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Letters
December
1999
Tercentennial
Query
Thanks
for your Y3C coverage ("Countdown
to 300," Oct.), especially the illuminating sidebar, "When is
the Tercentennial?"
But why
is it the Tercentennial, rather than (as that other place observed
in 1936) the Tercentenary, or even the Tricentennial? Was the classics
faculty consulted?
On another
note, I regret your minimizing Elihu Yale's eponymous 1718 gift
as "just over £500." University Secretary Reuben Holden's 1967 Yale:
A Pictorial History lists the benefaction as nine bales of goods
worth £562/12s, together with 417 books. Holden's 1968 Yale University
Presidents says the gift "remained the largest private donation
made to the College for over a hundred years." Adjusting for inflation,
£562/12s in today's currency is $93,250.
417 books:
priceless.
Randy
Alfred '67
San Francisco, CA
According
to the Tercentennial Office, a committee appointed in 1996 chose
"Tercentennial," as opposed to the synonymous "tricentennial," as
the preferred usage. "Tercentennial" is commonly used to describe
the year leading up to the 300th anniversary, while "tercentenary"
refers to the day on which the 300th anniversary is celebrated.
-- Ed.
Family
Affair
I was
so pleased to see in "Countdown
to 300" (Oct.) a picture of my two children representing 1969!
They had the distinction of being the first brother and sister to
graduate from Yale -- together -- in 1971. My son had an extra
year abroad, so my daughter caught up with him. She had entered
in her junior year in the first class of women.
My son,
Dr. E. MacArthur Noyes, is now an emergency medical doctor in Seattle,
Washington, and my daughter, Nancy N. Foss, is an administrator
in the Marblehead, Massachusetts, school system. Their picture is
also appropriate as they are direct descendants of James Noyes (the
"Noyes" on Woodbridge Hall), a founder of Yale.
Their
great-grandfather was Class of 1879. Their grandfather, Edward S.
Noyes '13, was a professor of English at Yale for 40 years. Their
father, Edward M. "Ted" Noyes II '40, served as director of career
services at Yale until 1983. Ted accepted the Yale Medal posthumously
for his father in 1968 -- and received the Yale Medal himself in
1996! Ted died in January 1999.
Needless
to say, I was overjoyed to see the picture of my children -- regardless
of their 1969 clothing!
Mrs.
Edward M. Noyes
New Haven, CT
October
Coup
The October
1999 issue is one of the best in the magazine's recent history.
From layout to articles, all superb.
Arthur
T. Hadley '49
New York, NY
A
Mom's Wrath
How rude
and insensitive for Mark Alden Branch to quote Robert Stern as saying,
"We can't have an environment where everyone is a winner, or we
might as well have Mom teach the studio" ("Blast
from the Past," Mar.).
As a
graduate of Yale's School of Architecture, a mother of four children,
and a practicing professional (I have been working on major hospital
projects for the last 20 years), I could probably teach the studio.
So let me know when you're ready and I'll come.
Perhaps
we need more moms and fewer pompous fools at the top!
Elvia
Fernandez '49MArch
Pasadena, CA
Mixed
Reviews
On the
one hand, I am happy to congratulate the
Yale Alumni Magazine
for having received the Grand Gold award from the Council for the
Advancement and Support of Education.
On the
other hand, I am somewhat dismayed by a new editorial attitude manifest
in your "In Print" department. As usual,
you review a few books, but as for the other authors, you relegate
them and their contributions to the swamp of the Web. I think this
is a mistake and a disservice. The printed word should be honored
by the printed word.
I do
not mean to suggest that you should not put important news, like
the publication of a book, on the Web. There are plenty of alumni
and (more important) non-alumni who might not see it otherwise.
But please be advised that many of us older folks do not use the
Web for pleasure reading, but use it solely to obtain information
which we cannot conveniently get by any other means. It's a utility,
no more. Alumni news hardly belongs to such a category. The primary
source for that is your excellent magazine.
Erwin
Hauer '57ArtS
Bethany, CT
While
we have in the past attempted to list all books written by alumni
and faculty authors in our "In Print" section, the growing volume
of publication notices we receive has made that impractical. By
putting the "Books Received" section on our Web site, we hope to
ensure that every author is given some recognition, while making
room for more reviews in the magazine. -- Ed.
Mail
Fraud?
The October
"Campus Clips" stated that the officers of Light and Truth
had placed a "1999 Survival Guide" in freshman mailboxes. It was
further stated that "a number of counselors removed some 750 copies
of the magazine from freshman campus mailboxes."
Was any
disciplinary action taken against these so-called "counselors" for
taking property and denying First Amendment rights? I assume these
mailboxes do not belong to the U.S. Postal Service, as this would
also be a great offense.
Thomas
Mints '50
Boynton Beach, FL
I note
in "Campus Clips" that counselors removed 750 copies of a Light
and Truth publication from freshman mailboxes.
What
was missing was the punishment meted out to those freshman counselors.
Their action, which set a very poor example for the incoming freshmen,
certainly called for severe punishment. Is it now all right for
them or others to do the same thing when publications have positions
with which they do not agree? What ever happened to civil discourse
at Yale? What happened to the ability to disagree agreeably?
If the
counselors were held up by some as heroes and not relieved of their
positions and made to make restitution to the magazine, then Yale
has some severe problems. I must admit that I agree with the magazine's
position that the teaching of safe sex encourages sexual promiscuity.
