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Light
& Verity
March
2000
Yale
Science To Get a $500-Million Boost
On
January 20, President Richard Levin announced Yale's most comprehensive
building project in the sciences since the 1960s. The University
will spend $500 million during the next decade to build five new
buildings on Science Hill and renovate six others. That same day,
it was revealed that John Malone '63, former chairman of the cable-television
concern Tele-Communications, Inc., is giving $24 million toward
the construction of one of those buildings, a facility for the Faculty
of Engineering at Prospect and Trumbull streets.
President
Levin described the plan as necessary to keep Yale competitive in
the sciences -- particularly the rapidly growing biology and engineering
areas. "My view is that Yale can't stay at the top without
being at the top in the sciences," says Levin.
Yale's
science facilities have increasingly been seen as inadequate for
attracting both students and faculty when compared to those at peer
institutions. Cutbacks in federal funds and Yale's former policy
of "deferred maintenance" have brought the University
to the point where, in the words of Dean of Engineering Allan Bromley,
"Our buildings are now literally falling down around our ears."
In addition
to the engineering building, the plan includes a new
environmental sciences facility, which is being built adjacent
to the Peabody Museum with a $25-million gift from Edward Bass '68;
a building for the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
north of Osborn Memorial Laboratories; a molecular biology building
north of the Peabody and connected to Gibbs Laboratories; and a
new chemistry building north of Kline Chemistry Laboratory.
The other
existing Science Hill buildings will be renovated and, in some cases,
assigned to new uses. The 77-year-old Sterling Chemistry Laboratory,
for example, will be reconditioned as teaching laboratories for
undergraduates in biology, chemistry and physics. There are also
plans to build a pair of lecture halls for introductory undergraduate
science courses on the central campus.
While
Levin said that the Bass and Malone gifts are an important start,
he added that the University has a long way to go to fund the renovations.
"We will try to get as much as we can through fundraising,"
he says. "But we're committed to move ahead, and we are prepared
to finance some of it through borrowing if need be."
Yale
has long hoped to shed its image as a school dominated by the humanities,
and Bromley, for one, thinks the new investment in facilities -- coupled
with a planned expansion of the faculties in engineering
and biological sciences -- will make a difference. "This
definitely changes the character of the University," says Bromley.
"It changes the way the University sees itself, and it changes
our relationship with the outside world."

For
God, For Country, And for Ial?
The
likelihood that Yale alumni will confuse their alma mater with a
Welsh public college has been dramatically reduced. Officials at
the stateside Yale have convinced Yale College in Wrexham,
Wales, to alter its name to Coleg
Ial Yale College Wrexham, a moniker that combines the Welsh
and English versions of its name.
The saga
began in March, when the University learned of the Welsh institution -- which had adopted the Yale name in 1993 -- and sent a letter
through the General Counsel's office to the school's principal,
Emlyn Jones. While Jones says they felt Yale's claim was "bogus"
and the letter's tone "aggressive and threatening," the
school was advised by its own counsel "to make a commercial
decision not to expose the college to the risk of expensive legal
cost."
Officials
at Yale in Wrexham, which is similar to a junior college, say that
the name was chosen for the nearby Yale Hills, which are usually
known by their Welsh name, Ial. But the school's Web site (www.yale.ac.uk)
claims the college was "named after Elihu
Yale, a local entrepreneur of the 16th [sic] century and benefactor
of Yale University in America." Elihu Yale is buried at St.
Giles Church in Wrexham; Saybrook College's Wrexham Tower is
modeled after St. Giles.
While
University Secretary Linda Koch
Lorimer maintained that Yale acted because there was potential
for confusion between the schools, the media -- particularly in
Britain -- saw the story as a David-vs.-Goliath battle. The
Guardian opined that the University's concerns were "complete
horsey do-dos."

