| |


A brain surgeon in the deans office
Security review derails cutting-edge
work
Soldiers are born, not made
Reeve urges to keep religion out of stem cell research
Warshaw returns for symposium
Et cetera
University, unions settle strike
Spellbound by spelling

Among the priorities demanding the attention of the new interim dean,
Dennis Spencer, are faculty recruitment, fund-raising and the allocation
of space.
 
|
|
In the dean’s
office, it takes a brain surgeon
Running the med school is a complex task, which may be why Yale tapped
Dennis Spencer as interim dean.
On a Monday afternoon in late June, close to a hundred senior faculty
members filled the Historical Library to witness a changing of the guard.
Then-Dean David A. Kessler, M.D., was about to announce his departure
for the University of California, San Francisco, where he had been named
vice chancellor for medical affairs and dean of the school of medicine.
Standing next to Yale President Richard C. Levin was a tall, bespectacled
man in a dark suit and white beard who has a passion for cultivating water
lilies and has been sighted more than once on Cedar Street astride a Harley-Davidson.

“You may be asking yourself, as I did, ‘Why Spencer?’”
the new interim dean, neurosurgeon Dennis D. Spencer, M.D., HS ’77,
said a few minutes later, evoking a laugh from the crowd. Looking at Levin,
he went on: “He chose a surgeon, and so I thought maybe he wants
quick decisions. So I’ve made two already. First I will decree that
the first floor of the Air Rights Garage will be reserved for the exclusive
use of motorcycles. Second, I have just decided that the third-year medical
students will now be required to do a three-month rotation in neurosurgery.”

The room erupted in laughter and thus Spencer took the helm—at least
for a time—of the medical school where he began his career in 1972
as a resident. The moment summed up much about the person who has led
neurosurgery since 1987, building the section into a free-standing department
in 1997 and serving as its chair: people notice him, they listen and they
seem to enjoy the experience. “He’s the quintessential neurosurgeon
and a wonderful exemplar of the physician-scientist,” said Carolyn
W. Slayman, Ph.D., deputy dean for academic and scientific affairs and
Sterling Professor of Genetics.

Spencer himself sees the post as an opportunity to keep the school on
a steady course during a time of transition, and to move it ahead in certain
critical areas pending the appointment of a permanent successor to Kessler,
who came to Yale as dean in 1997.

In July, Spencer said that his initial areas of focus would be faculty
recruitment, fund-raising and shepherding the allocation of laboratory
and office space that becomes available as more than 700 investigators
move into the Anlyan Center for Medical Research and Education. He said
that Kessler’s “outstanding recruitments over the last few
years” of senior faculty members have equipped the school with “an
excellent complement in faculty leadership right now. … At this
stage we’re focusing on mid-level positions—some senior, some
junior, too, but primarily mid-level positions that have been created
in the process of bringing in new department chairs.”

Spencer also noted President Levin’s announcement on June 23 of
a $50 million matching endowment fund for the medical school. “This
promise is very real, and it’s going to be the top thing on our
agenda,” Spencer said.

A graduate of Grinnell College and Washington University School of Medicine
in St. Louis, Spencer came to Yale in 1972 as a resident in the Section
of Neurosurgery. He served as chief resident, then joined the faculty
as an assistant professor in 1977. Over the next 25 years, working with
colleagues including his wife, Susan S. Spencer, M.D., FW ’78, a
Yale neurologist and past president of the American Epilepsy Society,
he developed new approaches to the surgical treatment of epilepsy and
new models for understanding the biochemical and physiological mechanisms
of the disease.

In a September e-mail message to faculty, Levin announced the formation
of a 15-member advisory committee to assist him in the selection of the
next dean. “The committee’s first task will be to assist me
in evaluating the 41 candidates who have been identified by nominations
and in my conversations with the department chairs and other leaders of
the School,” he wrote. “If a wider search is undertaken, I
will seek the committee’s advice on how to proceed.”

In the interview, Spencer said he had not decided “whether to think
about [the deanship] as a full-time position” and is focusing his
attention on the tasks before him. He has appointed Joseph M. Piepmeier,
M.D., HS ’82, as the interim chair of the Department of Neurosurgery
and cut back his time in the operating room and clinic.

“My role is to keep things moving forward, and if Rick Levin thought
that was important and that I was the right person to try to do that,
I’m happy to do it, however long it takes,” Spencer said.

Levin praised Kessler for “six years of accomplishment and real
advances for the school,” notably the completion of the Anlyan Center
and the recruitment of more than a dozen department chairs and program
leaders. “This is a moment of sadness but also excitement as he
takes on what is a tremendous new challenge,” Levin said.

Michael Fitzsousa

|
|



|
| |
Basically, I lost everything here, scientist
Heng Zhu said of his year in diplomatic limbo.
|
|
A security review
drags on, devastating a scientist and derailing cutting-edge work
As a scientist, Heng Zhu, Ph.D., is used to dead ends, setbacks and
roadblocks. But nothing prepared him for the obstacles he would encounter
this past year when he tried to renew his expired visa and continue working
as a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Molecular, Cellular, and
Developmental Biology.

