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Sightings
Using
a blow torch, a brew of chemicals, and a grant from
Facilities, sculpture conservator Susan Schussler "repatinated"
the three bronze residents of the Old Campus. The sculptures
are now cloaked in richer brown tones, but one thing
was left unchanged. "Woolsey's toe," says Schussler,
"will remain golden."
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Campus
Clips
More
than 95 percent of the Yale library's catalog is now online
after a decade-long project to convert the library's card
catalog to digital form. Library officials say the paper card
catalog -- which is no longer being updated -- will stay in
the nave of Sterling Memorial Library for several more years.
How
best to respond to a smallpox attack by terrorists? The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have a plan for
targeted vaccinations in the event of an outbreak, but Edward
Kaplan, a professor at Yale's School of Management, says mass
vaccinations would be more effective. Using a mathematical
model, Kaplan and colleagues at MIT determined that mass vaccination
could reduce the number of deaths in a city of 10 million
by 4,120 people.
The
distance-education venture formed two years ago by Yale, Oxford,
and Stanford announced in August that it will now offer
its courses to the public. AllLearn
-- formerly the Alliance for Lifelong Learning -- had previously
offered its courses only to alumni of its three member universities.
The $250 courses are developed by professors at the universities.
Ice
cream lovers rejoice: Ashley's is back. The ice cream
parlor that contributed to students' "freshman 15" from 1978
to 1999 returned to York Street in September.
Want
to live longer? Researchers at Yale and Miami University
say it's all in how you look at it. In a study published in
the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology in
August, a team led by Becca Levy of Yale's Department of Epidemiology
and Public Health found that people who have "positive self-perceptions
about aging" lived seven and a half years longer than those
whose stereotypes about aging were more negative.
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From
the Collections
Three years ago, the history of art department contacted
Branford College master Steven Smith to offer him James
Gamble Rogers's original plaster model of Harkness Tower,
which had been sitting in a faculty office for many
years. Smith had the four-foot replica of his college's
most visible symbol cleaned and placed under glass in
the Branford common room.
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Sports
Shorts
The
Heisman Trophy is coming to Yale -- sort of. In December,
the Yale Club of New York City will host the annual dinner
at which college football's highest honor is awarded. The
dinner's traditional host, the Downtown Athletic Club, has
been closed since the September 11 attacks.
Sophomore
hockey standout Chris Higgins was drafted by the Montreal
Canadiens in the first round of this summer's NHL draft. Higgins,
who plans to stay at Yale and play for at least another year,
is the first Bulldog ever to be drafted in the first round.
Another sophomore, Joe Callahan, was picked by Phoenix in
the third round.
Ivy
League sportswriters picked this year's Bulldog football team
to finish sixth in the conference, citing the team's inexperience.
Defending champion Harvard was a near-unanimous choice to
win another title.
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Light & Verity
October
2002
Yale
and Unions Adopt Confrontational Stance
The high hopes of January,
when Yale and its unions promised to work toward a more cooperative
relationship, fell considerably as the academic year began, with
the unions approving a strike authorization by a wide margin and
President Levin accusing them of being "more interested in preparing
for confrontation during the academic year than in discussing and
resolving the contract issues that remain open."
Levin made his remarks
in an August 29 letter to Yale students, faculty, and staff. Citing
the strike vote and union activities that "question Yale's commitment
to New Haven," he suggested that Locals 34 and 35 were promoting
a confrontation over the union organizing drives at Yale-New Haven
Hospital and among Yale graduate students. "It is regrettable,"
wrote Levin, "that the unions' efforts to organize hospital workers,
graduate teaching assistants, and New Haven neighborhoods appear
to have taken priority over the objective of securing contracts
for the 4,000 employees represented by Locals 34 and 35."
Union leader Robert
Proto told the New Haven Register that it is "absolutely
not true" that the unions are more interested in confrontation than
in a settlement. The unions point to a consultant's report that
both sides endorsed early this year, which recommends that the two
sides reach an "understanding" about the hospital and teaching-assistant
union drives. The unions want Yale to agree to "card-count neutrality"
in both drives; the University advocates secret-ballot elections.
The negotiations over
the two unions' contracts, which expired in January, began when
the two sides retained the consultant, Restructuring Associates,
Inc. (RAI), to look at Yale's labor situation and lead the administration
and the unions through training in "interest-based bargaining,"
an alternative to adversarial negotiations. The two sides have reached
agreement on some issues, most notably on union representation in
new or renovated buildings.
But the talks slowed
over the summer, and differences over the organizing efforts and
over wage and pension proposals have become more acrimonious. In
addition to the strike vote and the sharp language, hospital officials
had University employees arrested twice in September for distributing
union literature (improperly, the hospital said) on the hospital
premises. The union had suggested that a strike might be called
in October, but they recently allowed their contract to be extended
through the end of the month.
Both sides post regular
updates on the negotiations, the unions at www.yaleunions.org
and the administration at www.yale.edu/opa/labor.

