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Sidebar:
A bed at Ma Levin’s, dinner at Nick’s
and nary an e-mail in sight.


Jenny Blair likens her Harkness apartment’s quirks to those of an
old friend. The bathroom door sticks, layers of paint cover everything
and her oven overheats by 100 degrees. But, she says, “these are
all part of the charm of the place.”




Living in an apartment overlooking Harkness Lawn keeps Blair connected
to the school and classmates. “Friends walk by and wave for me to
let them in, and I always know when impromptu snowball scrimmages are
on.” Edward S. Harkness Hall turns 50 in 2005; see Archives.





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“That college
feeling”
What student in her right mind would choose to live in a dorm for all
four years of medical school? Ask Jenny Blair, who enjoyed a gym in the
basement, a piano in the Harkness ballroom and snowball fights right outside
the door.
By Jenny Blair
Photographs by Terry Dagradi

Midtown, Hyde Park, Brookline. Match Day is upon us, and I am looking
for a neighborhood in the cities whose hospitals I’ve applied to.
Soon I will be looking for an apartment. Strange though it sounds, it
will be hard to improve upon the one I have on the medical school campus.

Our class moved into Harkness Dormitory in August 2000, after renovations
had polished it back to new. The doors swung smoothly. The floors were
so clean that it felt like sacrilege the first time your bare feet felt
the crunch of dirt on them. The low-pitched, constant whoosh of building
ventilators coming from the courtyard—or the ripping decibels of
motorcycles on the Frontage Road side—became our lullabies. We had
sinks in our rooms, clean tiled bathrooms down the hall and windows generous
enough to help the building shed its old nickname (“You don’t
live in Darkness Hall, do you?” asked a smart aleck I met through
an online dating service).

Though I’d known the freedom of apartment life during my years at
Yale College, I initially opted for the dormitory for social reasons.
Ask almost anyone who chooses Harkness and they’ll say the same
thing, though they’ll mention the location and the in-house cafeteria
and the relief of not needing to look for an apartment in a strange city.
New Haven was no novelty to me; I could have picked out a porch-and-yard
in the Grad Ghetto in the East Rock neighborhood or on Prospect Street
with English and physics students as neighbors. But I wanted to start
medical school with my very own class. So I wedged belongings from the
three-bedroom shared apartment I’d occupied during a post-college
year into a tiny room beside the elevator, on the eighth floor. It was
small, but near everybody else, including students from the other health
schools, and you couldn’t beat the commute—though that didn’t
keep us from trotting down Cedar Street late for morning lectures, slinking
into the back of Hope 110 with coffee in hand.

A room with a view
I nested quickly, decorating the door with photos from magazines and the
obligatory message board, and coming to relish the view from my window:
food-cart picnickers on the grass, day-care kids playing and always the
stately Sterling Hall of Medicine, with odd windows lit at night. The
eighth floor was all-female, and peaceful. The happenin’ floor was
the ninth. It was there that we threw our parties; people strung black
bags over the ceiling lights, and someone DJ’d with his own equipment
and we all felt like college freshmen again, only much cooler. These days,
first-year students use the ninth floor’s kitchen to get together
for a weekly dinner they cook themselves.

But no one, it seems, wants that college feeling for long. My classmates,
almost to a person, stopped living on the med school campus after their
first year. The many perks—Tuesday-night Queer Eye for the Straight
Guy (or, when we were first-years, Temptation Island), instant
access to food carts, laundry machines, Ethernet, even the lack of any
commute to Yale-New Haven Hospital (which can mean an extra half-hour
of sleep during tough rotations)—don’t seem to overcome the
stigma of a dormitory. Most people moved into high-rises two blocks away,
or up to the Science Hill neighborhood, where they walk their dogs and
jog past lawns, bushes and postdocs out with spouse and stroller. After
four years, though, I’m one of the few die-hards still living here,
though I switched to the apartment side of Harkness during second year.
(Harkness Apartments is Harkness Dormitory’s endearingly scruffy
neighbor. Positioned at right angles to the dormitory—the two buildings
hug the courtyard—it is only four stories high, and its units are
one-bedroom apartments instead of studio-style dorm rooms. Together they
are Edward S. Harkness Hall.) Whether for reasons of convenience, aesthetics
or sociability, Harkness has always lent my medical school experience
something inimitable.
 
On the happenin’ floor, communal meals
I wondered how other students felt about it. On a recent Sunday evening
I revisited the ninth floor to check out the fabled communal meals. When
I arrived, a dozen or so students were watching football on TV and eating
a pepper-speckled Caesar salad from a big bowl. Two women hovered over
great pots of chili on the stove. Empty cans and packages of guacamole
littered the counter. A keg waited expectantly in a corner.

