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Light
& Verity
May
1998
Tobacco
Stocks Staying in University Portfolio
After a new round of
attention to its investment policies concerning tobacco, the Yale
Corporation voted in April to keep its $16.9 million in tobacco-company
holdings. The decision followed a unanimous recommendation against
divestment by the Corporation's Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility,
an eight-member body composed of faculty, alumni, and students.
The committee and the
Corporation had last considered the issue of tobacco holdings in
1991. Since then, a handful of other colleges and universities-including
Harvard, Smith, and Johns Hopkins-have sold their tobacco stocks.
In addition, law professor John Simon '53LLB, who developed Yale's
ethical-investment guidelines, has recommended divestment, and a
group known as Students for Corporate Responsibility collected 70
faculty signatures on a pro-divestment petition.
But a few days before
the vote, the Yale Daily News weighed in with an editorial
opposing divestment and invoking the argument that dumping tobacco
stocks would set a difficult precedent. "There is a danger
of extending the arguments for tobacco divestment down a slippery
slope to include every company that has ever polluted, engaged in
discrimination, or moved jobs to Mexico," said the News.
In announcing the decision,
President Richard C. Levin '74PhD said Yale would continue to "use
its voice as a shareholder" to effect change in tobacco-company
policies that it considers harmful.

First
Alumna Returns to Campus
When Hillary Rodham
Clinton '73JD was a student at the Law School, she took advantage
of a Yale resource that is not part of most people's legal education:
the Child Study Center. There she learned lessons that helped her
develop her own ideas about the legal issues surrounding children
and families. On April 30, Clinton came to New Haven to pay tribute
to one of the center's leading lights, child psychiatrist James
P. Comer.
Clinton started her
day at the other end of the campus, appearing as the semester's
final speaker in a Divinity School symposium titled "Women:
Finding and Raising Your Own Voice." She talked to the audience
about her own faith, which she said is "essential to my getting
up and going on every day," and hailed the growing importance
of women's voices, citing women's efforts against female circumcision
in Senegal and in favor of a peace agreement in Northern Ireland.
After appearing at a
midday campaign rally for Democratic U.S. Representative Barbara
Kennelly, who is running for governor of Connecticut, Clinton spoke
at the School of Medicine as part of a two-day symposium marking
the 30th anniversary of Comer's School Development Program. Founded
in 1968, the 700-school program focuses on issues of child development
as a means of improving schools. Clinton praised Comer for his emphasis
on parental involvement in schools. "Perhaps more than anyone
I know, he has taken to heart the wisdom of the African proverb
I borrowed for my book-'It takes a village to raise a child'-and
put it into practice." She also took the opportunity to criticize
a Republican school-voucher proposal then before Congress and advocated
increased public school choice.

Wheels
Turning at New Power Plant
Tom Draeger was more
than a little jittery on April 15, but not because of an unfinished
1040 form. Draeger, the director of Yale's Power Plant Modernization
Program, was gearing up for the first of three tests of Yale's new
cogeneration system for producing electricity. After warning denizens
of the central campus to back up computer files, avoid elevators,
and use battery-powered alarm clocks in case of a power failure,
the Power Plant team successfully switched over from electricity
supplied by the United Illuminating Company to power generated by
the new system. The second and third tests also went off without
a hitch, and the system officially went online on May 14.
Three gas-fired turbines
that generate electricity through the cogeneration system also produce
some of the heat required to make steam for heating buildings. The
new system will provide about half of Yale's electricity, with the
rest continuing to come from UI. The improvements to the plant,
which cost about $100 million, will pay for themselves in energy
savings, Draeger says, because the new system is significantly more
efficient. The new equipment will also release less than an eighth
of the pollutants of the old, keeping Yale ahead of toughening EPA
regulations.
Draeger says the University
could have built a plant to supply all its own electricity, but
that it wanted to continue to support the local utility. "UI
is a small utility, and Yale is a significant chunk of their business.
We wanted to make sure to retain our relationship with them while
improving our own situation."

High
School for the Career-Minded
A town-gown partnership
that benefits high school students interested in healthcare will
get a boost in September, when the city dedicates a new $27 million
home for Career High School on Legion Avenue. The school's 600 students
get a head start on careers in health, business, and computer technology
through partnerships with local institutions.
Students and faculty
at the Yale Schools of Medicine and Nursing work with Career High
by offering internships, mentoring, and advice on curriculum development.
Medical students teach advanced anatomy to students, and the University
gives the high school faculty free Internet accounts and training
in information technology.
Michael J. Morand '87,
'93MDiv, an assistant vice president of the University in the Office
of New Haven Affairs, says the school is geared toward preparation
for higher education. "The name suggests a vocational school,
but it's not," says Morand. "Now that the school will
be two blocks away [from the medical center], the opportunities
for collaboration will grow exponentially."

