T H E O L D E ST C O L L E G E DA I LY · FO U N D E D 1 8 7 8
NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, MARCH 26, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 21 · yaledailynews.com
Communities mourn Rachael Shaw-Rosenbaum ’24 ple/staff, or call (203) 432-1128 during business hours. Walden Peer Counseling is available from 8 p.m. to 2 a.m. every night. To speak with a trained peer counselor, call (203) 432-8255. To speak with Dr. Eunice Yuen from the Asian American Cultural Center, schedule an appointment at aacc. yalecollege.yale.edu/resources/emotional-wellness. Good Life Center Woodbridge Fellow Alex Vaghenas offers 30-minute non-clinical wellness chats to support students in coping with stress and anxiety, and to hear about whatever else is on their mind. Email alexa.vaghenas@yale. edu to schedule a one-time session or a recurring time to chat. Additional resources are available in a guide compiled by the Yale College Council at bit.ly/3w0fgBf.
BY NATALIE KAINZ AND ZAPORAH PRICE STAFF REPORTERS The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is a hotline for individuals in crisis or for those looking to help someone else. To speak with a certified listener, call 1-800-273-8255. Crisis Text Line is a texting service for emotional crisis support. To speak with a trained listener, text HELLO to 741741. It is free, available 24/7 and confidential. Careline (carelinealaska.com) is a statewide hotline available at 1-877266-4357 (HELP) and staffed by Alaskans for Alaskans from 6 to 11 p.m. weekdays, and overnights on Friday and Saturday. During other hours, calls are automatically referred to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, 1-800-273-8255. To talk with a counselor from Yale Mental Health and Counseling, schedule an appointment at yalecollege.yale.edu/getting-help/drop-sessions-mental-health-counseling. On-call counselors are available at any time: call (203) 432-0290. The Chaplain’s Office staff are also available: schedule an appointment at bit.ly/3d5pAzj, write directly to any of the staff, a list of whom is available at chaplain.yale.edu/peo-
*** Rachael Shaw-Rosenbaum ’24, a first-year student in Branford College, recently died by suicide at the age of 18. She is remembered by her friends, family and teachers for her kindness, wit, musical talent and willingness to take on challenges. Born and raised in Anchorage, Alaska, Shaw-Rosenbaum was involved in a range of music, debate and community organizations in
Lee sues Yale over firing
COURTESY OF YALE UNIVERSITY
Lee tweeted that Trump supporters suffered from a “shared psychosis” in January 2020. BY MADISON HAHAMY AND BEATRIZ HORTA STAFF REPORTERS Bandy Lee MED ’94 DIV ’95, a formerly Yale-affiliated faculty member in the School of Medicine, filed a complaint against the University on Monday alleging “unlawful termination… due to her exercise of free speech about the dangers of Donald Trump’s presidency.”
University spokesperson Karen Peart declined to comment on the specifics of the case. Yale was the only named defendant. Lee’s complaint alleges that Yale fired her in response to a January 2020 tweet that characterized “just about all” of former president Donald Trump’s supporters as suffering from “shared psychosis” and said that Alan SEE LEE PAGE 4
high school and participated in the Directed Studies program at Yale. She dreamt of studying constitutional law and eventually sitting on the Supreme Court, like her idol, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. She adored her poodle Teddy, short for Theodore Teddy Roosevelt Shaw, and became a vegetarian due to her love of animals. “She’s all about seeking justice, finding fairness and justice in so many avenues,” said her mother, Pamela Shaw. More than two dozen of Shaw-Rosenbaum’s family members, friends and community members shared with the News the ways she touched their lives, from Alaska to Connecticut. “She accepted people, for certain — never, never, never judgmental of anybody,” said her aunt, Bev Harper. “When she’d get excited, she’d speak faster and faster … When she was serious, she wanted to be taken seriously. And she was very silly too.” Shaw-Rosenbaum loved to read — so much so that as a preschooler, she would keep her mom awake until 11 p.m. demanding just one more story before bedtime. She would become a storyteller herself, from daycare monologues to improv shows to made-up backstories about Wal-
COURTESY OF PAM SHAW
A high school senior class photo of Rachael Shaw-Rosenbaum '24, who was a first-year student in Branford College. greens customers from her summer job as a cashier. Her childhood friend Matthew Park ’24, who attended the
same schools as Shaw-Rosenbaum from elementary school to college, SEE SHAW-ROSENBAUM PAGE 4
A look at faculty diversity at Yale BY ROSE HOROWITCH AND ZAPORAH PRICE STAFF REPORTERS Meghan Gupta ’21 can count on one hand the number of Native faculty members throughout all of Yale, which is four, according to the Office of Institutional Research. These four faculty members act as role models and mentors to students of similar backgrounds, Gupta said. They can tell Native stories from a perspective that has been left out of traditional scholarship, and academics from outside the community can impose harmful stereotypes on Native communities. She is not alone in how she feels. Five students and five professors underscored the lingering need for improvement in faculty diversity in interviews with the News. In recent years, Yale has put resources and efforts toward hiring a more diverse faculty. In 2015, the University started the Faculty Excellence and Diversity Initiative, or FEDI, which devotes central resources to recruiting and retaining a more diverse faculty. These resources can include support for faculty spouses, research and salaries. Following a mid-decade decline in the number of diverse hires, the last two years have seen considerable growth, according to a report released to the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on March 9.
