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School Notes
A supplement to the Yale Alumni Magazine from the fourteen schools of Yale.
July/August 2010
School of Architecture
Robert A. M. Stern, Dean
www.architecture.yale.edu
Distinguished
endowed chairs
This
fall will inaugurate the Norman Foster Visiting Professorship at Yale, with the
appointment of Alejandro Zaera-Polo, cofounder (with Farshid Moussavi) of the
London-based firm Foreign Office Architects (FOA). Zaera-Polo has served as
dean of the Berlage Institute in Rotterdam and has taught at Columbia, UCLA,
Princeton, and other universities around the world. FOA’s award-winning built
projects include the Yokohama International Cruise Terminal in Japan; the
South-East Coastal Park in Barcelona, Spain; the Highcross development anchor
building in Leicester, UK; and the Meydan Retail Center in Istanbul, Turkey.
Zaera-Polo will be assisted by Maider Llaguno.
Other
distinguished visiting faculty this fall will be Tod Williams and Billie Tsien
’71, Louis I. Kahn Visiting Professors; Massimo Scolari, William B. and
Charlotte Shepherd Davenport Visiting Professor; Brigitte Shim, Eero Saarinen
Visiting Professor; Diana Balmori, William Henry Bishop Visiting Professor;
Hernando Diaz Alonso, Louis I. Kahn Visiting Assistant Professor; and Mario
Carpo, Vincent Scully Visiting Professor in Architectural History.
Exhibition
honors lighting designer
An
exhibition in the Rudolph Hall Architecture Gallery will celebrate the 100th
birthday of Richard Kelly ’44BArch, the Yale-trained architect who was one of
the most influential lighting designers in the history of modern architecture.
“The Structure of Light: Richard Kelly and the Illumination of Modern
Architecture” will be on view August 23–October 2. During his long and
productive career, Kelly designed more than 300 lighting projects. He
collaborated with Mies van der Rohe on the Lake Shore Drive Apartments and the Seagram
Building; with Philip Johnson on his Glass House, Four Seasons restaurant, and
New York State Theater; and with Louis Kahn on the Yale University Art Gallery,
the Yale Center for British Art, and the Kimbell Art Gallery in Fort Worth,
Texas. The exhibition, organized by Dietrich Neumann, professor at Brown and
former Scully Visiting Professor of Architectural History at Yale, will feature
drawings and photographs, many from Yale’s Manuscripts and Archives, which is
the repository for Kelly’s papers.
Coming
events in Rudolph Hall
A
number of public events have been announced for the fall term at the School of
Architecture. Saarinen Visiting Professor Brigitte Shim will open this year’s
lecture series with a talk on August 26. Other lectures by visiting professors
will follow during the month of September. A screening of Vincent Scully: An
Art Historian among Architects will take place on October 28. The film is produced by the
Checkerboard Film Foundation. On November 4, Norman Foster Visiting Professor
Alejandro Zaera-Polo will give a talk titled “Envelopes,” as part of the
school’s open house for prospective students. More details on these events may
be found at the school’s website.

School of Art
Robert Storr, Dean
www.yale.edu/art
Critic
awarded Rome Prize
Sarah
Oppenheimer ’99MFA, a critic in the Department of Painting, has won the
2010–2011 Gilmore D. Clarke/ Michael Rapuano Rome Prize in visual arts. The
celebrated prize is awarded annually to approximately 30 emerging artists and
scholars in the early or middle stages of their careers who represent the
highest standard of excellence in the arts and humanities. Rome Prize
recipients are provided a stipend, a study or studio, and room and board in
Rome for a period of six months to two years. Fellowships begin in September.
Sculpture
professor receives honorary degree
Jessica
Stockholder ’85MFA, professor and director of graduate studies in sculpture, received
an honorary doctorate of letters May 1 from Emily Carr University of Art and
Design in Vancouver, British Columbia. Stockholder’s work has been exhibited
internationally, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York
and at the 47th Venice Biennale in 1997. She has been on the faculty at Yale
since 1999.

Yale College
Mary E. Miller, Dean
www.yale.edu/yalecollege
Dean
Mary Miller delivers Mellon Lectures
Dean
of Yale College Mary Miller ’81PhD had an unusually busy spring semester,
dividing her time between her “day job” as the college’s chief administrator
and her scholarly work in pre-Columbian art history as she delivered the
prestigious A. W. Mellon Lectures at the National Gallery of Art in Washington,
DC. The five-week series of talks, Art and Representation in the Ancient New
World, focused on the constant evolution of Miller’s field of research.
