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Light
& Verity
December
1998
Law
School Panel Ponders the President's Future
Like parents asking
"Where did we go wrong?" a panel of seven Law School professors
met in the School's packed auditorium on September 24 to consider
the fate of alumnus Bill Clinton '73JD. While the discussion revealed
almost as many ways of looking at the President's recurrent troubles
as there were participants, the professors all decried the President's
"lawyerly" semantic hairsplitting over his relationship
with Monica Lewinsky.
"I worry that we're
teaching you that the Constitution means whatever you can make it
mean," said Kate Stith, the Lafayette S. Foster Professor of
Law. But Dean Anthony Kronman maintained that such tactics are not
necessarily the product of legal training. "I think you have
to tell the truth," Kronman told his students. "It has
to be part of your professional character."
As for the scandal's
likely outcome, Sterling Professor
of Law and Political Science Bruce Ackerman predicted that Clinton
would survive an impeachment inquiry. "This is not a constitutional
crisis," said Ackerman. "This is a tempest in a teapot."
(The Yale Daily News disagreed, calling in an editorial the
next day for Clinton's resignation.)
Meanwhile, Yale University
Press has released a new edition of Sterling
Professor Emeritus of Law
Charles L. Black Jr.'s 1974 book Impeachment: A Handbook.
Widely praised at the time of its original release during the Watergate
scandal, the book was written "for the citizen," in Black's
words, as an unbiased guide to the impeachment process.
For his part, the President
canceled plans to attend his 25th Law School Reunion on October
17. But the White House said the change in plans was due to the
Palestinian-Israeli summit in Maryland -- not annoyance with his alma
mater.

First
Black Graduate Gets His Due
The rise of Edward Alexander
Bouchet, Class of 1874, the first African American to graduate from
Yale College, is one of Yale's favorite inspirational stories. Bouchet,
whose father had come to New Haven in the 1840s as the personal
slave of a Yale student, went on to receive his doctorate in physics
in 1876, making him the first African American anywhere to earn
a PhD degree.
But less well known
are the frustrations of his life after Yale: Unable to find a job
at a university despite his outstanding credentials, Bouchet spent
his career as a high school teacher and administrator in the Midwest;
when he retired to New Haven and died at the age of 66, he was buried
without a tombstone at Evergreen Cemetary.
Thanks to the efforts
of Curtis Patton, a professor of epidemiology and public health
at the School of Medicine, Bouchet's grave is now marked with a
granite monument. The stone, which was paid for with contributions
from a number of organizations, including the University, was unveiled
at an October 17 ceremony.
Professor Patton, who
says he first heard of Bouchet as a freshman at Fisk University,
has encouraged the University to honor his memory since coming to
Yale in 1970. It was at his urging that President
Kingman Brewster commissioned the late Rudolph Zallinger's portrait
of Bouchet, which now hangs in the transept of Sterling
Memorial Library. "Everyone needs a personal hero,"
says Patton, "and for me it's Bouchet."

Getting
Into Print: A Soph's Story
On his East Coast college
tour in 1996, Ohio high school senior Josh Berezin didn't think
much of Harvard, and assumed he wouldn't think much of Yale. But
something clicked when he got to New Haven. "I felt like I
had fallen in love," remembers
Berezin, now a Yale sophomore. Calzones at Tony and Lucille's clinched
the deal. Now, the only question was
how to get in.
Berezin's answer to
that question, devised with the help of a family friend in the publishing
business, was to keep a diary of his road to college for possible
publication -- then write about the experience in his application
essay. Last fall, Berezin became a freshman at Yale. This fall,
his diary was published by Hyperion as Getting
Into Yale: How One Student Wrote This Book and Got into the School
of His Dreams.
Although the title suggests
a how-to guide, Getting Into Yale is not full of tips for
extracting good recommendations or aceing interviews. It is instead
a diary of events and emotions that describes Berezin's quest to
get into Yale, as well as the frustrations and joys of football,
girls, and grades. The journal culminates in the joyous entry of
December 16, published with the original wordprocessor typos intact:
"I got ion IO g ot uin!"
Now happily ensconced
in Davenport College, Berezin says his hard work was worth it, and
that getting into Yale has softened the intense drive he displays
in his book. "If anything, I'm more relaxed," he says.
"I've found more of a balance here."
Meanwhile, MTV has bought
the rights to the book as the basis for a television movie. While
details of the production have not been made public, the Yale
Daily News Magazine -- citing anonymous Hollywood sources --
reported in October that the story has undergone a few changes.
The protagonist's name has become Flynn Kelley, and the title has
been changed to -- are you sitting down? -- Getting Into Harvard.

