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Letters
Summer
2001
A
Formal Objection
I was
outraged to read that Richard Meier has been selected to design
the new building adjacent to the Art & Architecture building
("Light & Verity," Mar. ).
The site is hardly appropriate for the banal formalism that Meier
practices, not to mention the fact that he is a relative dinosaur
with little, I think, to say about Yale and its community. Meier
certainly does not deserve to be in the esteemed company of Paul
Rudolph and Louis Kahn.
I can
only think of all the talented young architects, both here and abroad,
who might have brought their inspired visions to that hallowed ground.
Shame on you, architecture school dean Robert Stern, and all others
responsible for this most egregious selection.
John Bertram '94MArch
john_bertram@email.msn.com
Los Angeles, CA
Tercentennial
Cheers
Lewis
Lapham's splendid "Quarrels with
Providence" (Mar.) has induced me to perform two acts entirely
new to my experience: save an issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine and write a letter to its editor.
Let's
have more of such thoughtful interpretations -- of God, of country,
and of Yale.
Mike
Foster '58
Golden, CO
Congratulations
on the Tercentennial issue of
the Yale Alumni Magazine. It made me once again grateful to be a small part of this great
University.
Harry
G. Toland '44
Wallingford, PA
AIDS
Drug Offer a "Sham"
I was
disappointed to read the Yale Alumni Magazine's May "Light & Verity" article on Yale, Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS),
and AIDS drugs -- a piece which, in essence, could have been written
by BMS's public relations department. As a journalist who has covered
the topic for some years, I've come to distrust executives from
multinational pharmaceutical companies, particularly when they self-righteously
claim to put "poverty and.disease" above "profits and patents."
BMS's price reductions were no more than a publicity stunt intended
to deflate growing international pressure for generic drug manufacturing,
not just for expensive AIDS medications, but for all sorts of drugs effectively priced out of developing world markets.
Not only
did BMS refuse to withdraw from a lawsuit against the South African
government seeking to prohibit the country from importing or manufacturing
generic versions of AIDS drugs (a suit that government subsequently
lost), BMS's highly touted price reductions on Videx and Zerit proved
to be a sham. The Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), South Africa's
leading advocacy group for people with AIDS, reports that BMS has
refused to sell its AIDS drugs to South Africa's private sector.
BMS maintains that the price reductions are only intended for government
or NGO programs, but it knows full well that no sub-Saharan NGO
has the capacity to purchase and administer these drugs, even at
reduced prices. Two months after it announced its price reductions,
BMS has yet to sell a single dosage of anti-retrovirals to South
Africa at those prices, despite repeated inquiries by South African
doctors.
The struggle
to save tens of millions of lives in Africa has indeed just begun.
Yale faculty, students, and alumni concerned with this issue should
refuse to accept BMS and Yale's attempt to gloss over the problem.
The Treatment Action Campaign has called upon Yale and the NIH to
issue a legally binding statement that the licenses for AIDS medications
are available to any generic manufacturer with the ability to develop
and distribute them. Such a move would begin to empower African
governments to combat a devastating AIDS epidemic, rather than keeping
them at the mercy of corporate charity -- which in BMS's case proved
to be no charity at all.
Richard
Kim '97
rkim@thenation.com
New York, NY
Worldly
Wise?
I was
delighted to see the news of the appointment of Strobe Talbott '68
to head the Center for the Study of Globalization ("Light
& Verity," Feb. ). At this time, when globalization is such
an irresistible force, Talbott is a superb choice. Yale is lucky
to have Talbott in place and to be receiving such wise policy direction
from President Levin.
John
C. Bierwirth '45W
Lawrence, NY
I was
troubled to learn that Strobe Talbott, deputy secretary of state
in the Clinton administration, has been named the head of Yale's
Center for the Study of Globalization. While I have no idea what,
if anything, the Center actually does, I have no doubt that Talbott
will find a way to mess it up.
Talbott
is an example of that inside-the-beltway phenomenon known as "failing
upward." Named by President Clinton to a series of senior state
department posts, despite his having no prior government experience
(Talbott was Clinton's roommate at Oxford), Talbott became the architect
of the Clinton administration's disastrous Russian and Yugoslav
policies and a chief apologist for the human rights abuses of some
of Washington's unsavory allies, including Turkey's brutal repression
of its sizable Kurdish minority.
If Strobe
Talbott is really the best we can find among our own, perhaps we
ought to ask Harvard for its alumni directory.
John
Dellaportas '91
New York, NY
Fact
or Facade?
"The
Art School On Its Own" (Dec.) states that "it was after Yale
bought the [former Jewish Community Center] that it became apparent
that the building -- or at least its facade -- had been designed
by Louis Kahn."
