Long-time dean retires
Betty Trachtenberg, long-time dean
 of student affairs and associate dean of Yale College, who has worked with five
 deans of Yale College, dozens of other deans and masters, hundreds of student
 leaders, thousands of freshman counselors, and tens of thousands of Yale
 undergraduates, will be stepping down at the end of the academic year to enjoy
 a well-earned retirement with her husband, children, and grandchildren. In a
 30-year career in Yale College, Dean Trachtenberg has had a broad and profound
 effect on the life of the entire Yale community. Dubbed the "Landlady of the
 Old Campus" for the attention she has paid to every aspect of freshman
 residential life, from public safety to the condition of the plumbing (and
 sometimes called the "Dean of Sex, Drugs, and Rock and Roll" for the student
 issues that so often have occupied her time), Dean Trachtenberg reorganized the
 oversight of hundreds of student organizations and involved herself personally
 in setting and enforcing policies concerning student health and social conduct.
 (See Milestones.)
Throughout her deanship, she has
 worked closely with the Yale College Council and has championed student
 participation in the governance of the university by arranging for their
 appointments to various advisory committees. Her strong sense of justice and
 her evident personal compassion have made her the ideal dean's office
 representative for disciplinary, mediation, and grievance procedures and have
 identified her as the person to whom students, parents, and staff turn in times
 of crisis. In one of the highest tributes a student organization can pay, Dean
 Trachtenberg was the subject of the half-time show at the Yale Bowl during the
 game against Princeton in November.
Yale/Peking undergraduate program
 takes flight
By the time you read this, Yale
 College students will have completed the first semester of the Peking
 University-Yale University joint undergraduate program, and the second
 semester will be underway. In the fall 21 Yale College students and 21 Yuanpei
 students lived together as roommates on two floors of Building #42 at Beida.
 The range of courses they took together, including "The Formation of Modern
 American Culture," "The City in Literature and Film," "Introduction to Chinese
 Economy," and "Directed Research at the Beida-Yale Joint Research Center for
 Microelectronics and Nanotechnology," as well as the courses for second
 semester, can be viewed at www.yale.edu/iefp/pku-yale/academicsfaculty.html.
While Yale students adapted to
 having no electricity in their individual rooms between midnight and 6:00 a.m.,
 there were accommodations to American habits: the bathrooms were renovated to
 Yale specifications, with hot-water showers and western-style toilets; there is
 a common room on each floor, furnished with televisions, DVD players, computer
 work stations, potable water, couches, tables, and chairs; and, at the
 suggestion of the Yuanpei program administration, Yale and PKU selected a more
 advanced student, Li Kunlin, to serve as a live-in and part-time resident
 assistant to help with extracurricular activities and to serve as a liaison
 with the dorm and program offices.
New York Times managing editor teaches seminar
Jill Abramson, managing editor of
 the New York Times, is teaching an advanced course in journalism at Yale College this semester as
 part of the Yale Journalism Initiative, established by Steve Brill ’72 and his
 wife Cynthia ’72, which will educate, train, and provide career guidance to 15-25
 Yale Journalism Scholars. A search committee solicited suggestions for the
 position from faculty across the university and received over 100 names. "Because
 of her award-winning reporting and significant books, Ms. Abramson quickly
 became a top candidate," noted Linda Peterson, the Niel Gray Jr. Professor of
 English and chair of the search.
Abramson was appointed managing
 editor of the New York Times in August 2003 after serving as that paper's Washington
 bureau chief for three years. She was the first woman to hold either position.
 Prior to joining the Times, she worked at the Wall Street Journal, 1988-1997, as deputy bureau
 chief for the Washington office and as an investigative reporter. From 1986 to
 1988 she was editor-in-chief of Legal Times, a weekly Washington-based newspaper
 with a national readership. In addition to many articles and essays, Abramson
 has written two books: Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas, co-authored with Jane Mayer
 (Houghton Mifflin, 1994), which was a finalist in the nonfiction category for
 the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award; and Where
 They Are Now: The Story of the Women of Harvard Law, 1974 (Doubleday, 1986). In 1992, Abramson
 won the National Press Club's Correspondence Award for her series of articles
 on the role of money in the 1992 elections.
