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Light
and Verity
May
1999
Tuition
Keeps Rising, But the Sticker is Less Shocking
It may be scant consolation
for the downwardly mobile parents in a recent New Yorker cartoon,
but the University announced in March that it is raising its undergraduate
term bill for 1999 by only 2.9 percent. That figure matches last
year's increase, which was the smallest at Yale since 1968 and the
smallest among Ivy League schools since 1979.
Tuition next year will
cost $24,500, and room and board will cost $7,440, for a total term
bill of $31,940. But some 38 percent of Yale undergraduates will
receive financial aid from the University; the average grant is
expected to be about $15,500.
While the term bill
is still growing faster than inflation, which inched along at only
1.61 percent last year, President Richard Levin points out that
the rate of increase has declined or remained steady in every year
of his Presidency, which began in 1993. "When
I became President, Yale was the most expensive school in the
country," Levin says. "We're no longer at the top."
Berkeley
Balcony Raises a Ruckus
However useful it might
prove for future productions of Romeo and Juliet, a newly
built balcony in the Berkeley College dining hall has sparked a
dispute within the University that rivals that of the Montagues
and the Capulets. A number of professors and students have signed
a petition protesting the balcony, which is being added to the east
end of the dining hall as part of the $25-million renovation of
the college, to be completed this summer.
Architect Steven Kieran
'73 of Kieran, Timberlake & Harris of Philadelphia says the
balcony was designed to add a different, separate dining area to
the hall, as well as to screen serving equipment below and allow
better access to the adjacent Swiss Room. But the petition, written
by architectural historian Robert Grant Irving '62, an associate
fellow of Berkeley, charges that the balcony will "reduce rather
than enhance" the dining hall's appearance. Among the signatories
who agree are history professor and former Berkeley master Robin
Winks and emeritus history of
art professors George Hersey and Vincent Scully Jr. "It's too
cheap-looking and utilitarian for that lovely interior," says
Hersey of the new insertion.
Kieran says he believes
original architect James Gamble Rogers would find the objections
"peculiar," since he designed Berkeley to look as if it
had been shaped by "different hands and styles" over the
years.
While the petition brought
the issue to public attention in February, Irving says he has made
known his objections to the balcony -- along with other aspects of
the renovation -- since March of 1997. On that point, he and associate
vice president Kemel Dawkins agree. "All of [Irving's] concerns
were relayed to the officers, taken to the housing council, and
heard by the Corporation," says Dawkins.
But Irving says that
since he got nowhere working "through channels," he resorted
to the petition in hopes that "the University would at the
last minute see the the error of its ways." But the balcony
is now substantially complete, and the petition hasn't changed Dawkins's
mind. "I'm not considering taking it down," he says.
Theater
Archive a Hit in New Haven
For 50 years, the New
Dramatists playwrights' center in New York has helped nurture some
of America's greatest dramatic talents, including William Inge,
Paddy Chayefsky, James Baldwin, and John Guare '63MFA. Now, the
stories behind those careers can be found in the Beinecke Rare Book
and Manuscript Library, which has purchased the organization's archives.
Founded in 1949 by the
playwright Michaela O'Harra, New Dramatists is a haven for young
talent, providing support from mentors and peers to foster experimentation
and risk-taking. Max Wilk '41,
a playwright and author who was in the group's first "class"
in 1949, says the experience was "like swimming in a sea of
professionalism. Every week the most prominent people from the theater
would come and spend three or four hours with us talking about the
problems of playwriting."
It was Wilk who suggested
that the Beinecke might be interested in the organization's papers,
which previously lay uncatalogued in a church basement. The papers,
which cover the years 1949 to 1989, include more than 750 manuscripts,
including some submitted by playwrights hoping to join New Dramatists
and others developed by members with the aid of the organization.
The trove also includes photographs of and letters from a number
of important theater figures. "It's a wonderful window on the
development of playwriting in New York in the postwar years,"
says Beinecke curator of American literature Patricia Willis.
Wilk says that many
of the plays written by members from the organization's early years
were tried out at New Haven's Shubert
Theater. "To have these things coming back to New Haven
is a lovely idea," he says.
