked should be blamed for jogging through the park alone at about 6 p.m.
TBTN released a statement Tuesday condemning comments that blamed the woman who was attacked.
“It’s obviously really problem-atic when you’re faulting someone for an assault that they experi-enced,” TBTN press liaison Lauren Herold, CC ’12, said. “I was kind of shocked that these ideas are still getting reproduced no matter how many times we talk about them.”
Herold added that she hoped people would think about the comments during the march.
“It’s kind of a timely exam-ple of how important these issues are and how much work we have to do to constantly combat vic-tim blaming, or rape culture, or misogynistic or racist attitudes,” she said.
AROUND THE IVIESPAGE 10 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
53Percent of candidates lie on their resume Research conducted by the Society of Human Resource Managers indicates that more than 53 percent of individuals lie about their resume in some way.
T H E C O L U M B I A S P E C T A T O R
Students march to ‘take back the night’ T H E C O R N E L L D A I L Y S U N
Study: People less likely to lie on online resumes
BY JONATHAN DAWSONSTAFF WRITER
Resumes posted on the popular profes-sional networking site LinkedIn contain fewer lies about work experience than tra-ditional, paper copies of resumes, research-ers from the Cornell Social Media Lab said in a study.
Because LinkedIn resumes are posted online and are visible to former employers and co-workers, the researchers –– Prof. Je! Hancock, communication and informa-tion science, and Jamie Guillory grad M.S. ’10 –– thought that people tell the truth more often on public LinkedIn profiles than on traditional resumes.
To test this idea, the researchers surveyed 119 Cornell undergraduates who had not previously created a profile on LinkedIn –– one-third of whom were asked to create a public online LinkedIn resume for an inter-national marketing consultant position. The position offered “attractive international o"ce locations,” along with a high starting salary and sign-on bonus.
A third of the participants created a pri-vate LinkedIn resume, while the control group typed a resume on a Microsoft Word document.
“This job description was embellished so that it was supposed to be di"cult for an undergraduate to meet the qualifications,” Guillory said, noting that the job required three to five years of work experience.
After participants created their resumes, the researchers asked them to report any information that was not the entire truth. When asking participants to disclose false information they had included on their resume, Guillory said that the researchers “provided them with statistics from other studies that demonstrated people lying often in their resumes and reminded them that lying on resumes is a common behav-ior.”
According to Guillory, more than 90 per-cent of participants in the study lied at least once on their resumes.
“We did see overall that it was more com-mon for people to exag-gerate and tell subtle lies than to tell outright lies,” Guillory said.
Resumes that were created on Microsoft Word or were private
on LinkedIn had more exaggerations about subjects’ previous work experiences than the public resumes posted on LinkedIn by the experimental group. However, the pub-lic resumes contained more lies about par-ticipants’ interests.
Participants with private resumes did not lie as much on their resumes because “they can only lie so much,” Hancock said.
“Our thinking is that they’ve already accomplished what they wanted to do,” Hancock said. “They’ve already lied about previous jobs, so they don’t want to feel like a liar … We don’t know for sure, but that’s what we think.”
Some participants in the study lied about the length of time worked at a particular company. Other lies, such as specific inter-ests or recreational activities, were di"cult to verify with other people.
“It’s really di"cult for someone to say, ‘I know you’re not interested in traveling or learning a di!erent language,’” Guillory said. “[The participants] chose to lie in a way that is safer for them, but makes them look slightly better.”
Hancock said that job applicants might be more inclined to lie on resumes tailored for competitive jobs.
“If they tried to get a ... less attractive job, they probably would have lied less,” Han-cock said. “They lie for specific goals, like self-presentation.”
The types of lies observed included bend-ing the truth — for example, altering the length of time worked at a job — omitting information and outright lies. Although researchers did not specifically study the type of lies found in resumes, Guillory said that they did not see many outright lies.
COLUMBIA
CORNELL
JENNY PAYNE/COLUMBIA SPECTATOR
In the first year that men were allowed to march at the front, Take Back the Night paraded down the streets of Morningside Heights on Thursday night to raise awareness about sexual violence.
BULLETIN BOARDYALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE 11
Showers likely, mainly before 1 p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 61. Low
of 44.
High of 58, low of 39.
High of 60, low of 43.
TODAY’S FORECAST TOMORROW WEDNESDAY
CROSSWORDACROSS
1 Get really high5 Overhaul9 Archipelago unit
13 Six-sided shape14 Captain’s “Hold
it!”16 Corrosive liquid17 Gillette razor
brand18 Do a two-step,
say19 Broadway award20 Providence
native, for one23 Spectacular
failure24 Nutritional fig.25 Writer LeShan28 Part of PST: Abbr.29 Saintly glow32 Marries in secret34 Skipped the
saddle36 Cathedral niche39 Hot brew40 Wedding vows41 Steered the skiff
beachward46 Tentacle47 Petrol station
name48 Juan Carlos, to
his subjects51 RR terminus52 Prime rib au __54 “From the halls of
Montezuma”soldier
56 Crosby/Hope film60 Visibly wowed62 “Vacation” band,
with “The”63 Baseball
stitching64 Kate, to
Petruchio,eventually
65 China’s Zhou __66 “__ la Douce”67 Well-protected68 Desires69 Armchair
quarterback’schannel
DOWN1 Eats, with “up” or
“down”2 Bat for a higher
average than3 Overseas
4 Curls up with abook
5 Commercial onAM or FM
6 Actresses Gaborand Longoria
7 FrontiersmanBoone, familiarly
8 Hollywood award9 “Musta been
something __”10 Scrabble sheet11 Surprise 2012
New York Knickstandout Jeremy__
12 Joseph of icecream fame
15 Painfully sensitive21 Off-the-wall effect22 Chip’s partner26 Geometric art
style27 Raises a
question30 “Panic Room”
actor Jared31 More than
chubby33 Off-Broadway
award34 Fishing line
holder35 Sighs of relief
36 Barking sounds37 One writing verse38 Quit cold turkey42 __ vu: familiar
feeling43 Plod44 Diffusion of fluids,
as through amembrane
45 Thunderousnoise
48 Potato presses49 Pitch a tent
50 Naval petty officer53 Full of rocks55 Riveter painted
by Rockwell57 Architectural S-
curve58 Eye lasciviously59 Sound of
suffering60 “How cute!”
