Light
and Verity
March
1999
Paul
Mellon: An Unparalled Legacy
In his lifetime, Paul
Mellon '29 was one of Yale's most remarkable benefactors, standing,
in President Levin's words, "alongside Harkness and Sterling
in terms of generosity to the school." Mellon, who died on
February 1 at his home in Virginia at the age of 91, was no less
generous in death. His will includes the largest single donation
to Yale by any individual: $90 million, along with 155 works of
art of unspecified value.
Mellon left $75 million
and 144 art works to the Center for British Art (with the condition
that the Center never charge admission), $5 million and 11 European
paintings to the Art Gallery, $5 million to endow an exchange program
with Clare College at Cambridge University (which Mellon attended
after Yale), and $5 million toward the renovation of the Art
& Architecture Building.
Mellon is best known
at Yale for founding the Center for British Art and filling it with
his own outstanding collection of British art, the largest outside
Britain. (Characteristically, he asked that the Center not bear
his name.) But Mellon's judicious giving made a staggering impact
on nearly every facet of Yale life. He paid for the construction
of Ezra Stiles and Morse Colleges and endowed the 12
residential college deanships, the DeVane Lectures, the theater
studies and humanities majors, the Directed Studies program, and
more than a dozen professorships.
Born to great wealth,
Mellon turned away from a career in his father's bank, choosing
instead a life of art collecting, horse breeding, and above all,
philanthropy. Besides his support for Yale, Mellon was known for
his patronage of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.,
which was built in 1937 with money and paintings from his father,
Andrew Mellon. In 1978, he funded the construction of the Gallery's
East Building. In his will, Mellon left $75 million and more than
100 paintings to the Gallery.
Mellon is remembered
fondly by those at Yale who knew him. "Paul Mellon was wise,
generous, and strikingly modest, a man of exquisite taste and deeply
humane values," said Levin.
An appreciation of Mellon
will appear in an upcoming issue.
Under
Pressure, the Co-op Links Up
Facing competition from
the bookselling giant Barnes &
Noble, the Yale Co-op is fighting fire with fire. In December,
the Co-op's board of directors signed a ten-year management contract
with Wallace's Bookstores, Inc., a Kentucky-based chain that operates
78 college bookstores across the country.
The 114-year-old Co-op
will retain its name and current membership structure, but Wallace's
is expected to make major changes to the store's physical layout
and marketing strategy. "Wallace's has interesting retail ideas,"
says Co-op board president Bill March '71. "They're a high-energy
company, and they're very competitive, which is extremely important
to us in our situation."
Wallace's spokesman
Doug Alexander says the company has developed a new design and marketing
concept that allows its stores to adjust their merchandising strategies
more quickly to meet seasonal customer needs. The Co-op will be
the first store to employ the concept. "We're going to redesign
the entire interior of the store," says Alexander. "By
mid-August, we expect to have all the major changes done."
The Co-op is owned by
its members, to whom it offers discounts and other benefits. The
store enjoyed quasi-official status at Yale until 1997, when the
University decided not to renew the lease on its Broadway store,
opting instead to lease to Barnes & Noble College Bookstores,
which now operates at that location as the Yale Bookstore. The Co-op
moved to the New Haven Green, where it anchors the Chapel Square
Mall, in the summer of 1997.
Despite the loyalty
some professors feel toward the nonprofit cooperative, the Co-op
has been losing the battle for course book orders to the Bookstore.
This term, the Bookstore offered texts for 200 undergraduate courses,
compared to 40 at the Co-op. But March says the trend is reversible.
"With Wallace's on board, the textbook situation will improve
dramatically," he says.
Clinic
Examines "Cinderella" Kids
When Americans go abroad
to adopt children from Asia, Eastern Europe, or Latin America, it's
a "wonderful Cinderella story" for the children, as Dr.