As
Miller describes it, her newest research—from which the lectures were drawn—is
distinct from her earlier work in that it looks at the works of Maya art and architecture
in terms of the “fundamental issues” of culture that they represent, thus
seeking “to use the works themselves to understand principles so grand that
they do transcend cultural boundaries.”
Yale’s
Collaborative Learning Center
On
the lower level of the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Library, the Collaborative
Learning Center (CLC) helps students and faculty make use of Yale’s rich
technological resources, collections, and opportunities for interactive,
interdisciplinary, and cooperative academic projects. The CLC service desk is a
gateway for many of these activities, offering foreign language tutoring;
workshops on effective use of the technologies (video and image editing, web
publishing, etc.); and access to media equipment, digital images, and other
tools to enhance the learning process in and out of the classroom.
A
primary goal of the CLC is to help faculty use technology in their course
offerings. Working with CLC director Barbara Rockenbach and instructional
technology group manager Kenneth Panko, faculty members have used the CLC’s
resources to design innovative courses such as Studies in Visual Biography (an
art course offered through the Yale College Freshman Seminar program in fall
2009), and Medieval Manuscripts to New Media: Studies in the History of the
Book (a collaborative effort pioneered by two colleagues in the Department of
English in spring 2010). The former, taught by School of Art faculty member
Jessica Helfand ’82, ’89MFA, took first-year students “into the collections”—from
Ezra Pound’s passport at the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library to a
private tour of the Marcel Duchamp holdings in the Yale University Art
Gallery—inspiring them to understand, according to Helfand, that “research
doesn’t mean Wikipedia; that an artist/designer can make work inspired by the
accomplishments of others … and that to reconstruct someone’s biography is
a multifaceted and often asynchronous exercise.” In the latter course, the “two
Jessicas” of the Department of English—associate professor Brantley and
assistant professor Pressman—guided students through an exploration of
contemporary digital literary culture and its intersection with medieval
manuscript culture. Operating as a “collaboratory,” the class made use of
manuscripts and Kindles, Yale Library archives and digital software, with
students contributing to a course-specific blog to track and expand upon their
classroom experiences.
To
read more about these and other items of community interest, visit the Yale
College news archive at yale.edu/yalecollege/homepage_announcements/archive/.

Divinity School
Harold W. Attridge, Dean
www.yale.edu/divinity
Environment:
despair, no; hope, yes
Hope
and despair were recurrent themes when activists in the climate change and
environmental justice communities came together for the April “Environmental
(Dis)Locations Conference” hosted by Yale Divinity School. Early on in
the three-day conference, David Orr of Oberlin College laid the groundwork for
a theological approach to the environmental crisis by calling despair a “sin,”
warning that despair over environmental degradation can be a “self-fulfilling
prophecy,” and challenging listeners to adopt a “hopeful” posture that can lead
to action. “I would submit that the challenge of climate change is more than
replacing our lightbulbs or measuring our carbon footprint,” asserted Mary
Evelyn Tucker, who holds joint appointments in the schools of divinity and
environmental studies, and at the college in religious studies. “Climate
change is at its heart a moral issue, calling into question who we are as
humans and how we will survive as a species on a finite planet. … Issues of
justice and compassion are at the core of these moral arguments.”
Four
tapped for alumni awards
Winnowed
from a strong field of international candidates, four YDS graduates are
recipients of the school’s 2010 Distinguished Alumni Awards. They span four
decades of YDS education and will be honored at Convocation and Reunions 2010,
October 11–14. Honorees include Lillian F. Daniel ’93MDiv, senior minister at
the First Congregational Church in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, Distinction in
Congregational Ministry; Barbara K. Lundblad ’79MDiv, the Joe R. Engle
Professor of Preaching at Union Theological Seminary in New York City,
Distinction in Theological Education; Nancy Jo Kemper ’67BD, former executive
director of the Kentucky Council of Churches, William Sloane Coffin ’56 Award
for Peace and Justice; and Nai-Wang Kwok ’66BD, past head of the Hong Kong
Christian Council and the founder and director of the Hong Kong Christian
Institute, Lux et Veritas.
YDS
capital campaign close to goal
At
the end of April, as the university’s Yale Tomorrow capital campaign approached
the beginning of its fifth and final year, Yale Divinity School was just shy of
the $30 million mark toward a goal of $38 million. While gifts of $1 million or
more have provided a foundation for the YDS campaign, smaller gifts from alumni
have played a significant role as well in reaching the milestone. One very
successful “mini-campaign” within the framework of the overall campaign was the
Divinity School Challenge, in which two Yale College alumni established a
dollar-for-dollar matching fund that yielded $1 million primarily through gifts
from alumni. “The campaign has had a wonderfully sustained momentum,” said
director of development Constance Royster ’72. “We now have to make that final
push to the finish line.”

