Reporters are invited to cover a public forum at Yale on Friday, November 30, exploring the political situation in Venezuela under the leadership of President Hugo Chávez.“Venezuela’s Bolivarian Revolution at Home and Abroad: A New Geometry of Power?” —...
Henry A. Kissinger, former Secretary of State and winner of the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize, will participate in a symposium at Yale University on December 6 at 7:45 p.m. in the Levinson Auditorium, Yale Law School, 127 Wall St.The event is free and open to...
The largest, most comprehensive study of young women with heart attacks — VIRGO (Variation in Recovery: Role of Gender on Outcomes in Young AMI patients) — was recently launched at Yale School of Medicine with a $9.7 million National Institutes of Health...
Three of America’s foremost architects, all of whom have served as deans of the Yale School of Architecture, will participate in a symposium on the architecture and design of Yale libraries on November 30.The event, which is free and open to the public,...
Benjamin M. Eidelson, a senior at Yale College, and Isra J. Bhatty, a first-year student at Yale Law School, will soon be bound for Oxford, England, as recipients of Rhodes Scholarships for 2008.They are among 32 new Rhodes Scholars who were chosen from...
Mark Saltzman Bioengineers at Yale and Cornell have created a modified chemotherapy that more effectively reaches and remains at the site of brain tumors — by adding a water-soluble polymer to the anti-...
Mark Saltzman Bioengineers at Yale and Cornell have created a modified chemotherapy that more effectively reaches and remains at the site of brain tumors — by adding a water-soluble polymer to the anti-...
Yale School of Drama Dean James Bundy issued the following statement today on the death of Pierre-André Salim: “The Yale School of Drama suffered a grievous loss with the death of a remarkable student in the Technical Design and Production program on...
O. Erik Tetlie The gigantic fossil claw of a 390 million-year-old sea scorpion, recently found in Germany, shows that ancient arthropods — spiders, insects, crabs and the like — were surprisingly larger...
In the first evidence of its kind to date, Yale researchers find that infants prefer individuals who help others to those who either do nothing, or interfere with others’ goals, it is reported today in Nature.“This supports the view that our ability to...