sounds61 Italian actress
Scala
Saturday’s Puzzle SolvedBy Bonnie L. Gentry and Victor Fleming 4/23/12
(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 4/23/12
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SUDOKU EASY
ON CAMPUSTUESDAY, APRIL 245:00 P.M. “The ‘Abyss of Mystery’ and the Searches for Meaning: The Role of Medical Arts and Sciences.” Martin E. Marty will give the Margaret A. Farley Lecture, sponsored by the Yale Bioethics Center. Institution for Social and Policy Studies (77 Prospect St.), room A002.
7:00 P.M. “Dying for the Family: Animal Sacrifice and Kinship in India.” Radhika Govindrajan, a graduate student in the Department of Anthropology, will give this Yale Himalaya Initiative seminar. Kroon Hall (195 Prospect St.), room 319.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2512:00 P.M. “Emergency Preparedness 101: Good Planning Results in Peace of Mind.” This workshop, given by Maria Bou!ard, director of emergency management at Yale, will address the specifics to help you minimize the impact of the types of losses that accompany disasters. Sterling Memorial Library (128 Wall St.), lecture hall.
3:30 P.M. “Floods, Droughts, and River Food Webs: Algal-Mediated Connections of Rivers, Oceans, and Uplands.” Mary Power of the University of California, Berkeley, is the G. Evelyn Hutchinson Distinguished Speaker. Refreshments will be served. Class of 1954 Environmental Sciences Center (21 Sachem St.), room 110.
THURSDAY, APRIL 261:30 P.M. “The Voice of Your Brother’s Blood: Testimonies of Coexistence and Genocide from Buczacz, Galicia.” Omer Bartov of Brown University will give this Genocide Studies seminar. Institution for Social and Policy Studies (77 Prospect St.), room B012.
5:30 P.M. “The Secrets of Field Notes: Capturing Science, Nature and Exploration.” Michael R. Canfield of Harvard University will share stories, anecdotes, maps, photographs and drawings from historical and contemporary field notes to reveal scientific knowledge, expeditions and important discoveries. Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History (170 Whitney Ave.).
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ASIAN EGG DONOR NEEDED We are seeking a smart, intelligent, attrac-tive, and healthy woman with athletic abilities If you would consider donating your eggs to an amazing happy couple, please con-tact: [email protected]. 1-800-264-8828. Generous compensation for time and travel. VW: 03/2012
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THROUGH THE LENSPAGE 12 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 12, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
F rom its rugged coastline, buzzing city markets and rural game reserves, sta! photographer STEPHANIE RIVKIN cap-tures scenes of both human and animal life in South Africa,
where she is studying this semester.
IF YOU MISSED IT SCORES
SPORTS MONDAY
QUICK HITS
BY JOSEPH ROSENBERGSTAFF REPORTER
The No. 30 Bulldogs (18–3, 6–0 Ivy) have won the Ivy League title for the second con-secutive season with one match to spare thanks to a pair of 6–1 victories this weekend. The two victories pushed the Elis’ winning streak to eight matches.
On Friday, Yale’s defeat of Harvard (10–7, 3–3 Ivy) ensured that the Bulldogs would claim at least a share of the Ivy League title. On Sun-day, the Elis traveled to Dartmouth (8–12, 2–4 Ivy) in search of the Ivy League crown, which they placed firmly on their heads via a compre-hensive 6–1 win.
“It’s been 31 years since Yale women’s ten-nis has won two consecutive Ivy titles,” captain Steph Kent ’12 said. “That number has been keeping us motivated and has kept us going.”
Against both the Crimson and the Big Green, the Bulldogs won the first four points of the match, eliminating the opportunity for their opponents to make a comeback. For the 19th and 20th time in their 21 matches, Yale jumped out to a 1–0 lead by winning the dou-bles point. Against Harvard, the Elis won the doubles point 2–1, with the No. 81 pairing of Amber Li ’15 and Vicky Brook ’12 dropping its match at No. 1. Yale claimed the doubles point against Dartmouth 3–0.
Coach Danielle McNamara attributed the team’s success in doubles this year to many hours of practice.
“We’ve spent an incredible amount of time in practice working on doubles,” McNamara said. “We’ve been working on doubles for years. Now, our players are really starting to understand how to play high-quality doubles.”
Against Harvard, the Bulldogs quickly snatched wins at No. 2, No. 5 and No. 6. At No. 2, Blair Seideman ’14 pushed her winning streak to seven matches by dominating her opponent Camille Jania 6–1, 6–0. Jania had been 10–1 in the spring season prior to play-
THE NUMBER OF OVERTIMES THE MEN’S LACROSSE TEAM HAS PLAYED THIS SEASON. In four games — including three wins — the team has gone to a fifth, fourth, double, and single overtime. Those games were against Princeton, Brown, Bryant and Stony Brook, respectively.
STAT OF THE DAY 12
NBALakers 114Thunder 106
NBAKnicks 113Hawks 112
MLBRangers 3Tigers 2
NHLFlyers 5Penguins 1
NHLBruins 4Capitals 3
“We get to play [Har-vard] at home ... It’s a great opportunity for us to finish our regular sea-son on the right note.”
DERON DEMPSTER ’13ATTACKMAN, M. LACROSSE
FOOTBALLBLUE-WHITE SPRING SCRIMMAGEIn the annual spring game, quarterback John Whitelaw ’14, right, threw three touchdown passes and looked poised to take over the starting role next year. In the absence of captain Will McHale ’13, Colin Bibb ’13 led the defense and Nick Okano ’14 had an interception.
