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2006 Yale Medal Recipients |
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Victor E. Chears '74
Chears has served Yale with distinction and devotion in his many
volunteer leadership roles for almost 30 years, since his graduation
from Yale College in 1974. After serving as an AYA delegate, he
was elected to the AYA Board of Governors in 1988 and served as
Secretary from 1991 to 1992. Chears chaired the board of the Afro-American
Cultural Center at Yale in the early 1980s, and was co-chair of
its 35th anniversary celebration in 2004. He has been an ASC interviewer
for over 25 years and continues to serve as a Board member of the
Yale Club of Chicago, where he is a former president. |
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Dr. Samuel D. Kushlan '32 '35 MD
Dr. Kushlan, a 1932 alumnus of Yale College, has been the consummate
volunteer and alumni leader for the Yale Medical School, serving
in many volunteer roles since his graduation in 1935. Kushlan has
taught residents, medical students and physicians voluntarily at
the School of Medicine for over 50 years. At age 95 he continues
to attend “morning report” of Yale-New Haven Hospital
Department of Medicine where one of the services bears his name.
He has also established Merit Awards for the Medical House Staff
and Digestive Disease Fellows. In addition, Kushlan has volunteered
his time and resources to create an outstanding Capital Visiting
Professorship in Gastroenterology.
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John E. Pepper Jr. '60
Pepper has served the Yale community, first as a member of the
Development Board and later as a member of the 1960 Class Council
and Reunion Gift Committee. Pepper also taught a course for a semester
as an adjunct professor and was a member of the Advisory Committee
at the School of Management. He was a member of the Yale Corporation,
the University’s governing board, for eight years, including
service as Senior Fellow for 18 months. He stepped down from the
Corporation when asked by the University to serve as vice president
for finance and administration. Given his major commitments in
his home city of Cincinnati, Pepper served just two years in this
capacity. In that time, Pepper initiated a critical transformation
of the university’s administrative and financial operations.
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Jon E. Steffensen '68
Steffensen’s affection for Yale is evident from his many
volunteer leadership roles since his graduation from Yale College
in 1968. His longtime service and leadership for the Yale Club
of Boston led him to become an AYA delegate in 1981. He was then
elected to the AYA Board of Governors in 1984, and served as Secretary
in 1987. From there he went on to serve on the University’s
Honorary Degree Committee. Steffensen’s strong leadership
skills led him to become chair of the Scholarship Trust of the
Yale Club of Boston, which has been instrumental in helping undergraduates
in the Boston area meet the cost of a Yale education.
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Vera F. Wells '71
Wells has helped organize events for both women and Black alumni
and has championed efforts to raise funds to support the Afro-American
Cultural Center and Women Faculty Forum. A Yale College graduate
of the Class of 1971, she is on the Campaign Committee and is an
at-large member of the University Council, where she served on
its Theater Review Committee. A former student of Professor Sylvia
Ardyn Boone, the first African-American woman to receive tenure
at Yale, Wells is executor of Boone's literary estate and Director
of the Boone Memorial Project. Wells used her own assets to endow
an undergraduate scholarship and a graduate student prize to honor
her professor at Yale.
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