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Campus Clips
November/December 2009
University
College of London (UCL) and its hospitals will partner with Yale and Yale–New Haven Hospital in a new medical research alliance. Announced in October, the
initiative will at first focus on joint clinical programs to research and treat
heart disease. UCL, a leader in biomedical research, is ranked fourth (just
behind Yale) in the latest Times Higher Education-QS World University Rankings.
The
federal stimulus package has resulted in $36 million worth of grants to Yale
researchers, the university said in August. Since February, when the American
Recovery and Revitalization Act was passed, 111 grants have come to Yale
faculty through the National Institutes of Health, the National Science
Foundation, and the Department of Energy.
An
Eastern Civilization curriculum? Yale is advising the National University of
Singapore (NUS) about developing a liberal arts college there. As in most of
the world, universities in Singapore require early undergraduate specialization
instead of the broad-based education of elite American institutions. Yale and
NUS have had an undergraduate exchange program since 2006.
President
Richard Levin’s salary and benefits totaled more than $1 million for the first
time in 2007-08, according to the university’s most recent tax filing. Levin's
$1,179,332 in compensation made him Yale’s fourth highest-paid employee, behind
investment officers David Swensen '80PhD and Dean Takahashi '80, '83MPPM, and
medical school associate dean David Leffell '77.
Food
may soon be more than an extracurricular activity for Yale students. The Yale
Sustainable Food Project and the environmental studies and agrarian studies
programs are exploring the idea of an interdisciplinary undergraduate program
in the study of food.  |