NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 2015 · VOL. CXXXVIII, NO. 31 · yaledailynews.com
INSIDE THE NEWS MORNING EVENING
SUNNY CLOUDY
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CROSS CAMPUS The Other Presidential Candidate. Hillary Clinton
LAW ’73 isn’t the only Yale alumna gunning for the presidency. Yesterday, Meryl Streep DRA ’75 was named president of the jury for the 2016 Berlin International Film Festival. “The responsibility is somewhat daunting,” Streep told The New York Times. “I have never been president of anything before.”
Sexy Can I? “This might be
the most sex-crazed college in America (and five presidents went there),” Esquire said of Yale in an article yesterday. The story referred to OkCupid’s feature that said Yale students ranked highest in the nation for sex drive. According to OkCupid, 57 percent of Yalies say their sex drive is higher than average.
STOMACHING IT FOOTBALL ADAPTS TO MEAL PLAN
CHOCTAW THE HAND
UP IN ARMS
New Native American language courses offered at the NACC
ACTIVISTS DEMAND CLIMATE CHANGE REFORM AT RALLY
PAGE 12 SPORTS
PAGE 3 UNIVERSITY
PAGE 3 CITY
BY FINNEGAN SCHICK STAFF REPORTER Twelve thousand five hundred sixty-four dollars: This is the average salary difference between male and female professors at Yale last year, according to newly released data on 531 Yale professors from the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Yale’s gender gap in faculty salaries is over $400 smaller than the gap at the average fouryear private college. Additionally, Yale’s faculty salaries as a whole are ranked eighth highest, behind schools including Harvard, Stanford and Columbia. But the disparity between male and female professors — which the University has consistently tried
to address through hiring initiatives — is tied to the low number of women among Yale’s senior faculty, a figure Faculty of Arts and Sciences Dean Tamar Gendler said has increased over time. “The statistics reported in the Chronicle reflect averages between men and women, but they do not control statistically for other relevant factors,” Gen-
Salmon Elis. Yesterday
Dole announced that it is recalling bagged spinach distributed in 13 states, including Connecticut. The spinach was recalled after salmonella bacteria were found in a sample. We’re not sure what brand of spinach Yale Dining uses, but the News recommends opting for romaine at the salad bar during lunch.
Say Cheese. The Yale Sustainable Food Program will host “Women of Cheese,” a talk with local cheese makers Laura Downey and Allison Hooper at 4:30 p.m. in Sudler Hall. If there are free samples, count us in. THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY
1982 The Yale Literary Magazine files a lawsuit against the administration claiming changes in University policies have threatened their status as an undergraduate organization. Follow along for the News’ latest.
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information filed with the U.S. Department of Education. Of the 531 Yale professors included in the data, roughly two-thirds were men. The salaries were those of professors among the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and the non-medical professional schools. The data included the SEE SALARIES PAGE 6
Food trucks removed from campus BY MICHELLE LIU AND JIAHUI HU STAFF REPORTERS
Now Make That Harvard Student Hammer Time.
are a few days left to take advantage of Beer Week in New Haven. Local bars — including Cask Republic, Ordinary and Prime 16 — will support Connecticut breweries such as the famous Two Roads Brewing Company in Stratford. Oh, and you must be 21 years or over to drink in the state of Connecticut.
PAGE 5 UNIVERSITY
dler said in an email to the News. “One of the strongest determinants of salary is the number of years someone has been teaching since receiving his or her Ph.D. The longer you have been teaching, the higher your salary tends to be.” The Chronicle data, which reports salaries from the 2013– 14 academic year, culled salary
week, Secretary of State John Kerry ’66 visited Cambridge to participate in a conversation about foreign policy with Harvard professor Graham Allison. The event, which took place at Harvard Square’s famous Charles Hotel, was streamed live on the State Department’s website.
The Road Not Taken. There
YCC offers “reality check” workshops teaching real world skills
Faculty gender pay gap persists
Cheating On Us? Earlier this
Speaking of the Crimson, Harvard senior Garrett Lam recently broke a Guinness world record. According to The Boston Globe, Lam’s body shook and wobbled, but he managed to stand on an exercise ball for over five hours, setting a new record. Lam raised over $1,500 for charity through the feat.
NO BRAINER
YALE DAILY NEWS
Caseus Cheese Truck, Portobello and Rubamba were ordered to cease food truck operations Wednesday.