TRACKLARRY ELLIS INVITATIONALStandouts for the men’s team included Mike Levine ’13 who, while scratching on five of six throws, managed to place second in the discus. On the women’s team, Allison Rue ’13 placed second in the 800-m. Both team’s 4x100-m teams had season-best times.
YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
Attackman Matt Gibson ’12 scored with 1.7 seconds remaining in the second overtime to give the No. 20 Bulldogs a 10-9 win over No. 19 Bryant on Friday. PAGE B3
ELIS ARE TOP DOGS
BLAIR SEIDEMAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
After defeating a red-hot Bryant squad in dramatic fashion on Friday, the men’s lacrosse team has now won three consecutive games in overtime, and has a six-game overall winning streak.
BY MARIA GUARDADOSTAFF REPORTER
Yale women’s crew had a strong showing against archrival Radcli!e on Saturday on the Housatonic River in Derby, Conn.
The No. 15 Bulldogs took four out of five matchups and captured the Case Cup by defeating No. 12 Radcli!e in the varsity eight race.
“I thought we raced really well as a team,” head coach Will Porter said. “It was our most complete e!ort of the year, as far as being aggressive and rowing well as crews and really representing Yale women’s rowing for what it is.”
In the varsity eight race, Yale gained an advantage o! the start, and by the 1,000-meter mark, the Elis were more than a full boat length ahead of their rivals. The Bulldogs crossed the line at 6:46.0, more than seven seconds ahead of Radcli!e, to take back the Case Cup after Harvard claimed the prize last year.
“I thought they rowed their best race of the year to date,” Porter said. “They raced with a high level of trust and performed well.”
The second varsity eight turned out to be the closest race of the day. The Bulldogs opened up an early lead, but Radcli!e surged to pull even with Yale midway through the race, and then built a slight advantage of its own. Though the Bulldogs fought back over the last 500 meters, Radcli!e edged the Bull-dogs by 1.3 seconds to capture the race.
“We had a close, hard-fought race that we
WOMEN’S CREW
WOMEN’S TENNIS
SEE W. CREW PAGE B3 SEE W. TENNIS PAGE B3
W. tennis takes Ivy LeagueBulldogs take back Case Cup
GRAHAM HARBOE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Annie Sullivan ’14 won twice over the weekend as Yale clinched its second straight title.
SPORTSBY CHARLES CONDRO
STAFF REPORTER
The saying goes in baseball that there is always next year. That will have to be the case for the Bulldogs, as they were elimi-nated from contention in the Ivy League by Dartmouth this week-end.
Yale (9–30–1, 2–14 Ivy) was swept by Dartmouth (17–15, 11–5 Ivy) in Hanover. After two one-run losses in the doubleheader on Friday, the Elis fell seven games behind the Big Green in the Red Rolfe division with just six Ancient Eight contests remain-ing. Dartmouth then swept the twin bill on Saturday for empha-sis.
In what has been a familiar theme all season, Yale was close to Dartmouth in every game. Three of the four contests were decided by two runs or less — Yale is 5–17 in such games on the season.
“We are much, much better than our record shows,” shortstop Cale Hanson ’14 said. “It’s a good
learning point for us going into the next season … We’re going to have to learn how to win close games.”
In the first game of the series on Friday Yale took an early 1–0 lead when first baseman Kevin Fortunato ’14 homered in the top of the second inning. Dartmouth rallied for three runs in the bot-tom of the fifth, however, to erase Yale’s lead.
Although Yale knotted the game at three all on a two-run single by Fortunato, the Big Green went on top for good with a two-out single by centerfielder Jake Carlson.
Fortunato continued to stay hot in the second game, driving in two with a double in the first, but Dartmouth led 4–2 after two innings.
Yale chipped away at the lead with a run-scoring groundout by designated hitter Josh Schar! ’13 in the fourth before outfielder Charlie Neil ’12 tied it with an RBI double in the sixth.
The score remained tied until Big Green first baseman Dustin Selzer hit a walk–o! single in the bottom of the 12th to give Dart-
mouth a 5–4 win and end Yale’s postseason hopes.
“For whatever reason we haven’t been able to come up with the big hit this year,” catcher Ryan Brenner ’12. “I’m really proud of the guys. It’s not because [they] didn’t try.”
With nothing but pride to play for in Saturday’s doubleheader, the Bulldogs did not go down without a fight.
Yale starter Pat Ludwig ’12 struck out six and gave up just five hits over six innings. Ludwig was tagged for a two-run home run by Selzer though, which would prove more than enough run support for Dartmouth hurler Kyle Hunter.
Hunter threw a seven-inning complete game shutout to notch his second win on the season.
Despite taking a one-run lead in the top of the first in the final game of the series, the Bulldogs were outslugged by the Big Green 8–4 in the final game of the series.
“The seniors have pretty much said to learn from this experi-ence,” pitcher Eric Hsieh ’15 said. “To remember what it feels like when you’re losing … to learn from it and never let it happen again.”
Although hopes of an Ivy League crown were put to rest this weekend, Yale’s season is not over. The team wants to end the season on a winning streak to send out the class of 2012 and set the tone for next season, Hanson and Hsieh said.
Yale will travel to Holy Cross tomorrow for a weekday game against the Crusaders.
Contact CHARLES CONDRO at [email protected] .
ing Seideman. Kent simply over-matched her opponent at No. 5, romping to a 6–2, 6–0 victory. And at No. 6, Annie Sullivan ’14 routed her opponent, cruising to a 6–1, 6–3 straight-set win.
