NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 2016 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 98 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SNOW CLEAR
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CROSS CAMPUS
Q&A WKND PRESENTS: INTERVIEW ISSUE
YES MEANS YES
CHIPS ON SHOULDER
Yale students head to Hartford to promote affirmative consent bill
TOMATILLO, SALSA FRESCA, COMPETE FOR BUSINESS
PAGE B2 WKND
PAGE 5 CITY
PAGE 7 CITY
Cultural centers to hire asst. directors
And then there were four. The four remaining Republican presidential candidates sparred in the 11th GOP debate, hosted by Fox in Detroit, last night. While frontrunner Donald Trump and Sen. Marco Rubio went back and forth on some NSFW topics, Sen. Ted Cruz squeezed in some digs at Trump saying, “Donald has a tenuous relationship with the truth.” Gov. John Kasich had a breakout moment when he described himself as the “adult on the stage.” Bill takes Beantown. Former President Bill Clinton LAW ’73 caused controversy when he entered a polling place in West Roxbury, Massachusetts on Super Tuesday. Clinton was stumping for his wife, 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton LAW ’73. The law that Bill Clinton was accused of violating was the same that New Haven voters alleged Sarah Eidelson ’12 violated during the Ward 1 primary. Schuy high. Pi Beta Phi at Yale
is hosting “Schuy is the Limit” — a dance-a-thon fundraiser for Schuyler Arakawa ’15, a member of Pi Phi who was critically injured when she was struck by a boulder while rafting in Colombia. Students can form dance teams or simply donate via Venmo. The event will be held from 4 to 8 p.m. on Saturday at the Payne Whitney Gymnasium’s Lanman Center.
Roses are crimson, violets are blue. A Harvard student’s
account of the dating scene at the Ivy League university appeared in Salon yesterday. Yehong Zhu, a Harvard sophomore, said “Dating is hard enough. Throwing Harvard into the equation just makes everything worse.” In the article, Zhu noted that “nobody really dates” at Harvard. In fact, she wrote, one-fifth of Harvard seniors graduate without having been in relationships.
Itty bitty piggy. This Sunday
at 6 p.m. Oink — a local, sustainable pop-up restaurant — will partner with Ordinary for a special late-night event. The restaurant and bar will serve cocktails and specialty items such as yakitoris and pork belly lettuce wraps. The pop-up will serve customers on a first-come, first-serve basis until food runs out.
Movie night. The Yale Film
Society will screen a 35 millimeter film version of “The Master” — a drama starring Joaquin Phoenix as a World War II veteran adjusting after his military service. The screening will be held at the Whitney Humanities Center at 7 p.m. tomorrow night.
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1965 Ray J. Byrd ’67 becomes the first African-American man to be initiated into the Phi Gamma Delta national fraternity after he receives a bid from the Nu Deuteron chapter of the fraternity at Yale.
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BACK AT YOUR DOOR Actual Food, new grocery delivery service, to come to the Elm City this fall PAGE 7 CITY
Basketball capt. expelled, father says BY DANIELA BRIGHENTI AND MAYA SWEEDLER STAFF REPORTERS
ard said the Yale College Dean’s Office hopes to hire candidates in the next six weeks. According to Howard, part of the funding for the new positions will be drawn from the doubling of each cultural center’s budget, a pledge announced by University President
The father of former Yale men’s basketball captain Jack Montague told the New Haven Register on Thursday that Montague has been expelled from the University. Montague’s status was changed to “withdrawn” on his academic record over three weeks ago, and on Feb. 24, Yale sports publicity sent out a press release stating that Montague would not return to the team. Until Jim Montague’s statement, no one had specified the nature of Montague’s departure from Yale College. “We have strict orders from our lawyers,” Jim Montague told the Register while explaining he had been advised not to comment. “Soon enough, I’d love to tell the other side of the story. It’s ridiculous, why he’s expelled. It’s probably going to set some sort of precedent. We’re trying to do things the gentleman’s way, so we’re keeping things closeknit. But you guys will get a story.” No University administrators or members of the basketball program would comment on Jack Montague’s expulsion Thursday night. Vice President for Communications Eileen O’Connor said she was unable to comment
SEE CENTERS PAGE 6
SEE BASKETBALL PAGE 4
IRENE JIANG/PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Job postings for the new positions went online Thursday morning. BY DAVID SHIMER AND JON VICTOR STAFF REPORTERS The University’s four cultural centers — often described as understaffed and underfunded — will each gain a new full-time assistant director next academic year. All four cultural centers are currently searching for assistant direc-