School of Drama
James Bundy, Dean
www.yale.edu/drama
Award-winning
playwright joins faculty
Pulitzer
Prize and Tony Award winner Doug Wright ’85 will join the Yale School of Drama
faculty as a lecturer in playwriting for the fall 2010 semester. Paula Vogel,
the Eugene O’Neill Chair of the playwriting department, will take a
one-semester leave of absence in the fall to work on a new play commissioned by
Yale Rep through the Yale Center for New Theatre. Doug Wright received the
Pulitzer Prize, a Tony Award for Best Play, the Drama Desk Award, a GLAAD Media
Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, a Drama League Award, and a Lucille
Lortel Award for his play I Am My Own Wife. His other works include the books for the Broadway
musicals Grey Gardens and The Little Mermaid, as well as the plays Quills, The Stonewater Rapture, Interrogating the Nude, Watbanaland, Buzzsaw Berkeley, and Unwrap Your Candy. For a Yale Alumni
Magazine report on
Wright’s work, see “Symphony for One,” Arts & Culture, July/August 2004.)
Yale
School of Drama at the Tonys
School
of Drama alumni were represented with 14 Tony nominations and two Tony awards,
which were handed out on June 13. Lynne Meadow ’71Dra, artistic director of
Manhattan Theatre Club, received two nominations, as producer of Time Stands
Still and The
Royal Family. Liev
Schreiber ’92MFA was nominated in the Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a
Play category for his role in A View from the Bridge; and David Alan Grier ’81MFA was
nominated for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play for his role in Race. Three of the four Best Scenic
Design of a Play nominees received their MFAs from the School of Drama: John
Lee Beatty ’74, The Royal Family; Alexander Dodge ’99, Present Laughter; and Santo Loquasto ’72, Fences. Marina Draghici ’88MFA received
two nominations, Best Costume Design and Best Scenic Design of a Musical, for
her work on Fela! She took home the Tony for costume design. Derek McLane ’84MFA was also
nominated in the Best Scenic Design of a Musical category for Ragtime. Lighting designers Donald Holder
’86MFA and Robert Wierzel ’84MFA were both nominated for their work on the
musicals Ragtime and Fela! And
Constanza Romero ’88MFA and Catherine Zuber ’84CDR were both nominated for Best
Costume Design of a Play for Fences and The Royal Family, respectively; Zuber won the Tony in this category.
Connecticut
Critics honor Yale Rep
Yale
Repertory Theatre productions received five 2010 Connecticut Critics Circle
awards, including Outstanding Production of a Play for Eclipsed by Danai Gurira and Outstanding
Production of a Musical for POP! by Maggie-Kate Coleman and Anna K. Jacobs. Brian Charles
Rooney was named Outstanding Actor in a Musical for his performance as Candy
Darling in POP!;
Kevin Adams received the Outstanding Lighting Design Award (also for POP!); and Chad Raines ’11MFA garnered
the award for Outstanding Sound Design for Battle of Black and Dogs. Yale Rep productions were honored
with an additional 12 nominations.

School of Engineering & Applied Science
T. Kyle Vanderlick, Dean
www.seas.yale.edu
Carbon
nanotubes boost cancer-fighting cells
The
work of professors Tarek Fahmy, Lisa Pfefflerle, and Gary Haller, appearing on
the cover of the April 20 issue of the journal Langmuir, has shown that carbon nanotubes
(CNTs) can be used to boost T cell production for adoptive immunotherapy to
fight cancer.
Adoptive
immunotherapy involves extracting a patient’s blood and stimulating the
reproduction of naturally occurring T cells (a type of white blood cell) before
transferring the blood back to the patient’s body. Scientists boost the production
of T cells outside the body using different substances that encourage T cell
antigens to cluster in high concentrations. Yale researchers have found CNTs to
be particularly effective in causing T cell antigens to cluster in the blood
and stimulate the body’s natural immune response.
Leadership
program gains momentum
Over
the past year, the Advanced Graduate Leadership Program has begun to reshape
the way Yale’s engineering doctoral students prepare for professional
pursuits—helping them make the transition from highly focused graduate studies
to careers as entrepreneurs, educators, or engineers, among others. Twelve
students were selected for the program in 2009–10. What began in fall 2009,
with an individually designed coursework package within Yale’s School of Management,
expanded through the year to include highly sought-after internships in
technology ventures with the Yale Office of Cooperative Research and Yale
Entrepreneurial Institute, as well as opportunities in K–12 outreach, communications
and public affairs, policy and government relations, and international
partnerships. The program, supported by a grant from the Goizueta Foundation, will
continue to grow in the next year, expanding upon opportunities that cross the
boundaries of science, policy, and business and provide valuable experience
beyond the lab.