The remaining three singles matches all went to three sets. With the four points necessary for victory secured, each match entered a third-set tiebreaker. At No. 1, Elizabeth Epstein ’13 was just edged out by her opponent after herself holding several match points. Hanna Yu ’15 topped her opponent 10–7 at No. 3 while at No. 4, Vicky Brook ’12 came out on top, 10–8.
On Sunday, the Bulldogs were even more superior in singles. Of the five singles matches that the Elis won, all were in straight sets. The only match that Yale dropped was at No. 5, where Kent came out the wrong side of an extremely close match, 7–6(5), 7–5.
The Ivy League title was clinched at No. 3. Yu had no idea she was the decisive match until the last moment.
“I didn’t really realize that I was the clincher until I won the last point and my teammates who were o! the court just came run-ning to hug me,” Yu said. “It was a
really good feeling.”Despite already having secured
the Ivy League title, Yale will meet No. 56 Brown (17–7, 3–3 Ivy) in the regular season finale on April 28. It would not be in the charac-ter of this team to take the match lightly.
“We’ve never been in this sit-uation where we’ve clinched the title with one match to go,” McNa-mara said. “We’ll be ready for the next one, though. Brown at home still has NCAA implications.”
Yale will meet Brown at the Cullman-Heyman Tennis Center on April 28 at 12 p.m.
Contact JOSEPH ROSENBERG at [email protected] .
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS METTA WORLD PEACE
The Lakers forward was ejected from Sunday’s game against the Oklahoma City Thunder after elbowing James Harden in the head while celebrating a dunk. Artest may face a suspension for the hit, which took Harden out of the game.
PAGE B2 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
DARTMOUTH 0 0 0 0 3 1 x 4
YALE 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 3
DARTMOUTH 5, YALE 4
DARTMOUTH 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 5
YALE 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4
DARTMOUTH 2, YALE 0
DARTMOUTH 0 0 0 2 0 0 x 2
YALE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
DARTMOUTH 8, YALE 4
DARTMOUTH 2 2 1 0 1 0 0 2 x 8
YALE 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 4
Dartmouth dashes baseball’s hopes
BASEBALLWe are much, much better than our record shows. It’s a good learning point for us going into the next season.
CALE HANSON ’14Shortstop, baseball
GRAHAM HARBOE/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Kevin Fortunato ’14, who plays first base as well as pitching, had a home run and six RBI over the weekend.
BY LINDSEY UNIATSTAFF REPORTER
It was a disappointing weekend for the heavyweight and lightweight crew teams, as both of their previously unde-feated varsity eight boats lost their titles and finished in last place.
On Saturday, the heavyweight team took on Cornell and Princeton in Ithaca, N.Y., while the lightweight team trav-elled to Dartmouth to race the Big Green. The heavyweights faced a strong head-wind with minimal current, which made race times longer than in ideal condi-tions, whereas the lightweights had to contend with only a mild headwind that lessened throughout the day.
The heavyweight team, which has swept the V 8+, junior varsity 8+ and freshman 8+ in all of its earlier regattas this season, instead lost all three races and the contested Carnegie Cup to Cor-nell. Yale ranked second in the junior varsity eight and the freshman eight races, but finished third in the varsity.
In the V8+ race, all three crews
were fairly even in the first 1000m of the 2000m course, but in the second half of the race, Cornell and Princeton pulled ahead of the Bulldogs. The Cor-nell varsity boat crossed the finish line at 6:00.7, followed by Princeton at 6:04.6 and Yale at 6:11.3.
“We rowed an aggressive race o! the start but never settled into a rhythm,” team captain Tom Dethlefs ’12 said. “Without a stable rhythm, we didn’t have the cohesiveness to keep the boat speed up in the last part of the race. We had a very good week of training leading up to the Carnegie Cup, and so while this was certainly not ideal I don’t think it was representative of the speed we have been producing in practice.”
Dethlefs added that if the team con-tinues to train as it has, it should be able to rebound from these loses and do well in the Eastern Sprints, its first champi-onship race of the season.
The lightweight crew team man-aged to win its JV 8+, V 4 and F 8+ races against Dartmouth by sizable margins — 19.0, 4.5 and 9.6 seconds respectively. But that was not enough to win the con-tested Durand Cup. Despite taking an early lead in the V 8+ race, the Big Green
caught up to the Bulldogs by the halfway point and ended up besting them 6:03.6 to 6:09.1.
Head coach Andy Card said the team was disappointed to come up short against Dartmouth in the varsity races, but that the race served as a learn-ing experience. He added that the cox-swains did well navigating the Connect-icut River and that Yale’s JV 8+, V 4 and F8+ have improved their speed.
Team captain David Walker ’12 agreed, adding that the team did well to win three out of four races on Saturday. He added that the varsity race was com-petitive, despite being the squad’s first loss of the season.
Next weekend, the lightweight team will take on Harvard and Princeton for the Goldthwait Cup in its first and only home regatta of the season. Both the heavyweights and the lightweights will compete in the Eastern Sprints in mid-May and the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship at the beginning of June.
Contact LINDSEY UNIAT at [email protected] .
MEN’S CREW
CAROL HSIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
After starting the season undefeated, heavyweight crew fell to Cornell and Princeton over the weekend.
Crew teams face first losses
W. TENNIS FROM PAGE B1
YALE ATHLETICS
The women’s tennis team beat Harvard and Dartmouth over the weekend.
I didn’t really realize that I was the clincher until I won the last point and my teammates...just came running to hug me.”
HANNA YU ’15Women’s tennis
Elis ride two wins to title
SPORTS
BY JOHN SULLIVANSTAFF REPORTER
The 2012 Yale men’s lacrosse team cannot seem to avoid excite-ment. Friday night under the lights at Reese Stadium, the No. 20 Elis (8–4, 3–2 Ivy) knocked off the No. 19 Bryant Bulldogs, 11–10, in the second extra period for their third straight overtime victory.
