Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT)

 - Class of 1966

Page 19 of 306

 

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 19 of 306
Page 19 of 306



Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

R.D. CHRISTOPHER TUNNARD America the Beautiful? It's fast becoming America the says Christopher Tunnard, Professor of City Planning. The areas decay, the suburbs sprawl, the need for planning is clear. Yale's answer to the growth of population reflectively si s some more coffee ROBERT DAHL In spite of his work and his reputation, Robert Dahl, Sterling Professor of Political Science, is one of the most active faculty members in campus activities. He takes his responsibility as a member of the University and civic community seriously and devotes an amazing amount of time and effort to these concerns. Yet he shies away from becoming a joiner , creating causes, and building a large student fol- lowing. This past year Professor Dahl was to be found right in the center of the two controversies that occupied the most student energies: Viet- nam and faculty tenure. He has been a frequent speaker, moderator, and advisor in the Vietnam meetings and was chairman of the Dahl Com- mittee , which produced the faculty's recommendation on the question of tenure in response to the Bernstein affair. In both cases his calm, closely reasoned, and rather unemotional approach has been in striking contrast to other more frantic efforts. For extremists, he is a constant disappointment. Mr. Dahl was born in Inwood, Iowa fpopulation 200j and moved to slightly larger Skagway, Alaska, when he was ten. One should never ask Where? a second time, he is the product of small town America and is not very defensive about it. His father was the town doctor. After graduating from the University of Washington, Mr. Dahl re- jected thoughts of a career in law, and came to Yale to continue study- ing political science. Before getting his doctorate, he spent a year as an intern for the National Labor Relations Board in Washington, D.C. where he met his future wife. He returned to Yale after serving on the War Production Board and has been at Yale ever since. ugly, urban and then continues. The undergraduates are becorifing more interested in the city now. They have seen riots in the cities, they have seen the ugly commercial strips and they have seen de-humanized redevelop- ments. Now they are interested in humanism. City planning has had a very weak humanist tradition. Planners have traditionally been in- terested in efficiency: build highways, widen streets, throw up massive apartments. People are being forced to live like wasps in hives. Chris Tunnard was born i11 Victoria, British Columbia. In a lilting, cultured British accent he is glad to recount the story of his life. He earned a B.A. at Victoria College f Now I hear it's become a uni- versity j, took graduate Work with the Royal Horticultural Society in Wisley College in Surrey, England, and then practiced as a landscape architect in London. In 1933 his first book appeared, Gardens in a Modern Landscape. Then, in 1939, he started teaching at the Harvard School of Design. Those were the days when you could 'pick up' city planning and teach it without any formal study. Mr. Tunnard came to Yale after the war and has taught city planning since then. He is currently Director of the Master of Urban Studies Program. N.W.C. L .. Wil .Y :asa mv! amp f C.T. ,Q

Page 18 text:

JAY MARTIN jay Martin, Assistant Professor of English and American Studies, is both a teacher and a confidant of many of America's greatest writers. As a teacher, he is the lecturer in A.S. 59, a survey course which covers Twentieth Century Ameri- can fiction. As a confidant, Mr. Martin has carried on a wide rang- ing correspondence with many of the major American writers whom he lectures about. His correspon- dence with Henry Miller, for ex- ample, is probably as extensive as any from that difficult writer. Re- cently Mr. Martin was asked by Nathanael West's literary guardians to write the authorized biography of Mr. West. Having such an inti- mate acquaintance with the lives of American writers, Mr. Martin's lectures are both informative and sympathetic. Mr. Martin received his bach- e1or's degree from Columbia in 1956. He then went to Ohio State to study for a M.A. After he re- ceived his doctorate from Ohio State, he joined the Yale faculty as an Instructor in English and American Studies. Since then he has been named a Fellow of Silliman College and has served as Yale Faculty Club Lecturer. He was granted a Morse Fellowship for the academic year of 1963-64 and upon its termination was appointed an Assistant Professor in English and American Studies and Director of Undergraduate American Studies. He has published Conrad Aiken: a Life of his Art, a cririral ap- praisal of Aiken as a poet from the standpoint of the movement in his art indicating his growing self- awareness. Mr. Martin's other book is a study of the relation of American culture and literature between the Civil War and the First World War. In this book he views literature as a vehicle which moves radical ideas into the American mind and imagination which suggest new ways of facing major problems. .l.W.F. 5 5 t JAMES W. FESLER james W. Fesler, Alfred Cowles Professor of Government, came to Yale in 1951 as Chairman of the Department of Political Science, after six years of wartime service on various government boards and after ten years on the faculty of the University of North Carolina. As Chief of the Policy Analysis and Records Branch of the War Produc- tion Board, and finally in 1945 as War Production Board Historian, he produced a 1,000-page report on Industrial Mobilization for War. Professor Fesler received his Political Science training at Berkeley fUniversity of Californiaj, the University of Minnesota, and Harvard, where he received his Ph.D. in 1935. Although the Yale College courses that Mr. Fesler teaches deal predominantly with the political institutions of the United States, his graduate teaching and research interests lie in the area of public ad- ministration. His most recent research has focused on comparative field administration, which is the study of governmental organization out- side a country's capital. In 1956 Mr. Fesler served as a consultant in field administration to the government of Vietnam and in 1961 as a consultant to the United Nations on decentralization in developing countries. Last year he was on leave studying administrative problems in France and England. He has also served as Editor-in-Chief of the Public Administration Review, the journal of the American Society for Public Administration. NEIL W. CHAMBERLAIN Whether writing a book, experimenting with depth painting, or just having a friendly chat, Professor Neil W. Chamberlain exudes an enthusiasm for exploration and action in life. Born May 18, 1915, in Charlotte, North Carolina, Neil W. Cham- berlain prepared for his A.B. degree in journalism at Western Reserve University. However, while writing for The International News Serv- ice, he realized that he wanted to learn a great deal more about his subject-unions and management. Once more he pursued his studies, this time at Ohio State University. After receiving a Ph.D. in 1942, he became hooked forever to the academic life. By 1960, when he came to Yale, Professor Chamberlain had been on the Board of Editors of the American Economic Review, served on the Executive Committee of Industrial Relations Research Asso- ciation, and completed eight major books. At present he is the Chair- man of Yale Economic Essays, a member of the Editorial Council of Management International, and a Fellow of Jonathan Edwards College. From a receptivity to the world of ideas, he has gained a broad un- derstanding of contemporary problems, ranging from world peace f The West in a World without Warj to the individual laborer fThe Labor Sectorj. In a recent article Retooling the Mind , he contends that as long as we treat the threat of automation as something to be met by reduced work weeks, longer vacation periods, accelerated retirement, or more aggregate spending, we are refusing to recognize the real nature of the problem. The solution, he believes, lies in developing a new conception of education, one which sees education as a process con- tinuing throughout a man's career, as much a part of his life as work. Professor Chamberlain's pet project is the relation of private busi- ness to the public sector. In determining how best to tailor public policy to such objectives as an increased GNP and decreased unemploy- ment, he is projecting the attempts of large corporations to plan their affairs into the context of our whole economy.



