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Light
and Verity
April
1999
Baltimore
Mayor to Lead Corporation
Baltimore Mayor Kurt
Schmoke '71 has been named senior fellow of the Yale Corporation,
the University's governing body. Schmoke, who has been a fellow
of the Corporation since 1989, will succeed Richard J. Franke '53.
Besides being the first
African-American to serve as senior fellow, Schmoke is also the
first member of the Baby Boom generation named to the post. He was
a prominent campus activist during his time at Yale, when he cofounded
the Calvin Hill Day Care Center. Schmoke is serving his third term -- which
he says will be his last -- as mayor.
The Corporation also
announced the appointment of two new successor trustees in February:
Holcombe T. Green Jr. '61 and Barrington D. Parker '65, '69LLB.
Green, a resident of Atlanta, is chairman and CEO of West Point
Stevens, Inc., and the principal of Green Capital Investors L.P.
He has been an active fundraiser for Yale, and he himself gave the
money to make possible the renovation of 1156 Chapel Street, which
will be the new home of the School
of Art. Parker is a U.S. District Judge for the Southern District
of New York. He has been active in both College and Law School alumni
affairs.
Applications
Rise To Record High
This month, 13,167 would-be
Yale students will hear from the admissions office on the fate of
their applications -- the most ever to the College. The number of
applications, which was up by 10 percent over last year, breaks
the previous record set in 1987.
While the University
endured a pair of crises last fall -- the slaying
of an undergraduate and the arrest
of a professor on child molestation and pornography charges -- the
adverse publicity does not seem to have affected applications. Dean
of Admissions Richard Shaw says the increase is a sign of Yale's
increased competitiveness. "The word is out," he says.
"Yale College is a very popular option." But the numbers
may have been boosted by the tendency of high school students to
apply to more colleges than in years past; Yale's peer institutions
have also reported dramatic increases.
Those who find the thick
acceptance envelopes in their mailboxes this month will have the
chance to join 529 students who were chosen from the early decision
pool in December.
New
Boathouse Set for Launch
After one false start,
the Yale crews appear to be on their way to getting a new home on
the Housatonic River. Pending approvals, the University will begin
construction this summer on the Gilder
Boathouse, which will rise on the site of the existing Bob Cook
Boathouse in Derby.
The old boathouse, completed
in 1924, has long been considered too small, especially since women's
crew was added in the 1970s. A design by Architectural Resources
Cambridge, Inc., for a new, larger boathouse was proposed in 1996,
but it was dependent on acquiring additional property north of the
site. When that failed to happen, the design was scrapped.
Last year, School of
Architecture professor Turner Brooks won a competition to design
a boathouse using the existing property, a narrow sliver of land
between the river and Route 34. Brooks's design calls for a concrete
base with five large boat-storage bays (two more than the existing
building) topped by a wood building with locker rooms, offices,
and a "viewing room" at the finish line of the race course.
"It's a lightweight wood structure," says Brooks of the
upper portion, "somewhat akin to modern boat construction."
A central feature of
the design is a ceremonial staircase that leads from the building's
entrance down to the water to provide a meeting place and viewing
area on race days. Another welcome change is a waterside ramp for
unloading shells from trailers so that the boats will no longer
have to be carried across the right-of-way.
The new boathouse is
named in honor of the Gilder family, whose foundation made a major
contribution to the building. Olympic rower Virginia Gilder '79,
the daughter of Richard Gilder '54, also helped organize the fundraising
effort.
Peabody
Examines Feathered Finds
A group of 120-million-year
old, feather-bearing fossils discovered in China in 1996 took center
stage at an international symposium on the origin and evolution
of birds that brought more than 400 paleontologists and ornithologists
to New Haven on February 13 and 14. The gathering was coordinated
by the Peabody Museum of Natural History to honor John Ostrom, the
Yale paleontologist who revived the theory, first proposed in the
19th century by Thomas Henry Huxley, that birds are descended from
dinosaurs.