“We’re not trying to, actu-ally,” attackman Deron Demp-ster ’13 said when asked about his team’s propensity for play-ing close games. “We’re lucky our defense has played really solid in overtime. I know it seems like an anomaly, but we’re just happy to get the wins.”
Bryant’s (12–3, 4–0 NEC) Kevin Massa won the faceo! to start the second overtime, and the visitors kept possession for the first three minutes of the period. But defenseman Peter Johnson ’13 forced a turnover, and Yale cleared the ball into its o!ensive zone. With time winding down, the ball found its way behind the net and into the stick of attack-man Matt Gibson ’12.
The Elis’ leading scorer had two assists in the game, but had yet to find the net. Bryant defender Glenn Maiorano had done a good job keeping up with the crafty Long Island native, but this time Gibson would not be denied. He took Maiorano up the left side of the crease, stutter-stepped, and spun up towards the front of the goal. Gibson’s left-handed shot rocketed through the legs of Bry-ant goaltender Jameson Love with 1.7 seconds left on the clock.
Friday’s win came after a four-overtime victory at Brown last weekend and a 9–8 defeat of Stony Brook in the first overtime period earlier this week. Seven of the Elis’ 12 games have now been decided by a single goal. Despite dropping the first three of these contests, to Sacred Heat, No. 3 Cornell and No. 14 Princeton, the Bulldogs have come out on top in each of the last four.
“Against Princeton and Cornell we saw some of the upper-eche-lon teams in the country,” Demp-ster said, “and playing against them and being close in those games builds character. Having that experience pays o! in [close games] going forward.”
The matchup with Bryant not only featured a battle of Bulldogs — the Smithfield, R.I., school shares its mascot with Yale — but a battle between the No. 4 and No. 5 face-o! men in the nation. Dylan Levings ’14 trails Massa by .005 points with a .641 winning percentage, but on Friday the Yale sophomore had his way with him at the X. Levings finished 16 of 25 for the game, putting in another strong performance against top competition. Earlier in the sea-son he finished six of nine against a Cornell unit led by No. 15 Doug Tesoriero and 10 of 17 against
Princeton, the 17th-ranked face-o! team in the country.
“I watched a lot of film on [Massa] and was pretty comfort-able with what he was trying to do,” Levings said. “I just wanted to go out there and do my thing, and I was able to make adjust-ments when I had to.”
It took almost 13 minutes for the teams to get on the score-board, but Bryant midfielder Matt Larson broke the knot with 2:17 left in the first quarter. Yale responded with goals from Dempster and captain Michael Pratt ’12 in the final minute of the period, and the Elis never trailed again.
The teams battled for most of the game, and Yale was never able to pull away. The Elis led 6–3 midway through the third quar-ter, but Bryant went on a three-goal run to close the gap. Later, in the fourth quarter, Yale built another three-goal lead, but Bry-ant scored the final three goals of the game to tie the score at 10 and send the game into overtime.
Defenseman Mason Poli scored Bryant’s final goal in transition with 21 seconds remaining in the game. Poli led his team in scor-ing with three goals, and the Elis had trouble stopping him in tran-sition. Yet Yale was very e!ective in settled, six-on-six situations. Defender Michael McCormack ’13 had five caused turnovers, and netminder Jack Meyer ’14 finished with 13 saves. The Yale defense has surrendered only one
goal in 12 overtime periods, and Meyer has a 91 percent save per-centage in overtime.
“Jack Meyer has been incred-ible in overtime,” Yale defensive coordinator Ryan Polley said. “He has 11 saves and only one goal against. We’ve gotten timely saves, and we have a lot of expe-rience on defense in Mike Pratt and Mark Dobrosky ’12. These guys are used to playing in those big situations, and we don’t make a lot of mental mistakes in over-time.”
The Bulldogs were led on o!ense by Greg Mahony ’12, who finished with a hat trick for the second game in a row. Dempster also added two goals, while mid-fielders Ryan McCarthy ’14 and Colin Flaherty ’15 finished with two more points for the Bulldogs.
Yale faces Harvard in its final game of the season this Saturday. The Bulldogs have clinched a spot in the Ivy League tournament, but the Crimson needs to win its final game to earn a spot of its own.
“Last year we didn’t per-form very well [against Harvard] and [head] coach [Andy Shay] stressed that we cannot have a repeat of that effort,” Demp-ster said. “We get to play them at home this time, and we have a chance to end their season. It’s a great opportunity for us to fin-ish our regular season on the right note.”
Contact JOHN SULLIVAN at [email protected] .
Nadal beats Djokovic to win Monte-Carlo MastersWorld No. 2 Rafael Nadal cruised to an easy victory over No. 1 Novak Djokovic in the finals of the Monte-Carlo Rolex Masters. The Spaniard won in straight sets, 6-3, 6-1. Grieving for his grandfather Vladimir, Djokovic’s play had been o! the entire tournament. He’d been informed of the loss just hours before his third-round game against Alexandr Dolgopolov, and went on to drop two sets before the finals.
YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com PAGE B3
LAST WEEK NEXT WEEK
SATURDAY, APR. 21, DAY 1 3rd place
FRIDAY, APR. 27, Ivy League Championship at Galloway National
LAST WEEK NEXT WEEK
SUNDAY, APR. 22Dartmouth 8, Yale 4
WEDNESDAY, APR. 25 Yale vs. Army, 2:30 p.m.
BASEBALL
IVY OVERALLSCHOOL W L % W L %
1 Cornell 13 3 .812 27 11 .705
2 Dartmouth 11 5 .688 17 15 .531
3 Princeton 10 6 .625 17 17 .500
4 Columbia 9 7 .562 17 22 .436
Penn 7 9 .438 16 20 .444
6 Harvard 7 9 .438 11 27 .289
Brown 5 11 .312 8 29 .216
8 Yale 2 14 .125 9 30 .238
LAST WEEK NEXT WEEK
SATURDAY, APR. 21Dartmouth 8, Yale 4
TUESDAY, APR. 24Yale vs. Holy Cross,
6:30 p.m.
