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 · MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 74 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SNOW/RAIN CLOUDY
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CROSS CAMPUS
WOMEN’S HOCKEY WHITEOUT GAME RAISES $30K
GLOBAL HEALTH
POLITICS
Hackathon focuses on health-related tech innovations
PEOPLE’S CAUCUS DISCUSSES AGENDA PRIORITIES
PAGE B1 SPORTS
PAGE 3 NEWS
PAGE 3 CITY
YALE-NUS Students receive assistance in summer experience search PAGE 5 NEWS
Miller, Pollard to step down
SEE DEANS RESIGN PAGE 6
Love et veritas. On Thursday afternoon, freshman couple Kasidet Manakongtreechee ’17 and Christina Zhang ’17 created a massive drawing in the snow on Science Hill of the Yale Lux et Veritas seals. The artwork showed that even in the darkest winter, love can create a little lux. Goodbye and thanks for all the fish! The Saybrook 12-pack
threw a party in honor of Yale College Dean Mary Miller following the announcement of her impending departure. “Discuss your thoughts on the ‘mapa,’ and kick off MC Miller Lite’s lame-duck semester in style,” the invitation said. Apparently, there was also an ice luge. Round 1: Résumé Drop.
More competitive than your consulting interview, more lucrative than your investment banking offer, the nation’s two most elite a cappella groups are holding their info session about joining today. Presentations about The Whiffenpoofs and Whim ’n’ Rhythm are taking place at Broadway Rehearsal Lofts in anticipation of auditions next month. SlIfKEA. Now you can
take your favorite Jewish community center home with you. According to a Slifka Center announcement, boxes of stuff found in the center’s basement are up for grabs in the “purple couch room.” Campus pawn stars can help themselves to books, wrapping paper and Shabbat candlesticks! Have at it Yale.
The thirst is real. A new
student startup called H2Yale is delivering cases of water to student doorsteps for 62 cents a bottle. How soon until the business model expands to include beverages of all variety (and alcoholic content)?
Ale at Yale! BAR hosted
the Connecticut Real Ale Festival this Sunday, with participating breweries from across New England. For $40, attendees could sample drinks from breweries including Cambridge Brewhouse, Half full and Cavalry Brewing. Proceeds went to local New Haven children’s charities.
Three paths diverged on a winter’s day— Kappa, Pi Phi or
Theta? Sorority bids come out today. But remember, calling somebody else fat won’t make you any skinnier. Calling someone stupid doesn’t make you any smarter. And ruining Regina George’s life definitely didn’t make Cady any happier. All you can do in life is try to solve the problem in front of you.
The morning after. Silliman
held their first Screw this weekend at Elevate.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1940 Initiation night is banned by fraternities by the InterFraternity Council. Submit tips to Cross Campus
crosscampus@yaledailynews.com
ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus
YALE
DEAN POLLARD ENCOURAGED CHANGE, EXAMINED CURRICULA, SPARKED RENOVATION OF HALL OF GRADUATE STUDIES BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID AND MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTERS Four years ago, Thomas Pollard was the chair of the search committee for a new Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. But in a surprise turn of events, the committee went behind his back to recommend Pollard himself for the job to then-University President Richard Levin — a recommendation that was met with approval. In his years of deanship, Pollard has maintained a tighter grasp on the graduate school than he did on that committee. In a school where change has been comparatively slow, Pollard spearheaded a controversial movement to closely track the school’s goings-
BY ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER AND MAREK RAMILO STAFF REPORTERS It was a somber scene in Battell Chapel when family, friends, colleagues and students of the late Samuel See gathered Saturday to pay tribute to the 34-year-old Yale assistant professor who died unexpectedly last November. But through song, readings and personal anecdotes, those closest to See looked past the tragedy of his death to memorialize the life he led: as a scholar, a teacher and a deeply understanding and devoted friend. “I am the most proud mother in the whole world,” See’s mother, Ann Sturdivant, told more than 100 people gathered to celebrate her son’s life. “Rather than grieve our loss, we elicit wonder — wonder at what our lives would be like if Sam had not lived.”
