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March 9, 2007|Volume 35, Number 21|Two-Week Issue


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Ricardo Lagos Escobar



Former president of Chile to give a public address on campus as a Downey Fellow

Ricardo Lagos Escobar, the former president of Chile, will visit Yale on Wednesday, April 4, as a Downey Fellow.

He will speak at 4:30 p.m. in Rm. 127 of the Yale Law School, 127 Wall St. The talk is free, and the public is welcome.

A lawyer and economist, Lagos served as Chile's president from 2000 to 2006. The first socialist president of Chile since Salvador Allende, he was responsible for the signing of free trade agreements as well as important social legislation, including the country's first divorce law, the creation of unemployment insurance, the end of film censorship and the extension of compulsory schooling to 12 years. The commission he appointed to investigate the human rights violations of the Augusto Pinochet dictatorship in Chile heard the testimony of 35,000 Chileans and culminated in life pensions for 28,000 victims of torture. Lagos also promoted the career of his successor, Michelle Bachelet, the first woman elected president of a Latin American country who was not the widow of a political leader.

As a leader of the Socialist Party of Chile, in 1988 Lagos publicly defied Pinochet in the first electoral campaign since the dictator's 1973 military coup, declaring, "You promise the country eight more years of tortures, assassinations, violations of human rights. ... I speak for 15 years of silence!" Following the election, Pinochet was forced to resign and Lagos became minister of education and subsequently minister of civil works before announcing his candidacy for the presidency.

Lagos began his career as a professor of economics and for some years was secretary-general of the University of Chile. He founded the Fundación Democracia y Desarrollo (Foundation for Democracy and Development) in 2006 and serves as its president. He also heads the Club of Madrid, an organization of former presidents whose mission is to promote democracy.

The Downey Fellowship, established in memory of Russel H. Downey Jr., encourages interest in Latin American affairs and scholarship. Previous Downey Fellows have included former Costa Rican president Oscar Arias, George Gallup, anti-terrorism expert Hernando de Soto and former president of Mexico Ernesto Zedillo, now director of the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization.


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Major gift to fund construction of Loria Center for the History of Art

Scientists determine ancient Peruvian citadel was earliest solar . . .

For students, spring break will be a time of discovery, service

SOM travel goes green

Researchers discover treatment for lethal kidney disease

Professor and trustee awarded India's highest civilian honor

Study implicates gene defect in early heart disease

Marvin Chun and John Hollander are honored by Phi Beta Kappa

Yale will help build DNA databank to further research on autism

Scientists clarify why colliding ice blocks interlace

Negative health effects of soft drink consumption confirmed in study

Exhibit looks at contributions of early women healers

Yale nurses Linda Pellico and Geralyn Spollett are lauded . . .

Past, present and future Elis are named Soros Fellows

Study finds that yearning -- not disbelief -- is defining feature of grief

Record number of city students taking part in annual science fair on campus

Conference to explore new collaborations with Turkey

IN MEMORIAM

Campus Notes


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