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Letters
November
1999
The
Mellon Touch
I enjoyed
your tribute to Paul Mellon ("Exit
an Icon," Sum.) and would like to note a lesser-known side of
the Mellon character.
My stepson
Scott (son of Anderson G. Flues '51) took odd jobs during his teen
summers, including an occasional stint on the Mellon estate in Upperville,
Virginia. More than once, he labored beside a quiet, older man,
who joined the crew for a few hours at a time, clearing fencelines,
digging trenches, and making all kinds of repairs. It was one of
the surprises of Scott's life to discover that the man was Paul
Mellon.
We have
since heard that there is a network of retirement-age manual laborers
in our area who remember Paul Mellon with pleasure, but less for
his benefactions and more for his willingness to pitch in and lend
a hand on outdoor tasks on his own property -- despite his many
millions.
Carol G. Flues
Boyce, VA
The essays
in tribute to the late Paul Mellon provided four beautiful and diverse
perspectives on the life and passions of this extraordinary Yale
benefactor. J. Carter Brown, John Baskett, Jules Prown, and Duncan
Robinson captured in very personal and memorable stories the qualities
of this man who has left wonderful legacies to Yale, the nation,
and the world.
We are
fortunate to have significant centers for learning about British
art within the context of fine architectural settings in Cambridge,
Washington, DC, and New Haven as the the result of Mellon's philanthropy.
Anyone who visits the Yale Center for British Art is enriched with
a deeper appreciation of British art and the world around.
Robert K. Loesch '66MDiv
rkloesch@aol.com
Springfield, MA

Missing
Trove
Your
book review of Rush for Riches: Gold Fever and the Making of
California ("In Print," Sum.), by J.S. Holliday '46, neglected
to mention his earlier book, And the World Rushed In, and,
more importantly, made no mention of the spectacular collection
of Western Americana given to Yale by William Robertson Coe while
Holliday was a student, which helped inspire and inform him. Mr.
Coe's grandson, Michael Coe, was for many years a Yale professor
of anthropology, dean of that department, officer of the Peabody
Museum, a world class expert on Meso-America, and occasionally a
great gentleman.
Campbell James '50
Newport, RI

Cramped
Campus
In response
to your coverage of the current renovations campaign ("Renovating
a Classic Campus," Nov.), this is a wake-up call.
As a
member of the class of 1942, I lived (along with nearly all my classmates)
on the Old Campus, which is now being brought up to date.
Then
we moved on to the residential colleges. One could get a single,
as I did, or a double with two bedrooms and one sitting room (occupied
by two people only). The arrangement had privacy; one could really
study in one's room.
I have
wondered, over the years, when Yale is going to get back to making
comfortable, un-crowded housing for undergraduates a priority.
I can't
think of anything that would do more to improve the quality of undergraduate
life than to restore those pre-war standards when Yale had the finest
college housing in the country, and maybe the world.
Edward J. Logue '42
West Tisbury, MA

Lux
et Influx
A more
global Yale? (Feb. )
The answer perforce is yes. With only 5.5 percent of foreign students
(the Canadians being treated the same as U.S. students) Yale is
sadly a part of l'arri're garde of American universities,
clinging to a parochial attitude with the excuse that, in David
Gergen's words, "It would change the nature of Yale." To me, foreign
students spice and brace the American student body for the exciting
third millennium.
If Yale
is to follow her motto, Lux et Veritas, she must open her arms to
foreign students for the enhancement of our global society. She
must beckon students to become beacons in the 21st century unlimited.
V.W.H. Greenway-Stuart '48
Paris, France

Tobacco's
Bottom Line
Regarding
the letter of William H. Jarrett II '54 (Mar.): I too have spent
my life advising my patients, and others when the situation warranted,
of the medical havoc that tobacco has wrought upon our population.
Today, few physicians remain immune from the obvious evidence one
sees at the operating table or in the au- topsy room. But that is
not the issue.
Dr. Jarrett
writes, "Yale should remove every dollar invested in tobacco companies."
The reality of stock funds, loaded or otherwise, where decisions
are made by their managers, removes any realistic investor control
of the makeup of that fund he chooses. Likewise, unless the individual
invests in a corporation at its initial public offering (where money
is actually given to the corporation), buys a new issue, or holds
a sufficient quantity of stock to affect the management of the company,
funds from an investor are given to the entity that has decided
to sell. The corporation, looking towards its bottom line, pays
its quarterly dividend to the owner of record on a specific date.
It cares not where those funds are expended.
On a
moral basis, Dr. Jarrett has a point. Though I specifically do not
invest in Phillip Morris, or others of their ilk, I recognize the
lack of control I have when others choose where my money goes. But
this is merely emotional.
The rise
or fall of the tobacco industry is far beyond the University's influence.
Yale should continue to place its investments where maximum return
is realized with reasonable safety.
Robert M. Frank, MD, '48JD
Rancho Palos Verdes, CA