Aid
Plan Survivors Balk at Settlement
Late in March, the University
announced that it will shut down its Tuition Postponement Option
(TPO) program, a financial aid plan offered between 1971 and 1978
that requires participants to pay a portion of their annual income
to Yale. Those still paying into the program were told that they
will no longer be required to contribute after the year 2001. But
the organizers of TPO Blues, the group that first called for relief
from the obligation last year, say they are not satisifed with the
agreement.
"If the University
has come up with a solution that takes three more years, surely
they can come up with a way to end the program immediately,"
says Juan Leon '74, one of 50 TPO participants who signed a letter
calling for the program to shut down at the end of this year.
Yale officials say that
ending the program in 2001 will cost the University $2 million,
in addition to the $5-million loss it was already expecting to incur
when the group obligations expired after 35 years.
Under the TPO plan,
students agreed to pay 0.4 percent of their income for every $1,000
borrowed until their class's group obligation was paid off, which
was expected to take 20 to 25 years. But the numbers didn't work
out that way, in part because 15 percent of the participants stopped
paying. Under Yale's settlement, those who are in default will be
held liable unless they make up missed payments.
Architects
Meet on Remaking Yale
From the old Brick Row
to the brownstone campus of the late 1800s to the rich Gothic of
the interwar years, Yale has remade itself architecturally in dramatic
ways over the past 300 years. A School of Architecture symposium
in April looked back at those transformations but mainly emphasized
the current billion-dollar building program.
Unlike the construction
campaigns of the past, though, this one is largely focused on the
renovation of Yale's existing buildings, a fact reflected in
the division of the symposium into three sessions: one on renovations,
one on new buildings, and one on campus
planning efforts. Eighteen architects presented projects ranging
from the renovation of the Rose Alumni House by Gregg & Weis
Architects to the new environmental sciences facility next to the
Peabody Museum by David M. Schwarz/Architectural Services and GSI
Architects.
The program, hosted
by architecture dean Robert A.M. Stern and underwritten by architect
James Volney Righter '70MArch, was not without controversy, mostly
centered on preservation battles over the Maple
Cottage on Trumbull Street, the partial demolition and renovation
of the Divinity School, and a new balcony
inserted in the Berkeley College dining hall. Vincent Scully Jr.
'40, the Sterling Professor
Emeritus of the History of Art,
devoted much of his opening address to criticism of the University's
record on preservation issues. On the last day, Scully took the
stage at the Law School Auditorium again, just before President
Richard Levin's closing remarks, and made a surprise announcement:
After reiterating his longstanding objections to the demolition
at the Divinity School, Scully,
who is retired but teaches a course in the School of Architecture,
said that if the plan went forward, "I'd have to think seriously
about my future at this institution."
Yale
Signs "No Sweatshop" Pact
In an effort to ensure
that products licensed to carry
the Yale trademark are not manufactured in sweatshops, the University
announced on March 17 that it had become a charter member of an
industry, government, and academic coalition called the Fair Labor
Association. At least 17 universities, including all of those in
the Ivy League, have now joined the FLA, which grew out of the 1996
White House-sponsored Apparel Industry Partnership, an endeavor
designed to protect workers throughout the world against exploitation.
"We're helping
to raise the bar," says Helen Kauder, director of Yale's licensing
program. "The FLA obligates companies to change the way they
do business."
The hallmark of the
agreement is its requirement that manufacturers comply with a code
of conduct that forbids such practices as forced labor, child labor,
harassment and abuse, and discrimination. It also calls on companies
to recognize workers' rights to freedom of association and collective
bargaining, as well as to decent wages, a reasonable work week (and
overtime pay, if necessary), and a safe and healthy workplace.
To ensure that these
basic conditions are met, the FLA requires regular monitoring and
reporting of conditions, both by the manufacturers and by outside
agencies certified by the Association.
But campus leaders such
as Jess Champagne '01, coordinator of Yale Students Against Sweatshops,
are unimpressed with the agreement. "This is not what anti-sweatshop
advocates were asking for," says Champagne, citing inadequacies
in the FLA's monitoring provisions and its failure to require companies
to publicly disclose the locations of all manufacturing facilities.
