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Appointed
July/August 2010
Dean of undergraduate admissions Jeffrey Brenzel ’75
has been appointed master of Timothy Dwight College, succeeding longtime master
Robert Farris Thompson ’55, ’65PhD. (For more on “Master T,” see “Professor of
Mambo.”) Brenzel, who was previously the executive director of the Association
of Yale Alumni, holds a PhD in philosophy from Notre Dame. He will continue in
his admissions post.
President Obama has nominated Susan Carney, the
university’s deputy general counsel, to serve as a judge on the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit. Carney, a graduate of Harvard College and
Harvard Law School, worked in private practice before joining the general
counsel’s office in 1998.
Honored
James Rothman ’71, chair of Yale’s cell biology
department, has won the 2010 Kavli Prize in Neuroscience for his discoveries on
the molecular workings of neurotransmitters. Rothman shares the $1 million
prize with Thomas Südhof of Stanford and Richard Scheller of Genentech.
Elected
Francisco Cigarroa ’79 is already running the
200,000-student University of Texas system; for the next six years, he’ll also
spend part of his time running his alma mater as a fellow of the Yale
Corporation, the university’s board of trustees. Cigarroa, a pediatric
transplant surgeon, was chosen by alumni in an election that also included
health-care consultant Susanna E. Krentz ’80 and biotechnology entrepreneur
David B. Singer ’84.
Remembered
Martin Price, Sterling Professor Emeritus of English,
died on April 10. He was 90 years old. Price was a distinguished scholar of
British literature; his book Forms of Life is a seminal text in the study of the novel, and his
book To the Palace of Wisdom is a classic piece of scholarship on eighteenth-century
English literature. Former Yale College dean Richard Brodhead ’68, ’72PhD, said
that Price “inspired—and daunted—generations of students with the example of
his finely discriminating sensitivity, his continual precision of phrase, and
his breadth of cultural knowledge and curiosity.” 
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