Hormones
Boost Female Libido
Menopause brings a number
of dramatic changes in a woman's life, and for many, one of the
most troubling is a loss of sexual desire. But according to Yale
researchers, a new therapy that combines both female and male hormones
appears to provide a way around this problem, while at the same
time offering the benefits of conventional hormone replacement therapy -- reduction
in the risk of both heart disease and osteoporosis.
In the October issue
of the Journal of Reproductive Medicine, coinvestigators
Philip Sarrel, professor of psychiatry and of obstetrics and gynecology,
and Barbara Dobay, a nurse midwife at Yale University Health Services,
report on a study involving 20 post-menopausal women. Half the group
received estrogen alone; the other half was given a combination
of estrogen and testosterone, the male hormone that women normally
manufacture, but only in minuscule amounts, before menopause. (Production
of both substances declines sharply during and afterwards.)
Following a study period
of eight weeks, the researchers, using interviews and questionnaires,
assessed sexual functioning and desire and discovered that both
had markedly increased only among those women taking the combination
pill, which is called Estratest and is manufactured by Solvay Pharmaceuticals.
"This is a way of maintaining an active sex life in the later
years," says Dobay.

St.
Thomas More Celebrates its 60th
In 1938, when the Reverend
T. Lawrason Riggs '10 founded Saint Thomas More, the Catholic Chapel
and Center at Yale, Catholics made up around 13 percent of the College.
Today, the number is between 20 and 25 percent, and Saint Thomas
More's community has grown, expanding to include graduate and professional
students, faculty and staff, and their families.
So when the Center celebrated
its 60th anniversary with services and a symposium October 2-4,
part of the agenda was to find room for all that growth. The Center
used the occasion to kick off a five-year, $10-million capital campaign,
including a $5-million building fund for a new student center and
$5 million to strengthen its endowment for program expenses. The
Reverend Robert L. Beloin, Saint Thomas More's chaplain, says the
capital campaign is directed at Catholic Yale alumni, and that President
Levin has agreed to count gifts made to the building fund toward
class and reunion gift totals.
According to Beloin,
the new student center is critical to meeting the physical needs
of Saint Thomas More's program. "Instead of emphasizing the
Sunday assembly, we offer small groups that discuss the week's readings
during the week," he says. "These groups need places to
meet; they're meeting in my residence every night now."
The celebration featured
a symposium titled "The Legacy of Thomas More: Catholic Faith
and Intellectual Life at the Threshold of the 21st Century."
Speakers ranged from former Law School dean Guido Calabresi, Yale
professors Paul Kennedy, Bruce Russett, and Louis Dupre to
National Review editor William
F. Buckley Jr. '50.

Tennis
Tourney Defects to Austria
Seven years after the
State of Connecticut built an $18-million tennis stadium near the
Yale Bowl to house what became the Pilot Pen International tennis
tournament, an Austrian tennis promoter has bought the tournament
and will move it to Kitzbuhel, Austria, next year.
The tournament has not
been financially successful in the years since it came to New Haven
as the Volvo International. The Austrian group purchased it to upgrade
an existing tournament to the level of a championship series event.
Mayor John DeStefano
Jr. said that while the loss was regrettable, there is reason to
celebrate: the Pilot Pen women's tournament that was inaugurated
immediately after this summer's men's tournament in August. "The
women have been a lot more popular in their appearances here in
New Haven," said DeStefano.