While Kauder admits
that there are shortcomings, she is cautiously optimistic about
the agreement. "It remains to be seen how the FLA, which doesn't
yet have a staff or a director, will function, but it could do some
good simply by requiring plants to obey the laws of their own countries,"
Kauder notes. "This is clearly a work-in-progress."
Ice
Cream, Coffee In City Swap
After more than two
decades of serving cold comfort to the Yale populace, Ashley's Ice
Cream closed its doors on March 5, an apparent casualty of its owner's
financial problems. Meanwhile, the coffee giant Starbucks has finally
cracked the Yale market, announcing that it will open a large new
store at the corner of Chapel and High streets.
Ashley's, which was
named for a champion Frisbee-catching dog, started out on College
Street two blocks south of campus. Students quickly took to the
store's frozen confections, which were made on site, and trips to
the store began to rival pizza pilgrimages to Sally's and Pepe's
as off-campus rituals.
Taking advantage of
its base of Yale customers, Ashley's moved in the 1980s to a storefront
on York Street near Broadway, bringing its "canine wall of
fame" and Frisbee collection to the new location. Soon Ashley's
had four other locations in neighboring towns. But employees told
the Yale Daily News that owner Bob Weisblatt had had trouble
meeting his payroll and paying for supplies in recent months, and
the remaining stores closed within three weeks of New Haven's.
In the mid-1980s, Ashley's
was one of as many as five ice cream shops near the campus. While
Joe Fahey of University Properties says his office is "looking
to put ice cream back on Broadway," the eight area coffee shops
suggest that caffeine has replaced sugar as the Yale student's favored
legal stimulant. As if to underscore that point, the national chain
Starbucks will open its first Yale-area store next year, on the
site recently occupied by Kaye's Art Shop (which has moved to a
site by the New Haven Green). While Fahey says that University Properties
has long resisted Starbucks's advances, the University does not
own or control the location where the java juggernaut will be installed.
Record
Damages In Medical Suit
The parents of a young
man whose open-heart surgery at Yale New-Haven Hospital went awry
nearly 13 years ago were awarded $27 million in early March in a
malpractice lawsuit against YNHH and the University. The award is
the largest judgment in a medical case in Connecticut history.
The six-person jury,
which heard more than a month of testimony, agreed with the contentions
of the attorneys for Arlene and William Jacobs that Yale was liable
for the surgery which left their son, William J. Jacobs, blind and
largely wheelchair-bound. The young man, who was 17 in 1986 when
the operation took place, had been transferred to YNHH from a hospital
in Duchess County, New York, after being seriously injured in an
auto accident in which four other people died. Doctors at Yale believed
that William's persistent fever was the result of a tear in his
aortic artery, but during an operation to repair the blood vessel,
a surgical clamp caused the artery to rupture. The subsequent loss
of blood and cardiac arrest left the patient with severe brain damage.
The hospital and the
University are currently awaiting a review
of the award by presiding New Haven Superior Court judge Jon
Blue before determining how to proceed. In a press release, a spokesman
for Yale stressed that "although the jury's verdict is in,
judgment is not final and there are outstanding legal issues to
be resolved before [we will decide] whether to take any additional
steps."
Caring
Strategy to Prevent Delirium
More than 50 percent
of all patients over the age of 70 suffer from delirium during a
stay in the hospital, and for many seniors, the confusion that is
a hallmark of the condition marks the beginning of a suite of medical
complications that can result in death. But a program developed
recently by Sharon K. Inouye, associate professor of medicine and
geriatrics, and her colleagues at the Yale-New Haven Hospital has
demonstrated that "many cases of delirium are avoidable."
In the March 4 issue
of the New England Journal of Medicine, Inouye explained
that their "Elder Life Program" decreased the incidence
of delirium by 40 percent in a study population of 852 patients.
Each was seen three times a day by a trained volunteer who made
sure that the patient was kept apprised of the day's medical schedule
and was kept mentally stimulated through such activities as word
games and structured reminiscences. There were daily walks or exercise
sessions, back rubs and herbal tea to ensure a good night's sleep,
and careful monitoring of fluid intake to prevent dehydration.
"This is simply
good care for any older patient in the hospital, but it's time-consuming
for the staff, who have to train and supervise the volunteers,"
says Inouye. "When you talk about delirium, prevention is the
most effective strategy."
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