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Sightings
Two
days of entertaining prospective students at the annual
Bulldog Days recruiting event left this inflatable
Handsome Dan dog tired.
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Please
eat the daisies
As if
a $35 million renovation and a new
organic dining hall menu blessed by restaurateur Alice Waters
weren't enough, Berkeley College's latest initiative sounds
even more Edenic. This summer, the college is starting a program
of "edible landscaping." The courtyards will be planted with
herbs and other edible plants that also have ornamental qualities,
and these will be used in dining hall cooking when possible
-- or just for noshing. "Imagine reaching down off the bench
while reading to pick a few alpine strawberries," says Josh
Viertel of the student group Food from the Earth, which is
sponsoring the initiative.
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Campus
Clips
Responding
to widespread public criticism of its debt-collection
policies, Yale-New Haven Hospital announced a number of reforms
to those policies in May. The hospital said it would close
170 past-due accounts that are more than five years old and
would have collection attorneys seek preapproval from the
hospital before attaching liens to patients' homes. State
attorney general Richard Blumenthal '73JD sued the hospital
in February over its alleged underuse of charitable funds
available to low-income patients. The hospital is separate
from Yale University, but several Yale officials serve on
its board, and the two institutions engage in joint operations.
Beinecke
Library director Barbara
Shailor and chemistry professor Andrew Hamilton are
the newest deputy provosts of the university. Provost Susan
Hockfield appointed the two in May to succeed Diana Kleiner
and Pierre Hohenberg, who will return to teaching. Shailor's
portfolio will include the university's fine arts institutions.
Hamilton will focus on the sciences.
The
Berkeley Divinity School,
an Episcopal seminary affiliated with the Yale Divinity School,
has named the Rev. Canon Joseph Harp Britton as its dean.
Britton, a theologian who has held several posts in the American
Episcopal Church's European wing, is a graduate of Harvard
and the General Theological Seminary. The previous dean, R.
William Franklin, left after a dispute
with the university over the school's finances.
Some
students with summer travel fellowships had a change of
plans when the university said it would not fund or grant
credit for student work done in countries where the SARS virus
was prevalent. A similar new policy discourages travel to
countries that are unstable or experiencing armed conflicts.
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From the Collections
Years
before Saddam Hussein came to power, styling himself
as a latter-day Nebuchadnezzar, an American named Lewis
Adair Payne bought a handsome clay cylinder in Iraq
that dates back to Nebuchadnezzar himself. Payne's 1952
purchase, used by the family over the years as a doorstop,
paperweight, and bookend, turns out to be the only known
copy of an inscription dedicating the Emah temple to
the goddess Ninmah after its restoration by Nebuchadnezzar
in the sixth century BCE. After Payne's grandson Bracken
White '96MBA brought the six-inch-high cylinder to the
Yale Babylonian Collection and learned of its value,
his parents, Tom and Robin White, donated it to Yale.
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Bacon
and eggs won't make you thin
Despite
the renewed popularity of the Atkins diet, researchers at
Yale and Stanford have determined that a low-carbohydrate
diet does not have any bearing on weight loss. In a study
published in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
the researchers looked at data from 107 weight-loss studies
and found that cutting calories, not carbs, was the main factor.
Also important was the duration of the diet: The longer participants
cut calories, the more likely they were to lose weight. The
authors said there was not enough evidence about the long-term
health risks of low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets to recommend
for or against them.
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Sports
Shorts
The
men's and women's golf teams both won their Ivy League
championship tournaments this year, their first tandem win
since 1997. Brian Kim '06 also won the men's individual title.
The women's team has now won five of the seven championships
in league history.
Also
taking an Ivy League title was the women's lacrosse team,
which shared the honors with Princeton and Dartmouth. The
team finished the regular season ranked ninth in the nation
and earned an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament (their first
trip since 1985), where they defeated Syracuse in the first
round but lost to top-ranked Loyola in the quarterfinals.
On
June 7, the heavyweight crew endured its worst defeat
in the Yale-Harvard Regatta since 1911. The Crimson, this
year's national champions, finished 49.8 seconds ahead of
Yale in the four-mile race. Harvard also won the junior varsity
and freshman races.
All-American
hockey player Chris Higgins
'05 signed with the Montreal Canadiens in May, dashing Eli
hopes that he would remain a Bulldog for at least one more
year. "It came down to which place I could develop better,"
said Higgins.