S C O R E S & S T A N D I N G S
MEN’S GOLF
IVYSCHOOL W RANK AVG. SCORE W%
1 Yale 2 151 75.73 66.971
2 Columbia 1 186 75.67 65.102
3 Penn 2 169 75.44 67.536
4 Princeton 0 171 76.11 65.592
5 Harvard 1 200 76.55 53.247
6 Dartmouth 0 209 76.17 50.476
7 Cornell 0 250 78.29 17.702
8 Brown 0 262 79.13 13.375
IVY OVERALLSCHOOL W L % W L %
1 Harvard 15 1 .938 28 11 .718
2 Penn 11 5 .688 27 15 .643
Cornell 11 5 .688 21 19 .525
4 Princeton 8 8 .500 14 27 .341
5 Columbia 6 10 .375 12 29 .293
6 Dartmouth 5 11 .312 12 21 .364
Brown 5 11 .312 8 24 .250
8 Yale 3 13 .188 10 30 .250
SOFTBALL
MEN’S LACROSSE
LAST WEEK NEXT WEEK
FRIDAY, APR. 20Yale 11, Bryant 10 (2OT)
SATURDAY, APR. 28Yale vs. Harvard, 2:00 p.m.
WOMEN’S LACROSSE
LAST WEEK NEXT WEEK
SATURDAY, APRIL 21Cornell 17, Yale 9
SATURDAY, APR. 28Yale at Boston
College, 1:00 p.m.
IVY OVERALLSCHOOL W L % W L %
1 Dartmouth 5 1 .833 10 3 .769
Penn 5 1 .833 7 5 .583
3 Cornell 4 2 .667 9 4 .692
Harvard 4 2 .667 8 6 .571
Princeton 4 2 .667 7 6 .538
6 Yale 2 5 .286 5 9 .357
7 Brown 1 5 .167 6 7 .462
8 Columbia 0 7 .000 2 12 .143
IVY OVERALLSCHOOL W L % W L %
1 Princeton 5 0 1.000 9 3 .750
Cornell 4 1 .800 9 2 .818
3 Yale 3 2 .600 8 4 .667
4 Brown 2 3 .400 6 7 .462
5 Brown 2 3 .400 6 7 .462
6 Penn 1 4 .200 3 8 .273
Dartmouth 1 5 .167 3 9 .250
YALE 11, BRYANT 10
YALE 2 1 4 3 0 1 13
BRYANT 1 1 4 4 0 0 9
Elis win sixth straight
MEN’S LACROSSE
Jack Meyer has been incredible in overtime. He has 11 saves and only one goal against.
RYAN POLLEYYale defensive coordinator
learned a lot from,” captain Kath-leen O’Keefe ’12 said of the event.
The varsity four race was also fiercely contested. Though Rad-cliffe had built a two-seat lead by the 1,000-meter mark, the Elis used a higher stroke rate over the last 500 meters of the race to come from behind and earn a victory. The Bulldogs clocked in at 7:34.8, finishing 1.3 seconds ahead of Radcli!e.
Yale’s second varsity four enjoyed a ten-second margin of victory over Harvard’s B and C boats, while Yale’s third varsity eight bested its Radcli!e coun-terpart by a little over six sec-onds.
Though the Bulldogs had struggled in recent weeks to keep up with their competition, Porter said the team had simply
taken longer to develop its peak speed than its opponents, many of which were nationally ranked teams.
“The thing about a racing sport is getting to your top end speed at the right time of the year,” Por-ter said. “Our schedule was very challenging early this year, and we just weren’t up to speed as quickly as the other teams were. We seem to have found another gear in these last couple weeks, and we’re as fast as many other crews in our league, which is great. We’re gaining speed at the correct time.”
The Bulldogs return to action this Saturday when they battle Brown for the Nat & Anne Case Cup in Providence, R.I.
Contact MARIA GUARDADO at [email protected] .
W. CREW FROM PAGE B1
W. crew outraces Radcli!e
CAROL HSIN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Yale will look to build on this week’s win when it races Army on Saturday.
YDN
Attacker Matt Gibson ’12, who leads Yale with 25 goals and 40 points this season, sealed the team’s victory Friday with a goal in the second overtime.
SPORTS
BY MASON KROLLSTAFF REPORTER
With two wins against Dartmouth this weekend, the softball team is regaining momentum after what has been a disappoint-ing season.
The win marked the second and third Ivy League victories for the team this season. Two home runs by captain Christy Nelson ’13 and a career-first homer by Tori Balta ’14 buoyed the Bulldogs (10–30, 3–13 Ivy) to sweep Dart-mouth on Saturday, though they lost both games on Sunday.
“Based on our season so far, the split is a step in the right direction,” shortstop Meg Johnson ’12 said.
In the first game on Saturday, Yale and Dartmouth (12–21, 5–11 Ivy) were quiet o!en-sively for the first four innings. Johnson sin-gled in the second inning and, after steal-ing two bases, reached home o! of an illegal pitch to bring the Bulldogs their first run of the game. The Big Green responded with two runs of its own in the bottom of the second to secure a 2–1 lead.
In the top of the fifth, Balta stepped up to the plate with one on and one out. She hit the ball out of the park in her first home run wear-ing Yale blue. The two runs she drove in gave the Bulldogs a 3–2 victory.
Defensively, the Bulldogs excelled. Yale stopped Dartmouth with the bases loaded twice, ending the inning with three runners left on base. Pitcher Chelsey Dunham ’14 won her second game in a row and struck out four Big Green batters.
“The wins were definitely a team e!ort,” Nelson said. “We had great pitching mixed with flawless defense, and we got the key hits at the right time. Our defense made some great plays on Saturday with runners in scor-ing position, which gave us a huge momentum advantage.”
