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First Thoughts
November/December 2007
Photographs by Mark Ostow
Interviews by Alejandra O'Leary '04
Everyone here is very modest, but when you ask them about their lives,
they'll tell you how they discovered a method for dating crocodile teeth, or
published a book of poetry, or something else you can hardly imagine or
believe.
I want to be a senator. I think it's atrocious that no one believes in
the political system, and that most people are cynical about American democracy
in general. I want to be part of changing this, because I really do believe in
the ideals this country was founded on. The American Presidency is definitely
my favorite class. Spanish is my least favorite, but only because it is an 8:20
a.m. class.
George Harris
Class of 2011, Yale College
Atlanta, Georgia

I was in the Peace Corps in Senegal, and I've since worked for NGOs
dealing with transportation and hunger issues. I want to adapt private sector
efficiency models for NGOs, and I knew that Yale's MBA program was one of the
best for development work. I enjoy being with people who think in a different
way -- I don't think there's not enough dialogue between the private and
public sectors. After Yale, I want to do something that uses information and
communication technologies to increase peoples' possibilities. I love West
Africa, and I'll be really surprised if I never live there again.
Nate Heller
MBA candidate, School of Management
Washington, DC

My first Yale experience was FOOT, the freshman outdoor orientation
trip, which was insane. We backpacked and slept under tarps for six days before
showing up on move-in day smelly and dirty. But the experience was amazing! I'm
still friends with the freshmen on my trip, and we hold regular reunions. I'm
not sure, but I think I might want to pursue a career in medicine. I've heard
so many good things about so many professors, there's no way I'll be able to
take all the classes I want to before I graduate.
Carrie Albert
Class of 2011, Yale College
New Orleans, Louisiana

This year, all 78 of us in the program are eating and breathing
nursing. We are all in the same classes together every day, the whole group,
together, always. Thankfully, we like each other. The nurse-midwives are an
especially tight-knit group. Maybe because our chosen field revolves around the
idea of relating to women, empowering women, and caring for women, this same
idea has somehow translated into eating and partying with women. I was dancing at
GPSCY and a girl came over and asked if I was a nursing student. I said yes,
and asked her how she knew. She said she could tell by the way I was dancing.
Janna Ekholm (at left)
Master of Science in Nursing candidate in nurse midwifery, School of
Nursing
San Diego, California
It's exhilarating being around other art students all the time. That's
one of the main reasons I wanted to come back to school. A lot of us got into
art as kids and never got out of it. But one thing we've realized is that if
you want to be a thoughtful artist, you have to come to terms with painting as
something more than something fun to do or something you're good at. So it's
beyond "Oh, I love this!" for the people here. A lot of people are making sacrifices
to be here and work amazingly hard.
Mary Reid Kelley (at right)
Master of Fine Arts candidate in painting, School of Art
Northfield, Minnesota

At home my family calls me Hai, but all my friends call me Angela.
Hai means "sea" or "ocean" in Chinese. My grandma named me with hopes that I
could grow up to be generous and achieve something meaningful in my life. I
will be working in the tissue engineering field, in which we try to regenerate,
recover, or repair tissues through stem cells, drug delivery, mechanic
stimulation, or other approaches. My ultimate goal, at this point, is to get my
PhD degree and be able to wear the glamorous graduation gown!
Angela Hai Huang
PhD candidate, biomedical engineering, Graduate School
Sichuan, China, and New York, New York

It's a beautiful thing, computer science, and there's some wonderful
stuff going on here with social robotics. Yale is creating robots that learn
from humans in a social setting.
People here are wittier than people I've met anywhere else, and more
considerate. Dining hall talk is interrupted by "I'm going to get some dessert,
can I bring you guys anything?"
Dan Leyzberg
PhD candidate, computer science, Graduate School
Morganville, New Jersey

I attended high school in Singapore. It's 12 hours ahead of New Haven
in terms of time difference. But the striking similarity is how fast-paced both
places are. I don't really think there is that much culture shock, given the
way American culture permeates the world. So far I've been enjoying all my
classes, especially literature and introduction to psychology, because I've
never taken courses in these fields before.
Sun Sang
Class of 2011, Yale College
Suzhou, China



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