Yale Daily News

Andrew Bartholomew

Recent Stories

Bartholomew: Yale torn between two lovers

Hey Princeton, we need to talk. It’s just, well, it’s not that the occasional fling hasn’t been fun. Really, what we have between us is great. There’s mutual interest and attraction, even if it’s a bit one-sided. We love being able to call you up every couple years for a gridiron tryst at our place.

Fast times at QPac

Quinnipiac is a university in transition, consumed with expansion and plagued by the requisite growing pains.

Bartholomew: It’s time for change

Enough is enough. Saturday’s fourth-quarter meltdown against Penn underscored the shortcomings that have held back Yale football for years.

Yale crew stays in the race for dominance

As rowing’s popularity builds, Ivies retain titles

A single sculler, midstroke, perches atop the copper weather vane above Ray Tompkins House, the Athletic Department’s administrative building. Rowers’ profiles hunch in the entrances of several residential colleges. And each year, Yale boats take to the water towing the legacy of the country’s oldest collegiate athletic team.

Eli coaches play a different ballgame

There is no tenure track in the Department of Athletics. And so head football coach Jack Siedlecki will take the sidelines on Saturday, his Elis opening their most anticipated season in years against a historically dismal Georgetown squad, under the weekly scrutiny that haunts his job like a specter.

Student vets await summons to duty

With the “war on terror” expanding and the military’s shortage of troops worsening, many inactive veterans, including graduate students at Yale, must wonder if or when they will be summoned to serve again.

Computer files not so secret

Like approximately 50 other Yalies every month, Rosa Ayala ’09 got busted. The Record Industry Association of America spotted an illegal file on her computer and contacted ITS with her IP address in an attempt to curb the spread of illegally downloaded music.

Colleges plan series of conferences

The leaders of 10 top international research universities — including Yale — met in Australia last week and agreed to hold a series of conferences on topics ranging from sustainability to the role of women in academia.

Seminar scripts TV series

Suzanne O’Malley knows how to keep an audience tuned in. So when over 50 students attended the first meeting of her Calhoun College seminar, “Writing Hour-Long Television Drama,” she made an offer that she was sure would hold everyone’s attention. “She told us she was thinking about creating a new television series, and that all got us very excited,” Alexander Dominitz ’09 said. “She said we would not be so much students but that we’d be calling each other colleagues, and that

Affirmative action bans may boost Yale's diversity

Experiencing Race at Yale: Part 3 of 3

Yale’s efforts to increase racial and socioeconomic diversity in the student body may get a small boost from an unusual source: voters in California, Michigan and, in 2008, potentially a handful of other states.

More stories