But I would not attempt to shut up those who disagree with me.
Wayne
Blankenship Jr. '47
ruffles@home.com
Kenner, LA
The
mailboxes do not belong to the U.S. Postal Service. They are used
for official University communications directed toward the freshmen.
No one has been disciplined as a result of the incident. -- Ed.
Sight
Specific
I'm writing
to touch on a few thoughts concerning funding for Yale admissions.
Currently Yale College does not send its standard, four-color viewbook
to internationally-based applicants ("A
More Global Yale?" Feb.). Instead, a cheaper, smaller, black-and-white,
print version is sent with the application. This pales in comparison
to all our peer schools and just about every other school in the
top 50 that all send their colorful viewbooks and usually supplemental
information as well, realizing students abroad often do not have
access to the Web and/or U.S. information. Yale's method is disadvantageous
in two ways:
People
decide not to apply since, out of the big four schools (Yale, Harvard,
Princeton, and Stanford), they know the least about this place.
Last year we had over 700 fewer international applications than
Harvard. Furthermore, we come off as rather arrogant or cheap since
our package is so lacking.
Further,
if international students decide to apply and then get in, they
may choose other schools instead of Yale for the sole reason that
we do not inform them or show them how amazing Yale indeed is. A
friend of mine from Tunisia chose Columbia instead of Yale for this
reason. After visiting Yale, she is regretting her choice. One can
even argue that by sending two different mailings to different groups
of applicants (discriminating between groups), Yale is being unfair
in its admissions procedures; clearly one group is better informed
(and enticed) than the other. The admissions office says we do not
have the money for this, but when all the other top schools do it,
I cannot fathom why we can't. And if we truly cannot do it, then
we should solicit funding. We must not lose out by not marketing
ourselves in the face of such competition.
We should
use the same effort and vigor with which we recruit minorities within
the U.S. to pursue students outside the U.S.
Ranjan
Goswami '02
ranjan.goswami@yale.edu
New Haven, CT
Christian
Responsibility?
I am
writing in response to the remarks of Teresa Kathryn Mithen '98
in the May issue of the
Yale Alumni Magazine
("Letters"). The fact that she proclaims herself an "active liberal
Protestant Christian" goes a long way towards explaining how she
could write such a letter.
To understand
from whence she is coming, we must focus upon the word "liberal."
In my experience the hallmark of the liberal Christian is the inability
or unwillingness to accept the Bible as the verbally inspired and
therefore inerrant word of God. Once you start questioning the veracity
of the Bible as the very word of God, you have opened Pandora's
box in terms of your ability to understand who Christ is and for
what He stands. We have extra-Biblical proof of the existence of
Christ, but as to who He is and for what He stands, we have only
what the Bible says about Him.
No one
who claims the name of Christ and who genuinely understands what
that entails from having read the Bible and accepting as true all
that it has to say about Him would ever be thankful over the demise
of any Christian institution as such, be it Yale itself or just
Dwight Hall. If Mr. McGown bemoans the fact that Dwight Hall "no
longer seeks to make a clear Christian witness" ("Letters," Mar.),
then he speaks with the authority of someone who understands the
Christ of the Bible.
I would
bemoan the fact that not only has Christianity lost Dwight Hall,
but more importantly it has lost Yale.
Mithen
has been captured by the zeitgeist that says that Christians must
refrain from witnessing to non-Christians for fear of offending
them or because, after all, all religions are leading their followers
towards the same ultimate deity. As a former Christian medical missionary
who served five and a half years full-time in Nigeria, Kenya, and
India, and who has done short-term medical work in ten other Third
World countries, I say emphatically that that kind of limp-wristed
Christianity has never and will never have a truly positive effect
upon the misery and chaos in which this world finds itself.
The true
Christian never crams Christianity down the throat of anyone, but
at the same time the true Christian has an inescapable obligation
to at the very least share his or her knowledge of Christ with non-Christians.
Robert
E. Searle, MD ' 59
Pittsburg, KS
Aged
Race
In "Countdown
to 300" (Oct.) the photograph for the year 1885 has a caption that
refers to its being taken "Nineteen years after the first intercollegiate
sporting event -- the Harvard-Yale boat race." In fact, the
first Yale-Harvard Race was in 1852, which would have been 33 years
prior to the 1885 date. The first athletic team at Yale began in
1843 with the purchase by undergraduates of the first boat in what
was to become the fleet of the Yale Navy.
Dave
Vogel '71
Heavyweight Crew Coach
Woodbridge, CT
Addenda
In response
to our October "Who's Blue" column listing college and university
presidents who are Yale alumni, our correspondents have brought
our attention to a number of individuals whose names were omitted:
Victor
E. Ferrall, Jr. '60LLB, Beloit College; Thomas George '70PhD, Chancellor,
University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point; Roger H. Hull '67LLB, Union
College (New York); Jane L. Jervis '78PhD, The Evergreen State College;
David C. Joyce '78MDiv, Union College (Kentucky); Wesley H. Poling
'71MDiv, Kentucky Wesleyan College; L. Baird Tipson '72PhD, Wittenberg
University; John S. Toll '45, Washington College (Maryland); Stephen
Joel Trachtenberg '62JD, George Washington University; Richard Warch
'68PhD, Lawrence College; Michael Wartell '71PhD, Chancellor, Indiana-Purdue
University.
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