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Light & Verity
February
1999
Mystery
Lingers Over Slaying of Student
As fall classes ended
in early December, the Yale community was shocked to learn of the
murder of Davenport College senior Suzanne Jovin in New Haven's
East Rock neighborhood. Jovin died on the night of December 4, shortly
after having been discovered suffering from stab wounds near the
corner of Edgehill and East Rock roads, an area of expensive homes
favored by Yale faculty and administrators.
Jovin had last been
seen on campus, nearly two miles away, less than an hour before
she was found. She had spent the evening at a pizza party for a
group called Best
Buddies, which enlists students to work with retarded adults.
The killing shook a
University and a city that have experienced a dramatic drop in crime
since 1991, when the shooting death of Christian Prince, a Yale
sophomore, heightened the perception that New Haven was unsafe.
But unlike the Prince murder, this incident does not appear to have
been a random street crime. Police have revealed little about the
investigation, but they have said they believe Jovin knew her killer.
In early January, the
University canceled two spring courses that were to be given by
Jovin's senior essay adviser, James Van de Velde, when New Haven
Police revealed that he was among the suspects in the case. Van
de Velde, a lecturer in the political science department, said he
saw Jovin the afternoon of her death, when she dropped off a draft
of her essay, but that he had nothing to do with the crime. Acting
director of public affairs Tom Conroy said that the classes were
canceled because Van de Velde's presence in the classroom while
being investigated would be "a major distraction" for
students and "impair their educational experience." "We
want to underscore that we are presuming him to be innocent,"
said University secretary and vice president Linda
Koch Lorimer.
Jovin, 21, was born
to American parents in Goettingen, Germany, where she was raised.
A political science major, she had planned to study international
diplomacy in graduate school. She was active in a number of student
organizations, but devoted much of her time to Best Buddies, serving
as director of the Yale chapter.
Students, teachers,
and administrators stunned by the crime gathered with Jovin's family
and friends for a candlelight vigil on Cross Campus on December
9. The observance was followed the next day by a memorial service
in Battell Chapel.
Rival
Presidents Share An Oxford Embrace
Harvard president Neil
Rudenstine and Yale President Richard Levin may have been wearing
different colors on opposite sides of Harvard Stadium on November
22, but two days later they were sporting identical robes as recipients
of honors from Oxford University. In a special joint ceremony, Oxford
awarded honorary Doctor of Civil Law degrees to Levin and Rudenstine.
The Oxford campus is
familiar to both presidents: Levin earned a B. Litt. degree in philosophy
and politics from the university in 1971, and Rudenstine studied
literature there as a Rhodes Scholar from 1957 to 1959. The new
degrees were awarded to recognize each man's contribution to education
and to celebrate the historic ties between Oxford and American universities.
"As Oxford has
always enjoyed a friendly rivalry with Cambridge, so has Harvard
with Yale," said Oxford Public Orator Jasper Griffin at the
ceremony. "Today, however, there is no trace of that, but only
perfect harmony."
Police
Union Accepts Contract
New Haven's mayor, John
DeStefano Jr., might want to consider a career in Middle East diplomacy
if he ever decides to leave City Hall. In November, the mayor brokered
his second settlement between Yale and its labor unions. In 1996
it was locals 34 and 35; this fall, DeStefano mediated negotiations
with the Yale Police Benevolent
Association, which had been at odds with the University since its
contract expired. The settlement, which awards six-year contracts
retroactive to July 1, 1996, to 55 members, was reached on November
25 and ratified by the union's members a week later.
A number of disagreements
had stood in the way of a contract over the past two years; the
most recent was over long-term disability benefits. The union wanted
enhanced disability benefits for injuries suffered on or off duty,
while the University wanted to award such benefits in cases where
an officer was injured "in the line of duty." The final
compromise excludes off-duty injuries but includes those suffered
while on duty, whether in the line of duty or not.
