Memory of student expands Yale financial aid By Katie Odland, Yale Herald, Sept. 21, 2007. Read the article at the Yale Herald online. Stationed on the wall, at the top of the brand new, sealed and varnished wooden staircase leading to the Silliman dining hall, an inscription reads: “In memory of Alexander MacBurney Byers Jr., who was graduated from the Sheffield Scientific School in the Class of 1894. This building was erected by his parents 1903.” Perhaps the predominant impression is that Yale was entirely built by wealthy, living alumni. But memoriam is perhaps a larger, if less obvious, presence on campus. From the J. Willard Gibbs or Osborn Memorial Laboratories to the monolithic Sterling Memorial Library, the power of memory has provided some of Yale’s most noticeable features. This year, it is poised to shape the Yale campus again, but not through any architectural statement. Instead, the Promise Fund, incorporated by the Alexander Capelluto Foundation, in memory of the class of 2008 Berkeleyite who died in the summer of 2006, hopes to change Yale academics by augmenting Yale’s financial aid packages with funding for various supplemental, yet essential, course supplies. The fund will be available for members of the Class of 2010 this year, with future expansions dependent on the fund’s success in the 2007-2008 year. In seeking to honor Alexander’s alma mater, the Capelluto family immediately looked for ways to directly benefit students’ experience. Alexander’s sister Katherine Capelluto, BK ’04, found herself looking at a school with a