“It screwed up my life totally,” said Zhu. “I wasn’t
able to work for a year, and I lost my fellowship.” Without an income,
Zhu also lost his apartment and car, and his credit rating was ruined.
Because he was stranded in China for months, he and his fiancée
broke up.

Zhu’s troubles began in March 2002, when he realized he had let
his work visa expire. Returning to his native China to renew it, he wound
up languishing in Beijing for a year while the State Department did a
security review. He was finally allowed to re-enter the United States
in mid-April of this year.

Zhu, 35, became mired in the quicksand of heightened security measures
implemented after the September 11 terrorist attacks. His case drew national
attention, in part because his delay was longer than most, but also because
his work is groundbreaking and well-known.

“He invented a whole new technology that has enormous value for
understanding basic biological processes,” said Michael Snyder,
Ph.D., chair of Zhu’s department. Snyder said Zhu developed a method
to study the function of all 6,300 proteins encoded in the yeast genome.
Zhu’s work, likely to aid drug discovery efforts, yielded a $1.5
million grant from the National Institutes of Health.

When Zhu got stranded in China, Snyder and others circulated a petition,
wrote to congressional representatives and called the State Department,
all to no avail. The State Department doesn’t respond to questions
about particular cases, said Bureau of Consular Affairs spokesperson Stuart
Patt.

At Yale Zhu is not alone. According to Ann Kuhlman, director of the Office
of International Students and Scholars, about 20 foreign undergraduates,
graduate students, postdocs and faculty members experienced visa delays
during the 2002-03 academic year.

Zhu finally renewed his visa and returned to New Haven—but not for
long. Late in the summer, as his postdoctoral position at Yale came to
an end, he accepted a faculty position at Johns Hopkins.

Although he’s back in the United States and his career is back on
track, Zhu will never recover the time he lost at Yale. “I can’t
turn back the clock—that’s the bottom line—which is
a loss to Yale and the United States as well as to me.”

—Jennifer Kaylin

|
|
|
| |
Special Forces troops, such as these searching a home in Afghanistan,
release higher levels of neuropeptide Y, which helps them deal with stress.

|
|
Neuropeptide’s
presence in high levels suggests soldiers are born, not made
Contrary to the image of hardened drill sergeants molding untrained youths
into skilled fighting machines, a Yale psychiatrist suspects that some
soldiers may be born that way.

Charles A. Morgan III, M.D., associate professor of psychiatry, studied
troops taking a rigorous survival course at Ft. Bragg, N.C., home to the
XVIII Airborne Corps, to see whether some handled stress better than others.
Working with researchers from the base, he found that the Army Special
Forces, also known as Green Berets, consistently outperformed the other
soldiers. When he looked at the levels of neuropeptide Y, a brain chemical
that is linked to stress, he noticed that the Berets released higher levels
during periods of stress and then returned to baseline more quickly once
the stress was removed.

“As a group, the Special Forces were releasing so much more, we
could identify who was in that unit just by looking at the numbers,”
Morgan said. “The more neuropeptide Y they were releasing during
stress, the fewer symptoms of confusion or mental disconnection during
stress were reported.” During their training, soldiers are deprived
of food and sleep, pursued through rough terrain by other soldiers acting
as the enemy and, if “captured,” subjected to interrogation.

Morgan has published his research in several journals, most recently last
year in Biological Psychiatry. But as soldiers prepared to go to
war in Iraq in the spring, Morgan’s studies drew attention from
the national press.

He says the question raised by his findings is whether the Special Forces
soldiers have always released higher levels of the chemical or whether
their training somehow enhanced their ability to do so. “I don’t
think that’s likely. I think those guys are just different,”
Morgan said, “but we’re still testing that hypothesis.”

Morgan’s findings could help the Army select the most likely candidates
for dangerous duty, but there are also civilian applications. “Because
we found that neuropeptide Y is low in people with anxiety disorders and
depression, this raises the possibility of new ways of treating them.
One might expect that pharmacologic agents that act as agonists at the
npy-1 receptor might diminish anxiety,” he said.

Morgan is now looking at ways to help soldiers bounce back from stressful
situations more quickly and manage stress more effectively so they don’t
make costly—or deadly—mistakes.

Jennifer Kaylin

|
|
|
| |
In a talk sponsored by the Yale Stem Cell Interest Group, actor Christopher
Reeve said science, not religion, should drive the debate over stem
cell
research.
|
|
Keep religion out of
stem cell research, Reeve urges medical school audience
Social and religious conservatives have robbed American scientists of
their chance to play a leading role in the promising field of stem cell
research, actor and writer Christopher Reeve said during a visit to the
medical school in April. “We’re giving away our pre-eminence
in science and medicine,” he said. “We’re going to lose
incredibly valuable time.