Hybrid
race car wins kudos
The
Yale Bulldogs racing team went back to the garage this past fall with renewed
ambition to rebuild and fine-tune the formula hybrid race car—which they had
built from scratch, but failed to race, the previous year.
Following
eight months of hard work, on May 3 the Yale Bulldogs racing team pulled into
Loudon, New Hampshire, site of the Society of Automotive Engineers Formula
Hybrid International Competition, with their best entry to date. Evaluated on
design, presentation, acceleration, autocross, and endurance, Yale finished
tenth in a pack of 30 and was awarded second place in Best Engineered Hybrid
Design. “The bar is set higher now for the Yale Formula Hybrid team. We are confident
that we can win this competition and will come back next year with an even
stronger car,” said Henry Misas ’10, who has led the team the last two years.

School of Forestry & Environmental Studies
Peter Crane, Dean
www.environment.yale.edu
Microbes
contribute less to climate warming
Microbes
living underground may not be the significant contributors to global warming that
scientists previously believed them to be. Researchers at UC–Irvine, Colorado
State University, and F&ES have found that as global temperatures increase,
microbes in soil become less efficient over time in converting carbon in the
soil into carbon dioxide, which is a key contributor to climate warming.
Microbes
use carbon for energy to breathe and to grow in size and number. New research
shows microbes exhaling carbon dioxide furiously for a short period of time in
a warmer environment, leaving less carbon for growth—resulting in a decrease in
the number of microbes and, eventually, a decrease in the amount of carbon
dioxide being emitted into the atmosphere.
The
study, published in April online in Nature Geoscience, suggests that if microbial
efficiency declines in a warmer world, carbon dioxide emissions will fall back
to pre-warming levels. But if microbes manage to adapt to the warmth—for instance,
through increases in enzyme activity—emissions could intensify. Mark Bradford,
assistant professor of terrestrial ecosystem ecology, says there is intense
debate in the scientific community over whether the loss of soil carbon will
contribute to global warming, and adds that “the microbial processes causing
this loss are poorly understood. More research in this area will help reduce
uncertainties in climate prediction.”
Compton
Fellows will research tropical conservation issues
Four
F&ES students, all first-year candidates for master’s degrees in
environmental management, have been named Compton International Fellows for
2010–11 by the school’s Tropical Resources Institute. Each received $11,250
from the Compton Foundation, which enables students from developing countries
to conduct research on the environment and sustainable development that has
links to the fields of peace and security (conflict management) and population
and reproductive health.
Geofrey
Mwanjela is conducting research on protected areas and their impact on the
livelihoods of local communities in Tanzania; Ana Perea is working to engage
local Mexican communities in the conservation and restoration of natural resources;
Giancarlo Raschio is planning a comparative study of climate-change mitigation
and adaptation initiatives in Ghana and Peru; and Pablo Reed is researching
whether indigenous community lands in Ecuador could benefit from a program
designed to use financial incentives to reduce the emissions of greenhouse
gases from deforestation and forest degradation.
F&ES
dean Peter Crane says that the Compton Fellows program “perfectly complements”
the school’s efforts to provide “multidisciplinary training and research
opportunities” to its students and supports the school’s goal of “building environmental
leadership capacity in developing countries.”

Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
Jon Butler, Dean
www.yale.edu/graduateschool
Scientist
appointed new dean
Thomas
D. Pollard, Sterling Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental
Biology, and professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry and cell
biology, has been named the new dean of the Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences. At press time, he was scheduled to begin his term on July 1. Dean Jon
Butler has stepped down after six years of service and will rejoin the
departments of American studies, history, and religious studies after a
sabbatical. Pollard, who holds a BA in chemistry and zoology from Pomona
College and an MD from Harvard, came to Yale in 2001 after teaching at Harvard,
Johns Hopkins, and UC–San Diego medical schools, and heading up the Salk
Institute for Biological Studies. He has been chair of MCDB at Yale since 2004.
Dean
Pollard’s research combines biochemical, biophysical, cellular, and genetic
experiments to investigate the molecular basis of cellular motility and
cytokinesis. He has been recognized widely by the scientific community,
receiving the 2004 E. B. Wilson Medal from the American Society of Cell Biology
and the 2006 Gairdner International Award (with Alan Hall of Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center) for “discovering the molecular basis of cellular
motility and the mechanism of its regulation,” which are critical for
understanding embryonic development, the spread of malignant tumors in our
bodies, and how humans defend against infections. He is a longtime fellow of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences,
and the Institute of Medicine. (For a Yale Alumni Magazine report, see “Busy Bio Prof Named Graduate School Dean.”)