"These fossils
are very important because they show that almost all the features
we think of as uniquely avian originated in dinosaurs long before
true birds appeared on the planet," says symposium host Jacques
Gauthier, a professor of geology and geophysics and curator of vertebrate
paleontology at the Peabody, which will exhibit some of the China
material through early May.
Gauthier, an expert
on the evolution of reptiles, notes that one of the fossils is simply
a small dinosaur that is clearly covered with down. "Feathers
apparently first evolved to hold in body heat," he says. "These
animals certainly couldn't fly."
Researchers at the symposium
explained that over time larger feathers developed, particularly
on the tail and forelimbs of the Chinese creatures. The adornment
served an important, albeit secondary, purpose. The reptiles remained
flightless, says Gauthier, "but the feathers gave them added
maneuverability."
Eventually, these feathered
dinosaurs would be able to take to the air -- as birds. "The take-home
message is that members of the Audubon Society and the Dinosaur
Society are really in the same club," says Gauthier.
Yale
Sued Over Historic House
A Connecticut Superior
Court judge heard arguments in January in a lawsuit to prevent the
demolition of 85 Trumbull Street, a vacant Yale-owned house also
known as Maple Cottage.
A group called Friends of Hilhouse Avenue filed the suit against
the University, claiming that the house should be spared because
it is an early exemplar of the noted "ornamented cottages"
designed in the mid-19th-century by the architect Alexander Jackson
Davis.
Yale officials argue
that the house's historic value has been lost because of significant
alterations since it was built in 1836. That position is shared
by the New Haven Preservation Trust, which made an agreement with
the University last year whereby Yale would restore four of the
historic homes it owns if the Trust would not oppose the demolition
of Maple Cottage and the relocation of another nearby house.
"It's lost virtually
everything Davis put into it," Trust official Robert Grzywacz
says of the house. "If you restored it, you would just have
a replica of a Davis house. That's not the best use of limited preservation
dollars." But Jack Gold, vice president of the Friends group,
disagrees, arguing that since the building's original cladding and
some original detail remain beneath a stucco facade that was added
later, the house "retains a significant degree of architectural
integrity."
A bit of drama was added
to the story in November when a visiting scholar working at Sterling
Memorial Library discovered that the building had once been the
home of Lillie Delveraux Blake, an early feminist and one of several
women who founded Barnard College. But the revelation was not enough
to sway the Connecticut Historic Commission, which approved the
demolition on November 4.
A decision in the lawsuit
is expected this month.
Students
Simulate Mideast Peace
A group of 70 delegates
representing five Middle Eastern nations and the Palestinian Authority
hammered out a peace agreement at Yale in mid-February. But the
"Yale Accords Peace Conference" was the product not of
real diplomats but of college students from around the country gathered
for a simulation.
The conference was the
brainchild of a group of undergraduates who formed their own organization,
the Yale Accords, to plan and implement the affair. As in Model
United Nations simulations, delegates were assigned at random to
represent the views of each nation. "We wanted to force people
to see the issues from viewpoints different from their own,"
says simulation director Justin Florence '00. "So for example
we had a couple of Orthodox Jews on the team representing the Palestinian
Authority."
But if the delegates
were role-playing, the guest speakers were real: The conference
was addressed by former Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban, U.S.
assistant secretary of state Matrin Indyk, and Jordanian ambassador
to the United Nations Hasan Abu Nimah. And when the delegates had
completed their task, University of Chicago professor Rashid Khalidi
gave the accords a realist's evaluation. "He was very impressed
with some of the resolutions and thought they were likely to happen,"says
Florence. "But there were others where he said 'Neither side
would agree to this.'"
The conference was dedicated
to the memory of Jordan's King Hussein, who had died the week before.
Florence says the group will hold another conference next year.
"We don't know of anything else like this that's happening
anywhere," says Florence.