The
university's new batting cage near Yale Field was dedicated
in April to Kyle Burnat and Nicholas Grass, two sophomore
pitchers who died in a January auto accident
that also killed two other undergraduates.
Complete
listing of spring sports results.
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Light & Verity Summer
2003
Motive
for Law School Bombing Still Not Known
Things were relatively
quiet as Kevin Woodson '03JD worked on a final paper in the Law
School computer lab on the afternoon of May 21. "Then I heard a
very loud noise," recalls Woodson. "None of us knew what it was,
but we left when we saw debris starting to fall from the ceiling.
A bomb was the furthest thing from our minds."
But it was a bomb that
exploded one flight up in Room 120, damaging that classroom and
the adjacent Alumni Reading Room. Coming while the nation was under
an elevated terror alert, the blast brought a massive response from
all levels of law enforcement. Once it was clear that no one had
been injured, though, the university's end-of-the-year rituals continued
more or less as planned -- albeit with tighter security and a sense
of puzzlement about the crime.
The closing of the
building as a crime scene during final exams (and five days before
commencement) posed logistical challenges for the school. Students
were housed and fed in Ezra Stiles College, exams were moved to
alternate locations, and temporary office space was set up in Woolsey
Hall. But the building reopened for commencement events on Sunday,
May 25. "People worked literally around the clock to make it happen,"
says Law School dean Anthony Kronman.
In addition to the
damaged interiors, water from a sprinkler head broken in the blast
seeped into a collection of rare books in the library below. Some
300 books were affected, but only 40 were significantly damaged.
In order to preserve them, they were wrapped in plastic and taken
to the Beinecke Library for freeze-drying.
City, state, and federal
law enforcement officials are investigating the crime. As of mid-June,
no arrests had been made, and the motive for the bombing remained
a mystery. Whatever the reason, Kronman says he is determined not
to let security considerations diminish the school's openness. "This
is an exceptionally free and open institution, and not accidentally
so," he says. "While we're mindful of the need to take precautions,
we are all unwilling to give that up."

Graduate
Students Reject GESO
The Graduate Employees
and Students Organization (GESO)
suffered a setback in its quest for union representation of teaching
assistants when it held a non-binding referendum on April 30. Most
people had expected a symbolic victory for GESO, but the vote went
694-651 against unionization. About 66 percent of eligible graduate
students turned out.
The upset appears to
have been driven mostly by a hastily assembled group of graduate
students who say they were angry about GESO's aggressive organizing
tactics, citing frequent visits by recruiters to students' homes,
offices, and labs. "People were being harassed," says Katherine
Marsland, a graduate student in psychology and an opposition leader.
"Some were seriously considering legal recourse." GESO's opposition
has historically been low-key, consisting mainly of a loosely organized
group called GASO, but GESO's stepped-up recruiting campaign in
the weeks before the election galvanized opponents. Marsland sent
an e-mail to ten colleagues suggesting they get organized themselves.
"Overnight, it got forwarded across the university," says Marsland.
"We found that there were cells of people all over the campus who
felt the same way."
Marsland's group adopted
the name At What Cost after similar groups fighting unionization
at Brown and Cornell. With just ten days remaining before the election,
they mobilized voters and matched GESO poster for poster across
the campus.
GESO president Anita
Seth says that union backers underestimated the division on campus
over GESO's participation in a strike
in March, and that the non-binding nature of the election depressed
turnout among supporters. "A number of our members knew Levin wasn't
taking this seriously and didn't come out to vote," she says. Seth
also says, though, that the result is "an accurate reflection of
where the campus is" on unionization -- "about 50-50."
The Yale administration
had said it would not recognize the results of the election, which
was supervised by the League of Women Voters. "I think the results
underscore the fact that GESO has regularly overstated its support,"
says university spokes-man Tom Conroy.
But even the winners
of the election are unsure just how to interpret those 694 "no"
votes. "I was overjoyed," says GASO's Matthew Glassman, "but it
was more anti-GESO than anti-union. At What Cost was formed with
a common enemy, but what they have in common otherwise remains to
be seen." In fact, two groups emerged from the election to articulate
more specific positions: SIC_of_GESO is anti-union, while Alternative-GESO
wants to reform GESO and make it more democratic.
As for GESO itself,
Seth says the election results and the complaints voiced during
the campaign will be fodder for discussion this summer. "We're taking
this very seriously," she says. "We're going to spend the summer
talking about how our organization works and how it could work differently."