Eyeing the generous bowls of corn chips, I sat down beside a first-year
named Brendan Jackson who, as it turned out, was a member of a mysterious
sixth-floor Frat. “It’s very unofficial—Ru-Rah-Rigma,”
he explained mysteriously. “There’s a fraternity on the sixth
floor?” asked a classmate. (It’s an all-male floor.) “Yeah.
Live on the sixth floor and you’re in.” Jackson is also the
Harkness Dorm Liaison. He had recently been elected by his classmates,
though he ran unopposed. His duties include presenting the dorm dwellers’
complaints to the Powers That Be. Complaints like what? “The water
pressure!” he answered. “None of the TVs work except the one
on the ninth floor,” put in a woman who was standing by. Maybe that’s
how the ninth floor got so popular.

The home-cooked dinners began because the dining hall is closed on weekends.
They were the brainchild of first-years Caryn St. Clair and Misaki Kiguchi.
When I first saw Misaki, words like “brisk” and “efficient”
came to mind. As students slipped into the lounge, she swung between kitchen
and tables as if on a hinge, handing off bowls of chili topped with blue
corn chips, purple onions, guacamole, sour cream and shredded cheese to
one eater after another. The room grew happy and noisy, and soon people
were wading through the crowd to the keg and helping themselves. I stretched
like a cat and enjoyed the atmosphere.

Tired of eating at Subway every weekend, Misaki convened a group of students
willing to take turns catering for each other. She makes up the schedule
and e-mails it to everyone involved. When people who aren’t part
of the circuit show up to mooch, she publicly assigns them a night to
cater for the group, trusting in the potential wrath of 40 hungry classmates
to exert the necessary social pressure. Dishes served in weeks past have
included chicken Marsala, pancakes and caramel apples. As I chatted with
the diners, an arm reached into our midst and set down a big pan of sliced
blueberry cornbread. I took a piece, ate it, then took another. Though
I was too afraid of being forced to cater for 40 people to sneak a bowl
of chili, resistance to cornbread was futile.

Remembering what it was like trying to fit my complicated mess into one
room, I asked the general assemblage if anyone had decorated really creatively.
One of their number was pushed forward, protesting feebly. “You’ll
see what can be done with a Harkness room,” they promised me. The
student in question, willing but abashed, led me to his room and unlocked
it.
 This man had a gift. Red curtains, sleek pine bookshelves, delicate fabric
lamps shaped like Platonic solids, a tidy futon, a patterned rug instead
of the standard ratty Persian knockoff, a graceful easy chair. It was
Urban Outfitters, it was Ikea, it was glorious. It even smelled good.

Yet even he is planning to leave, as is every current first-year I asked.

I stayed. I love living in Harkness. Friends walk by the window and wave
for me to let them in, and I always know when impromptu snowball scrimmages
are on. The basement gym is too close for excuses. I can walk downstairs
with a folder of music and practice the piano in the ballroom. In late
evening I can slip across the lawn to the computer lab or library—the
lack of psychological distance between work and home life doesn’t
bother me, for some reason. Here on the apartment side, the dormitory
gods even provide free furniture. My couch and easy chair began life as
seating for interviewees in the Office of Student Affairs. Tacit neighborly
trades go on all the time, as when a bookshelf or night table turns up
in a hallway and a day later is eased, skittering, into someone else’s
room.

I prefer the apartments for a few reasons. For one thing, I’m not
an elevator person. As anyone who has watched me can tell you, I tend
to stride purposefully toward my destination. Elevators interrupt the
vector. The Harkness elevators were particularly irksome because they
were often out of order. This happened so often that I learned to build
it into my day, leaving extra time to get up and down the stairs on days
when the building was competing for a single elevator. Living on the eighth
floor, it was just barely worth it to wait rather than take the stairs,
but I never learned patience. Apologetic signs appeared on the elevator
doors over and over again, and soon we all knew where the first-floor
stairwell door was. When I moved into Harkness Apartments, I chose a second-floor
unit. Suddenly it was possible to run home from the hospital and pick
up a forgotten stethoscope or heat up some lunch.

