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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 2014 · VOL. CXXXVI, NO. 105 · yaledailynews.com

INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING

SNOW SNOW

37 21

CROSS CAMPUS

DRY LAND STUDENT-WRITTEN DRAMAT EX OPENS

BIOTECH

UNIVERSITY BUDGET

Company working on novel treatment to fight depression

DEPARTMENTS WORK TO MAKE FURTHER CUTS

PAGES 10-11 CULTURE

PAGE 3 CITY

PAGE 3 NEWS

Franco in New Jersey. Former

Yale graduate student James Franco dropped by Princeton’s campus on Monday while filming scenes for his upcoming film ‘The Sound and the Fury,’ a movie based on the Faulkner novel. The celebrity visit led to a post from The Daily Princetonian headlined “JAMES FRANCO ALERT!!!! AT PRINCETON!!!!!!!” Meanwhile, Franco also tweeted a photo accompanied by the caption “GROUP SELFIE ALERT!!!! AT PRINCETON!!!!!!!” so clearly the love was mutual.

More movie stars. Alan

Muraoka ’80, the art director for “Little Miss Sunshine” (2006), was on campus yesterday to discuss the film following a screening. Director Tamar Hoffs ART ’57 also visited to talk about her movie The Haircut (1982).

Drawing on the walls. The Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital is looking to create a design theme to be used on a mural and throughout the hospital to beautify the environment. The new decor will be chosen through an art contest hosted by Inspire Yale. Anything goes as long as it is “uplifting, colorful, timeless and appealing to all ages.” Rothman takes the stage.

Another Nobel Prize winning professor will be featured in the next YaleLive, the University’s monthly live interview program. Jim Rothman — who received the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine — appears on the show, following Professor Robert Shiller’s appearance earlier this year. Everybody send in your bio problem set questions!

THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY

1923 The ownership and operation of cars in New Haven is made a senior privilege. The move follows a petition from the Sheffield Scientific School. Submit tips to Cross Campus

crosscampus@yaledailynews.com

ONLINE y MORE goydn.com/xcampus

Changes result in longer Metro-North train rides to New York PAGE 5 CITY

NELC remains in dire straits

Reports clash on J&B wage theft

The sushi master. Bun Lai of Miya’s Sushi was recently featured in a piece from April’s issue of Outside Magazine, titled “The Gourmet Invasivore’s Dilemma,” as well as an accompanying photo shoot. According to the article, “with his spotlight and his pail and his perfect snap-on hair, he looks like an action figure.” The piece continues: “Who could stop this ChineseJapanese-American hero for our times, stirring a wok in his Hawaiian-print bathing suit and popping boiling crabs into his mouth?” Not your typical painting. A large ad for a defunct cigar store in Westville has been replaced by a work of modern art by Tony Kosloski titled “Execution Wall — paper for the controllers (head shot/life in the time of the assassins).” The newly installed massive black, red, and white banner — spanning over 24 feet wide and 8 feet tall — is a nearly fullsized, vinyl reproduction of a Kosloski painting.

TRANSPORTATION

BY YUVAL BEN-DAVID STAFF REPORTER

Tuesday morning that the deli had opened in violation of the “Stop Work” order, a breach that costs owners $1,000 each day a business is open contrary to such an order. A $300 fine is assessed for every day that an employee works while not on proper payrolls. The deli, located at 1147 Chapel St., opened again Tuesday at 5 p.m. in violation of the order, Rhee said. In an interview Tuesday evening in the deli, Rhee said the investi-

In 2011, the Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations (NELC) department lost its modern Arab specialist, Hala Nassar, when she was passed up for tenure. The number of ladderfaculty Arabists in the department went from three to two. Now, as classical Arabic professor Beatrice Greundler leaves Yale for a job in Berlin, the number of ladder-faculty Arabists in the department is down to one. “Next year indeed we’ll have a bit of a problem,” Greundler admitted. As other faculty members in NELC see it, the problem is not Greundler’s departure so much as the University’s unresponsiveness to its consequences. The University has declared a hiring freeze that complicates the process of replacing the vacant NELC posts. Greundler said the department must petition the administration to start a search for new faculty member to fill her vacancy in classical Arab literature. But even if approved, that search can only start next academic year, and the hired professor would only come to Yale in the 2015-’16 school year. The same holds for the vacancy in modern Arab civilization, for which the University has not yet approved a job search. Meanwhile, Assyriology professor Benjamin Foster GRD ’75, NELC’s director of undergraduate studies, said the administration has refused to hire a temporary professor to replace Greundler for next year. “I don’t see evidence of concern [from administrators] for the Arabic program at the moment,” Foster said, adding that Yale’s hiring freeze is “highly elective,” meaning that the