Princeton
Caught Snooping Online
The story may not
have had everything, but it had enough to capture media attention
in the dog days of summer: Ivy Leaguers, Internet snooping, college
admissions, and even a member of the Bush family. The revelation
by the Yale Daily News that Princeton admissions officials
had broken in to Yale's online system
for reporting admissions decisions spawned tut-tutting about Princeton's
ethics, criticism of Yale's online security, and rampant speculation
about the Tigers' motives.
It all
started at an Ivy League admissions meeting in June, when Yale admissions
officials were describing a new Web site where applicants to Yale
College could find out their admissions status without waiting for
a letter in the mail. By typing in their name, birthdate, and Social
Security number, admitted students were taken to a personalized
"Welcome to Yale!" page that played "Bulldog." The site included
links to subjects in which the student had expressed an interest
and e-mail links for current Yale students from the student's home
region.
At the
meeting, Princeton associate dean of admissions Stephen LeMenager
said that he had entered the site by using data from the files of
students who had applied to both schools. The Yale admissions office
examined the site's records and found evidence to confirm the claim.
On July 24, President Levin presented Princeton president Shirley
Tilghman with the evidence after learning that the Daily News
planned to report the story on its Web site the next day. The News
article led to a front-page story in the New York Times and
a period of celebrity for the News editors, who were interviewed
about the story on Fox News and other media. A few days later, it
was revealed that the eight students whose records were viewed improperly
included presidential niece Lauren Bush (who ended up choosing Princeton).
After
an internal investigation, Princeton concluded that LeMenager and
others in his office had acted merely out of curiosity about Yale's
system, the first online notification in the Ivy League, and that
the information they gained from viewing the site had not been misused.
But as a result of the breaches both of Yale's site and its applicants'
confidential information, LeMenager was reassigned to another office
at Princeton. President Tilghman issued an apology to Yale, as did
LeMenager's boss, admissions dean Fred Hargadon, who announced that
he planned to retire at the end of this year.
While
most of the media commentary about the break-in dwelt on Princeton's
behavior -- which some saw as a symbol of the growing competitiveness
in college admissions -- Yale was criticized for its reliance on
bithdates and Social Security numbers for entrance to the site.
While an admissions official says that no breaches of security other
than Princeton's identity theft have been discovered, the system
will use unique personal identification numbers next year.

End
Is Likely for City's Coliseum
When the
New Haven Coliseum opened in 1972, it was the kind of building that
historic preservationists considered the enemy -- a behemoth that
ignored the scale of the surrounding urban fabric. But now that
the city is planning to demolish the underused sports and concert
venue, noted preservationists -- including School of Architecture
dean Robert A.M. Stern -- have issued a last-minute appeal to the
city to reconsider.
The Coliseum
and its neighbor, the Knights of Columbus building, have been a
symbol of downtown New Haven to passersby for 30 years. Designed
by architect Kevin Roche, the buildings are exemplars of the brash
"New Brutalism" of the era. In a 1976 guide to New Haven architecture,
historian Elizabeth Mills Brown called the space under the building's
parking garage, with its outdoor escalators, "an experience of sheer
spatial intoxication." But more recent critics have found the building
insensitive to its surroundings and less than inviting inside.
The Coliseum
has been home to concerts, conventions, expositions, and a succession
of minor-league hockey teams. It has also hosted some Yale hockey
and basketball games -- most notably last year's historic National
Invitation Tournament appearance by the men's basketball team.
But competition
from new arenas nearby -- in Bridgeport and at the Mohegan Sun Casino
in Montville -- has hurt the Coliseum, and city officials decided
this year to spend $20 million to raze it and retire its debt rather
than spend $50 million to renovate it and continue to subsidize
it for another decade. The building was closed on September 1, and
Mayor John DeStefano Jr. says it will be demolished "as soon as
possible." The city has suggested that a hotel and conference center
and a new home for the Long Wharf Theater could be built on the
site, which is adjacent to the Ninth Square redevelopment area.
But Stern
and other preservationist complain that the Coliseum was condemned
without public input, and that the building's architectural merit
was not considered. "It's one of those buildings you love to hate,"
says Stern, who is well known as a defender of modern landmarks,
"but it's one that -- like the World Trade Center -- we will miss
if it goes." DeStefano says the decision will not be revisited.

