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Light
& Verity
November
1997
University
Budget Back in Black
As of this year, University
administrators can open their ledgers and see something they haven't
seen for six years: a balanced budget. Thanks to a 6 percent reduction
in the size of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, an unusually strong
endowment performance, and what Deputy Provost Charles H. Long terms
"pruning," the 1997-98 budget of $1.1 billion calls
for a zero deficit, the result of a four-year effort to erase an
annual shortfall that had peaked at $18 million.
Long says that holding
"fairly tight" on salary increases helped the University
reach its goal, as did a new contract with union
locals 34 and 35. While the increase in the endowment made deeper
cuts unnecessary, Long says the budget would have been balanced
anyway, "because we set that goal with determination to reach
it on time."
With budget-cutting
days behind it -- at least for now -- the campus is abuzz with speculation
about how the University should spend a forecasted surplus in coming
years. Speeding the pace of renovations
(or borrowing less to fund them) is a possibility, as are increased
aid for international students
and additional support for faculty research. Provost Alison
Richard says that revisiting the faculty no-growth policy is
not among the options being discussed. But Long cautions that "surpluses
will happen only if the endowment continues its extraordinary climb.
We are doing our best to budget cautiously, anticipating the strong
possibility of a market correction."
Mac vs.Windows Rivalry Hits Home
Given the precarious
state of Apple Computer
and the passionate loyalty of the fans of its Macintosh operating
system, tensions run high these days when the Mac's future is the
subject of discussion. Anxiety on campus rose substantially over
the summer when Yale's director of Information Technology Services
(ITS), Daniel Updegrove, advised incoming students who are buying
computers to choose models that use the Windows operating system
rather than Macintoshes.
Updegrove made the recommendation
at the end of a letter to incoming students mailed in June. But
when an online news service published the letter in late August,
such publications as Business Week and Wired seized
on the news as a bad omen for Apple, which counts the educational
market as one of its few remaining secure niches.
Updegrove says his intention
was simply to let students know that there is now "less inherent
advantage to owning a Macintosh" at Yale than there was when
the University's network supported only Macs in students' rooms.
As a result, Updegrove says, the Class of 1997 chose Macs over Windows
PCs by a 3-to-1 margin, while the Class of 2001 favored Windows
by the same ratio.
Still, Updegrove emphasized
that the University is working to "integrate Macs into the
increasingly Windows-centric software systems we are providing."
New Look for the "Blue Book"
For more than 50 years,
Yale College has listed its courses in the Yale College Programs
of Study, a chunky paperback known universally as the "Blue
Book" for its pale blue cover. But students shopping for courses
got a surprise this fall when they picked up the 1997-98 version,
which sports a color photo of Sterling Memorial Library on its front
cover.
Veronica Soell, the
managing editor of publications for Yale College, explains that
change was intended to help YCPS conform to the look of the catalogs
of the graduate and professional schools, which were recently redesigned.
"College catalogs everywhere have become more interesting,
and it was time for a change," says Soell.
To those who complain
that they can't call it the Blue Book anymore, Soell points out
that the back cover and spine still carry the familiar color.
Jewish
Students Sue Over Housing
Four Orthodox Jewish
Yale students filed a Federal lawsuit against the University on
October 15 challenging its on-campus residency requirement for freshmen
and sophomores. The students argue that because separation of the
sexes is not enforced, Yale dormitory life is incompatible with
their religious beliefs. They cite in particular the Jewish tenet
of tznius, or modesty.
The students -- who called
themselves the "Yale Five" until one of them married recently
and became exempt from the requirement -- have for several months waged
a highly public campaign to be excused from the requirement. In
a New York Times op-ed essay, freshman Elisha Dov Hack complained
that, despite the fact that freshmen are housed on single-sex floors,
"women are permitted to stay overnight in men's rooms, and
visiting men can traipse through the common halls on the women's
floors -- in various states of undress -- in the middle of the night."
Dean Richard Brodhead
responded in a letter to the Times that "what students
gain by living together is an essential part of their education"
and that if the students were allowed to live off-campus,
they would "rob others of a chance to learn who they are and
why their convictions require respect."
While freshmen have
long been required to live on campus, the requirement was extended
to the sophomore class two years ago in order to counter a trend
toward off-campus living, a trend that has since begun to wane.
The University has worked to accommodate Orthodox concerns in other
matters, permitting the transfer of meals to the Kosher Kitchen
and arranging for observant students to have keys to bypass electronically
controlled entry gates on the Sabbath. Yale Hillel, the undergraduate
Jewish organization, opted not to take an official position on the
issue.
In early October, the
University proposed a compromise in which the students would be
accommodated with in-suite bathrooms or by labeling bathrooms as
single-sex. The students rejected the offer, saying that the University
would have to go further -- policing bathrooms and monitoring a voluntary
agreement to abstinence by the students' suitemates.
Debunking
Myths On Race and Poverty
Question: What percentage
of the nation's poor are African-Americans? Answer: About 29 percent.
If you guessed higher, you may be under the influence of the media.
Martin Gilens, an assistant professor of political science, has
published a study in Public Opinion Quarterly showing that
news magazines illustrate 62 percent of stories the on poverty with
pictures of African-Americans. On network television news, African-Americans
are seen in 65 percent of poverty stories.
Gilens finds further
that the groups that are viewed most sympathetically by the public -- the
elderly and the working poor -- are underrepresented in news coverage,
while unemployed working-age adults are overrepresented. The result,
he says, is a public misinformed about the nature of poverty (on
average, Americans think half of the poor are black, according to
surveys) and more opposed to welfare spending than they might be
otherwise.
Gilens, who teaches
a course on welfare policy, interviewed photo editors at the news
magazines in an effort to explain the discrepancy. He says the editors
tended to overestimate the percentage of African-Americans among
the poor themselves. The availability of poor people in urban areas
where the magazines are located also provides a partial explanation:
While African-Americans make up only 32 percent of the urban poor,
they represent more than 60 percent of neighborhoods in extreme
poverty. Gilens also speculates that editors may unconsciously choose
images of African-Americans in order to "present a more readily
recognized image of poverty."
"By implicitly
identifying poverty with race," Gilens concludes, "the
news media perpetuate stereotypes that work against the interests
of both poor people and African-Americans."
Music Library Emerging in Sterling
An enormous construction
crane took up residence on Wall Street this summer to work on a
task akin to building a ship in a bottle: raising the roof trusses
for a new $11-million music library in a little-used light court
at Sterling Memorial Library.
For 25 years, music
librarians have been expressing a need for a larger space in order
to consolidate materials now stored in several locations. The new
Irving S. Gilmore Music Library, designed by Sterling renovation
architects Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson, and Abbott, of Boston,
will provide three times the space of the current library in Sprague
Hall.
The main floor of the
library will contain seminar rooms, an exhibition space, and 44
listening stations. A reading area with periodical stacks will be
located on a mezzanine level, and the basement will house additional
stacks, a seminar room and study carrels.
Jon Ross, project manager
at Shepley, Bulfinch, says the goal of the library's design was
to "create a room comparable in stature to the main reading
room , but one that is unmistakably a 1990s space." The project,
which was partially funded by a gift from the late Irving S. Gilmore
'23, is scheduled for completion in May.
Shifting Portfolios at the Top
The addition of a new
officer and the retirement of another will lead to a redistribution
of responsibilities among key University administrators. Vice president
Terry Holcombe '64, a 23-year veteran who has overseen two capital
campaigns, including the one just ended, will retire at the end
of the year. At that point, the development office's liaison role
to the Association of Yale Alumni and the Yale Alumni Magazine
-- which is editorially and financially independent of the University
-- will be transferred to University Secretary Linda
Koch Lorimer '77JD. Lorimer, in turn, will hand over her responsibilities
for New Haven and state affairs to Bruce
D. Alexander '65, a newly appointed vice president and retired
executive of the Rouse Corporation, the Baltimore developer noted
for urban revitalization efforts.
Lorimer, who is also
a vice president, has led the University's New Haven Initiative
program since she returned to Yale as Secretary in 1993. She established
the Office of New Haven Affairs, launched the Yale Homebuyers Program,
and redoubled the University's efforts to spend its dollars in New
Haven.
Alexander, whose appointment
expands the number of University officers to seven, will join the
administration in May. Director of Development Charles J. Pagnam
will serve as acting vice president for development upon Holcombe's
departure.
Research Probes Foiling Thieves
When it comes to preventing
automobile theft, many people turn to obvious devices such as noisy
car alarms or red steering wheel locks. But the best strategy may
be what Ian Ayres, the Townsend Professor of Law, calls the "unobservable
precaution."
In a research paper
to be published next year in the Quarterly Journal of Economics,
Ayres and his colleague, University of Chicago professor Steven
Levitt, describe the crime-stopping power of "Lojack,"
a hidden radio transmitter activated by the company when its owner
reports a car as stolen. The police then home in on the signal --
and the felon. The recovery rate of Lojack-equipped cars is better
than 95 percent; those without it are recovered only about 50 percent
of the time.
That statistic alone
might justify the device's roughly $500 price tag, particularly
among owners of expensive vehicles. But when Ayres and Levitt examined
the incidence of car theft in a dozen cities served by the Lojack
company, they discovered something surprising. "For every 1
percent increase you have in the number of cars with Lojack, you
get a 20 percent decrease in the current rate of auto theft,"
says Ayres, who, aside from having a Lojack in his minivan, emphasizes
that neither he nor Levitt has financial ties to the corporation.
The reason the strategy
works so well is because of the power of unobservable precautions.
"Alarms and steering wheel restraints simply encourage thieves
to look elsewhere," Ayres explains. But this "displacement
effect," as it's called, doesn't occur with hidden devices
like Lojack, which has not only resulted in the arrests of professional
car thieves, but also in the break-up of "chop shops"
that specialize in stripping vehicles of valuable parts.
"We've estimated
that a $500 investment translates into an anti-crime benefit of
$5,000 to your fellow citizens," says Ayres. "In terms
of charitable giving, that's a pretty big bang for the buck."
A Designer Virus That Kills HIV
An intriguing new weapon
in the war against AIDS uses a genetically altered cattle virus
to kill cells infected with the HIV virus. A team led by Dr. John
K. Rose, a professor at the School of Medicine, has published the
results of a successful laboratory trial of the approach in the
journal Cell.
HIV attaches itself
to white blood cells and takes them over, using them to replicate
itself. Rose and his team altered a virus known as VSV, or vesicular
stomatitis virus, so that its outer coating would resemble that
of the cells HIV targets. But when the VSV attaches itself to HIV-infected
cells, the more efficient VSV reproduces itself inside the HIV-infected
cells, kills the cells rapidly, and reduces HIV production to very
low or undetectable levels.
Because the VSV is engineered
to seek only HIV-infected cells, it is thought to be otherwise harmless.
But the virus's safety and effectiveness will not be known without
extensive tests, beginning with animal trials this fall.
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