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            Web Exclusives :Features 
             
            News from other Ivy League institutions, and Stanford
             
             
             Posted April 1, 2002 
              
            Brown: The Starr Foundation has donated 
              $15 million to Brown for financial aid. It is the largest donation 
              for financial aid the university has ever received. "Education 
              has traditionally been the largest area of giving for The Starr 
              Foundation" Maurice R. Greenberg, chairman of The Starr Foundation, 
              (and father to two Brown graduates) stated. He continued, "We 
              are delighted to show our support for Brown's need-blind admission 
              policy with this gift and hope it inspires others to give as well". 
              Cornelius Vander Starr founded the Starr Foundation in 1955, C.V. 
              Starr Scholarship Funds have been endowed at over 80 colleges and 
              universities since then. 
             The Corporation of Brown University has endorsed 
              a multiyear Proposal for Academic Enrichment under which Brown will 
              institute need-blind undergraduate admission. The university will 
              also add up to 100 new faculty members, and the increase to the 
              university's yearly budget will reach 36 million dollars by 2005. 
               
              Robert J. Zimmer, a mathematician and research administrator at 
              the University of Chicago, has been named Brown's ninth provost, 
              he will take up the position on July 15, 2002. 
             Columbia: Michael M. Crow, the exectuive 
              vice provost has been named president of Arizona State University. 
              Crow had been with Columbia since 1992
             Robert Kasdin 80, executive vice president 
              and chief financial officer of the University of Michigan, has been 
              named to the newly created position of senior executive vice president 
              of Columbia University by President-elect Lee C. Bollinger. Kasdin, 
              who will assume his new position in July 2002, previously served 
              as treasurer and chief investment officer of the Metropolitan Museum 
              of Art, and as vice president and general counsel of the Princeton 
              University Investment Company. As Columbia's senior executive vice 
              president, Kasdin will help Bollinger shape his new administration 
              and apply his management and financial expertise to a variety of 
              departments and programs including areas in the health sciences 
              and university computing. As new initiatives begin, Kasdin's portfolio 
              will expand. 
             Cornell: Brian Crane, an assistant professor 
              of chemistry and chemical biology at Cornell has been honored as 
              the recipient of the National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career 
              Development Program Award and a Searle Scholars Program Grant. Crane 
              hopes to develop and apply "new photochemical methods for studying 
              the structural basis of oxidation-reduction chemistry and long-range 
              electron transfer in biology", in part by using money from 
              his awards. 
             Hunter R. Rawlings III *70, who has been president 
              of Cornell University since 1995, has announced he plans to retire 
              on June 30, 2003, assuming instead the position of professor in 
              the university's Department of Classics. Rawlings stated that he 
              has announced his plans at this time because it "will allow 
              the board to being a deliverate and systematic search for a new 
              president and will provide time for an orderly transition" 
             Dartmouth: 
              A junior at Dartmouth, Heidi Williams, was named a 2002 Truman Scholar 
              by the S. Truman Scholarship Foundation. The award finances 2 to 
              3 years of graduate study for students pursuing studies in government 
              or nonprofit careers. She will receieve $30,000. Williams based 
              her Truman application on "improving women's access to math 
              and science education". Darthmouth Medical School cancer researchers 
              have identified a gene that triggers the death of leukemia cells. 
              Their findings were reported in the March 19 issue of the Proceedings 
              of the National Academy of Sciences. Ethan Dmitrobsky, professor 
              and chair of pharmacology and toxicology headed the research team 
              which identified the gene.  
            Dartmouth Medical School cancer researchers 
              have identified a gene that triggers the death of leukemia cells, 
              opening a novel target for anti-cancer drugs. This new genetic switch, 
              reported in the March 19 issue of the Proceedings of the National 
              Academy of Sciences, turns on a program to destroy certain leukemic 
              cells and possibly other tumor cells. It is activated by treatment 
              with retinoic acid, a vitamin A derivative used in cancer therapy 
              and prevention. Finding a mechanism that sets a cell death program 
              in motion paves the way for developing new cancer-killing drugs, 
              according to Ethan Dmitrovsky, professor and chair of pharmacology 
              and toxicology. He headed the research team that included Sutisak 
              Kitareewan, Ian Pitha-Rowe, Sarah Freemantle, and David Sekula. 
               
