As students head out for ports-of-call far and near during spring break, it’s a good time to look back at a group of globetrotting Yale graduate and professional students, who spent ten days in China earlier this year immersing themselves in the nation’s...
Comedic mayhem will be on the agenda in the Yale Repertory Theatre’s next play, “The Servant of Two Masters.”The play, directed by Christopher Bayes, will be presented March 12-April 3 at the University Theatre, 222 York St.The chaos begins when the wily...
The 2010 winner of the annual Yale Drama Series competition is Virginia Grise, who won for her play “blu,” about a Mexican-American family’s response to the loss of their oldest son in Iraq.“Virginia Grise’s writing is blazingly talented and resonant, and...
For the complete stories on this research, click on the title of each summary.Unintended consequences: Immune response to influenza may trigger life-threatening bacterial infectionsA Yale School of Medicine study provides insight into why the influenza...
With guidance from Yale sophomore Margaret Greenberg, high school junior Christina Lee has been thinking well in advance about the college application process she’ll undertake next year.Lee, a native of South Korea who lives in San Antonio, Texas, and...
Two Yale faculty, neuroscientist Daniel A. Colón-Ramos and astronomer Marla Geha, have won Sloan Foundation Fellowships in recognition of their “outstanding promise.”The prestigious awards, given annually to 118 early-career researchers, recognize “...
A series of public events will examine the environmentally destructive practice of mountaintop removal mining in Appalachia and envision a coal-free future for the region.The series, titled “Appalachia in Transition: Beyond Mountaintop Removal Mining,” is...
Nearly 150 early printed books in the Yale Law Library have bindings that incorporate visible pieces of medieval manuscript. A number of these are featured in the latest exhibit from the library’s Rare Book Collection, “Reused, Rebound, Recovered:...
The Franke Lecture series on “The Age of Cathedrals” will continue on Tuesday, March 2, with a talk by Jay Rubinstein, associate professor of history at the University of Tennessee.Titled “Guibert de Nogent and His Demons,” Rubinstein’s talk will take...
“Dinosaur Train” host and paleontologist Scott Sampson will examine “Dinosaurs of the Lost Continent” in a talk at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History on Thursday, March 4.Sampson will speak at 5:30 p.m. at the museum, located at 170 Whitney Ave....