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Light
& Verity
October
1999
World
Markets Watched from Hillhouse Landmark
In 1832,
Aaron Skinner built a Greek Revival house on Hillhouse Avenue that
doubled as a short-lived boys' school. Now, the house has finally
returned to its educational roots as the home of the International
Center for Finance, a recent initiative of the School of Management.
The Center moved into the house in September after an extensive
renovation.
The
new center provides a home for collaborative research into financial
markets in the United States and abroad. In addition to supporting
faculty and graduate-student research, the center sponsors conferences
and weekly seminars. Director William Goetzmann says the new facility
is part of the effort to raise the profile of the 23-year-old School
of Management. "A number of other institutions have such a center,"
Goetzmann says. "It's a necessary condition to keep us on the front
lines in financial research."
While
the center has been operating for more than two years, it was more
a conceptual center than a physical one until it moved into its
own building. "One of the things visitors noticed was that our group
was scattered across three buildings," says Goetzmann. "They wondered
how we could work together, and we wondered too."
The
building, bequeathed to Yale by the late Rachel Trowbridge, now
features a conference room, a computer center where researchers
can gain access to financial databases, a faculty lounge, and 16
faculty offices.

Politics
Trumps Theater in Moscow
Two
years ago, a joint company of drama
students from Yale and the St. Petersburg Academy of Theatre
Arts reconstructed a seminal 1926 production of Nikolai Gogol's
The Inspector General at the Yale Repertory Theatre. This summer,
drama professor David Chambers and nine students from the School
of Drama traveled to Russia to reunite the company for a performance
in Moscow. But after two weeks of rehearsal in St. Petersburg, their
performance at the Moscow Art Theatre was canceled. The problem?
Politics. The half-American troupe turned up in the Russian capital
during the NATO bombing of Serbia, when anti-American sentiment
was running high.
It
was not the first time the work of pioneering Russian director Vsevolod
Meyerhold had been the subject of controversy in Moscow. Meyerhold,
whose production the company recreated from notes in Russian archives,
pioneered a radical, highly physical approach to theater that Chambers
says is like "seeing reality through the prism of the dream." His
production of The Inspector General is considered his masterwork.
But like most of the early Soviet avant-garde, Meyerhold's work
was condemned under Stalin, and the director was executed in 1940.
Only in recent years has his work been reexamined by scholars.
The
disappointment in Moscow aside, the company went on to be well-received
at a student festival in Amsterdam. Chambers and coproducer Nikolai
Pesochinsky of the St. Petersburg Academy have received invitations
to perform the work and lecture on Meyerhold throughout the world.
"The response has been astounding," says Chambers. "I think people
are looking for a theater vocabulary to counter Stanislavsky-based
psychological realism, and Meyerhold is the only person -- other
than Brecht, perhaps -- to develop a vocabulary that works both
theoretically and on stage."

School
Offers Real-Life Writ Small
Two
years ago, a group of students at the Law School and the School
of Management with an interest in educational policy began brainstorming
about how they could contribute to improving public education in
New Haven. Their answer, a charter school for fifth and sixth graders
called the Amistad Academy, opened last month in Fair Haven.
The
school, whose 90 students were selected by lottery from 550 applicants,
emphasizes citizenship and personal responsibility along with academic
excellence, says executive director Dacia Toll '99JD, one of the
school's founders. Students at the Amistad Academy spend part of
their days in classroom situations, but the rest of the time they
build and maintain a "microsociety," operating their own bank, legislature,
courts, media, and small businesses.
In
addition to teaching citizenship, says Toll -- a Rhodes Scholar
who taught full-time in New Haven schools during her final year
of law school -- microsociety "is a way of applying skills. A lot
of these kids are still learning multiplication, which they will
use to calculate interest for the bank."
The
school, which receives $2,000 less per student from the state than
local public schools spend, relies on community foundations, the
Law School, the University, and individual Law School alumni donors
for additional financial support. Its "institutional partners,"
who will advise students in the operation of the microsociety institutions,
include the New Haven Savings Bank, the New Haven Board of Aldermen,
and the New Haven County Bar Association.