SEE J&B PAGE 4

SEE NELC PAGE 6

ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Workers employed by the deli dispute the charges of wage theft against their employer. BY ISAAC STANEY-BECKER STAFF REPORTER Another New Haven grocery store — and Yale tenant — was shuttered this week after the Connecticut Department of Labor discovered multiple counts of labor violations. The state DOL issued a “Stop Work” order against J & B Deli on Monday for failing to pay their workers the minimum wage and overtime compensation. Investigators found that the owners,

John and Cheong Rhee of Hamden, Conn., had also improperly paid workers in cash, failed to keep adequate payroll records and failed to provide workers’ compensation and other benefits required by law. The owners, as well as the two men they employ, dispute the wage theft charges. “This business was flying in the face of basic tenets of the law,” Gary Pechie, director of the DOL’s Wage and Workplace Standards Division, said. He said his division received eyewitness reports

Yale to host first UCS changes housing rules Asian reunion UCS INTERNATIONAL INTERNSHIPS AND COORDINATED HOUSING

BY WESLEY YIIN STAFF REPORTER When Julie Wong ’86 came to Yale College, only five percent of students were Asian American. Coming from a majority Asian American public high school in Los Angeles, this was a major shift. “I didn’t consider myself a minority … until I got to Yale [and] one of my professors complimented me on how well I spoke English,” Wong said. In the decades since Wong graduated, the presence of Asians at Yale has increased to 17 percent of the student body. This year, to commemorate the growing community as well as the 160th anniversary of the graduation of Yale’s first Asian student, the University is hosting its first-ever Yale Asian Alumni Reunion — an event that Wong is co-chairing.

I didn’t consider myself a minority … until I got to Yale. JULIE WONG ’86 Co-chair, Yale Asian Alumni Reunion From April 11 to 13, nearly 200 Yale alumni from the University’s various schools will descend on campus to honor the Asian-American legacy at Yale and fortify the alumni network. The event features keynote speakers such as Pepsi Chief Executive Officer Indra Nooyi SOM ’80, Tony Award-

winning playwright David Henry Hwang DRA ’83, U.S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke ’72 and composer-pianist Vijay Iyer ’92. Current students have also been invited to either attend, plan or perform at the reunion. Harry Chang ’84, the other reunion co-chair, said the event will celebrate the history of Asians at Yale and promote strong connections within the Asian student and alumni community. When contacting potential speakers, Chang said, the planning team did some preliminary research to find prominent alumni in varied fields and sent off their invitations. Every one of the four desired keynotes said yes, which Chang said he took as a personal point of pride, as well as an indication of interest in the reunion. Wong stressed the universal appeal of the speaker lineup, adding that organizers asked themselves what bound them together and what they treasured as a group, in order to put together speakers that would be relevant and interesting. “These are not ‘Asian leaders,’” Wong said. “They’re leaders.” Though there are many Asians active in the alumni community, Chang said, many students lost touch with Asian alumni groups because they were not placed on email panlists unless they indicated their ethnic origins on a form after graduating. As a result, many alumni including Chang, SEE REUNION PAGE 6

Denmark

Coordinated UCS housing available

England Canada

Germany

Belgium

China

Turkey

Spain Greece

Mexico

Japan

India Ghana

Columbia

South Korea

Jordan

Israel

Singapore

Brazil South Africa Argentina

BY RISHABH BHANDARI STAFF REPORTER For the first time since Undergraduate Career Services began sponsoring international internships, participating students will have the option to arrange their own housing this summer. In prior years, any student who accepted a UCS-sponsored internship overseas was required to live in housing that the office had procured for interns in the area. University administrators interviewed said the office decided to eliminate the housing requirement this year primarily in response to student criticism that the existing policy was too inflexible. UCS employees added that changing this policy also enabled the office to expand its international offerings for this summer to countries where it may have been too difficult for the University to guarantee housing.

“Even if some students had family in the area, according to the old policy, they still had to live in and pay for Yale housing,” UCS Director Jeanine Dames said. “This shift is intended to empower students who, for whatever reason, think they can find better housing through other avenues.” Kenneth Koopmans, Director of Employment Programs and Deputy Director of UCS, said the new policy has helped the office add internship opportunities in nine new countries — Brazil, Colombia, Germany, Ghana, India, Japan, Jordan, South Africa and South Korea. In the nine new countries, Koopmans said UCS will not offer any housing for students this summer, because it was difficult for UCS to find residential spaces that fit all of the office’s criteria and were large enough to accommodate all the interns.

“I think most students would prefer having internship opportunities in these countries even if it meant having to find housing on their own as opposed to not having these opportunities at all,” he said. But even in international locations where UCS does not provide optional housing, Dames said the office will work extensively with local alumni and employers to help students find housing in safe and central locations with easily accessible public transportation. Brian Whalen, president and CEO of Forum on Education Abroad, a non-profit that advises students and universities on study abroad programs, said the University’s international-internship program is a leader in the field because of the number of international opportunities it offers and the housing and support UCS provides to stuSEE UCS PAGE 4


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