February 1999
Volume 62, Number 4
Feature stories:
Barnes and Noble, and Mom and Pop
by Mark Alden Branch ’86
The managers of Yale’s commercial real estate holdings hope to create a neighborhood where national chain stores and distinctive local institutions can coexist to the benefit
of both.

How Sterling Professors Get That Way
by Bruce Fellman
When John William Sterling died in 1918, he left, among other bequests, $5 million for Yale to use to honor its best faculty members. Over the years, there have been
many paths to a Sterling professorship.

Yes-ssss!
by Matthew Goldenberg ’99
From football to field hockey, Yale’s fall sports teams showed a new strength in a season capped by
a gridiron victory over Harvard.

A More Global Yale?
by Mark Alden Branch ’86
At the most recent AYA Assembly, delegates contemplated bringing Yale to the world and the world to Yale. While there were clashes over the issue of increasing international representation, no one disputed that the university’s future lies beyond national borders.

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