New
student prizes awarded
The
Graduate School inaugurated new prizes this year: two of the prizes honor
students engaged in public service and two were given in memory of Annie Le.
Christina
Roberto (EPH, psychology) received the Public Scholar award for her work on
overeating and obesity. She studies how people’s choices are influenced by
nutritional labels on restaurant menus and front-of-the-box packaging.
Roberto’s research in nutrition standards and policy has been cited in court
decisions upholding New York City’s restaurant menu labeling requirements and
in the development of federal menu labeling requirements in the recent health
care bill signed by President Obama.
Dana
Asbury (sociology) received the first Community Service Award for the hundreds
of hours she has given to Camp Antrum, which offers underprivileged local
children programs in personal development, recreational activities, and academic
tutoring. Her research focuses on ethnography, community organizing, consensus
building and collective decisionmaking, theories of deviance and difference,
and the sociology of knowledge.
Jason
Wallace (MCDB) and Julie Button (microbiology) were awarded the inaugural Annie
Le fellowships, in memory of the graduate student who was the victim of a
tragic homicide last fall. The winners “embody the scholarly achievements,
service to the Yale–New Haven community, and humanity we knew in Annie Le,”
said Elias Lolis, associate professor of pharmacology.

Law School
Robert Post, Dean
www.law.yale.edu
Law
School students successful in Connecticut Supreme Court case
The
Education Adequacy Project won a major victory in the Connecticut Supreme Court
in March when the court ruled in favor of the Connecticut Coalition for Justice
in Education Funding in the case CCJEF v. Rell. CCJEF, represented by Yale Law
students in the EAP clinic, asserted in a complaint back in 2005 that the
state’s failure to adequately and equitably fund public schools had irreparably
harmed thousands of schoolchildren. In oral arguments before the court almost
two years ago, clinic members said Connecticut students had the right, not just
to an education, but to an adequate one. In its 4–3 decision in March, the
court agreed, saying, “The fundamental right to an education is not an empty
linguistic shell” and that it must meet “modern educational standards.” “This
is a significant victory by any standard,” said professor and director of
clinical studies Bob Solomon. “The fact that the litigation team consists of a
law school clinic is remarkable, and a real testament to the combination of
intelligence and dedication that permeates Yale’s clinical program.” The Education
Adequacy Project is part of the Jerome N. Frank Legal Services Organization at
Yale Law School.
Professors
win Guggenheim fellowships
Two
YLS faculty members have been awarded fellowships by the John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation: James Q. Whitman ’80, ’88JD, the Ford Foundation Professor
of Comparative and Foreign Law, and John Fabian Witt ’94, ’99JD, ’00PhD, the
Allen H. Duffy Class of 1960 Professor of Law. Professor Whitman is an expert
on comparative law, contracts, criminal law, and European legal history. He has
written extensively on the origins of reasonable doubt and the widening divide
between American and European criminal punishment. His Guggenheim project will
explore the verdict of battle. Professor Witt is the author of widely acclaimed
works in the history of American law and in torts, including Patriots and
Cosmopolitans: Hidden Histories of American Law and The Accidental Republic:
Crippled Workingmen, Destitute Widows, and the Remaking of American Law. His Guggenheim research will
examine the laws of war in American history. The Guggenheim grants provide
support to exceptional mid-career scholars, scientists, and artists, giving
them the opportunity to work on projects with complete creative freedom
anywhere in the world. This year, the foundation selected 180 fellows from a
group of approximately 3,000 applicants.
New
program will promote field of law and economics
The
Law School’s newly created Kauffman Program in Law, Economics, and
Entrepreneurship will help “reenergize and redirect the field of law and
economics,” says law professor George L. Priest. Priest, who has been named a
Kauffman Distinguished Research Scholar in Law, Economics, and
Entrepreneurship, is an expert in the fields of antitrust and regulation, and
has focused his research on the determinants of economic growth. He says that
the Kauffman Program will move the field of law and economics forward “by
studying and developing the role of law in promoting innovation and
entrepreneurship in order to advance worldwide economic growth.” Funded by the
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, the Kauffman grant also supports the
Information Society Project, which examines ways in which laws relating to technology
can promote innovation and growth.