The Asteroids Aren't Coming -- Maybe
Rest
a bit easier: The odds that our planet will collide with an asteroid
are considerably less than was previously believed, says David Rabinowitz,
a research associate in physics. In a research paper published last
January in the journal Nature, Rabinowitz and three colleagues
from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, report
on a sky survey they are conducting with a highly sensitive automated
telescope system in Hawaii. The computerized telescope is capable
of detecting and tracking the tiny points of light that reflect
off asteroids that travel in so-called "near-Earth" orbits.
The objects
under consideration are between one mile and six miles in diameter.
If one of them were to cross paths with our planet, the result would
be the stuff of which disaster movies are made. "It would be
like a nuclear bomb coming in," said Rabinowitz. "It might
even change the climate of the Earth."
Indeed,
many scientists believe that such a collision took place 65 million
years ago and helped bring about the demise of the dinosaurs. Previous
estimates by astronomers sug- gested that perhaps as many as 2,000
asteroids were in chaotic orbits that would from time to time bring
them uncomfortably close to our celestial neighborhood. Odds of
an encounter were pegged at about 1 percent over the next 1,000
years.
But the
sky survey Rabinowitz described in Nature found that there
were only about half the number of asteroids out there with the
potential to menace the Earth. "I'm not getting any more sleep
knowing this," said the scientist. "I'm just happy that
we're well on our way to finding most of these asteroids."

Student
Project Aims at Guns
A group
of Yale seniors is trying to turn a class project into a moneymaker -- and a lifesaver. Five students from a course called "Creativity
and New Product Development" have created a product they hope
will reduce accidental deaths from handguns.
Students
in the engineering and applied science course, taught by lecturer
Henry Bolanos, come up with product ideas, then follow through with
business plans. Brian Kreiter '00, an African
American studies major from Chicago, took the class in order
to develop the idea for GunGuard, a device that attaches to a gun
with a Velcro strap and emits a loud, high-pitched whine when the
gun is moved, deterring children from playing with the gun and alerting
adults. (A childproof mechanism turns off the alarm.) He teamed
up with four other students in the course to pursue the idea.
Kreiter
says the inventors, none of whom are gun owners, would like to see
guns protected by trigger locks or gun safes. But not all gun owners
are willing to have their guns disabled. "The product is targeted
at people who won't use other safety products," says Kreiter.
The inventors
have hired a patent attorney and are currently trying to decide
whether to license their invention, produce it themselves, or hire
a CEO to "run with the idea," as Kreiter puts it. Foremost
in their minds, he says, is getting the product into the nation's
homes. "It's such an important safety device, we're comfortable
doing whatever it takes to get it manufactured and sold," he
says.

Will
Power Books Replace Blue Books?
Some
53 percent of Yale undergraduates are now using laptop computers
instead of desktop models, and the rise of such portable technology
is producing new opportunities -- and new problems. Last fall,
a Yale Daily News editorial called on the University to create
a consistent policy regulating the use of laptop computers in exams.
"This
past week," the editorial said, "as some of us shook our
cramped hands to relieve the pain from hand-writing essays in blue
books, others calmly scratched their temples and went back to typing
their midterm exams."
Laptops
are now commonly used in classes for note-taking, but are less frequently
permitted in exams. Currently, the decision whether to allow students
to write exams on computers is left up to individual faculty members.
Some feel that computers offer an unfair advantage to students who
can afford them, while others worry about the potential for cheating
on closed-book exams. "We would have to be assured that the
computers don't have loads of relevant files or a prewritten essay
on them," says Mark Schenker, Yale College dean of academic
affairs.
Schenker,
who chairs the Committee on Honors and Academic Standing, says an
investigation by his committee is "one of many ways we could
decide this issue. We're hoping to get a better sense by the end
of the term of the reality of laptop use."