“When matters of public policy are being decided, no religion should
have a seat at the table—that is what is provided for in the Constitution,”
Reeve said. Yet religious conservatives, including the Pope, he said,
“have an undue influence in the debate.”

Because of their plasticity—their ability to differentiate into
any cell in the human body—stem cells “have unlimited potential
to cure disease,” Reeve told the crowd that filled the auditorium
of the Anylan Center for Medical Research and Education. Reeve also hopes
that stem cell research will lead to a cure for paralysis such as his,
the result of a 1995 riding accident.

In a talk sponsored by the Yale Stem Cell Interest Group, Reeve criticized
President Bush’s order of August 9, 2001, restricting federal funding
for embryonic stem cell research to only 64 extant cell lines. (Last May,
National Institutes of Health Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D., acknowledged
that only 11 of those lines were eligible for federal research funds.)
Reeve suggested that the decision made no ethical sense in light of Bush’s
objection to using embryos for research. “Those lines were derived
from leftover embryos from infertility clinics. Did he suddenly develop
a new morality effective August 10th?”

Reeve noted that, although typically about a third of embryos are discarded
as medical waste, even vocal opponents of using embryos for research have
never suggested banning in vitro fertilization. “They know very
well that you can’t go to a couple and say, ‘You can’t
have a child this way.’”

President Bush has followed his ruling on stem cells with a call for a
ban on all forms of human cloning, whether therapeutic or reproductive.
Reeve made a distinction between reproductive cloning of human beings
(which “sounds like Frankenstein’s work,” and which
he opposes) and cloning stem cells from embryos and adult tissues for
research. Reeve rejected the implication “that science has no ethics
and that it will run rampant if religion and conservative ideologies aren’t
brought into the picture.”

He called stem cell research “the future of science.” “There’s
going to be a seismic shift,” Reeve told an audience composed largely
of medical and doctoral students, “and you will ride the wave into
an era when stem cells will be able to aid millions of people.”
He urged the audience to “make it happen here,” but advised
young scientists to leave the United States and pursue the research elsewhere,
if necessary. “It’s a big world. … If you really want
to heal people, you go where the work is being done.

“Even though I sit here in a wheelchair, frustrated by today’s
public policy, I’m very hopeful about tomorrow and what will be
achieved,” Reeve said. “And so, go do it.”

—Cathy Shufro

|
|
|
| |
|
|
Warshaw returns for
symposium
For the second year, Joseph B. Warshaw, M.D., former deputy dean and
chair of pediatrics, visited Yale from his post as dean of the University
of Vermont College of Medicine. Eight scientists from around the country
came to Yale in March to discuss the cardiovascular system at the Joseph
B. Warshaw Symposium on Developmental Biology. Clifford W. Bogue, M.D.,
HS ’90, FW ’93, chief of the pediatric intensive care unit,
welcomed Warshaw, describing him as a “leader in pediatrics throughout
his career,” with a strong interest in nurturing pediatric scientists.

|
|
|
| |
|
|

Et Cetera
University, unions settle strike
As Yale Medicine went to press, the university and two major unions
representing close to 4,000 workers had reached a tentative agreement
to end a three-and-a-half-week strike, the ninth on the campus in 35 years.

The agreement, which had yet to be ratified by union members, resulted
in unprecedented eight-year contracts with the two unions. It was reached
on September 18 after a series of bargaining sessions involving President
Richard C. Levin and John W. Wilhelm, president of the Hotel Employees
and Restaurant Employees International Union. Mayor John DeStefano Jr.
served as mediator.

Members of Local 34, which represents clerical and technical workers,
and Local 35, representing service and maintenance employees, walked off
their jobs on August 27. In March the unions struck for a week. The recent
strike coincided with students returning to campus, drew national attention
and brought the Rev. Jesse Jackson as well two presidential candidates
to campus in support of the strikers.

The two sides were at odds over salaries, job security, retroactive pay
and pensions. Details of the settlement were not available.

Jennifer Kaylin


Spellbound by spelling
Don’t count on keeping up with the competitors in Spellbound,
the Oscar-nominated documentary about the 1999 National Spelling Bee.
But if you see the movie, you may spot three members of the medical school
community.

They include Suzanne P. Lagarde, M.D., HS ’77, FW ’80, assistant
clinical professor of medicine, and David Stagg, Ph.D., research scientist
in pharmacology, parents of Emily Stagg, one of eight children profiled
in the film. Emily’s participation introduced Lagarde and Stagg
to the spelling bee subculture, in which the Paideia, a collection
of spelling bee words, is considered the Bible. Emily’s strategy
was to learn roots from four languages.

Eighth-grader Emily was one of 250 finalists from a field of 9 million
competitors. So how did she do? See the film, with its cameo of the 1971
champion, Jonathan P.S. Knisely, M.D., associate professor of therapeutic
radiology. His winning word: “shalloon.”

Cathy Shufro


|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |