MilestonesMore news of Yale peopleStephen Adams ’59 and his wife Denise. View full imageRememberedStephen Adams ’59, who with his wife Denise gave $100 million to make the Yale School of Music tuition-free, died on March 14 at his home in Connecticut. He was 86. With an MBA from Stanford, Adams became a successful businessman in a number of fields, but he was best known for his philanthropy. At the Yale School of Medicine, the couple made a gift to establish the Stephen and Denise Adams Center for Parkinson’s Research, and at Yale New Haven Hospital, the Adams Neurosciences Center. Adams was awarded the Yale Medal in 2009, and the Adams Center for Musical Arts is named for them. Ken Mackenzie ’56, who coached the Yale varsity baseball team from 1969 to 1978, died on December 14 at his home in Guilford, Connecticut. He was 89. MacKenzie was a two-sport varsity athlete at Yale, playing both hockey and baseball. He captained the baseball team in his senior season and led the team to a conference title. He pitched as a reliever in the major league for six years and was part of the roster for the New York Mets in their infamous 1962 inaugural season; in fact, he was the only pitcher on the team with a winning record that year. After stepping down as coach at Yale, MacKenzie worked for the Yale Alumni Association until his retirement in 1984. HonoredEight writers have been honored with the 2024 Windham-Campbell Prize, a $175,000 award inaugurated in 2013 and administered by the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. This year’s winners in fiction are Deirdre Madden (Ireland) and Kathryn Scanlan (US); in nonfiction, Christina Sharpe (Canada/US) and Hanif Abdurraqib (US); in drama, Christopher Chen (US) and Sonya Kelly (Ireland); and in poetry, M. Nourbese Philip (Canada/Trinidad and Tobago) and Jen Hadfield (Canada/UK). The recipients will come to campus in September to speak at the Windham-Campbell Festival. Stepping downCourtney Martin ’09PhD is leaving her post as director of the Yale Center for British Art at the end of June to become the executive director of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation in New York. Martin, an art historian, has been director of the YCBA since 2019. Her tenure included both the COVID-19 pandemic and a closing of the museum for a building conservation project that is expected to be completed next April. In a message to the Yale community, President Peter Salovey ’86PhD called Martin “a strategic, visionary leader” who has “strengthened the YCBA over the past five years.”
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