A decided advantage to the apartment side of Harkness, indeed, is the
kitchenette. Though I’m no chef, it can be hard to transition back
to a meal plan after having lived in an apartment. The dormitory’s
common-room kitchens come complete with sink, stove, microwave and freezer
(“NOT A REFRIDGERATOR [sic],” a sign reminds us). But their
public location creates a certain tension between the shared and the owned.
Some people take their chances and leave things there. When I was a first-year,
one student used to leave her carton of eggs out on a shelf. I doubt anyone
stole an egg, but I remember slices gone missing from the loaves of bread
I stored in the freezer. Annoyed, I piled breakfast fixings onto a cart
every morning—pot, oatmeal, eggs, plate, fork, spatula—and
wheeled it into the elevator to ride one floor up. Ding. But the dumpy
little cart dampened any culinary ambitions I might have had after managing
breakfast. Now that I have a kitchen of my own, I’ve upgraded to
soups and stir-fries.

Like an old friend
It’s taken some practice, though. In contrast to the spanking-clean
Harkness dorm rooms, the apartment side hasn’t been renovated. I
like it that way; my apartment’s quirks are like an old friend’s.
It’s the type of place where everything is covered with layers of
paint—radiators, light switches, coat hooks. Every piece of furniture
is an orphan. Several generations of curtain rods grace each window. The
window in the bedroom is stuck slightly open year-round, while the bathroom
door, if fully closed, traps guests inside (if I forget to warn them,
I have to kick it open while they cower behind the sink). The oven reliably
overshoots by 100 degrees, and the markings wore off the burner dials
ages ago. But these are all part of the charm of the place, and I’ve
mastered the workarounds. With vigilance and a thermometer, I can even
wrest pie from the oven.

Do fourth-year medical students get “senioritis”? As part
of final-semester lassitude, I spend a lot of time daydreaming about my
next place, as well as reminiscing. I’ve lived in a lot of apartments.
There was a New Haven summer sublet on Bishop Street, with hardwood floors
that sloped and roaches so ubiquitous that I kept dishes buttoned into
Tupperwares to keep them clean. There was a carpeted one in Ann Arbor,
an easy walk from downtown, that smelled of the downstairs neighbor’s
ferrets. At night a freight train hustled by, waking me, then soothing
me back to sleep. There was a flat in Fort Lauderdale that huddled in
a patch of downtown jungle. I remember wet heat, ants streaming across
the windowsill to the spot of jelly on the counter, peacocks strolling
outside. The year after graduating from Yale College, I lived in New Haven
in a place memorable more for its roommates—a bread-baking astrophysicist,
an Orthodox Jew who knew six languages and a geologist obsessed with bunnies
and Renaissance Fairs—than for its physical plant. Then I was accepted
to Yale Med. For four years, Harkness has welcomed me home, and I could
hardly ask for better. YM

Fourth-year student Jenny Blair will begin a residency in emergency
medicine this summer at University of Chicago Hospitals. Terry Dagradi
is a photographer with the MedMedia Group at the School of Medicine.

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Members of the Class of 1954 gathered outside a rooming house on Howard
avenue, sometime in the 1950s.

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A bed at Ma Levin’s, dinner
at Nick’s and nary an e-mail in sight.
It’s been more than half a century since Arthur C. Crovatto, M.D.
’54, HS ’61, was a first-year Yale medical student living
in Ma Levin’s boarding house on Howard Avenue, but he can tick off
the names of his housemates as easily as if he were telling you who was
at last Saturday night’s poker game: “Let’s see, there
were 11 of us. I roomed with Bob Joy. Buzz Lind, John Rose and Lowell
Olson were down the hall. Then there was Harry Miller … Bill Elliott.
… ”

Residential life for medical students in the early 1950s fostered a camaraderie
that has endured well beyond that triumphant moment when they received
their diplomas. Despite, or perhaps because of, arduous studies and living
conditions that can best be described as austere, graduates of 1954 recall
those days with the warm affection of soldiers bonded by the rigors of
boot camp.

Recollections of that time, which ended with the opening of the Edward
S. Harkness Memorial Residence Hall in the fall of 1955, live on in a
class book assembled by the Class of 1954 in preparation for their 50th
reunion next spring. Robert P. Hatch, M.D. ’54, edited the class
book.

“We loved the place,” Crovatto says of his first New Haven
domicile. (When her boarders told her about a broken toilet seat, Ma Levin
responded that it was for “half-assed doctors. The name—‘home
for half-assed doctors’—stuck.”) Ma Levin’s boarders
may not have known their host’s first name, but the house rules
were never in doubt. “She wouldn’t tolerate women. Wouldn’t
let them in the front door,” Crovatto recalls. Everyone knew Ma
hoped her niece Jackie would marry a medical student, so whether this
prohibition was a reflection of her moral code or just a desire to lessen
Jackie’s competition was not known. “Only once in my life
have I found a bottle of wine so bad that I couldn’t drink it. It
was a bottle of something Ma Levin’s niece tried to share with us,”
recalls Lowell E. Olson, M.D. ’54. “But it was a nice place
to live. We all got along well.”