Page 20 text:

T.H.W. GEORGE B. SELIGMAN Since joining the Yale faculty in 1956, George B. Seligman, recently appointed Professor of Mathema- tics, has become closely involved with all the math courses as well as many courses in other departments. Mr. Seligman, as Director of Undergraduate Studies in Mathematics, is largely responsible for the revisions of the mathematics curriculum, specihcally the re- vision which allows freshmen and sophomores to take more advanced courses if they have the ability. Professor Seligman, who took his B.A. at the University of Rochester, did graduate work here at Yale, receiving both an M.A. and Ph.D. He first taught at Princeton University where he notes mathe- maticians seem closer to the physicists than here. ln 1958-1959 he studied and lectured at the Uni- versity of Muenster in Westphalia, Germany, under a Fulbright Lecture Scholarship. Since his return to Yale he has taught such wide-ranging courses as introductory calculus and graduate level modern algebra QMathematics 100j. He has become an au- thority on Lie algebra, which , says Mr. Seligman, has moved in an algebraic direction , although its origin is in geometry. Oh, yes , he adds, It's pro- nounced like 'Lee'g that's what the New Haven papers say. .il -. TALBOT HOWE WATERMAN Talbot Howe Waterman, Zoology Professor, did his undergraduate and graduate work at Harvard University. He then served in the armed forces as a scientific consultant in the Pacific during World War II. He came to Yale in the fall of 1946. His field of research is the orientation of deep sea marine animals and, specifically, the relationships between the eye and orientation. This is primarily basic research as opposed to applied research, but it may eventually have much practical value. His research has been supported by the U. S. Government Oflice of Naval Research for 10 years. At the present time he is studying orientation by polarized light. This line of research may someday give clues to better ways of human orientation under water. Mr. Waterman is an ardent skindiver, and has done much of his underwater research in the Caribbean. Until a few years ago, he used to go to the Caribbean every summer for a type of recreational research. Until last year Mr. Waterman was a resident fellow of Trumbull College. As one of his favorite avocations is music, he used to have students up to play piano duets with him. He had and still has two pianos. He especially enjoys 20th century music, and doesn't really go for classical or romantic music. Feeling he has little time to spare, Mr. Waterman owns no tele- vision, hi-fi, or stereo. He would rather listen to a live concert, even though contemporary music is not often played, or play the music him- self. Another one of his hobbies is collecting graphic art. Again much interested in the contemporary, he has a large collection of pop and op art and sculpture. He still buys and collects, and is aghast at the thought of selling any of his collection. R.M.C. c ..'f. me -.1 .- QQ ,,: ,,q . ig ,151 ,, . . . . ai A , Wi G.B.S. 1 at 5 1 1 4? ' ar s . , 'A is QP ' if J f - fs, Q .Mfg . 'fiilfi 7-3 1XQ 5fT ...Q

Suggestions in the Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) collection:

Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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Yale University - Banner / Pot Pourri Yearbook (New Haven, CT) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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