MilestonesMore news of Yale peopleGeorge GarvinView full imageRememberedAlexander Garvin ’62, ’67MArch (left), an urban planning expert who taught at Yale for more than 50 years, died on December 17 in Manhattan. He was 80. A lifelong New Yorker, Garvin worked as a planner there under five different mayors and as a consultant in several other cities. He also wrote books and led the planning for New York City’s bid to host the 2012 Olympic Games. At Yale, Garvin was an adjunct professor at the School of Architecture; he taught a popular undergraduate course called Study of the City, which introduced generations of students to his pragmatic approach to urban planning, design, and politics. AppointedIn January, President Peter Salovey ’86PhD announced the appointment of Maurie Mcinnis ’96PhD and Marta Lourdes Tellado ’02PhD as new members of Yale’s Board of Trustees. McInnis, a historian, has been president of Stony Brook University since 2020. Tellado, who studied political science at Yale, has been president and CEO of Consumer Reports since 2014. They succeed Gina Raimondo ’98JD and Lei Zhang ’02MA, ’02MBA, on the board. Stepping DownYale College dean Marvin Chun announced in January that he will step down from the deanship when his term ends in June and return to teaching and research. Chun, who is the Richard M. Colgate Professor of Psychology and a professor of neuroscience and cognitive science, said in a message to the Yale College community that he needed to prioritize his laboratory work. President Peter Salovey ’86PhD said in a statement that he has begun the process of choosing Chun’s successor. HonoredThe Graduate School Alumni Association will award the Wilbur Lucius Cross Medal—given annually for “outstanding work in scholarship, public service, teaching, or academic administration”—to four alumni in October. The awardees are: anthropologist Virginia Rosa Dominguez ’73, ’79PhD, of the University of Illinois; music theorist Philip Ewell ’01PhD of Hunter College; geneticist Sarah Tishkoff ’96PhD of the University of Pennsylvania; and electrical engineer Che-Chia Wei ’85PhD of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing.
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