"The agreement
is an excellent one for Yale and its officers," said President
Levin. YPBA president Carlos Perez said the union was "pleased
with the outcome of the negotiations."
Still
Paying After All These Years
In 1972, when inflation
was driving up the cost of college tuition and federal loans weren't
available, President Kingman Brewster announced a "frankly
experimental" deferred-tuition plan to help students pay for
their Yale education. But now, some of the 3,602 students who signed
up for the Tuition Postponement Option (TPO) find themselves still
saddled with debts far bigger than the amount they borrowed a quarter
century ago, and an alumni group that calls itself TPO Blues believes
it's time the experiment was declared a failure.
Offered between 1972
and 1978,TPO was a loan program that required students, after graduation,
to pay four-tenths of one percent of their income until their loan
was retired. A special feature of the plan was that borrowers were
grouped by class into "repayment groups"; when the group's
obligation was met, all the individual loans would be retired. At
the time, the University predicted that this would happen in 20
to 25 years, which would mean most of the borrowers would be released
from their obligations about now.
But it hasn't turned
out that way. A letter from TPO Blues to President Levin tells of
students who borrowed as little as $2,000 in 1974 but are still
$27,000 away from paying off their loans, evidently because payments
have not been covering the annual interest. The borrowers face another
ten years of payments before the program shuts down because of a
35-year default clause.
Founded last summer
by Sabin Russell '74 and Juan Leon '74, TPO Blues sent the letter
to Levin-accompanied by 60 signatures-in November. They asked for
a committee to look into "a solution that would allow us to
retire these obligations fairly."
Arthur Gallagher, who
administers the program in the financial aid office, says a committee
has been formed to recommend a course of action. "We hope to
have something concluded within the next few months," says
Gallagher.
England
Beckons For Five Elis
Five Yale College graduates
will travel to England next year as recipients of the prestigious
Rhodes and Marshall Scholarships. Senior Siobhan K. Peiffer and
1998 graduate Cary A. Franklin are among the 32 winners of the Rhodes
Scholarship, which supports up to three years of study at Oxford
University. (Yale law student Jeffrey Manns, who received his undergraduate
degree from the University of Virginia, was also awarded a Rhodes.)
The three seniors to win Marshall Scholarships, which also support
study in the United Kingdom, are Andrew B. Cohen, Jillian M. Cutler,
and Anisha S. Dasgupta.
A
Center for Art by the Byte
The symbolism was lost
on no one last fall when the University's printing and graphic services
department moved its equipment out of 149 York Street and was replaced
by the Digital Media Center for the Arts, a new facility that will
coordinate the exploration of new technologies for the presentation
and creation of art. The schools of Art, Drama, Architecture, and
Music will use the Center to experiment with the creation of video
and other images on digital equipment, while the Art Gallery and
the Center for British Art will use its equipment as part of their
ongoing project to digitize their slide collections.
Director Carol Scully,
who teaches a course called "Digital Video Synthesis,"
says she hopes to encourage collaboration among the art schools.
"There is a growing realization that the traditional art forms-architecture,
graphic design, music, painting, photography, sculpture, and drama-will
be complemented by the common language of the computer," says
Scully.
The center includes
a large computer classroom, a smaller computer studio, a video studio,
and four audio-visual editing suites. "We want the Center to
be a place for the exchange of the latest ideas," says Scully.
"This is the place where the R&D will go on."
New
Findings on Inca Metallurgy
Two Yale investigators
have shown that metallurgy began in the New World more than 1,000
years earlier than previously thought.
In a paper published
November 6 in the journal Science, anthropologist Richard
L. Burger, director of the Peabody Museum of Natural History, and
Robert B. Gordon, professor of geology and geophysics, describe
their analysis of thin pieces of copper and gold foil that were
excavated from a site in Peru called Mina Perdida.
The central Andes, says
Burger, have been called the "hearth of metalworking"
in the New World, and there is abundant evidence that some 2,500
years ago Inca metalsmiths were producing delicate foils to adorn
both religious objects and the costumes of the society's elite.