Students
Catch Swing Fever
Wander into a residential
college dining hall on a Saturday
night these days, and you just might see a large crowd of undergraduates
doing the Lindy, the Charleston, or the jitterbug. Along with collegians
and twenty-somethings across the country, Yalies, it seems, are
rediscovering swing.
A swing dancing club
formed by a group of undergrads has a mailing list of 400 people,
and the Payne Whitney Gymnasium
is now offering two sections of swing dance classes taught by drama
student Boudicca Todi. Even the venerable rock club Toad's
Place -- in a development that must be music to the ears of
its neighbors at Mory's -- has
been having monthly swing nights this fall.
A number of recent movies
and a widely admired television commercial for the Gap have helped
promote the swing revival, which includes a set of new swing bands
with names like Squirrel Nut Zippers and Indigo Swing.
"I went to Roseland
in New York to hear Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, and the place was full
of people in zoot suits and fedoras or twirly skirts," says
Catherine Price '01, who is one of the founders of the Yale Swing
Club. "Of course, they also had pierced tongues and tattoos."

Shootout
Bucks Crime Trends
Students, merchants,
and others near the corner of York and Chapel Streets got a scare
on the afternoon of Friday, October 23, when gunfire was exchanged
between two youths in groups on opposite sides of the intersection.
While witnesses said that around ten shots were fired before the
suspects fled the scene, no one was injured in the 15-second incident.
New Haven police arrested
a 16-year-old New Haven high school student who they say admitted
to being one of the shooters. He says he acted in self-defense when
his group was fired on. Assistant chief Douglas MacDonald said the
dispute that led to the gunplay is believed to be "between
a couple of individuals with no gang affiliation."
While crime in New Haven
has dropped 30 percent since 1990, and crime on campus has followed
a similar trend, the incident was the second shooting this year
to shake the Yale community. In April, Medical School professor
Eiji Yanagisawa was shot in the collarbone outside his York Street
office in a late-night robbery.

"Down
the Field" In the Big Leagues
A Yale football team
going up against Michigan or Notre Dame would not be a pretty sight.
But a new book suggests that Eli fans are still in the big leagues
at halftime. In College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology,
authors William Studwell and Bruce Schueneman rank the Bulldogs'
"Down the Field" number four, behind the "Notre Dame
Victory March," Michigan's "The Victors," and "On
Wisconsin."
Studwell, a professor
of library science at Northern Illinois University, says he and
Schueneman looked for good, rousing songs that were suitably distinctive.
And while they decided to impose a one-song-per-school rule in making
the list, Studwell has a soft spot for Yale songs. "If I had
to rate one university for the best fight songs," he says,
"it would be Yale," praising "Boola
Boola," "Bulldog," and "Bingo Eli Yale."
In fact, "Boola Boola" actually did make it to the number
16 slot, but in the guise of the University of Oklahoma's adaptation
"Boomer Sooner."
Saybrook
Master Faces Charges
A geology and geophysics
professor who also served as master
of Saybrook College has been charged with receiving and storing
pornographic images of children on computers in his office. Antonio
Lasaga turned himself in to federal authorities on November 19,
two weeks after he resigned as master and took a leave of absence
from his teaching duties.
FBI agents searched
the Saybrook master's house and Lasaga's office on November 6. The
agents reportedly seized two computers and numerous photographs
in the search.
Lasaga was released
on $50,000 bond. Each of the felony charges against him -- knowingly
receiving child pornography and knowingly possessing three or more
images of child pornography -- is punishable by a fine, a prison sentence
of up to five years, or both.
Lasaga had been master
of Saybook since 1996. Harry Adams, a former Yale chaplain and former
master of Trumbull College, has stepped in as master of Saybrook.
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