Was
Mona Lisa Smiling for Two?
That smile. Its inscrutability
has inspired fascination and frustration for 500 years. What was
Mona
Lisa thinking about? Now, Sherwin
Nuland thinks he knows the answer: She's having a baby.
Nuland, who is both
a clinical professor of surgery at the School of Medicine and a
well-known author, advanced this theory about Mona Lisa two years
ago in his biography of the painting's creator, Leonardo da Vinci.
A recent three-part BBC documentary on Leonardo focused on the claim
and supported it with new information about the painting's likely
subject.
Nuland, who credits
the late English scholar Kenneth Keele with first proposing the
theory in 1959, says that evidence in the painting itself and in
what is known about Leonardo supports Keele's idea. "Leonardo was
fascinated by childbirth and the beginnings of life," he says, citing,
among other pictures, the artist's famous drawing of a fetus in
utero. He also developed geological theories about the development
of the planet, and Nuland thinks the painting's background represents
his view of primordial earth.
As for Mona Lisa herself,
Nuland sees evidence in more than her smile. Her fingers and face
seem swollen as if in pregnancy, he says, and the way she holds
her hands above her abdomen is characteristic of a pregnant woman.
Recently discovered baptism records in Florence indicate that Lisa
del Gioconda -- often believed to be the subject of the painting
-- had a baby approximately four months after the painting was begun
in 1503.
Leonardo is said to
have kept the painting with him for the rest of his life. "He was
preoccupied with this idealized vision of motherhood," says Nuland.
"It had a very deep meaning for him."

Slave
Manuscript Given in Gratitude
"I owe Yale big-time,"
said Harvard professor Henry Lewis Gates Jr. '73 on May 30 at the
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Gates was in town for
his 30th reunion, but he was at the Beinecke to help discharge his
debt by presenting to the university the original manuscript of
The
Bondwoman's Narrative. Experts believe that this 1850s-vintage
tale, a 301-page fictionalized autobiography penned by one Hannah
Crafts, is the first novel ever written by an African American slave.
At the ceremony, Gates,
the W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of the Humanities and chair of the
Afro-American studies department at Harvard, described how, two
years ago, serendipity and a hip replacement gone awry resulted
in his obtaining the manuscript. Confined to his bed, Gates had
time to peruse antiquarian catalogs. In the auction offerings of
the Swann Galleries of New York, Lot 30 -- a manuscript purportedly
written by a fugitive female slave -- caught his attention. The
professor sent Richard Newman, an associate, to bid on the item,
which Gates thought could sell for as much as $100,000. "Had I gone,
other bidders might have sensed that something was up and raised
the bidding," said Gates. "But it turned out that Dick was the only
bidder, and we got the manuscript for $8,500."
Gates described the
Beinecke's collections, which he helped build while teaching at
Yale, as a "vast repository of the black mind." "I learned to be
a scholar here," he said, "and in donating the manuscript, I wanted
to make a contribution to the library and the university I love."

Alumni
Chorus Plays the Kremlin
One night in Moscow
recently, a group of Yale alumni found themselves with little to
say to their dinner companions. So they sang. "There were three
or four Russians at each table, and we couldn't communicate through
words, but through song," says Yale Alumni Chorus member Tracey
Ober '85.
The singing dinner,
with members of the Spiritual Revival Choir of Russia, was part
of the chorus's ten-day trip to Russia in April. The main event
was a concert on April 8 with the choir and the Moscow Chamber Orchestra
at the Kremlin State Palace, where they sang Russian patriotic songs
for a nationwide broadcast on VE Day.
The performance, which
also featured famed baritone Dmitri Hvorotovsky, came at the invitation
of orchestra conductor Constantine Orbelian, who had come to know
the chorus during its 2001 tour. When chorus president Mark Dollhopf
'77 put out the call for singers in December, more than 100 volunteers
stepped forward to memorize songs in Russian and meet for rehearsals
around the country. School of Music dean Robert Blocker went along
to conduct. The trip was the third for the chorus, which was formed
in 1998 for a trip to China.
The exchange won't
be the last between the chorus and the orchestra: They will perform
together at Carnegie Hall in October, when the orchestra comes to
Yale for a week-long residency.

Van
de Velde Sues University Officials
Former Yale lecturer
James Van de Velde '82 has added several university officials to
a federal lawsuit he filed against the New Haven police in 2001.