JESSIE CHEUNG/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The FAS ladder faculty has grown by 29 people since 2015, with an increase of 12 underrepresented minority faculty members. Though Yale has made progress toward hiring a more diverse faculty, the faculty’s composition has not kept pace with a cohort of students that has become ever more diverse, according to Matthew Jacobson, professor of African American Studies. According to the Office of Institutional Resources, Black faculty made up 3.9 percent, Hispanic faculty made up 4.6 percent, American Indian or Alaska native faculty made up 0.001 percent, Asian faculty made up 19.7 percent and white faculty made up 63.3 percent of University faculty in 2020. In that same year, the student body was 7.7 percent Black, 13.3 percent Hispanic, 0.4 percent American Indian or Alaska native, 19.3 percent Asian and 52.7 percent white.
“The undergraduate admissions is light-years ahead of the rest of the University when it comes to diversity questions,” Jacobson told the News. “Here we are with almost a 19th-century faculty that is still just egregiously white, but this really diverse student body that is completely different from the student body of a generation ago. That gap between who the students are and who the faculty are has become more and more problematic.” In an email to the News, Desir pointed to FEDI’s success in recruiting diverse faculty members in recent years. During the first five years of the program, FEDI helped recruit 101 ladder faculty members and 46 Presidential Visiting Fellows. But he acknowledged that the SEE DIVERSITY PAGE 5
Community supports Oriental Pantry after break-in BY DOMINIQUE CASTANHEIRA STAFF REPORTER
DOMINIQUE CASTANHEIRA/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
Yoon-ock Kim prepares bibimbap in the kitchen area of Oriental Pantry. Kim is the owner of the store.
Around 1:30 a.m. on Sunday, Oriental Pantry — an Asian market on Orange Street — was broken into and robbed. The community has since rallied to support the family-owned establishment. Oriental Pantry is run single-handedly by Yoon-ock Kim, who had left for the night when the business’ glass front door was broken and $200 was stolen from the cash register. The crime brought added financial pressure on Kim. Oriental Pantry’s business had
CROSS CAMPUS
INSIDE THE NEWS
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1931.
YUAG
Former baseball star turned evangelist speaker Billy Sunday speaks to a full crowd of students at Battell Chapel. Sunday speaks on issues facing current college students, especially issues surrounding access to higher education.
A lecture series at the Yale Undergraduate Art Gallery titled "Pablo Picasso at Yale" came to a close on Thursday. The talks explored Picasso's work and presence at the YUAG. Page 6 ARTS
JONES
already seen a harsh drop in revenues since the onset of the pandemic, forcing Kim to delay rent payments over the past two and a half months. A Yale student helper, Lauren Kim ’21, set up a GoFundMe campaign to cover the damages. The effort has since surpassed its $2,000 goal to raise close to $13,000 as of Thursday evening. “I was surprised,” Kim said of the response to the GoFundMe. “I love the community and I appreciate its support.” When Kim arrived after the break-in, she said that the interior
Prominent altright radio host Alex Jones visited Skull and Bones to create content for his website InfoWars. com, an outlet known for spreading conspiracy theories. Page 8 UNIVERSITY
HEALTH
Students shared their experiences with Yale Mental Health and Counseling, expressing frustration, disappointment and anger over inadequate mental health resources. Page 9 UNIVERSITY
of the restaurant was “a mess” but that no merchandise had been stolen. However, since the business is not insured through her landlord, Kim had to cover the damages herself. She told the News she will use the funds from the GoFundMe to make repairs, including those she has already initiated to fix the storefront’s door, in addition to covering back rent and installing security cameras. Kim has owned and operated Oriental Pantry – which offers panAsian ingredients as well as several SEE PANTRY PAGE 5 VIGIL
Around 300 community members gathered on Tuesday for an online vigil for the eight victims of the Atlanta spa shootings, which took place on March 16. Page 11 UNIVERSITY