Ezra Stiles College

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Ezra Stiles College
Image:ezrastilescoatofarms.jpg
Motto ?
"One love, one moose."
Named For Ezra Stiles
Established 1961
Colors Black, gold
College Master Stuart Schwartz
College Dean Jennifer Wood
Undergraduates 400-500
Called Stilesians
Location 19 Tower Parkway
Homepage http://www.ezrastilescollege.org

Ezra Stiles College is a residential college at Yale University, built in 1961 by Eero Saarinen. Architecturally, it is known for its lack of right angles. It is adjacent to Morse College.

Stiles has had success in Yale's intramural sports program, winning the Tyng Cup — presented to the residential college with the best intramural sports performance — in 2003, 2004, and 2005. Stiles has won a total of 10 Tyng Cups, just one behind leaders Pierson College and Timothy Dwight College.

Ezra Stiles and Morse co-host an annual Casino Night, thought to be one of the nation's best-organized college parties.[citation needed] A formal affair, the event features casino-style games and live music. Nearly 3,000 people attended the 2005 event, which was planned by Stiles Activities Chairs Christina Tubb, David Nitkin, and Eric Sandberg-Zakian.[citation needed]

Contents

[edit] History

In his report on the 1955-56 academic year, Yale President A. Whitney Griswold announced his intention to add at least one more residential college to the system Yale had launched only two decades earlier. "We have the colleges so full that community life, discipline, education, even sanitation are suffering," he stated.[citation needed] This news bred wild rumors about four or five new colleges being added to Yale's system. Nothing substantial was announced until the spring of 1959 when Eero Saarinen '34 was chosen as the architect, and the Old York Square behind the Graduate School became the designated site. The Old Dominion Foundation, established by Paul Mellon '29, provided money to build two "radically different" colleges, which would alleviate the growing strain on the existing colleges.

The cornerstone of the college was laid on Alumni Day, 1961, and students took up residence in September 1962. The college was dedicated the following December 7. The purchase of the land — previously occupied by Hillhouse High School and Commercial High School — from the City of New Haven was made possible by a grant from John Hay Whitney, Yale Class of 1926.

The college, considered by many architecture critics a masterpiece of American architecture[citation needed], is built of rubble masonry with buildings and a tower in the style of pre-Gothic Tuscan towers such as still exist in the medieval Italian hill town of San Gimignano.[citation needed] The college consists almost entirely of single rooms, and in a modern attempt to capture the spirit of Gothic architecture, Saarinen eliminated all right angles from the living areas.

Stiles' adjacent "twin" residential college Morse is architecturally-similar and was built at the same time. The two distinct colleges share an underground kitchen. Architecturally, Morse and Stiles differ from predecessors by having more private space per student and the lowest ratio of natural light aperture to wall surface of any of the colleges.


[edit] Masters and deans

Masters of Ezra Stiles College Term
Richard B. Sewall 1961-?
A. Bartlett Giamatti 1970-1972
Hans Wilhelm Frei 1972-1980
Heinrich von Staden 1980-1986
Traugott Lawler 1986-1995
Paul Fry 1995-2002
Traugott Lawler 2002-2003 (Acting Master)
Stuart Schwartz 2003-Present
Stephen Pitti Future Master beginning Fall 2008
Deans of Ezra Stiles College Term
Herbert Atherton
Susan Rieger 1992-?
Jennifer Wood 2002-Present
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[edit] Trivia

The mascot is the A. Bartlett Giamatti Memorial Moose. The stuffed moose head that graces the college dining hall was named in honor of former college Master Bart Giamatti, who in 1977 became Yale's youngest president, and in 1989 was named Commissioner of Baseball. Giamatti's son, actor Paul Giamatti, lived in the Master's House on the Ezra Stiles College grounds from birth through age five.

Contrary to popular belief, the college's concrete walls were never meant to be covered with ivy.[citation needed]

Because none of the interior walls make right angles, the dorm rooms are furnished with built-in desks and bookshelves. Some rooms had no wall space sufficient to provide for an adjacent normal bed. The college was once heated by a system that warmed the stone floors, but maintenance troubles led Yale to abandon it and install radiators.

Residents of the tower had access through a window to the roof of the Yale Co-op, which would sometimes be covered with a sheet of ice, permitting brave students to ice skate on the open roof (without railings of course).

[edit] Notable alumni

[edit] External links


Residential Colleges of Yale University
Berkeley College | Branford College | Calhoun College | Davenport College | Ezra Stiles College | Jonathan Edwards College
Morse College | Pierson College | Saybrook College | Silliman College | Timothy Dwight College | Trumbull College