Van de Velde says that by publicly naming him as a suspect in the
murder of Suzanne Jovin '99,
the parties violated his civil rights and damaged his career, health,
and reputation. His suit names as defendants president Richard Levin,
vice president and secretary Linda Koch Lorimer, Yale College dean
Richard Brodhead, Yale police chief James Perrotti, and deputy director
of public affairs Thomas Conroy.
Jovin was found in
the East Rock neighborhood dying from stab wounds on the evening
of December 4, 1998; Van de Velde was her teacher and senior essay
adviser in political science. Neither he nor anyone else has been
charged in the murder.
Van de Velde's name
first appeared in the local media as a suspect within days of the
murder, but the police never identified him publicly until January
11, 1999, after Yale issued a statement explaining why administrators
had canceled his two spring-semester classes. Because Van de Velde
was "in a pool of suspects" in the case, the statement said, his
presence would be "a major distraction" for his students. Van de
Velde's suit says that "as a result of defendants' conduct, he was
charged, tried, and convicted in the media, and therefore in the
minds of much of the public, without regard to facts, logic, legal
standards, or the rule of law."
Speaking for the university,
Conroy declined to comment about the suit except to say that "university
officials have acted entirely properly throughout the investigation."
Van de Velde now works
in Washington, D.C., as an analyst for the Defense
Intelligence Agency's Joint Task Force on Combating Terrorism.
A former dean of Saybrook College, he says he "can't even visit
New Haven anymore without feeling enormous pain. All the relationships
I built with hundreds of Yale students, alumni, faculty, and administrators
were destroyed."

Leaving
Yale, Neck and Neck
by Carl Bialik '01
Laura O'Neill's outstanding
four-year collegiate track career, which ended in June, would clearly
make her the best women's distance runner in Yale history -- were
it not for her twin sister Kate. Running together for four years,
the Milton, Massachusetts, natives went from solid Ivy League prospects
to among the nation's best as seniors. Laura earned six All-America,
eight first-team All-Ivy, and eight second-team All-Ivy selections.
Kate, meanwhile, notched seven All-America awards, ten individual
Ivy titles, and six school records. She was named track athlete
of the year in the Northeast district this spring.
At Class Day in May,
the athletics department named Kate and Laura co-winners of the
Nellie Pratt Elliot Award, given to a senior woman for outstanding
athletic performance. It was the first time two students had shared
the award.
"If not for Kate, Laura
is as good or better than anybody I've ever coached," says track
coach Mark Young '68. "Kate has been ever so slightly better --
but only because she has Laura to run with all the time." Though
other Yale runners are faster at short distances, nobody else on
the team can match the O'Neills' workout tempo and minimal recovery
time, Young says.
Their amazing Yale
careers ended at the NCAA outdoor championships at Sacramento in
June, where Kate finished second in the nation in the 10,000 meters
and Laura finished fourth. Both beat their previous personal bests
by about 30 seconds. But the two O'Neill sisters will continue to
run together for at least one more year. After graduating, they'll
work in New Haven while training for spots in the U.S. Olympic Trials
in 2004. Young puts their chances of qualifying at 70 to 75 percent.
Kate O'Neill says the
decision to stay on and train was easy. "I really like both of the
coaches, I like the team, and I like New Haven," she says. "If it's
working well, why try to change it?"
Louisa Garry '87, a
record-setting Yale runner, stayed after graduating to train for
the Olympic trials in the 800-meter and 1,500-meter events. Though
an injury left her just shy of the needed time, she says she doesn't
regret the decision. "In many ways, it made me more sure of my desire
to coach after college," she says. Garry coaches boys' and girls'
outdoor track at Friends Academy in Locust Valley, New York, and
also teaches English and history.
Remarkably, the O'Neills,
consummate team-first runners and modest to a fault, appear to be
oblivious to their unprecedented accomplishments at Yale. During
the outdoor Heptagonal championships in May, illustrious track alumnae
invited by Young were eagerly buzzing about the prospect of meeting
the O'Neills. "They're quite a phenomenon," said Sarah (Smith) Gerritz
'89, a two-time All-American for the Bulldogs. Yet the O'Neills
themselves seemed awestruck by the alums they had overshadowed.
"They were really cute about it," recalls Garry. "They were like,
'Wow, Sarah Smith.' I don't think they realize what they've done."
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