School of Management
Sharon
Oster, Dean
www.mba.yale.edu
Yale
SOM launches faculty research e-newsletter
SOM
has launched an online Faculty Insights newsletter [http://mba.yale.edu/faculty/insights/] showcasing the intellectual capital of
the school’s faculty. Each quarterly issue will include a selection of recent
working papers, publications, research summaries, commentaries, and interviews.
The first issue highlights the work of Gary Gorton, Frederick Frank Class of
1954 Professor of Management and Finance, who connects the financial crisis of
late 2008 to other banking panics throughout history; an interview with Robert
Shiller, Arthur M. Okun Professor of Economics, on how economists need to look
beyond the classical view of individuals as rational actors; and an argument by
K. Sudhir, professor of marketing, that organized retail in India can achieve
long-term success by following the strategies of China and other Asian
countries that recently modernized their retail sectors. To subscribe to Faculty
Insights, send an
e-mail to faculty.insights@som.yale.edu.
Dean
Oster blogs for Forbes
Dean
Sharon Oster has signed on as a regular contributor to Forbes.com’s new CSR
Blog, which
highlights corporate responsibility issues within companies worldwide. In her
first post, she writes about how BP should respond to its oil spill disaster in
the Gulf of Mexico and draws on research by Victoria Brescoll, assistant
professor of organizational behavior, and postdoctoral associate George Newman.
Using research both on business executives and on a random selection of adults,
Brescoll et al. found that after the fact, firms that conveyed an empathetic,
responsibility-taking message ended up losing much less public trust than those
taking more defensive or noncommittal stances. Oster writes that such an
approach might seem obvious to those observing a crisis from outside. “Yet
looking at actual crisis situations, it is surprising how many company leaders
fail to act on this insight,” she writes. Read this post, and others, at
http://blogs.forbes.com/csr.
Inaugural
Green Summit celebrates progress of last 40 years
The
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute and NYSE Euronext hosted the
inaugural Green Summit at the New York Stock Exchange on April 22, in
conjunction with the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. Leaders from business,
government, and academic realms described the ways that environmental
sustainability can be a means to drive the economy. The summit underscores NYSE
Euronext’s commitment to creating thought leadership forums where executives
can exchange innovative ideas and network. “We are celebrating how, 40 years
later, economic development and environmental vitality can join forces. We are
proud to showcase the profound tangible strides shared by a large portfolio of
enterprises,” said senior associate dean Jeffrey Sonnenfeld. Read about the
Green Summit at
http://qn.som.yale.edu/article.php?issue_id=12&article_id=279.

School of Medicine
Robert J. Alpern, Dean
www.med.yale.edu/ysm
Zeroing
in on genes to head off aneurysms
In a
new genomic study, a team led by Yale researchers has identified three new
regions of the genome containing variants that increase the risk of
intracranial aneurysms—weaknesses in the brain’s blood vessels. Brain aneurysms
rupture in 500,000 people worldwide each year, causing hemorrhagic stroke, but
most people have no prior symptoms. Rupture is fatal in up to 40 percent of
cases, and survivors usually have severe neurological damage. The team compared
nearly 900,000 variable spots in the genomes of 6,000 aneurysm patients with
those of 14,000 healthy subjects. In the May issue of Nature Genetics, they describe the new regions and
confirm that two previously identified loci are strongly associated with
aneurysms. The new knowledge is “ten percent more than we understood just a
couple of years ago,” says lead author Murat Günel ’94Grd, the Nixdorff-German
Professor of Neurosurgery.
An
engineered tissue’s surprising development
Christopher
K. Breuer and Toshiharu Shinoka, both associate professors of surgery and
pediatrics, have been studying the use of tissue-engineered vascular grafts
(TEVGs) to treat congenital heart defects. TEVGs—created from a patient’s bone
marrow cells (BMCs)—make living vessels that will grow as a child grows and
could last a lifetime. With colleagues, Breuer and Shinoka explored how BMCs
are transformed into vessels in TEVGs. Many scientists thought that BMCs—stem
cells—differentiate into several kinds of cells that make up blood vessels. But
the group found that BMCs were undetectable soon after TEVGs were implanted
into mice. Instead, the graft appeared to initiate an inflammatory response
that drew white blood cells to the scaffold, replacing the BMCs. These cells
were also soon replaced—with the mouse’s own blood vessel cells. This “better
understanding of how TEVGs develop in vivo will lead to improved second-generation TEVGs,” the
authors write in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Autoimmunity
expert named Beeson Professor
Joseph
E. Craft, chief of the section of rheumatology and director of the Yale Investigative
Medicine Program, as well as chief of rheumatology at Yale–New Haven Hospital,
has been named the Paul B. Beeson Professor of Medicine. Craft is an
internationally recognized expert on the pathogenesis of systemic autoimmune
diseases, including lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. He and his research team
seek to define the mechanisms of loss of self-tolerance and activation of
autoreactive T cells in systemic autoimmune diseases, as well as the
differentiation and regulation of T cells in normal immune responses. The
Beeson professorship was established in 1981 by the late Elisha Atkins to honor
his colleague, Paul B. Beeson, chair of Yale’s Department of Internal Medicine
from 1952 to 1965.