Margaret Hostetter puts it. But when they bring the children home,
the new parents may find themselves facing any number of diseases
or development problems unfamiliar to doctors here. That's why Hostetter,
a pediatrician who directs the Yale Child Health Research Center,
opened the Yale International Adoption Clinic shortly after coming
to the University last year.
Hostetter began her
work with newly adopted international children at the University
of Minnesota, where she started a similar clinic. Hostetter and
her team test the children for a number of infectious diseases that
are common in the their country of origin, and evaluate their growth
and development.
The clinic also examines
video tapes of children available for adoption that are sent to
potential parents by agencies or orphanages, looking for clues about
their physical and developmental well-being. "If we can see
a child on tape for longer than two minutes," says Hostetter,
"we can observe things about gross and fine motor skills, socialization,
and language."
Hostetter says that
new problems have emerged as international adoption has expanded.
Until 1990, 70 percent of such adoptions were from Korea, which
has a system of well-run foster homes. But more recently, adoptions
from understaffed Eastern European and Russian orphanages have increased.
Many of these children suffer from a lack of close contact with
caregivers. "A child will lose one month of linear growth and
development for every three months in one of these orphanages,"
says Hostetter. "If they're adopted before the age of 2, that
loss can be reversed."
Probing
GM's Links to the Nazis
As Ford and General
Motors face new allegations that they profited from collaboration
with Nazi Germany and the use of slave labor, GM has hired Yale
professor Henry Turner to investigate its wartime activities. Turner,
the Charles J. Stille Professor of History, will take a one-year
sabbatical to pursue the research project, which involves locating,
copying, and cataloguing relevant records of GM's Opel subsidiary
in at least 14 cities in the U.S. and Europe.
General Motors first
opened a factory in Germany in 1935 to make trucks that were later
used by the German army. The company has insisted that it had no
control over its German subsidiary after the war began, but a new
history of GM by Bradford Snell '67 cites corporate documents in
making the case that the company was "an integral part of the
German war effort."
"After 1941 it
gets very complicated," says Turner. "What I want to know
is: When did GM's influence [over Opel] cease entirely?"
Turner says he will
have unrestricted access to GM's files, and will place copies of
the relevant materials he uncovers in the Yale archives. "The
management wants to know what the facts are," says Turner.
Turner, who has taught
at Yale since 1958, is considered an authority on Nazi Germany.
He is the author of German Big Business and the Rise of Hitler
and Hitler's Thirty Days to Power.
New
Building for Medical Research
Before accepting Yale's
offer to become dean of the School of Medicine in 1997, David Kessler
told the University that it needed new facilities in order to recruit
top researchers. The University agreed: This fall, pending city
approval, it will begin work on a new $160 million research complex
on the medical campus. The 420,000-square-foot building, scheduled
for completion in 2002, will occupy the block bounded by Cedar Street
and Congress, Howard, and Gilbert avenues.
To dramatize the importance
of Yale's biomedical research to
the New Haven economy, Kessler unveiled the design for the new building
at New Haven's Career High School, where local students learn anatomy
and other subjects in partnership with medical students. "This
isn't just about Yale," said Kessler. "It's about all
of us, and most of all, it's about the young people in this room."
The new building was
designed by the architectural team of Payette Associates and Venturi,
Scott Brown & Associates. In addition to laboratory space, it
will include facilities for teaching and for magnetic resonance
imaging.
Lyme
Vaccine Tackles Ticks
In many parts of the
U.S., spring marks the beginning of Lyme disease season. But thanks
to the approval last winter by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
of a Yale-designed vaccine, people across the country now have a
weapon against deer ticks, the pinhead-sized arachnids whose bite
is responsible for transmitting the ailment. Lymerix, developed
in part by Yale researchers Erol Fikrig, Fred S. Kantor, and Richard
Flavell and manufactured by Smith-Kline Beecham Biologicals, is
the first vaccine to protect against infection by a spiral-shaped
bacterium called Borrelia burgdorferi, a spirochete that
can cause a wide variety of symptoms ranging from fatigue to severe
arthritis and heart abnormalities.
