| |
Comment on this article
Honored
July/August 2008
Joan Steitz, a Sterling Professor of Biophysics and Biochemistry, has
been awarded the Albany Medical Center Prize. The eight-year-old prize, which
Steitz shares this year with Elizabeth Blackburn of UC-San Francisco, comes
with a cash award of $500,000. Steitz was cited for her pioneering work in RNA
research.
Peter Jones, the James E. English Professor of Mathematics, is among
72 people selected for membership in the National Academy of Sciences this
year.
The American Academy of Arts and Sciences has
selected nine Yale faculty members and a university trustee as new members. In
addition to trustee and Pepsico CEO Indra Nooyi '80MPPM, the academy chose
professors Mel Bochner (painting and printmaking, adjunct); Michael Donoghue (biology); Stathis Kalyvas (political science); David Quint '71, '76PhD (English and
comparative literature); Reva Siegel '78, '81MA, '85JD (law); Susan Stokes (political science); Chief
Investment Officer David Swensen '80PhD (management, adjunct), Alan Trachtenberg (English and American studies,
emeritus); and Meg Urry (physics and astronomy).
Retired philosophy professor Ruth Barcan Marcus '46PhD has been awarded the third
Lauener Prize for an Outstanding Oeuvre in Analytical Philosophy.

Elected
Yale alumni have elected DNA researcher Peter
Dervan '72PhD to a
six-year term on the Yale Corporation, the university’s board of trustees. Dervan, a chemistry professor at
Caltech, outpolled Chanel CEO Maureen Chiquet ’85 and film producer Walter
Parkes ’73 in the election. He succeeds Maya Lin ’81, ’86MArch.

Appointed
Mary Miller and Joseph Roach have been appointed to Sterling professorships, the
university’s highest faculty honor. Miller, an art history professor and master
of Saybrook College, is a leading authority on Mesoamerican art and
architecture. Roach, a theater director and a scholar in the field of
performance studies, is a professor in the theater studies, English, and
African American studies departments.

Remembered
Jean Boorsch, who taught French at Yale for 40 years, died on
March 23 at the age of 102. Boorsch, a native of France, arrived at Yale in
1934 and soon became part of a renowned cohort of French professors. During
World War II, he developed an immersion technique for teaching French that
later evolved into the widely used “French in Action” curriculum published by
Yale.  |
|