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Topic Name: New Haven is the best city in the world
Message Name: continued...
Date Posted: 01/22/2000
In Reply To: As a former resident of Glastonbury, Connecticut (outside Hartford), I feel it necessary to respond to several posts over the past few months which concerned the city of New Haven, Connecticut and the University therein. It seems as if people here are very unfamiliar with the State, and there were a few other questions that I've responded to as well. Yes, Yale established the nation's first graduate school of arts and sciences, in 1846, which awarded the first Ph.D. in 1861, and the first Ph.D. to an African-American in 1876. Even though it awarded the first Ph.D. and medical degree in America (in 1720), I would hesitate to call it the nation's first university. U-Penn actually founded the first graduate school (a medical school), and might be considered the first. Harvard, founded in 1636, is typically considered the first even though Yale developed more rapidly and has historically been more prestigious than Harvard. The first Chinese citizen to graduate from a Western university graduated from Yale in 1854. Yale was founded in 1701 and has been in New Haven since 1717. The City of New Haven, grid-planned in 1638, was the first planned city in the United States. New Haven also invented the first pizza, hamburger, polio vaccine, lyme disease vaccine, telephone company, telephone switchboard, public tree-planting program, chemotherapy, scientific school, artificial heart-lung machine (on display in the Smithsonian), professor of paleontology, scientific journal, medical journal of case reports, field of biochemistry, calzone, american football game, intercollegiate basketball game, university art museum, university school of art, steamboat, submarine, interchangable parts factory, cotton gin, automatic revolver, lollipop, corset industry, assembly line, pediatric medicine course, ribozymes (RNA-catalase), fraternal Catholic mens' association (KofC), planetarium, hybrid corn, acidophilus milk, auto self-starter, football shoes, football dummy, batting cage, and figure skating championship (1914) in America. All of this for a small city with 125,000 residents.
Message: There were 2 robberies, 4 car thefts, 0 murders, and 1 aggravated assault last year on and around the Yale University campus, according to FBI Uniform Crime reporting. This is less than Harvard, Brown, MIT, Duke and even Stanford; and much less than Columbia, and U-Penn, which saw 39 robberies, 24 car thefts, and 15 aggravated assaults according to this year's UPenn safety report. Although it was once one of the more dangerous campuses, Yale is now one of the safest campuses in the nation. The administration, once conservative, has responded to the realities of things like adding campus lighting and creating a police force. The Yale University security report can be viewed at http://www.yale.edu/search/securityrep.pdf. By the way, both of those Yale robberies occurred in the same parking lot off campus, all four of the cars were recovered, and the assault involved two individuals who knew each other. Read the security report. Oh yeah, if you hear sirens around the Yale campus, it's because Yale-New Haven Hospital, one of the nation's most important and largest hospitals and medical research complexes, is located adjacent to the Yale central campus. The sirens are ambulance sirens taking advantage of some of the larger roads which run close to the Yale campus. This allows Yale students to work in the hospital and medical school (#3 all-time USNWR-ranked) by walking over. This can't be said for Harvard, JHU, Cornell, Tufts, or U-Penn; medical schools at these institutions are located several (or even hundreds) of miles away from the undergraduate colleges.

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