Name
That Dinosaur!
In the annals of paleontology,
menace and the surname of John Ostrom, a seemingly mild-mannered
professor Emeritus of geology
and geophysics, have been forever linked. This spring, fellow researchers
bestowed a high honor on the curator emeritus of vertebrate paleontology
at the Peabody Museum by naming a dinosaur after him.
Rahona ostromi -- which
means "Ostrom's menace from the clouds" -- was a birdlike
dinosaur that terrorized the landscape toward the end of the Cretaceous
period, nearly 65 million years ago. About the size of a small hawk, R. ostromi was endowed with sharp, sickle-shaped claws that
were used, Jurassic Park style, to eviscerate prey.
The fossil was found
on the island of Madagascar several years ago by Catherine Forster
of the State University of New York at Stony Brook and Scott Sampson
of the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine. The ancient creature,
which had a feathered tail, "is one of the strongest last nails
in the coffin of those who doubt that dinosaurs had anything to
do with the origin of birds," Forster said.
The fossil hunters proposed
the name, which was recently accepted by a paleontological review
team, in praise of Ostrom, a champion of the controversial -- but
increasingly accepted -- theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs.
"It's a very exciting specimen," said its namesake, "and
a nice, flattering honor."

Devane
Medals to Lamar, Chang
Former University President
Howard R. Lamar '51PhD and statistics professor Joseph T. Chang
were honored in April with the William Clyde Devane Medals -- the
highest awards for teaching and scholarship in Yale College -- by
the University's chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.
The Devane medal honors
the longtime dean of Yale College, who was also a national and local
Phi Beta Kappa leader. Each year, graduate members of the society
select a retired faculty member for the medal, while members from
the senior class choose a current faculty member.
Lamar, the Sterling Professor Emeritus of History
who was Dean of the College from 1979 to 1985 and who led the University
in 1992-93, is a noted scholar of the American West. Chang, an associate
professor of statistics, has taught at Yale since 1989. His research
focuses on probability, quality control, and genetics and evolution.

Covert
Concert: BDs at the CIA
When 14 Yale men in
blue blazers filed into CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia, this
spring, it wasn't a training session (as far as we know). The group
was the Baker's Dozen, a men's a cappella singing group, which has
performed for the intelligence agency on several occasions in recent
years. The group gave a concert to employees before joining a luncheon
with some of the 50 Yale alumni who are on the CIA's rolls.
"People don't believe
the CIA can have fun, but we do," says Joyce Lovelace of the
agency's communications office. Asked if the agency did any recruiting
during the visit, Lovelace acknowledges "I did get a couple
of names."

Once
Again, Yale's Books Are Balanced
The University will
live within its means again next year, if it meets the proposed
budget for 1997-98 that was announced in May. This year's budget
was the first to be balanced after six years of spending cuts.
The University proposes
to spend $1.16 billion next year, about 5 percent more than this
year. Just over half that figure goes for salaries and benefits;
building construction and renovation accounts for $241 million. On the revenue side, 27 percent comes
from grants and contracts, 23 percent from student term bills, 19
percent from the endowment, 15 percent from medical services, and
16 percent from a variety of other sources.

Women's
Studies Expands Offerings
How could the women's
studies program attract more men? First of all, its leaders
decided, rethink the name. Next fall, as the interdisciplinary program
turns 20 years old, it will appear in the Blue Book as "Women's
and Gender Studies." Further, majors will be asked to select
a concentration in one of three areas: women's studies; lesbian,
gay, bisexual, and transgender studies; or gender studies.
Yale's women's studies
program, the oldest in the Ivy League, began as a track within the
American Studies major before being spun off into its own program
in 1978. The change in structure is designed to draw more students
of both sexes into the program, whose focus has gradually broadened
to encompass scholarship related to homosexuality and gender differences.
"We're trying to
repackage what we've been offering for some time," says chair
Margaret Homans '74, '78PhD, a professor of English and women's
and gender studies. "This is really just our presentation catching
up to the reality of the program."
The new track in lesbian,
gay, bisexual, and transgender studies comes almost a year after
author and activist Larry Kramer '57 accused the University administration
of homophobia when it rejected his offer to leave Yale a sum of
around $5 million for two tenured positions in lesbian and gay studies. Provost Alison Richard said at the time that the field was still too new to
justify professorships "that would be there in perpetuity."
Homans says that her
department is the natural home for the new lesbian and gay studies
track, which does not involve the commitment of new funds. "At
Yale, it was inevitable that it would come out of women's studies,"
says Homans. "No other department has had such consistent interest."

A
Little Larceny In Life's Origins
Origin of life researchers
have long wondered how the supposedly primitive first family of
chemicals that floated around in a primordial soup nearly four billion
years could have developed any kind of sophistication. The answer,
says a Yale scientist, is relatively simple: theft.
Ron Breaker, an assistant
professor of biology, explains that in the beginning, a compound
called ribonucleic acid (RNA) learned to reproduce. This substance,
which remains fundamental to many key life processes, then gained
an upper hand in the molecular arms race a very old fashioned way.
"It stole what it needed," says Breaker.
In the May 26 issue
of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Breaker
and post-doctoral research associate Adam Roth report on experiments
that make use of a technique called "test tube evolution"
to demonstrate the effectiveness of molecular thievery. The scientists
created trillions of DNA molecules (DNA and proteins eventually
overcame RNA for supremacy) and then tied them down to a kind of
chemical train track. The only way off was to "steal"
a pair of molecular scissors, and after nearly a dozen trial runs,
Breaker and Roth were left with molecules that could extricate themselves
from potential calamity 10 million times faster than their less
sophisticated neighbors.
Breaker expects future
experiments will show that RNA also has the ability to coopt appropriate
technology, and so the "RNA-world wouldn't stay primitive for
long." By copying the process in the laboratory, the researchers
are not only retracing life's first steps. "We're creating
new substances, in particular compounds we can use as biosensors,
that may be valuable for medicine and industry," says Breaker.

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