For $8 a week, Levin’s tenants got a room, housekeeping service,
clean sheets and Sunday breakfast. They ate the rest of their meals at
Nick’s or one of the other greasy spoons that lined Congress Avenue.
Dinner cost about 50 cents, and students often worked in the restaurant
in exchange for food.

But the big treat for those who stayed at Ma Levin’s was access
to something rare and wonderful—television on Sunday evenings. “I’d
never seen TV before. We’d all get together and watch Your Show
of Shows with Sid Caesar,” recalls Harry C. Miller Jr., M.D.
’54. “She was like a surrogate mother to us.”

Although Ma Levin’s boarders enjoyed the homey atmosphere, they
were usually eager to move into one of the medical school dormitories
farther down Howard Avenue (where the children’s hospital now stands).
The cost was between $5 and $8 per week for a single room and between
$3 and $5 per person for a double. But the main allure was a chance to
interact with the more advanced students and to learn from their experiences.
Plus, there were fewer rules. “I liked it better,” says Crovatto.
“You were absolutely free to do what you wanted, as long as you
didn’t burn the place down,” which probably wouldn’t
have been hard to do. Adds Miller: “I remember a guy was locked
out of his room, so he just broke through the wall.”

Some students had radios or phonographs for entertainment. “I brought
a stack of very precious first-edition 78s I’d collected: Glenn
Miller, Tommy Dorsey,” says Miller. “When I left med school
I foolishly didn’t take them with me. Somebody probably used them
as Frisbees.” As for access to telephones, “It wasn’t
a big deal in our lives,” says Miller. “I can’t even
remember. There may have been a pay phone somewhere.” One thing
everybody remembers vividly was the formal tea hosted by faculty wives
four days a week. “The tea was poured from a samovar, with cups,
saucers, spoons, little cakes, the whole bit,” says Crovatto. “Everyone
came—faculty, nurses, students, house staff. It was a wonderful
tradition.” Less charming, but arguably more timeless, were the
loud parties on the back porch of the dorm. Crovatto recalls a particularly
boisterous gala involving fireworks after the board exams. “There
was a convent right behind us. Usually the sisters were very tolerant,
but this time they called the police.”

The Class of 1954 included three women. Two lived off campus, and one,
Eva H. Henriksen, M.D. ’54, lived with women from the public health
program in a dormitory next to the men’s building. Consequently,
dormitory life for her was significantly different than it was for the
men.

“We were allowed to study together, to help each other, so the guys
would get together in their dorm,” Henriksen says. “But I
wasn’t going to go next door to study with them. You just didn’t
do that in those days. I wasn’t a great med student, but I did it
all myself.” Henriksen did find a way to “visit” with
one student in the men’s dorm. “The space between his window
and mine was just close enough that if we both leaned out, I could hand
him a cup of tea,” she recalls. “Then he’d hand me his
mother’s home-baked black walnut cookies.”

Also outside the mainstream housing experience were World War II veterans,
who lived with their wives and children in Armoryville, a village of metal
half-cylinder Quonset huts built by the Army near the Yale Bowl. Two couples
occupied each hut, one couple at each end, with the two apartments separated
by a thin wall. “In the winter, whether you were warm or cold depended
on which way the wind was blowing,” says Richard D. Pullen, M.D.
’54, a Navy veteran. The apartments, which rented for $37 a month,
were heated with a pot-bellied coal stove and cooled by a sprinkler on
the roof. “Silvia Heap, the wife of Walker Heap, put a can of frozen
orange juice on the counter to thaw,” recalls Hatch. “When
she came back a few hours later, it had exploded in the heat.” Hatch’s
other vivid recollection is that “the walls were quite thin, so
you pretty well knew what activity was going on next door. It was kind
of intimate that way.”

While football games at the Bowl provided entertainment for veterans and
their wives, they could also be a hardship. Either the couples were hounded
by tailgaters wanting to use their bathrooms, or the roads leading to
their homes were blocked off by traffic police. Getting to and from the
medical school was also a challenge. Hatch remembers commuting for a while
on an “old rusty bike I’d picked up somewhere.” Armoryville
couples usually walked, biked, took the bus or used vintage Plymouths
or Fords. “It might have been hard, but I remember it as a happy
and fulfilling time,” Hatch says.

Indeed, whether home was a Quonset hut, a dormitory or a rooming house,
the memories of former occupants have acquired the patina of nostalgia.
“Things happen in your life that are life-changing. My going to
the Yale Medical School was one of them,” says Crovatto.

—Jennifer Kaylin

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