The Elis took another early lead in the sec-ond game. After Jennifer Ong ’13 and Balta singled, Johnson sealed the deal with a two-RBI double and soon reached home herself. Two more Bulldog runs — including a fifth-inning home run by Nelson — brought the score to 5–2, and a bottom-of-the-sixth rally by Dartmouth was not enough to secure the win. Yale took its second win of the day with a final score of 5–4.
Kristen Leung ’14 took the win for the Bull-dogs, and Kylie Williamson ’15 gave Yale its first save of the season. On Saturday, the Elis outhit Dartmouth both games.
“We played hard and well for all 14 innings on Saturday,” Johnson said. “Our defense was making smart plays, pitchers were doing their job and as hitters, [and] we connected when we needed to.”
Sunday’s games were far less successful for the Bulldogs. In the first game, Dartmouth beat Yale 8–0 in six innings, keeping the Elis to two hits. The Big Green seized the advan-tage with four runs in the bottom of the first, and the Bulldogs could not recover.
Yale fared slightly better in the second game. Down 8–1 in the top of the sixth, the Bulldogs attempted a rally. Nelson brought in two runs with her second homer of the week-end. Johnson and Sarah Onorato ’15 continued the rally with a single each, and Williamson walked to load up the bases. Although Kelsey Warkentine ’13 brought Johnson home, the Bulldogs left two runners on base and ended the game 8–4.
The Big Green scored six of its runs in the bottom of the third. That inning, the Bulldogs had three errors, which contributed to three
unearned runs. Additionally, three runs came on Dartmouth’s last out. If the Bulldogs had put a stop to the inning, they may have won the game.
“We have to keep building o! our good at-bats and focus on small goals like we did on Saturday,” Johnson said. “We need to focus on one inning and one at bat at a time.”
Last year, the Bulldogs ended their sea-son with a 17–25 record, winning eight of 20 games against Ivy League opponents. With only six games left in the season — two against Army on Wednesday and four against Brown this weekend — the Bulldogs cannot match either record.
However, significant wins can give the Elis an advantage in the Ivy League. Currently, Yale is tied with Brown for the worst record in the North Division of the Ivy League.
“We can take a lot from this past weekend and apply it to our last week of season,” John-son said. “We know we have the talent to beat Army and Brown. We just need to have a solid game in every aspect. We’ll bring that inten-sity and hard work this week and keep striving for these remaining victories.”
The Bulldogs next face Army at home on Wednesday. Last year, Army swept Yale 12–0 and 6–1, but team members said the team is feeling confident going into Wednesday’s doubleheader.
“I’ve learned that our team is capable of so much and everyone is able to come out and perform,” left fielder Riley Hughes ’15 said. “I’m looking forward to coming out strong and getting some more wins.”
The first pitch is at 2:30 p.m.
Contact MASON KROLL at [email protected] .
BY EUGENE JUNGSTAFF REPORTER
Three straight Ivy wins proved too great a task for the women’s lacrosse team.
The Elis left their home turf to take on No. 13 Cornell on Sat-urday only to return with a 17–9 loss despite a hat trick by attacker Kerri Fleishhacker ’15. With their defeat and the victories of the three third-place teams this weekend, Cornell, Harvard and Princeton, the Bulldogs had to settle for sixth place in the Ivy League.
“Cornell was experienced and skilled and with seven starting seniors. We entered the game as the underdog,” head coach Anne Phillips said.
Although Yale midfielder Christina Doherty ’15 won the face-o! and took the first draw control, the Big Red retook con-trol of the game by picking up a ground ball 50 seconds into the first half and scored within the next minute. However, with Doherty winning the draw again, midfielder Cathryn Avallone ’15 scored to even the score only 90 seconds after the hosts’ first goal.
After Cornell replied with another goal, captain Caroline Crow ’12 created an opportunity for attacker Devon Rhodes ’13 to even out the score. Then at 21:24 midfielder Ashley McCormick ’14 rallied past the field and fired a shot that took Cornell goalie o! guard to take Yale one ahead of the home team. However, Yale’s momentum broke when the Big Red came back with three more goals. The Elis finished the first half with Fleishhacker adding one more.
“Cornell’s o!ense is one of the most potent o!enses our defense has faced this year, since they have multiple weapons,” goal-keeper Erin McMullan ’14 said.
She added that the hosts had more ball possessions for most of the first half, and for Yale to give up only five goals in the first half was actually quite remarkable.
However, in the second half, the Big Red (9–4, 4–2 Ivy) stepped up its offense, going on an all-out scoring rampage against the Bulldogs. Within the first three minutes, Cornell rushed in two goals. Then a minute later, Yale’s Crow notched a goal of her own to reduce the scoring gap to two. Despite Fleishhacker’s attempt to narrow down the goal di!er-ence by scoring three goals for the Bulldogs, it was not enough to reverse the flow of the game that went to Cornell’s side early in the second half.
Fleishhacker said the Cornell had a solid defensive unit that worked well together. She added that the defense consistently “swarmed the ball” when Yale had possession.
Over the course of three min-
utes, the hosts doubled their score to make the game 12–6 in their favor. Yale (5–9, 2–5 Ivy) tried to rally back, with the upperclass-men attackers Rhodes and Crow moving quickly to score two more for the Elis. With Fleish-hacker’s hat trick goal, the Bull-dogs rounded out their come-back attempt with three minutes remaining in regulation.
Phillips said offensively, the team’s attack did not handle the defensive pressure well and needed to be more composed.
As Cornell pounded in two more goals in the last two min-utes, the Elis had no choice but to concede defeat. Despite fairly good matchups in defense, Yale ended up allowing 17 goals, 12 in the second half alone.
“Unfortunately, their offense got fired up after halftime and we couldn’t keep up,” McMullan said.