DUSs advise outside of academics BY MONICA WANG AND VICTOR WANG STAFF REPORTERS In the wake of campus sexual climate survey results released by the Association of American Universities last month, several Directors of Undergraduate Studies are considering the non-academic roles they can play to support students confronted with the alarming figures. Last Tuesday, Yale College Dean Jonathan Holloway, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs Melanie Boyd and University Title IX Coordinator Stephanie Spangler deconstructed the survey findings during a routine DUS meeting, as part of a series of discussions they held with various campus groups about the results. Attending DUSs were given an explanation of how the survey was conducted and what the numbers represent. DUSs were also reminded of their role as mandatory reporters, as Title IX regulation requires “responsible employees” to report any incidents of sexual misconduct they hear about to Yale’s Title IX coordinator. Although most DUSs interviewed told the News that their primary role on campus is to support students academically, they also acknowledged the effect the sexual climate has on students’ overall well-being and said they hope to offer an additional layer of support for undergraduates navigating issues in their personal lives. “DUSs were contacted because they are sometimes undergraduates’ first point of contact,” Holloway said. “Students come in to talk about their classes and majors, but there might also be something else going on.” According to William Rankin, DUS for History of Science, Medicine and Public Health, around 30 to 40 of the over 120 DUSs attended the discussion. Immediately afterwards, Rankin sent out an email to the 65 declared majors in his department SEE DUS PAGE 6
Hungry customers in downtown New Haven watched their favorite lunch stops roll away on Wednesday after the city ordered several food trucks to shut down operations at their current locations. The city’s building department told at least three food trucks on campus that they could no longer park their trucks in their current locations. A representative from the building department handed the Portobello and Rubamba carts on York Street and the Caseus Cheese Truck on College Street copies of the New Haven food truck vendor ordinances, which regulate where and how food trucks can operate. The representative informed Portobello and Rubamba that they were being evicted from their location
on York Street for violating the vendor ordinances. A city representative also informed workers at Caseus that the College Street food truck broke an ordinance prohibiting trucks from selling on a residential street, Caseus co-owner Tom Sobocinski said. “We’ve been there for six years,” Sobocinski said. “We’ve never had a problem. I know that there are a lot more trucks in the past year than we have had previously. The only rule I was aware of was that you can’t park within 45 feet of a brickand-mortar establishment.” This is the first time in the Caseus food truck’s six-year run that it has been told not to sell on College Street, Sobocinski said. Sobocinski added that he does not know what exactly constituted a residential street SEE FOOD TRUCKS PAGE 6
ELM CITY HOUSING
Low vacancy, high rent BY JIAHUI HU STAFF REPORTER Kiana Marie Hernandez ’18 and her mother spent close to a year searching the Elm City for an apartment they could call home. It was not the decor or the locations that hindered the process. Rather, they found the majority of New Haven’s apartments too expensive for their family. For each apartment they tried, they found the unit’s price too high for the family’s budget or the living conditions unsuitable for Hernandez’s 10-year-old younger sister. Hernandez and her family are not alone in this challenge. Many low- and middle-income residents in the Elm
City are forced to enter a city housing market riddled with low vacancy rates and rising prices. New Haven boasted the lowest vacancy rate, 2.1 percent, in the entire country, according to a 2014 report from New York real estate research firm Reis. Additionally, in the upcoming year, 2,000 apartment units will go online at rates of over $2,000 per month, said Morris Cove Alderman Salvatore DeCola. Recently, over 200 families living in the deteriorated Church Street South housing complex were told that they must leave their homes in a year due to unsafe living conditions such as mold infestations and structural deficiencies. Though the residents were given financial support to seek alternative housing, disparities between the low
rent they currently pay for Church Street South units and the higher cost of suitable apartments on the housing market have pushed the families to ask for increased funding from Northland Investment Corporation — the owner of Church Street South. The families and their legal representatives have since forced Northland Investment Corporation and the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development to reconsider their payment plants to the complex’s residents. Edward Mattison LAW ’68, member of the mayor’s City Plan Committee, saw firsthand the impact of low vacancy rates while at a homeless shelter for families. The director of the SEE HOUSING PAGE 4
DENIZ SAIP/CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER
The average renter in New Haven spends nearly 50 percent of their income on housing.