My family
and I were residents of New Haven, and I was a member of a local
architectural firm and also a visiting lecturer in the School of
Art and Architecture at the time the JCC was being built. We followed
its progress with interest. Contemporary news reports on the building
did not mention Louis Kahn as the designer or architect, but the
"scuttlebutt" reported otherwise.
Shortly
after the building was finished, Mrs. Spatz and I attended a faculty
reception and had the good fortune to talk with Kahn. We asked him
if he had designed the JCC. His response was an emphatic "no," followed
by a few uncomplimentary words about the architects who did design
it.
Now I
wonder whether Louis Kahn was expressing frustration with a project
that had gone sour, or simply passing judgment on the building's
design and designers.
Marvin
Spatz '38BFA
Coconut Creek, FL
The
record of Kahn's involvement in the design of the Jewish Community
Center is surprisingly sketchy. But Val-Jean Woods of Yale's Office
of Facilities sent us a copy of the original blueprints from October
1951 identifying Kahn as "consulting architect" for the project. -- Ed.
Expanding
Biotech
Your
article on biotechnology in New Haven ("New
Haven: Biotech City?" May) was an excellent exposition of a
very important development for the future of New Haven. There is
an additional aspect to this story that is worthy of note.
Without
Governor John Rowland, the hard work of his economic development
officials, and the support of the Connecticut General Assembly,
there would be no biotech cluster in our city. While it is true
that the new firms most often spring from Yale science, the State
of Connecticut has contributed in a least three important ways to
making this industry possible.
First,
Connecticut Innovations was an initial investor in many of the successful
start-up companies. This quasi-public entity, the state's largest
investor in high tech companies, is led by two Yale alumni, Arthur
H. Diedrick '59, chairman, and Victor R. Budnick '71, '86MPPM, president
and executive director.
In addition,
a $40 million State of Connecticut biofacilities fund managed by
Connecticut Innovations provides support for the laboratory space
that allows these startup companies to operate.
Finally,
Science Park, the early home to such firms as Alexion, Vion, and
Genaissance, was the recipient of significant state funds before
it began operating in the black this year. Diedrick is also chairman
of the development office of the governor and, along with economic
development commissioner James Abromaitis, has been key to the Rowland
administration's success in promoting economic development and the
biotech industry in the State of Connecticut and in the New Haven
region.
Bruce
D. Alexander '65
Vice President and Director of New Haven and State Affairs
Author's
Query
In preparation of a biography
of A. Bartlett Giamatti, who was a member of the Yale faculty from
1966 to 1978 before becoming President of the University, Robert
P. Moncreiff would appreciate recollections of Giamatti as a teacher
in the classroom. Please send correspondence to: Robert P. Moncreiff,
Palmer & Dodge LLP, One Beacon Street, Boston, MA 02108. Email: rmoncreiff@palmerdodge.com.
Addenda
Readers
have sent the following names as additions to "Who's Blue: The Environment"
(Dec.): Felice Pace '69, conservation director, Klamath Forest Alliance;
Oakleigh Thorne II '51, '53MS, founder, Thorne Ecological Institute;
and James Seif '67, secretary of environmental protection, Pennsylvania.
Also, an addition to "Who's Blue: Museums" (Apr.) is: Marc Wilson
'63, '67MA, director, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City,
Missouri.
The March Tercentennial Issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine included the names of a large number of prominent
alumni who have passed through Yale over its 300 years. We knew
that no such sampling could be comprehensive or satisfy everyone,
and we are happy to provide the names that readers (so far) have
felt were unjustly overlooked: Attorney Floyd Abrams '59LLB, U.
S. Senator James L. Buckley '44, geologist James Dwight Dana, Class
of 1833, television columnist Rowland Evans '44, Heisman Trophy
winner Clint Frank '38, Washington Post commentator Philip
Geyelin '44, football All-American Chuck Mercein '65, television executive David Milch '66, former Michigan governor Bill Milliken
'44, film executive Walter Parkes '73, television anchor Stone Phillips
'77, and tennis professional and surgeon Renee Richards '55.
Among organizations: Dwight Hall, Out
of the Blue, WYBC, Yaledancers, and the Yale track team.
Additions
to our section on "Great Moments
In Sports" were too numerous to mention.
Corrections
In the April "In Print," we wrote
that Paul Kane, author of Drowned Lands, is a member of the
Class of 1984, while in fact he received his BA in 1973 and his
PhD in 1990.
In our
May feature, "A Closer Look at Alcohol," we misquoted Dr. Lorraine Siggins, the chief of mental hygiene at
Undergraduate Health Services. She said that women metabolize alcohol
more slowly than men, not more quickly. Slower metabolization means
that women can become more intoxicated while drinking the same amount
as men. |