School of Music
Robert Blocker, Dean
http://music.yale.edu
Acclaimed
composer conducts School of Music students
Composer
Krzysztof Penderecki spent the last week of April at the School of Music—where
he served on the faculty in the 1970s—working with current students and faculty
on three concerts of his music. The first, which opened with an interview of
Penderecki by Dean Robert Blocker, featured solo and chamber works. For the
other two concerts Penderecki conducted the Yale Philharmonia, first in Woolsey
Hall and then in a performance at Carnegie Hall that earned critical acclaim.
The orchestral program ranged from the groundbreaking Threnody to the
Victims of Hiroshima (1960)
to the New Haven and New York premieres of the Horn Concerto (2008). Faculty
artist William Purvis was the soloist in the concerto, while faculty violinist
Syoko Aki performed the 1967 Capriccio for Violin and Orchestra. The program
closed with the Symphony No. 4, of which the New York Times wrote: “All sections of the
orchestra had a chance to shine in this piece, a kind of concerto for orchestra,
and they did, with Mr. Penderecki leading a tightly wrought, polished, and
dramatic interpretation.”
Ensembles
bring home prizes in major competitions
The
Charis Piano Trio—Helen Kim ’11MusM, violin; Yoon Hee Ko ’10MusM, cello; and
Jeong-ah Ryu ’10MusM, piano—won the Coleman-Barstow Prize for Strings (the top
prize in the strings division) at the Coleman Chamber Ensemble Competition. The
trio was coached by cellist Ole Akahoshi ’95CertPF, a member of the Yale School
of Music faculty.
In
the Plowman Chamber Music Competition, one of the most prestigious events of
its kind, the Amphion String Quartet won first place in the piano and strings
division as well as the Audience Prize. The members of the Amphion String Quartet
are Katie Hyun ’09ArtA, violin; Mihai Marica ’04CertPF, ’08ArtA, cello; and
David Southorn ’09MusM, ’10ArtA, violin; as well as violist Wei-Yang Andy Lin,
a DMA candidate at Stony Brook University.
School
of Music honorees
At
the school’s annual honors dinner May 1, the composer Bruce MacCombie received
the Cultural Leadership Citation. In addition to serving on the Yale faculty in
the 1970s, MacCombie has held major positions at G. Schirmer, Juilliard, and
Jazz at Lincoln Center. The Alumni Certificate of Merit was awarded to baritone
Richard Lalli ’08MusAM, ’86MusAD, who has taught at Yale since 1982 and is the
artistic director of the Yale Baroque Opera Project. Mitch Leigh ’51MusB,
’52MusM, received the Ian Mininberg ’34 Distinguished Service Award. Best known
for composing the musical Man of La Mancha (1965), Leigh was instrumental in
the renovation of what is now called Abby and Mitch Leigh Hall. Dean Blocker
awarded the Sanford Medal, the School of Music’s highest honor, to Elzbieta
Penderecki. The president of Poland’s Ludwig van Beethoven Association, she has
cofounded the European Mozart Foundation and initiated the Ludwig van Beethoven
Easter Festival and numerous other festivals. She is married to the composer
Krzysztof Penderecki.

School of Nursing
Margaret Grey, Dean
www.nursing.yale.edu
Nightingale
Awards honor YSN faculty
Two
YSN faculty members were honored as winners of the 2010 Nightingale Award for
Nursing Excellence in Connecticut at the tenth annual awards ceremony on May 5.
Associate professor Ivy Alexander, director of YSN’s specialty in adult,
family, gerontological, and women’s health primary care, is a noted expert in
midlife women’s health, and has published two popular and award-winning
consumer books on osteoporosis and menopause. Associate professor Nancy
Banasiak, pediatric nurse practitioner, is an expert in primary care of urban
children with asthma, and has led coordination of asthma care for more than 700
children at Yale–New Haven Hospital Pediatric Primary Care Center. The Nightingale
Awards program was established in 2001 by the Visiting Nurses Association of
South Central Connecticut and honors nurses who make special contributions to
patient care. In connection with this program, YSN student Brandon Ko ’10MSN
received a Nightingale scholarship.