In
China, Tales of Yale for Sale
For
18 years, East Asian language and literature professor Kang-i Sun
Chang has introduced Yale students to classical Chinese poetry.
But in a second life as a freelance journalist, she has introduced
readers in mainland China and Taiwan to Yale professors, the Grove
Street Cemetery, and Handsome
Dan. Last month, two volumes of her essays and articles about
Yale were published -- one in mainland China as part of a series
on "great universities," and one in Taiwan.
Chang,
a native of Beijing who was educated in Taiwan and at Princeton,
frequently does profiles
of Yale faculty members -- often in fields outside her own. Article
ideas sometimes come from her Chinese editors, but more often they
spring from conversations or chance encounters on campus. She writes
in a personal, first-person style far removed from academic prose.
"I like to re-educate myself," she says about her forays
into other disciplines. "I like the collegiality of Yale -- not
just socially but intellectually."
The professor
began writing about Yale after a 1979 visit to mainland China. "Nobody
had heard of Yale," she recalls. "I was quite upset, especially
since the first Chinese to study in America had come here."
Chang has sought to raise awareness of the University's historic
ties to China.
Chang
says her work is in demand because "mainland China has a fascination
with great universities, and they're very hungry for information
about the Western world." While she often writes about literature
and academic subjects, Chang says her article about Handsome Dan
got the most attention abroad. "I wrote about the many Handsome
Dans who died untimely deaths," she says. "And the Chinese
were very interested, since they have a superstition that says if
you're talented, you will die young."

It's
Official: Bad Hair Can Ruin Your Day
Next
time a loved one complains about a "bad hair day," pay
attention: It may cause more than mere annoyance. Psychology professor
Marianne LaFrance found in a recent study that the perception of
"bad hair" can have a demonstrable negative effect on
self-esteem.
LaFrance,
who does research on non-verbal communiction, was approached about
researching the effects of bad hair last fall by Procter and Gamble,
which is launching a new line of hair-care products that they claim
provide greater control. LaFrance told the company she was interested,
but warned that "we might find something they didn't like.
There were no strings attached to the research."
LaFrance
and her team divided subjects into three groups, all of whom were
given basic tests of self-esteem and self-judgment. But before the
test, subjects in one group were asked to think about and discuss
their bad-hair experiences. A second group was encouraged to think
about negative things unrelated to hair, and a third control group
was not asked to think any negative thoughts. The "bad-hair"
group showed lower self-esteem than the others. And contrary to
stereotypes, men, by one measure, seemed to be more affected than
women. "Bad hair seemed to trigger some kind of self-doubt
about performance in men," says LaFrance.
The subject
of bad hair might seem insignificant to some, but LaFrance says
that "as a psychologist, I'm interested in the effects of things
that might first seem to be small or trivial." And she says
she has heard plenty of bad-hair stories from friends and colleagues
since the study was made public. One dean at Yale, whom she would
not name, confided "I've had a bad hair life."

Campus
Clips
The
Yale Homebuyer Program,
which grants up to $25,000 to employees who buy homes in selected
parts of New Haven, will continue for at least the next two years,
officals announced in December. Since the program began in 1994,
384 employees have taken advantage of the plan.
Fraternities
hosting parties in their off-campus
houses have recently become the targets of a crackdown by Yale and
city officials. The city is moving to enforce existing laws that
require fraternities to secure housing permits, register their parties,
and prohibit the sale of alcohol
to minors.
Puerto
Rican and Mexican-American students have successfully petitioned
the University to unite their respective cultural houses to form
a new Latino Cultural Center. Under the new plan approved by Yale
College Dean Richard Brodhead, Latino students of all backgrounds
will now have access to the cultural center and to ethnic counselors.
A Divinity
School student has been suspended for 18 months after being accused
by another student of rape. The assault was alleged to have taken
place on October 18 at an off-campus party. While the state's attorney
declined to file charges in the matter, the School's sexual harassment
committee voted to suspend the student until September 2001.
Since
the Yale Club
of New York city began issuing membership cards last summer
-- and asking to see them at the door -- the club has turned away
nearly 1,500 people who could not produce proof of membership. The
club had apparently become a convenient spot for midtowners to read
the newspaper and have a cup of coffee. Officials say that since
the policy was enacted, the club has reduced its standard order
of coffee for the second-floor lounge by 50 percent.
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