The Elis outdid the Big Red in draw controls, 15–13, and McMul-lan recorded 17 more saves than her Big Red counterpart. How-ever, the Big Red had four times the number of shots that Yale did, 45–11, and committed half the number of turnovers, 20–10.
“Ultimately the 20 turnovers doomed our chances of winning,” Phillips said.
Phillips also said although Yale won draw controls, shot
extremely well, and McMullan had a season high 19 saves in goal, the team could not counter Cor-nell’s experience or its depth on the bench.
The team has concluded its Ivy League season. The Bull-dogs improved over last sea-son’s standings, stepping up two notches and scoring a total of 54 goals in conference matches in comparison to 26 goals scored last season.
“Our team has made great progress this year, though we had a lot of youth and inexperience,” Phillips said.
She added that she is pleased with how hard the team has worked this season, and the expe-rience gained will serve its pro-gram well in the future.
The Elis will travel to Boston for their final match this season on Saturday for an away game against No. 17 Boston College.
Contact EUGENE JUNG at [email protected] .
PAGE B4 YALE DAILY NEWS · MONDAY, APRIL 23, 2012 · yaledailynews.com
PEOPLE IN THE NEWS JARRET STOLLThe Los Angeles Kings forward scored 4:27 into overtime to lift his team to a 2–1 victory over the Vancouver Canucks and its first series win since 2001. The Canucks had been the NHL’s top team in the regular season, but the Kings won their series 4–1.
DARTMOUTH 8, YALE 4
DARTMOUTH 0 1 6 0 1 0 x 8
YALE 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 4
DARTMOUTH 8, YALE 0
DARTMOUTH 4 1 0 0 1 2 8
YALE 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
YALE 5, DARTMOUTH 4
YALE 3 0 1 0 1 0 0 5
DARTMOUTH 0 0 2 0 0 2 0 4
YALE 3, DARTMOUTH 2
YALE 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 3
DARTMOUTH 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2
CORNELL 17, YALE 9
CORNELL 5 12 17
YALE 4 5 9
BY ADLON ADAMSSTAFF REPORTER
In a disappointing turn of events, the men’s tennis team was defeated by two Ivy League rivals this weekend.
On the road Friday, the newly ranked No. 73 Bulldogs fell 5–2 to their Ancient Eight archrival, the No. 24 Crimson. Continuing its Ivy League competition, Yale hosted the No. 60 Big Green (18–3, 4–2 Ivy) for Yale’s Senior Day. but the Bulldogs were unable to come out with a win and lost again, 5–2.
“We knew that [Harvard] would be very tough,” Marc Powers ’13 said. “We all played our hearts out and left everything on the court. We were not disappointed with our e!ort.”
The Crimson quickly came out on top on Friday after winning the first two doubles matches at No. 2 and No. 3. At the No. 3 position, the pair of team captain Erik Blumenkranz ’12 and Joel Samaha ’12 lost first with a score 8–1, and No. 2 Patrick Chase ‘14 and John Huang ‘13 fell shortly after, 8–6. At No. 1, the No. 80 team of Daniel Ho!man ’13 and Marc Powers ’13 upset Harvard’s nationally ranked No. 57 pair in a close, back and forth 9–8 match.
In the singles round, Harvard (13–9, 2–3 Ivy) was ahead on every sin-
gle court after the first set. The Crim-son quickly secured the victory when it won at the No. 6, No. 4 and No. 1 spots consecutively. Harvard’s No. 1, Jonathan Pearlman, was the first Ivy League player to defeat Huang, end-ing his nine-match winning streak. Ho!man won at No. 2, winning his fourth consecutive three-set match. Powers was also victorious at the No. 3 spot, defeating his opponent in three sets as well.
“Harvard was really solid all the way down their singles lineup,” Zach Dean ’13 said. Ho!man noted that the team e!ort was there, but the bounces just weren’t going their way.
Against the Big Green, Yale (13–10, 2–4 Ivy) was unable to win the dou-bles point for the second time in a row. The teams split the first two doubles matches: Dartmouth won first at No. 2, defeating Huang and Chase 8–5, but the duo of Hoffman and Pow-ers was successful at the No. 1 posi-tion, coming away with a 9–7 vic-tory. The senior pair of Blumenkranz and Samaha fell in a close 9–7 match at No. 3.
Dartmouth also came away with the majority of the singles matches, winning four out of the six. Powers and Dean were the first to go at the No. 2 and No. 6 positions respectively, with Dean losing in a tough three sets. The deciding match came down to the No. 4 position, where Blumenkranz lost in another close three-set match.
Yale was victorious at the No. 1 and No. 3 spots. Huang had an easy 6–3, 6–0 win, and Ho!man came out with his fifth consecutive win, remaining undefeated in the Ivy League.
“It was fun. It was a bit nostal-gic being the last time playing in that facility,” Blumenkranz said, referring to the team’s last home match of the season at the Cullman-Heyman Ten-nis Center. “It was fun being out there with the rest of the guys, I’ve had a great time here at Yale.”
The Elis will play No. 51 Brown in Providence, R.I., this coming week-end.
Contact ADLON ADAMS at [email protected] .
Men’s tennis double faults
MEN’S TENNIS
WOMEN’S LACROSSE
Elis upset by Cornell
EUGENE JUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The women’s lacrosse team fell to No. 13 Cornell, 17–9 on Saturday.
Softball earns split against Dartmouth
MARIA ZEPEDA/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Marc Powers ’13 earned a singles victory against Harvard, but Yale fell to its archrival, 5–2., on Fri-day. The Elis then lost to Dartmouth at home the next day.
The wins were definitely a team e!ort. We had great pitching mixed with flawless defense, and we got the key hits at the right time.
CHRISTY NELSON ’13Captain, softball
We knew that [Harvard] would be very tough. We all played our hearts out and left everything on the court. We are not dissapointed with our e!ort.
MARC POWERS ’13Men’s tennis