Blue
Planet Prize for FES Dean
James
Gustave Speth, dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental
Studies, joined a short list of luminaries this summer when he was
named a winner of the Blue Planet Prize, an award that has been
given annually for the past 10 years by the Tokyo-based Asahi Glass
Foundation. The prize, which this year is also being given to Stanford
professor Harold Mooney, includes an award of 50 million Japanese
yen (approximately $400,000) that each man will receive during ceremonies
next month in Japan.
According
to the Foundation, Speth is being honored for "a lifetime of creative
and visionary leadership in the search for science-based solutions
to global environmental problems and for pioneering efforts to bring
these issues, including global climate change, to broad international
attention." After graduating from the College in 1964 and the Law
School in 1969, Speth was a founder of both the Natural Resources
Defense Council and the World Resources Institute. He was appointed
the administrator of the United Nations Development Programme in
1993 and FES dean in 1999. In addition, from 1977 to 1981, Speth
served on President Carter's Council on Environmental Quality, and
there helped write the Global 2000 Report, a seminal analysis
that examined population pressures, pollution, resource degradation,
and climate change, and sold more than 1.5 million copies worldwide.
Speth,
who plans to contribute most of his prize money to environmental
causes, including FES, continues to speak out, most recently in
August at the U.N. World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg
-- and he worries that the conservationist message may not be getting
across in time.
"The alarms
sounded 20 years ago have not been heeded," says Speth, "and soon
it will be too late to prevent an appalling deterioration of the
natural world." The award winner hopes that his work as FES dean
"trying to build a new generation of leaders" can help head off
a looming crisis.

Alumni
Directory Goes Virtual
The 2000
Yale Alumni Directory weighs eight pounds. The average computer
mouse weighs about four ounces. Those numbers alone demonstrate
the value of putting the alumni directory online, a project that
was completed this summer by the Association of Yale Alumni. Now
alumni can log on to a free, password-protected database that includes
contact and professional information for 130,000 alumni of the University.
And unlike a print directory, the information is updated daily by
the Alumni Records office.
The new
directory is part of what the AYA is calling an "online community"
that also includes message boards and the Virtual Yale Station e-mail
forwarding service. AYA executive director Jeffrey Brenzel says
that an "online career mentoring system" is also in the works under
the same umbrella.
The directory
went online in August, two months after alumni were sent a letter
with a password encouraging them to register at the site. The AYA
says that some 16,000 people -- 13 percent of the alumni -- had
registered by early September.
Brenzel
says that Yale moved "cautiously" toward an online system, in part
because the leading providers of such services had not developed
a way for people to choose how much information they allow their
fellow alumni to see. "We were concerned about preserving the maximum
availability of privacy," says Brenzel. The system recently produced
by Harris Publishing, which also publishes Yale's print directory,
fit the bill, says Brenzel, because alumni can display as much contact
information as they choose -- a business address but not a home
one, for example.
Perhaps
because of this flexibility, only about 100 alumni have asked to
be excluded entirely from the online database at all. Among the
site's other features is a "bookmark" system in which users can
create an annotated list of up to 100 contacts.
Alumni
can register at www.alumniconnections.com/yale.

Vinland
Map Flap Redux
New publications
have reignited an old controversy over the authenticity of the Beinecke
Rare Book and Manuscript Library's Vinland
Map. The small parchment document, which depicts a world that
seems to include the coastlines of Labrador and Newfoundland, is
said to date from around 1440. If that date is correct, then Columbus
probably knew where he was going when he left port in 1492.
But no
sooner had the map, which was purchased by Paul Mellon in 1958 and
donated to Yale, been publicized in 1965 than it attracted defenders
and detractors. Both camps will find something to like and loathe
in the new research.
In the
August edition of the journal Radiocarbon, Smithsonian investigator
Jacqueline Olin and her colleagues determined that the date of the
map's parchment was about 1434. But in the July edition of Analytical
Chemistry, Robin J.H. Clark and Katherine Brown, from University
College in London, concluded that the ink used in the map is of
20th-century vintage. And in a book to be published later this year,
exploration historian Kirsten Seaver identifies the purported forger,
Father Joseph Fischer, a Jesuit priest and old map expert.
In reaction,
University Librarian Alice Prochaska is diplomatic. "We regard ourselves
as the custodians of an extremely interesting and controversial
document," says Prochaska, "and we watch the scholarly work on it
with great interest."

Bulldogs'
European Vacation
A rather
tall group of tourists made its way across Italy in August, taking
in Rome, Florence, Venice, Milan, and Lake Como -- and playing a
little basketball along the way. The men's basketball team, which
finished last season as the toast of the campus by notching Yale's
first-ever postseason tournament win (against Rutgers in the National
Invitation Tournament), took advantage of NCAA regulations that
permit teams to play games abroad in the summer every four years.
(Normally, teams cannot even practice together until an appointed
date in the fall.)
From August
11 to August 20, the team toured Italy, playing four games against
Italian professional teams. "The caliber of play is comparable to
high-level Division I," says coach James Jones. The Bulldogs won
their first game against Tuscany Select but lost the remaining three.
"The emphasis
for us was not on winning games," says Jones. "We wanted to work
on building team chemistry. Everybody played in every game, and
my assistants each coached a game. It helped me see things to work
on that we wouldn't have seen until the first few games."
Between
games, the players rode gondolas, gaped at the Sistine Chapel, and
explored Italian nightlife, describing their days in diary entries
on the basketball Web site, http://www.yale.edu/athletic/
Showcase/Mbball/on_tour/on_tour.htm.
Back home,
the team opens its season as usual with a series of non-conference
road games against tough Division I opponents, including season
opener Oklahoma State on November 22, Wake Forest on November 27,
and Stanford on December 30.
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