| Comment on this article
The
Anti-Ivory Tower Brigade
May/June 2009
by Cathy Shufro
Photos
©Julie Brown
Yale
students have been doing volunteer work in New Haven for decades, often under
the umbrella of Dwight Hall, the public-service organization that connects
students with education, social justice, and public health projects in the
city. But when Rick Levin became president with a mandate to improve Yale's
relations with its host city, he put the university's deans and other leaders
on notice that every part of Yale should be involved with New Haven.
| |
The list is seemingly endless.
|
The
activities shown here are just a small sample of dozens of
programs across the university. Some of them rely on specific expertise, like
the Law School's Jerome L. Frank Legal Services Organization, which represents
people who cannot afford attorneys; it has advocated for immigrants, public school
students, and homeowners with mortgage problems. Others require simply a willingness
to make a friend, like Best Buddies, which pairs students with people in the
community who have intellectual disabilities.
The
School of Forestry & Environmental Studies helps create community gardens
and parks in vacant lots throughout the city. The School of Nursing brings a
traveling exhibit on the human body to local schools. School of Architecture
students design and build a house every year for a New Haven family. The
athletics department runs camps and clinics for New Haven children. The list is
seemingly endless -- or would be, if there were a list. The Office of New Haven and
State Affairs wouldn't supply a definitive inventory, feeling it was just too
likely that something would get left out.


©Julie Brown
Arts
(and culture)
"You
don't always have to talk to show how you feel," Sannya Hede '10 tells fourth
and fifth graders at John C. Daniels School. Feelings can also be conveyed
wordlessly by music, she tells them, or a painting, a dance, or ordinary body
language. Using lessons she designed, Hede is teaching the children a
vocabulary for describing the arts: words like rhythm, pitch, tempo, volume,
tone, and movement.
Hede's
students will use their skills when they visit the Yale Center for British Art,
to look at paintings while listening to live Indian music. But the point isn't
Indian music per se, Hede says. "At a young age, if you can be exposed to different
cultures, you'll keep that with you: you won't react in a negative way when
you're seeing something different."
Also
at John Daniels, School of Music students are teaching 60 children to play band
instruments, piano, guitar, Chinese flute, and erhu (Chinese two-stringed
fiddle). Another 64 are on the waiting list.


©Julie Brown
Community
resource
The
lights burn late in the Rose Center, home of the Yale police and the
Dixwell-Yale University Community Learning Center, where Michael Rebmann is
teaching a session of his free nine-month course for would-be emergency medical
technicians. The learning center is run by Yale's New Haven and State Affairs
office to provide education and serve the neighborhood, one of the city's poorest.
In
the adjacent computer room, engineering student Stacey Demento '11PhD is
helping low-income residents fill out tax forms. On other evenings, the center
hosts classes on Internet skills. By day, children fill the center for free
after-school activities.


©Julie Brown
Food
for thought
Fifty-four
men and women have arrived for dinner at the United Church Parish House. As
they move along the line, 15 Yale students dish out surplus food from Yale's
dining halls. About 20 Yale students volunteer each week through Hunger Heroes,
the student arm of New Haven's Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen. (Left to right:
AJ Haskins '11, Matthew Lucas '11, Kenny Castaneda '12, and Hayley Born '10.)
Among tonight's diners is a 44-year-old out-of-work fence installer. He says
he's had some good conversations with the Yale students. "A few of them even
try to understand where you're coming from."
Justin
Schwab '10JD says that seeing people in need provides perspective on anxiety
over "what law firm you're going to be working for. If we all came down and did
this, it would maybe chill the rat race."


©Julie Brown
Science
as showbiz
As a
child, mechanical engineering professor Ainissa Ramirez (at right) spent
Saturdays watching TV shows like 3-2-1 Contact. Now she runs her own shows for
kids -- "Science Saturdays." On this April morning, nearly 200 people will show up
at Davies Auditorium to hear Yale neuroscientist Marvin Chun explain how
illusions work. Beforehand, dozens of children arrive early to play with science
toys. Here, Ramirez demonstrates that putty impregnated with iron particles
will move toward a magnet. Other marvels include twisted wire that "remembers"
its original shape -- straight -- when immersed in hot water.
"Look
at those expressions on the kids' faces," says Ramirez. "How often do you see
that? Any opportunity that you can make for wonder is amazing."
 |