But at that point the technology was already fairly mature, and
researchers have been at a loss to explain its origins.
Burger and Gordon, a
specialist in archaeometallurgy who examined the 3,500-year-old
Mina Perdida foils with a scanning electron microscope, discovered
that the material showed signs of both heating and hammering, techniques
which are important precursors of smelting and making alloys. "What
the foils were used for remains a mystery," says Burger. "But
it's now clear that technological development in the New World was
occurring at a much earlier date than was previously recognized,
and it followed a long period of experimentation similar to that
found in the Old World."
City
Earns Double Plaudits
New Haven has tried
its share of nicknames, from "the Elm City" to "the
Paris of the '80s." Now the city can add "High-Tech Hub"
and "All-America City" to the list.
A recent report by an
economic consulting firm ranks the New Haven area second in the
nation-behind San Jose, California-in its percentage of workers
(21.6 percent) who are employed in high-tech jobs. The combination
of telecommunications companies, pharmaceutical companies, and Yale-related
biotechnology firms helped the area earn its ranking. Patrick Howie,
who directed the study, says New Haven's high-tech diversity is
notable. "Typically, when people think of high-tech, they think
of computers and semiconductors," says Howie.
The second title was
bestowed by vice president Al Gore on December 15 at a White House
ceremony. New Haven was one of ten cities honored as "All America
Cities" in an annual program run by the National Civic League . . .
The city's application emphasized efforts to clean up blighted neighborhoods,
the successful effort to bring a supermarket downtown, and a volunteer
program that teams Yale students with local youth.
After
a Year Off, The BAC is Back
One year after it closed
for $5 million worth of renovation work, the Center
for British Art reopened last month with a trio of shows designed
to bring back anyone who had come to regard the Center as out of
sight, out of mind. Concurrent exhibitions by three marquee-name
British artists-Henry Moore, Lucian Freud, and Francis Bacon-will
showcase the BAC's newly remodeled galleries through March 21.
BAC Director Patrick
McCaughey says the museum had two goals in mind when it reorganized
the gallery spaces. "First of all, we wanted to display more
works than ever before, and in a more thematic and surprising manner,"
says McCaughey. Second, we wanted to liberate Louis Kahn's wonderful
building and show it in a new light."
Funded by Paul Mellon
'29 and designed by the late architect Louis Kahn, the building
has enjoyed wide acclaim since it was completed in 1977. Among other
things, it is noted for the 56 finely tuned skylights that form
the building's roof, allowing a controlled amount of daylight into
the enclosed atria and top-floor galleries. But after 20 New England
winters, the skylights had begun to leak, requiring a major renovation
project. While the building was closed, wall coverings and carpets
in the galleries and administrative offices were also replaced.

Saybrook
Master Charged Again
Former Saybrook College
master Antonio Lasaga, who in mid-November was charged with possession
of child pornography ("Light
& Verity," Dec. ), now faces charges that he molested
a 13-year-old boy. Appearing in New Haven Superior Court on January
5, Lasaga pleaded not guilty to two counts each of first-degree
sexual assault, risk of injury to a minor, and promoting a minor
in an obscene performance.
Prosecutors say that
FBI agents found video tapes of two alleged encounters when they
searched Lasaga's office and the Saybrook master's house on November
6. Materials found in that search are also the basis for the separate
federal child pornography charges. The investigation of Lasaga,
a professor of geology and geophysics, began when a graduate student
in his department observed that someone using Lasaga's computer
password was downloading child pornography from the Internet.
Lasaga resigned as master
and took a leave of absence from his teaching duties just before
news of the investigation was made public. He was arrested two weeks
later on the federal charges, then released on bail on the condition
that he have no contact with minor children. On December 9, he was
arrested again and placed under home confinement when federal officials
charged that he had repeatedly driven past the home of a boy later
identified as the alleged victim in the assault charges. 
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