The Pitt News
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | August 31, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 16
Thai Hana closed FARM TO TABLE until violations resolved Janine Faust
Assitant News Editor The Allegheny County Health Department issued a consumer alert for Thai Hana and Sushi Bar Tuesday. According to the ACHD, the presence of roaches, flies and bags of rice infested by moths were among the reasons for issuing the alert for the restaurant located on the 3600 block of Fifth Avenue. Other reasons included a dishwasher that was not sanitizing properly, the presence of an unknown liquid leaking from the ceiling and cold food being stored at unsafe temperatures. As of Tuesday afternoon, a sign hung on Thai Hana’s front door saying it is closed for extensive plumbing repairs and will reopen Sept. 2. The ACHD has labeled the restaurant as Priority Code H, meaning that follow-up inspections were conducted on the facility within a five- to sevenmonth period due to violations in two or more high risk categories — such as employee health and cleaning and sanitation — during an initial inspection. The ACHD conducted a total of four inspections of the restaurant since late July, according to reports on the ACHD’s website. Both the initial report and the three subsequent follow-up inspections leading up to Tuesday showed repeated violations in areas including pest management and employee personal hygiene. The Pitt News made several calls to the restaurant on Wednesday and were met with a voicemail echoing the sign on the restaurant’s door.
Abigail Seltzer of Son Shine Farm sells fruit to Chris Josephs during Green Market at Phipps on Wednesday afternoon. Anna Bongardino ASSISTANT VISUAL EDITOR
STUDENTS, FACULTY RESPOND TO FOSTER STATUE Rachel Glasser News Editor When Laurence Glasco traveled to China in 1989, a Chinese band played for the group of visiting Americans and struck up a medley of Stephen Foster songs. “I said to them, ‘Gee, you know, you don’t really hear Stephen Foster songs anymore in America,’” Glasco said. “They were just dumbfounded.” A statue that sits on Forbes Avenue
near the Carnegie Museum of Art commemorates Foster — a Pittsburgh native — and his contributions to American music. But the statue — which has prompted controversy in the past — has recently become an even greater point of contention, receiving national attention and mention in The New York Times, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and a widely circulated article by Very Smart Brothas’ Damon Young. The monument was completed in 1900 and was located in Highland Park,
but after being vandalized repeatedly, it was moved to Oakland during the 1940s. The statue depicts Foster standing tall, dressed as a gentleman, with a black man sitting at his feet. The black man is toothless, wearing tattered clothing and strumming a banjo while Stephen Foster stares off into the distance and transcribes one of his iconic songs — “Uncle Ned,” a song about a slave. Kirk Savage, a professor in the history of art and architecture department, See Foster on page 2