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Appointed
September/October 2008
Four years of Ezra Stiles College were not enough for
Stephen Pitti '91: Pitti, a professor of history and American studies, is
returning to Stiles as its master this fall. A California native, Pitti
specializes in Chicano history and is the director of the undergraduate major
in ethnicity, race, and migration. His wife, Alicia Schmidt-Camacho, will be
the college’s associate master; she is an associate professor of American
studies whose scholarship is focused on Mexican-American border issues. They
have twin seven-year-old children, Antonio and Thalia.
Rev. Ian Oliver has been appointed Yale’s senior
associate chaplain and pastor at Battell Chapel. Oliver, a United Church of
Christ minister, has been the chaplain at Bucknell University since 1996.
Traditionally, the university chaplain has also been the pastor of Battell. But
when Sharon Kugler, a Catholic layperson, was appointed chaplain last year,
Yale president Richard Levin specified that a Protestant minister would be appointed
to serve Battell.
Joan Feigenbaum has been appointed the first Grace
Murray Hopper Professor of Computer Science at Yale. Feigenbaum, who has been
on the Yale faculty since 2000, focuses her research on Internet algorithms,
computational complexity, security and privacy, and digital copyright. The
professorship was named for Grace Hopper '34PhD, a pioneer of computer science.

Remembered
William R. Bennett Jr., the C. Baldwin Sawyer
Professor Emeritus of Engineering and Applied Science and Physics, died of
cancer on June 29 at his home in Haverford, Pennsylvania. He was 78. Bennett,
who taught at Yale from 1957 to 1959 and from 1962 to 1998, was a co-inventor
of the gas laser, a technology that made compact disc players, grocery-store
scanners, and certain types of eye surgery possible. Bennett was master of
Silliman College from 1981 to 1987.
Shakespearean scholar George K. Hunter, who taught at
Yale from 1976 to 1991, died on April 10 in Topsham, Maine. He was 87. Hunter,
a native of Glasgow, helped revolutionize literary study in Great Britain after
World War II by emphasizing the comparative study of European literary
traditions. At Yale, he was appointed the Emily Sanford Professor of English
and chaired the Renaissance studies program from 1985 to 1991. He was best
known for his work on Shakespeare and other Elizabethan playwrights. |
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