Class
of 2003 by the Numbers
Like
other elite colleges, Yale has regularly topped itself in the last
few years in admissions statistics. This year was no exception.
The pool of applicants for the Class of 2003 was the largest ever
(13,271), which led to the lowest admission rate in recent memory
(16.1 percent). The yield, or percentage of admitted students who
came to Yale, was 65 percent this year, another modern record.
Of
those 1,373 students who chose Yale and arrived at the end of August,
49.7 percent are men and 50.3 percent are women. All 50 U.S. states
are represented, as are 44 foreign countries. Foreign nationals
schooled abroad make up 4.3 percent of the class, and 27.4 percent
of the freshmen identify themselves as members of minority groups.
The class's median SAT scores were 740 verbal and 730 math.
The
class's noteworthy matriculants include a three-time high school
All-American swimmer, a national table tennis champion, a figure
skater who represented Lithuania at the world championships, the
president of Boys Nation, an actress who was featured on As the
World Turns and in the television miniseries The 60s,
the teen spokeswoman for the Scoliosis Foundation of America, and
a direct descendant of Yale's first rector, Abraham Pierson.

Turning
the Tables on Diabetes
A key
discovery by immunologist F. Susan Wong and her colleagues at the
School of Medicine and the University of California at Berkeley
about the cause of Type-1 diabetes, the form of the disease that
generally begins in childhood and requires a lifetime of insulin
injections, may help researchers develop a vaccine. Scientists have
known that "juvenile" diabetes is an auto-immune disease, an ailment
in which the immune system attacks the body's own tissue, rather
than foreign invaders like bacteria and viruses. Researchers did
not, however, know the precise target of this misguided attack.
Writing
in the September edition of the journal Nature Medicine,
Wong's group showed that in a kind of mouse
specially bred for diabetes research, the so-called "killer" T cells
of the immune system zero in on an unfortunate antigen: a minute
part of the insulin molecule, the substance that mammals produce
to regulate blood sugar. Attacks by these and other kinds of T cells
eventually destroy the body's insulin-producing machinery and cause
a condition that can result in blindness, limb loss, and early death.
While
there is no cure for the ailment, Wong's discovery lends credence
to a novel strategy of diabetes prevention in which fragments of
insulin are employed as a kind of vaccine. "Now that we know that
insulin is an important autoantigenic target, we can use this knowledge
to find our how to prevent the attacks," says Wong.

Preservationists
Win One, Lose One
A month
after the Connecticut Supreme Court threw out a preservationist
lawsuit to prevent the demolition of four buildings at the rear
of the Sterling Divinity Quadrangle, the University announced on
September 14 that the buildings will be retained after all. The
resolution of the controversy came after a summer that saw another
preservation battle end with the demolition of Maple
Cottage, a 163-year-old house at 85 Trumbull that preservationists
had sought to save.
The
new $38-million plan for the Divinity
School is to repair and "stabilize" three of the four buildings,
leaving them available for future use. The fourth building, the
School's library, will be restored and will continue to be used
as a library.
A group
of preservationists and Divinity School alumni had opposed the original
plan since it was announced in 1996. Last spring, Sterling
Professor Emeritus of the
History of Art Vincent Scully said he would consider leaving Yale
if the buildings were demolished.
University
planner Pamela Delphenich says the threat of continued legal action
from opponents of the plan led to the revisions. "This project really
needs to move forward," says Delphenich. "We just knew we would
have been tied up in litigation for years to come."
Maple
Cottage was razed on July 7 despite protests from a group called
Friends of Hillhouse Avenue, which argued that the house was an
important example of the work of architect Alexander Jackson Davis.

Younger
Women Face Heart Risk
Researchers
have long known that men under 50 are far more likely than their
female contemporaries to suffer heart attacks, but a recent Yale-led
study has shown that when both groups get to the hospital, women
are far more likely to die. This surprising conclusion is the result
of an investigation led by Viola Vaccarino, an assistant professor
in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, and a team
of scientists from EPH, the School of Medicine, and several other
universities.
In
the New England Journal of Medicine, Vaccarino and her colleagues
described their analysis of the medical records of women and men
who had been treated for heart attacks at 1,658 hospitals around
the country. The overall death rate during hospitalization was 16.7
percent among the women and 11.5 percent among the men. But when
this patient population was compared by age, the mortality rate
among women under 50 was twice that of men.
The
reasons for the difference are unclear. Three factors were found
to contribute to the disparity: the likelihood that women who suffer
heart attacks have other aggravating conditions, the tendency of
women not to go to the hospital as quickly as men, and the fact
that women are less likely than men to be properly diagnosed and
treated for a heart attack.
But
Vaccarino says these factors only accounted for about one-third
of this inequality between the sexes. The rest may be due to lower-than-usual
estrogen levels (the female hormone exerts a protective effect on
premenopausal women) that somehow make these younger women vulnerable
to a more deadly form of heart disease.
"The
signs and symptoms we have now are based on what we know about men
and older women," said Vaccarino. "What we are doing may not be
good enough."