DEAN MILLER’S TENURE A BALANCING ACT BETWEEN FISCAL CONSTRAINTS AND EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
on and mobilize the results of various surveys, pushing forward incremental changes in student life and encouraging academic departments to evaluate their teaching and advising practices. At the same time, Pollard made the long-deferred renovation of the Hall of Graduate Studies a priority for the administration. “He started the ball rolling on a number of things it would be nice to see come to fruition,” Graduate Student Assembly (GSA) President Brian Dunican GRD ’15 said. Former University President Richard Levin said Friday that Pollard’s tenure was notable for the dean’s efforts to SEE POLLARD PAGE 4
See’s life celebrated See’s mother described his “innate brilliance, charm and humor,” recalling See’s childhood in Bakersfield, California. As a preschooler, she said, See told classmates his curly, blonde hair came from eating angel food cake. He wanted to find a way to take the rainbow to school. Her son’s enthusiasm and curiosity were matched only by his “generosity of love,” she said. His intellect, she added, made him every teacher’s favorite, whether or not he was in that teacher’s class. “Some essence of Sam lives in each of us,” she concluded. “His journey as a mortal man has ended, and now his legacy begins … Our love for you, Sammy, is eternal. Godspeed, Sam.” English Department Chair Langdon Hammer ’80 GRD ’89 opened SEE MEMORIAL PAGE 4
YDN
BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID AND MATTHEW LLOYD-THOMAS STAFF REPORTERS When Mary Miller was appointed dean of Yale College on Oct. 10, 2008, the stock market — along with Yale’s endowment — was in free fall. The first years of Miller’s term, which will come to a close when she steps down as dean at the end of this academic year, were deeply affected by the University’s financial woes, which froze new faculty hiring and prevented the planned construction of the two new residential colleges. But balancing the fiscal storm that ensued after the 2008–’09 financial crisis with the University’s efforts to improve the quality of undergraduate education and increase accessibility was only one
part of Miller’s term as dean. A series of initiatives — a review of the findings of the Committee on Yale College Education, an administrative effort to address the University’s sexual climate, the return of ROTC to Yale’s campus for the first time since the Vietnam era and a push to increase Yale’s accessibility to lowincome and first-generation college students — will likely be regarded as Miller’s lasting contributions to the College. “Her experience as an exceptional scholar, wonderful teacher and residential college master [has served] her well as dean,” University Secretary Kimberly Goff-Crews said. “I have been in many meetings with her where her wisSEE MILLER PAGE 4
GHeav employees counter protest BY SEBASTIAN MEDINA-TAYAC STAFF REPORTER Holding up signs encouraging Yale students to end their Gourmet Heaven boycott, workers at the New Haven and Providence stores and some of their family members chanted “Leave!” in Spanish, drowning out the activists’ usual chants. About 20 Gourmet Heaven employees came out Friday at 5:30 p.m. to counter activists’ and fired workers’ weekly picket of the popular campus deli. Gourmet Heaven, which the Connecticut Department of Labor charged with committing wage theft over several years, has four locations, two in New Haven and two in Providence, R.I. The current workers contended they are being treated fairly by their employer, distributing pamphlets alleging that ULA has been lying about the wage theft and that all employees are making legal wages. “They say they want to help us but they’re actually screwing us over,” said
Reynaldo Garcia, an employee who has worked at Gourmet Heaven for two years. “We’re doing this to defend our jobs. We had no problems or complaints.” Employees said they were worried that the diminished business from the boycott would cause them to lose their jobs. Activists from La Unidad Latina en Accion and MEChA de Yale began the boycott and have been picketing weekly since August in reaction to the DOL’s confirmation of wage theft. Workers told the News last month that prior to a Department of Labor investigation that began in July, they had been making weekly salaries as low as $320 for 72 hours of work. Gourmet Heaven owner Chung Cho is still working to pay $140,000 in unpaid wages and overtime to more than two dozen workers, as mandated by the DOL settlement. Several of the workers at the counter protest said they had received back paychecks. SEE GOURMET HEAVEN PAGE 6