Teachers
Program Goes National
For more than 20 years,
the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute has given New Haven public
school teachers an opportunity to sharpen their skills and develop
teaching materials for their classrooms. (See "Teacher
Power," May 1998.) Now, the Institute is providing the
same opportunity to teachers in four other American cities. YNHTI
recently awarded $1.3 million in grants to launch versions of the
institute in Houston, Pittsburgh, Albuquerque, and Santa Ana, California.
The new institutes,
like Yale's, will offer seminars taught by college faculty on subjects
that will assist teachers in developing curricula. Faculty members
from Chatham College and Carnegie-Mellon University will teach in
the Pittsburgh program, Houston's will draw instructors from the
University of Houston, Albuquerque's from the University of New
Mexico, and Santa Ana's from the University of California at Irvine.
YNHTI chose the four
sites from among 14 university-school partnerships that were considered.
The funding for the national program was provided by the DeWitt
Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund.
Before
Yale Turns 300, Eli Turns 350
While planning for Yale's
Tercentennial
celebration in 2001 is in full swing, the Secretary's Office is
making sure another milestone doesn't get lost in the shuffle. The
University is planning a birthday party for its namesake, Elihu
Yale, who was born 350 years ago this month.
On April 5 at 12:30
p.m., cake and punch will be served on Beinecke Plaza to mark the
anniversary of Yale's birth. An exhibit on Yale's life, running
through June, will open on the same day.
As most alumni of campus
tours know, Elihu Yale was an American-born Englishman who made
a fortune with the East India Company. In 1718, he gave the struggling
Collegiate School a gift of books and goods worth about 800 pounds,
prompting its trustees to rename the institution Yale College. Yale
died in 1721.
A
Puritan's Positive Side
Of all the much-maligned
"dead white males" for whom Yale has named its residential
colleges, the Puritan preacher Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) might
be the last one modern students would want to spend an evening with.
But some 300 people flocked to the University Theater on January
22 for the world premiere of The Flaming Spider, a play about
Edwards's life by New York playwright Austin Flint.
The production, sponsored
by Jonathan Edwards College, came about when JE master Gary Haller
heard that Flint, who is now an associate fellow of the college,
was writing the play. "I was enthusiastic because it produced
a picture of Edwards as a human being," says Haller, "as
opposed to the way people perceive him when they read 'Sinners in
the Hands of an Angry God,'" the famous sermon in which Edwards
spoke of a God who "holds you over the pit of hell much as
one holds a spider or some loathsome insect over a fire."
But the Edwards that
Flint discovered in his research was more complex. "Edwards
was a sensual man who loved music, who fought to preserve hymn singing
in church, who exhorted his parish to experience nature's beauties,"
the playwright says.
The play, directed by
James Andreassi of the Elm Shakespeare Company, traces Edwards's
sensational career: He started a remarkable religious revival from
his pulpit in Northampton, Massachusetts, that spread across New
England, but soon found himself rejected by his followers and died
of smallpox as he embarked on a new career as president of Princeton.
"It was the curve of his life, its rise and fall, that got
me interested in Jonathan Edwards as a good subject for a play,"
says Flint. "In a way, Edwards was a tragic hero."
Big
Bucks For 'Best' Eggs
Readers of the Yale
Daily News have become accustomed to classified ads that offer
four-figure sums to Yale women willing to act as egg donors for
infertile couples. But an unnamed couple upped the ante in late
February by placing a half-page ad in the newspaper offering $50,000
for a half-dozen or so eggs.
Not just any Yalie will
qualify, though. The ad, placed on behalf of the couple by a San
Diego attorney, asks for a donor who is "athletic, at least
5'10"," and who has a combined SAT score of 1400 or higher
and no "major family medical issues."
The ad also ran in newspapers
at six other top colleges. The couple's attorney said last month
that she had already been contacted by some 200 interested women.
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