Christian
Values
Some
time ago in the Kansas City area, people felt what was thought to
be an earthquake. After reading the May issue of the Yale Alumni Magazine, I realized that it wasn't an earthquake. It was the aftershock felt
way out here in the heartland of America, caused by Timothy Dwight
and generations of benefactors of Yale turning over in their respective
graves.
According
to Teresa Mithen, Dwight Hall fellow, Yale is "thankfully" no longer
a Christian institution ("Letters"). I wonder who, besides Mithen,
has made this momentous decision. Was it the administration, the
Corporation, or the students in a referendum?
I fail
to follow the reasoning that because there are students of various
religious backgrounds, including many who are not Christians, at
Yale, it is disrespectful to them to think of Yale as being Christian.
What of the disrespect shown to Timothy Dwight and the many Christians
who founded, built, and maintained Yale?
I happen
to think that Yale can be a Christian institution and show true
Christian consideration for those students and faculty who are not
Christians. But, I plead guilty to being old fashioned.
George L. Thurlow '45W
gnmthurlow@aol.com
Platte City, MO

What's
in a Name
I very
much enjoyed "The Burdens of Belonging" (May), in which Dr. William
Sledge mentions how his thoughts "about issues of race and how the
institution (a residential college) figured in the ideals of a diverse
community were stimulated when a student writing in this magazine
raised the idea that the name of Calhoun College should be changed."
As a
former resident of Calhoun College, I must admit that the naming
of the college for an advocate of slavery, albeit a famous Yale
alumnus, shocks the conscience. I really hesitate mentioning the
name of the residential college in which I ate and conducted much
of my life for four years. Perhaps it would be better for the University
to rename the college for another well-known Yale graduate with
whom everyone at the University could feel comfortable?
Chuck Rich '83
Chicago, IL

Class
Cruising
I was
pleased to see that Professor Jerome Pollitt finally decided to
become a guest lecturer on an AYA cruise of the Aegean ("News from
Alumni House," Apr.). I can only wonder at his reluctance to participate
in lecturing on ancient Greece on these cruises, since memories
of his class on ancient Greek art when I was a freshman (in 1965)
continue to inspire me today. I finally toured Greece with my girlfriend
in 1980 and was constantly remarking that I had studied this sculpture
or this building with Professor Pollitt at Yale. Many thanks to
him for instilling a life-long love for classical art. I am thrilled
to read that he is now inspiring even older students.
Kenneth S. Loveday '69
Brookline, MA

The
"Janet" Files
The one
"rich superkid" I got to know at Yale was reasonably nice; but a
lot of preppies were pretty rotten in their scorn for those who,
they felt, were deficient for not coming from families with money.
As a scholarship student, I had to bus tables at the freshman dining
hall; a lot of preppies would make deliberate elaborate messes on
their tables just to make the busboys' lives a little harder.
Their
favorite prank was filling glasses with water, covering each full
glass with a napkin, inverting the glass onto the table, and removing
the napkin. They'd do this with a tray full of glasses -- then put
another tray on top, build up a second layer, and then a third.
Twenty-four 12-ounce glasses times three is a lot of water. Despite
the dining hall's vastness, they'd once or twice been caught by
Janet, the woman in charge ("Vintage YAM," Oct.). She'd make
them clean it up themselves while keeping their J. Press jackets
on; they were very much aggrieved.
Even
nice rich kids with public school educations can have blind spots.
My roommate, a rich high school grad, used to hang around with the
heirs to Pan Am and Briggs & Stratton. They'd frequently ignore
their prepaid dorm meals to dine out at Mory's,
and invite me along. I must admit I didn't have the nerve to ask
if we could eat somewhere more affordable, so I always ordered Jello,
the one thing on the menu I could afford. None of them ever asked
me why or figured it out. I know because I asked my roommate about
it years later. "Well, we thought it was a little odd," was all
he could say.
Ivan Berger '61
iberger@home.com
Fanwood, NJ

Mory's
Reliquary
I was
particularly interested in your article about Mory's ("A
Very Special Saloon," Apr. ) because for many years I have owned
a special item of Mory's memorabilia.
In the
early 1900s, my father did bookkeeping for Louis Linder, and many
times he had difficulty in collecting his overdue bill for services.
On one such occasion, he was offered an old mantle clock by Mr.
Linder in full payment of his bill. Perhaps my father saw this as
his best opportunity to be paid for his services. Whatever the reason,
the clock still strikes the hour and the half hour on my mantle
today.
The large
marble clock bears the following inscription on an attached brass
plate: "Presented to Mr. Frank Moriarty by some of his many friends
in testimony of their esteem of his character as a man (February
22, 1866)."
Since
I had attended Yale, my father left the clock to me when he died
in 1971, and I have treasured it ever since. If I adopt "Mory's
time," it must be 145 years old!
George S. Stirling Jr. '41
Madison, CT

Addenda
We overlooked
two alumni in the columns "Elected Elis" (Apr.) and "Who's Blue:
College and University Presidents" (Oct.): Pedro
Rosello '70MD is Governor of Puerto Rico, and Dale Knobel '71 is
president of Denison University in Ohio.

Correction
In the
photo on page 55 of the October
1999 Yale
Alumni Magazine, Gus Speth is talking to U.N. Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali,
not Javier Perez de Cuellar.

Clarification
Our October
article about the plans for Yale's Tercentennial ("Countdown
to 300"), reported that a University-wide open house was scheduled
for October 14, 2000. After the October Yale
Alumni Magazine went to press, the Tercentennial Office announced that the date
has been changed to October 21, 2000. 
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