            Harvard: The Harvard Law School Jessup International Moot 
              Court team won the U.S. Championship of the 2002 Phillip C. Jessup 
              International Law Moot Court Competition. The team was defeated 
              internationally by the eventual world champion, South Africa, yet 
              won the award for best combined memorials. This is the fourth year 
              in a row that a Harvard Law School team has attended international 
              competition. 
              A new discovery by a scientific team headed by researchers at 
              Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) has found that a group 
              of white blood cells demonstrates previously unrecognized memory 
              characteristics that enable them to launch a sustained immune response 
              against tuberculosis bacteria. This finding, described in a study 
              in the March 22 issue of the journal Science, offers an important 
              new piece of information on how the immune system combats infection, 
              as scientists around the world continue to work on developing a 
              more effective tuberculosis vaccine. A highly contagious bacterial 
              infection that primarily affects the lungs, tuberculosis is responsible 
              for two million deaths each year and affects an estimated 16 million 
              people around the world. Tuberculosis is a huge killer internationally, 
              says study co-author Norman L. Letvin, M.D., chief of viral pathogenesis 
              at BIDMC and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Worldwide, 
              the major targets for vaccine development are the HIV virus, tuberculosis 
              and malaria. Anything that moves us even a little closer to these 
              vaccines is very important.
              Rising carbon dioxide levels associated with global warming could 
              lead to an increase in the incidence of allergies to ragweed and 
              other plants by mid-century, according to a report appearing in 
              the March Annals of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology by Harvard University 
              researchers. The study found that ragweed grown in an atmosphere 
              with double the current carbon dioxide levels produced 61 percent 
              more pollen than normal. Such a doubling of atmospheric carbon dioxide 
              is expected to occur between 2050 and 2100. 
             Harvard Business School: HBS has announced the formation 
              of the Service Leadership Fellows Program, which will encourage 
              students hoping to make a contribution to society in the early years 
              of their careers to apply fror one or two year postgraduate Service 
              Fellowships. HBS plans to subsidize the graduates' salaries so that 
              it compares to those s/he would normally make from for-profit businesses. 
             
            Pennsylvania: Jim Lehr, host of "The NewsHour with 
              Jim Lehrer" will deliver the 2002 commencement address on May 
              13. Lehr has "moderated nine presidential debates in the last 
              four elections and served as the sole moderator for all presidential 
              debates in both 1996 and 2000". Penn will award Lehrer an honorary 
              Doctor of Laws degree. 
            Total undergraduate charges at UPenn are scheduled to increase 
              4.6 percent during the 2002-2003 school year. These charges include 
              tuition, fees, and room and board.  
            Penn's vice provost for information systems and computing, James 
              J. O'Donnell, will become Georgetown's next provost 
            Stanford: For Stanford's freshman class 
              of 2006, admission was once again competitive. 12.4% of applicants 
              were admitted, compared to 12.7% the year before. For the first 
              time in Stanford history, more than half the admitted students are 
              people of color, 13% African American, 24% Asian American, 10% Mexican 
              American, 3% Latino, 2% Native American/Native Hawaiian. Almost 
              3/4 of the admitted students had a 4.0 or higher GPA in high school. 
            Yale: The Sterling Professor Emeritus of Economics at Yale, 
              James Tobin, who also won the 1981 Nobel Prize in Economics, died 
              March 11. He was 84. Tobin won his Nobel Prize for "creative 
              and extensive work on the analysis of financial markets and their 
              relations to expenditure decisions, employment, production and prices" 
              (quoted from the Royal Swedish Academy of Science) 
            Yale is investing $500 million in its science and engineering programs 
              in order to add five additional buildings. "Yale researchers 
              have determined the atomic structure of the ribosome's large subunit", 
              a discovery which should help the medical industry find better drugs 
              to fight infection. Thomas Steitz led the study, he is the Eugene 
              Higgins Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale. 
             
            Yale's faculty of engineering is marking 150 years of teaching 
              and innovation this year.  
            Yale president Richard C. Levin urges end to early application 
              process in admissions. For stories, click below. 
            http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/13/education/13YALE.html 
            http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/16/opinion/16SUN1.html?searchpv=past7days 
              
             
               
             
              
             
               
             
             
               
             
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