WSN042015

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NYU’s Daily Student Newspaper

WASHINGTON SQUARE NEWS Vol. 43, No. 42

MONDAY, APRIL 20, 2015

nyunews.com UNIVERSITY AFFAIRS

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Report issued on NYUAD labor

NEWS

By MARITA VLACHOU and ALANNA BAYARIN News Editors

VIA NYU.EDU

The Gazelle: Hackathon Winners of the NYUAD International Hackathon target labor rights violations. STORY on PG. 3 FEATURES

COURTESY OF NYU

Guggenheim Fellowship Six members of NYU faculty became Guggenheim fellows, and discuss what they will do with the grant. STORY on PG. 4 SPORTS STAFF PHOTO BY HARK KANWAL

Linda Montana puts on a performance art piece with music in the background, a baby bottle and multiple facial expressions to make the crowd laugh. STORY ON PAGE 4

Nardello & Co., an independent investigative firm hired by NYU and Tamkeen, an Abu Dhabi government agency, to review allegations of labor violations at the NYU Abu Dhabi campus, released their report Thursday morning. Investigators confirmed that while NYU’s labor standards applied to 20,000 of the 30,000 workers employed during the construction of the Saadiyat Island campus, the remaining 10,000 laborers were subject to labor rights abuses committed by several subcontractors NYU hired. The report showed that one third of the workers were not treated according to NYU’s labor standards due to a de facto exemption policy, but concluded that the university and Tamkeen were not aware of the problem. NYU President John Sexton said in an email that the university was not aware of the policy in place and plans to ensure violations like these do not occur in the future. “Neither we nor Tamkeen knew about the exemption policy or how widely it was being applied (roughly one-third

NYUAD continued on PG. 3

FEATURES VIA GONYUATHLETICS.COM

Weekend sports recap Top news in NYU athletics from the weekend. STORY on PG. 5 OPINION

Opinion: Sexton response to report The editorial board argues that Sexton could have said more. STORY on PG. 7

Junior named to Top 10 College Women list By ZOE THOMPSON Staff Writer CAS junior and economics major Mansi Prakash was named one of Glamour Magazine’s Top 10 College Women 2015 on April 8 for her nonprofit Brighter Today. The organization sends eco-friendly bulbs to people in developing nations to improve their quality of life. A visit to her grandparents’ home in India inspired Prakash to establish the nonprofit. She noticed that the villagers were living without lights to save money. The villagers’ bulbs cost 20 cents and only lasted two months, but Prakash exchanged them for CFL bulbs that cost $2 but last up to five years, cutting

electricity bills by 80 percent. Prakash said that energy saving leads to increased productivity in other areas of life. “Our data has shown that savings go toward food, education and health care,” Prakash said. “Women can take up work from home, and children can use the light to study for longer.” Brighter Today’s team is almost as international as its cause. Prakash’s brother, who attends high school in the Philippines, currently controls the technical aspects of the company. And the nonprofit has a ground team of 12 volunteers and coordinators in India who are responsible for putting the project into place. Prakash won the Social Ven-

ture Challenge and received a fellowship after pitching her idea at Clinton Global University Initiative Conference. Since then, she has been working with mentors who have provided her with the funds to move the project forward. “Last summer we actually partnered with Philips, who have provided 100 percent of our bulbs,” Prakash said. “We carried out the project on a really large scale.” Prakash and her team have recently developed a new, more expensive bulb prototype that uses sunlight to act as a 60watt bulb. She plans to utilize her contacts, partnerships and Glamour recognition to establish Brighter Today bulbs in over

500 homes in the Philippines. “I came up with the prototype last year,” Prakash said. “It’s like a plastic bottle. You fill it up with bleach and water and it has an LED strip connected to a cellphone charger, bulb and fan. We don’t really have the money to make it on a large scale, but with this award, we can make this prototype the best possible and then implement it on a large scale.” For the future, Prakash hopes Brighter Today will become more sustainable by encouraging the involvement of high school students. “We want to go through the high school route,” Prakash said.

PRAKASH continued on PG. 4


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