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Previous
Columns
Summer
2001 Beltway veteran, Survivor champ; new master.
May
2001 New dean for Divinity; plus-size model; lone bowlers;
a psychologist for Morse.
April
2001 Sandra Boynton '74 on chickens, pigs, and Yale.
February
2001 A pianist's guide to life; candidate Schiavone; farewell
to a hero on and off the field.
December
2000 Tom Wolfe on grad school; Ernest Borgnine on acting.
November
2000 The business brain behind the Palm Pilot; a zipless
tea with Erica Jong.
October
2000 Goodbye to Larry Kelley; the alumni elect a fellow;
Levin at the plate; Bloom v. Potter.
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Faces
October
2001
| Yale's
newest vice president may have come from a chemical company,
but he's spent some time in education, too. Robert
Culver, who was named vice president for finance
and administration in June, was most recently executive vice
president and chief financial officer of the Cabot Corporation
in Boston. Before that, though, he spent seven years as vice
president and treasurer of Northeastern University. Culver has
also worked for the Cambridge, Massachusetts, schools and for
the consulting firm Coopers & Lybrand. He is a graduate
of SUNY-Buffalo, the London School of Economics, and Harvard.
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| Alumni
have elected Theodore
P. Shen '66 of Brooklyn, New York, to a six-year
term as an Alumni Fellow of the Yale
Corporation. A veteran financial manager, Shen retired in
1999 as chair of the Capital Markets Group at Donaldson, Lufkin
& Jenrette. Shen also graduated from the Harvard Business
School and Phillips Exeter Academy, where he is co-chair of
the board of trustees. His daughter graduated from Yale in 1999.
Also running for alumni fellow were Thomas Lovejoy '64, '71PhD,
and Gerald Fink '65. |
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| Tennis
star Venus Willams
won her third-straight Pilot
Pen Tennis Tournament on August 25, defeating Lindsey Davenport
in the finals. The tournament, which is held at the Connecticut
Tennis Center adjacent to the Yale Bowl, drew record crowds
and seven of the top nine women tennis players in the world
this year. "I don't know what it is," said Williams after the
match, "but I always play well here." |
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| An
August heat wave broke just in time for fans of Ray
Charles to fill the Green on August 11 for the
first of three concerts in the Yale Tercentennial New Haven
Jazz Festival. Charles attracted what organizers said was the
largest crowd in festival history. Latin drummer Poncho Sanchez
and singer Dianne Reeves also performed in the series, which
Yale joined as a title sponsor this year. |
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Public
schools should have on-site clinics to provide preventive
health care for children, said former surgeon
general Joycelyn
Elders in an address on July 10. "You can't educate
people who are not healthy, and you certainly can't keep people
healthy if they're not educated," said Elders, who now teaches
at the University
of Arkansas Medical School. Her speech was part of the
annual conference of the School
of the 21st Century Initiative, a program founded by Yale
psychologist Edward Zigler that promotes the idea of schools
as "family resource centers."
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"You
know, I've been to New Haven before," said former Black
Panther Bobby
Seale to a full house at the Yale
Repertory Theater on June 20. "But now I finally have
a chance to really see it." Seale was referring to his 1970
trial for the murder of Panther Alex Rackley, which led to
the May Day events that year. Seale was speaking in a series
of programs about May Day that was part of this year's International
Festival of Arts and Ideas. While his strategies are now
more mainstream, Seale voiced no regrets over the Panthers'
past. "It was a good struggle," he said. "Somebody had to
stand up and do something."
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Close-Up
When photographer
Anthony Armstrong-Jones began his career in the early 1950s, he
had one objective. "I wanted to photograph the two Englands," said
Armstrong-Jones, who became the Earl
of Snowdon when he married Princess
Margaret in 1960.
To say
that he succeeded would be a monumental understatement, as the recent
retrospective of his work at the Center
for British Art clearly demonstrated. It is said that Lord
Snowdon, who retains the title even though he and the princess
divorced in 1978, knew everyone worth knowing and photographed them.
At the BAC last June, Snowdon, 71, led viewers on a tour of 180
images, from the "charge of the nannies" to pictures of dancers,
designers, actors, writers, and royalty. He recalled a lesson in
his craft from Marlene Dietrich, the generosity of Sir Lawrence
Olivier, and the "enormous amount of luck required to get a split-second
right."
Snowdon
also dismissed any elevation of his craft. "Photographs are not
art," he said. But they could be useful. "I want my pictures to
make ordinary people react -- to see something that they hadn't
taken in before." 
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