In the coming academic year, Yale School of Architecture (YSA) will present exhibitions on the radical art collective Ant Farm, the U.S. pavilion at the 2004 Architecture Biennale in Venice, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Price Tower and the work of YSA students....
July 8, 2005 — Yale School of Nursing (YSN) has moved from 48th to sixth among nursing schools nationwide in support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) for research, training and fellowship activities, according to rankings released recently by...
July 8, 2005 — Yale School of Medicine is recruiting patients with Alzheimer’s disease to test a vaccine that appears to slow the accumulation of beta amyloid plaque in the brain. Alzheimer’s, which is marked by a progressive loss of mental ability and...
July 7, 2005 — The Gerber Foundation has awarded Yale School of Medicine researcher Thomas Carpenter, M.D., $844,000 over three years to study biomarkers of dietary calcium insufficiency in inner city infants. Carpenter, professor of endocrinology and...
The Gerber Foundation has awarded Yale School of Medicine researcher Thomas Carpenter, M.D., $844,000 over three years to study biomarkers of dietary calcium insufficiency in inner city infants.Carpenter, professor of endocrinology and pediatrics at Yale...
July 1, 2005 — A five–year, $8.5–million dollar research project, designed to substantially reduce the spread of malaria by redirecting mosquitoes with odor cues, is being undertaken by an international team of scientists including John Carlson, the...
July 1, 2005 — Yale has been offered $17 million from the Grand Challenges in Global health initiative to genetically engineer mice with immune systems similar enough to humans to aid in testing the safety and effectiveness of potential vaccines. Funded...
A five–year, $8.5–million dollar research project, designed to substantially reduce the spread of malaria by redirecting mosquitoes with odor cues, is being undertaken by an international team of scientists including John Carlson, the Eugene Higgins...
Yale has been offered $17 million from the Grand Challenges in Global health initiative to genetically engineer mice with immune systems similar enough to humans to aid in testing the safety and effectiveness of potential vaccines.Funded by the Bill...