Flavell, chairman of
the immunobiology department and a professor of molecular, cellular,
and developmental biology, explains that the vaccine appears to
work in an entirely novel fashion -- in effect, Lymerix vaccinates
the ticks.
Lyme disease is transmitted,
says Flavell, when a tick infected with spirochetes draws blood
from a mammal and then regurgitates some of the now-tainted meal
back into its unwitting host. But people vaccinated with Lymerix
make antibodies to the disease-causing bacteria, so when the tick
feeds, "these antibodies are taken up and kill the spirochetes,"
says Flavell.
Lymerix, which requires
three separate shots and possibly a periodic booster, has proven
nearly 80 percent effective in clinical trials involving almost
11,000 volunteers. Because the vaccine doesn't confer complete immunity
on everyone, though, people in deer tick country will still have
to check for the presence of these creatures.
Levin
at Bat for Baseball Panel
Shortly after leaving
the Presidency of Yale in 1986, the late A. Bartlett Giamatti became
president of the National League, and then commissioner of Major
League Baseball. Now, President Richard Levin is making his own
mark on the nation's pastime. In January, commissioner Bud Selig
appointed Levin to a "Blue Ribbon Task Force on Baseball Economics."
Levin, along with former
Senate majority leader George Mitchell, former Federal Reserve chairman
Paul Volcker, and political commentator George Will, are charged
with examining the player compensation system, which many owners
hope to reform in the wake of the record $105 million contract recently
signed by Kevin Brown of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The National Basketball
Association recently negotiated a salary cap with its players' association.
Expanding
the Slavery Saga
As scholarly interest
in the history of slavery reaches
new heights in the academic community, Yale is developing a center
devoted to the subject. Last fall, the University dedicated the
Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and
Abolition, a locus for conferences, lectures, and research support
on slavery in the New World.
Founding director David
Brion Davis, a Sterling Professor
of History, explains that the Center will promote scholarly attention
to the "big picture" in New World slavery. "There's
been a tendency to think of slavery as blacks picking cotton in
Mississippi," says Davis. "But that's a rather parochial
view. One also needs to look at the Caribbean and the rest of the
Americas."
The Institute's activities
will include an annual interdisciplinary conference; the administration
of the Frederick Douglass Book Prize, a $25,000 annual award for
the most outstanding book on slavery; outreach to New Haven high
schools and historical groups; and the awarding of research grants
to Yale graduate students and fellowships for visiting scholars.
The first conference, in October, will focus on the domestic slave
trade in the U.S., Brazil, and the West Indies.
The Center, whose offices
are located at 80 Sachem Street, is funded by a gift from two Yale
alumni, Richard Gilder '54, '57JD, and Lewis E. Lehrman '60. Gilder
and Lehrman, noted collectors of documents of American history,
own the Gilder Lehrman Collection that is on deposit at the Morgan
Library in New York. They are also the founders of the Gilder Lehrman
Institute of American History in New York, which promotes the teaching
of history in secondary schools through seminars for teachers and
other activities.
Wesleyan
Uproots "Ivy" Slogan
Wesleyan University
raised some hackles recently when it began calling itself "the
Independent Ivy" on recruiting materials sent to prospective
students. The objections didn't come from New Haven or Cambridge,
though, but from the college's own Middletown, Connecticut, campus.
An ad hoc student group
called Poison Ivy rose to protest what Wesleyan senior Scott Cavanaugh
called "a wannabe slogan." The students felt that trying
to associate itself with the Ivies was inappropriate for the small
liberal arts college, which is regularly listed among the best in
the country. Cavanaugh said the word 'ivy' brings with it a reputation
for being "elitist, upper crust, and old-boy network. We don't
want that reputation."
Wesleyan officials said
the slogan was created to emphasize the college's academic excellence
and independent spirit, and that it had tested well in focus groups
of high school seniors. But late in the fall the administration,
apparently swayed by the students, decided to retire the slogan.
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