Visiting
professor presents findings in gastrointestinal health
Beatrice
Renfield Visiting Professor Margaret M. Heitkemper addressed YSN faculty and
students on March 31, on the topic of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS).
Heitkemper is chair of the Department of Biobehavioral Nursing and Health Systems,
and director of the Center for Women’s Health, at the University of Washington.
She has been continually funded by the National Institutes of Health since 1983
in an ongoing study of women’s health, stress, and gastrointestinal function.
IBS occurs in 10 to 17 percent of the U.S. population, Heitkemper said, and
more often in women than in men. She added that hormone levels are an important
factor in both men and women, and that a lab rat study has shown that estrogen
inhibits bowel function. Heitkemper has found that treatment for IBS is less
effective for patients with a history of trauma, indicating that the cause may
be a combination of genetics and life events. Managing IBS, Heitkemper said,
has gained importance in health-care management because the disorder accounts
for 40 percent of gastroenterologists’ time and involves costly diagnostic
procedures.
YSN
professor receives Elm-Ivy Award
YSN
associate professor Alison Moriarty Daley ’94MSN was recently honored with a
Seton Elm-Ivy Award, which celebrates an individual’s efforts to enrich the
relationship between the university and the city of New Haven. Moriarty Daley
was recognized for her work with underserved teens through primary care,
advocacy, and education. In 1999, she developed and implemented a primary care
clinic with the Hill Regional Career High School. There, and in her practice at
the Adolescent Clinic at Yale–New Haven Hospital, she provides friendly health
care for many of New Haven’s teenagers. Moriarty Daley was tapped by Mayor John
DeStefano to co-chair his Task Force on Teen Pregnancy Prevention and has
worked with community-based organizations like Planned Parenthood of
Connecticut. In addition, she developed new programs to help urban youth avoid
or stop smoking and she established and conducts the first school-based program
for grieving youth.

School of Public Health
Paul D. Cleary, Dean
http://publichealth.yale.edu
Breakthrough
method predicts risk of invasive breast cancer
Scientists
for the first time have discovered a way to predict whether women with ductal
carcinoma in situ (DCIS)—the most common form of non-invasive breast cancer—are
at risk of developing more invasive tumors in later life. The finding will
allow women with DCIS to be more selective about their course of treatment and,
potentially, to avoid aggressive forms of treatment such as complete mastectomy
or radiation.
The
study, accessible online in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, followed the medical histories of
1,162 women who had been diagnosed with DCIS. It found that a diagnosis of DCIS
based on a lumpectomy specimen was more predictive of a high risk of subsequent
invasive cancer than was a DCIS diagnosis by mammography. Different combinations
of biomarkers were also associated with various levels of cancer risk. Women
diagnosed with DCIS have historically had an inaccurate perception of their
risk of developing invasive cancer, and as a result have chosen fairly
aggressive treatments. “This separation into risk groups will assist in
determining an appropriate treatment regimen, tailored to an individual woman’s
clinical profile,” said Annette Molinaro, an assistant professor of
biostatistics at the YSPH and one of the study’s lead authors.
Advocate
of better health for all visits Yale
An
outspoken advocate of better health and health care for the world’s poorest
people visited the School of Public Health in March with a hopeful message that
many of the glaring health disparities found in England, the United States, and
elsewhere can be changed—if societies have the will. Sir Michael Marmot, whose
well-known Whitehall studies in England have clearly established a link between
an individual’s social class and health, said that health inequalities between
rich and poor are “morally unacceptable” and that this divide gets at the very
heart of what is a good, fair, and compassionate society. There is no
biological reason for the glaring health disparities that are found in the
world today, he added. The good news is that these disparities can change
dramatically and quickly—improvements can be seen within the span of
years—if a society deems it important enough, Marmot said.
Noted
medical researcher receives Winslow Award
Sir
Iain Chalmers, recognized as one of the leading health researchers of his
generation, is the 2010 recipient of the C-E. A. Winslow Award, which was
presented April 26. The award commemorates the contributions of Charles-Edward
Amory Winslow to public health—he established the Yale School of Public Health
in 1915, one of the country’s first public health programs—and is given to
those who exemplify Winslow’s ideals, particularly his concern for social
factors affecting health. It is bestowed by the school every several years to
recognize outstanding contributions to the field of public health. Chalmers is
only the third recipient since the award’s creation in 2000. Sir Iain
Chalmers’s career in medicine and public health spans more than four decades.
Much of his work focuses on health research, particularly on assessing the
effects of health interventions and addressing medical uncertainties. |
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