tors, and a job posting for the positions went online Thursday morning. The posting states that candidates should be “student-centered” and motivated individuals who can assist in the implementation of services supporting underrepresented students and who can increase engagement with the broader campus community. Dean of Student Engagement Burgwell How-
Reinstatement tough on int’ls BY MONICA WANG STAFF REPORTER At the beginning of every semester, roughly 10 percent of Yale undergraduates board planes that take them across oceans, continents and national borders to reach the United States. Coping with the initial jet lag and culture shock, Yale’s international students face many challenges that their domestic peers do not. For an even smaller portion of this population — those who journey back to Yale after withdrawing and spending an entire year in a different country — their international status brings yet another challenge: cultural barriers in the reinstatement process. Wenbin Gao ’19, who
hails from Qingdao, China, was reinstated earlier this semester. He decided to withdraw from Yale last April after speaking with his psychiatrist at Yale Health’s Mental Health and Counseling Department. Since Gao missed the deadline for a leave of absence, University policies regarding withdrawal and reinstatement required him to be away for at least one full term, not including the spring semester during which he withdrew. From April 2015 to January 2016, Gao was back home in Qingdao, where he was able to rest and recover. When he felt ready to return, he decided to apply for reinstatement. But Gao did not expect the amount of time and energy that the rein-
statement process required or the numerous obstacles he faced as a result of unique cultural differences. In particular, he said, China did not have sophisticated mental health facilities, and academic requirements for reinstatement were hard to fulfill abroad. “[The reinstatement process] is very frustrating. I do not complain because I realize all these tedious procedures are necessary. I do realize why [the administration] is doing this,” Gao said. “Still, Yale should be more culturally aware of withdrawn students who live abroad. These cultural differences are something that students and the SEE REINSTATEMENT PAGE 4
For diverse faculty, admin roles hinder teaching BY VICTOR WANG STAFF REPORTER In spring 2014, 26 students enrolled in history and American Studies professor Mary Lui’s Asian-American history class. Last fall, that number spiked to 90, according to course demand statistics on the day final schedules were due. But if any students in the class hoped to take another class with Lui — who is Yale’s only tenured professor of Asian American Studies — they were disappointed: because of Lui’s administrative duties as master of Timothy Dwight College, she is only able to teach one undergraduate course a year. “I feel badly when students take the lecture, and they ask
what’s next,” Lui said. The University’s push for increased faculty diversity has often focused on recruitment and retention efforts, with less attention given to the subtle yet significant dilemma that arises when professors already at Yale who teach issues relating to diversity and ethnicity take on increasing administrative workloads. Faculty members have fewer teaching responsibilities when they become administrators — either in their own departments, in residential colleges or in the central administration — and some professors and administrators have suggested that this disproportionately hamstrings academic SEE ADMIN PAGE 4
YNHHS, L+M committed to affiliation, despite executive order BY PADDY GAVIN STAFF REPORTER Despite last week’s executive order signed by Gov. Dannel Malloy halting the proposed affiliation between the YaleNew Haven Health System and the Lawrence+Memorial Hospital in New London, Connecticut, both hospitals remain committed to the affiliation. The proposed affiliation would incorporate L+M Hospital within the Yale-New Haven Health System, which currently includes Bridgeport, Greenwich and Yale-New Haven Hospitals. The executive order, which was signed on Feb. 25, has postponed the affiliation until at least January 2017. Malloy asked that the Office of Health Care Access and the state Department of Social Services postpone the decision in order to give a newly appointed state task force the opportunity to conduct a review of the decision-making
process concerning affiliations and acquisitions between hospitals. However, the executive order requires that OHCA forbid affiliations between hospitals whose joint operating revenue would exceed 20 percent of the total operating revenue of all hospitals in the state. According to OHCA’s website, YNHHS had operating revenues in excess of $3.4 billion in 2014 — over 27 percent of the total operating revenue of all hospitals in the state. Malloy said the mandated review will ensure that consumers statewide receive equitable access to transparent and competitive health care that contributes to economic development. According to a release announcing the executive order, having a small number of hospitals control the market would negatively affect health care in the state. “With continuing changes SEE YNHHS PAGE 6
YALE DAILY NEWS
Gov. Dannel Malloy signed an executive order last week halting the proposed affiliation of YNHHS and L+M.