Room
to Grow at Child Study Center
For
88 years, the Yale Child Study Center has been a hub for research
into child development and the treatment of children. But like a
child outgrowing his clothes, the center recently found itself needing
something a bit more roomy. Last month, the center moved into a
new building at the corner of the School of Medicine's Harkness
Lawn, adjacent to the center's existing space.
The
Irving and Nieson Harris Building, named for the principal donors
to the project, contains office space for the center's doctors and
a 160-seat meeting space. Architect Mark Simon of Centerbrook Architects
in Essex, Connecticut, says the project was complex because of the
many types of people who will be using the building. The center's
visitors include patients and research subjects (both children and
adults) and doctors and researchers from around the world. "The
place needed to feel distinguished and substantial," says Simon,
"but be welcoming to children and families and not seem scary."
And
perhaps appropriately for a building full of psychiatrists and psychologists,
the architects were given seemingly contradictory charges. "They
wanted a building that fits in and yet stands out," says Simon.
The
solution: A five-story octagonal structure, clad in brick and limestone
and detailed in the manner of the Sterling Hall of Medicine next
door, that connects Sterling to the Harkness Dormitory. "It's a
building that acts like a psychiatrist: friendly but reserved,"
says Simon.

Imported
Elis Sample Bluegrass
The
Yale Club of Kentucky has a message for 33 undergraduates who spent
their summers in Louisville: "Y'all come back now." The students
were lured to Louisville by a new program designed to demonstrate
that there is life between the coasts.
The
program, called "Bulldogs
in the Bluegrass," collected commitments from area companies
and nonprofit organizations to provide paid internships to Yale
students, who could peruse a list of positions and apply online.
The program, using private donations, paid part of the students'
wages, provided a $300 travel stipend, and secured free lodging
in a local college dormitory.
"We
tried to level the playing field and make the program competitive
with going home for the summer," says Rowan Claypool '80, who conceived
and organized the program. Claypool says the idea was to get bright
young people to see Louisville and consider coming permanently after
graduation. "If you come and experience it, you see the benefits
of living in a town this size," he says. "You can be known and make
a difference here."
Yale
senior and Massachusetts native Gillian Bohrer, who worked for a
labor union in nearby Frankfort, left with just the impression the
organizers were hoping for. "I'd never thought about anywhere besides
New York, Boston, or Washington," she says, "but I'd definitely
consider a place like Louisville now."

Sporting
Life
Flesh
Failing, Spirit Triumphs
After
133 Yale-Harvard regattas, one might think there's nothing new under
the sun when these two crews do battle. But on June 5, the Yale
heavyweight varsity scored an especially satisfying victory over
the Crimson in New London by keeping cool against an unnerving strategy
that Harvard had used with success for years.
It
was nearly dark in New London when the four-mile race finally got
under way; strong headwinds had caused a two-and-a-half-hour delay.
The two crews, which Yale coach Dave Vogel '71 considered "evenly
matched" in terms of speed, stayed about even for the first two
miles, with Harvard holding a slight edge. Just past the two-mile
mark, Harvard made its move, pulling ahead to the point where the
Crimson coxswain was even with the bowman of the Yale boat. It was
textbook Harvard strategy -- a strong push at a point when the other
crew thinks it has victory in sight and is unlikely to have enough
power -- or spirit -- to resist a challenge.
"When
a blow like that is administered, that can be the end of it," says
Vogel. "Once you lose contact, that's it. It's a psychological thing:
Everyone's in extraordinary pain. It's very dispiriting. But our
guys steeled themselves, stood firm, and said, 'This is where we
have to take control of this race.'"
The
Crimson oarsmen, who had been buoyed by the sight of the Yale crew
falling back, suddenly saw them advancing -- fast. It took the Elis
half a mile to catch up to Harvard. But over the last mile, Yale
pulled ahead to win by six seconds, or two boat lengths, registering
only their second varsity win in the Regatta in the past 15 years.
(The other was a sweep of the varsity, JV, and freshman contests
three years ago.) "This is the best race I've ever seen, and I've
been in rowing for 30 years," says Vogel.
Vogel
says he is "sanguine" about this year's prospects, but seven men
from the winning New London boat graduated in May, and next year's
varsity will have to look out for Harvard, which won both the junior
varsity and freshman races in New London. Yale will also have to
face a year away from their boathouse, working out of a Shelton
marina while the Bob Cook Boathouse is replaced with a new $7-million
building on which construction is about to begin. But the New London
victory has buoyed Yale's spirits. Says Vogel: "I feel really good
about what our guys now know, which is that they can do this."
-- Mark Alden Branch
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