Yale Bulletin and Calendar

April 12, 2002Volume 30, Number 25



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CALENDARKEY

A&A
Art & Architecture Building

AACC
Afro-American Cultural Center

BAC
Yale Center for British Art

BASS
Bass Center for Molecular and Structural Biology

BCMM
Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine

BML
Brady Memorial Laboratory

BRBL
Beinecke Rare Book Library

CCL
Cross Campus Library

CMHC
Connecticut Mental Health Center

CSC
Child Study Center

DMCA
Digital Media Center for the Arts

HGS
Hall of Graduate Studies

HRT
Hunter Radiation Therapy Center

ISM
Institute of Sacred Music

ISPS
Institution for Social
& Policy Studies

JEH
Jane Ellen Hope Building

JPL
John B. Pierce Laboratory

JWG
J.W. Gibbs Research Laboratories

KBT
Kline Biology Tower

KGL
Kline Geology Laboratory

LC
Linsly-Chittenden Hall

LEPH
Laboratory of Epidemiology
& Public Health

LMP
Laboratory for Medicine
& Pediatrics

OML
Osborn Memorial Laboratory

PWG
Payne Whitney Gym

SHM
Sterling Hall of Medicine

SLB
Sterling Law Buildings

SMH
Sprague Memorial Hall

SML
Sterling Memorial Library

SOM
School of Management

SPL
Sloane Physics Laboratory

SSS
Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall

UCS
Undergraduate Career Services

WHC
Whitney Humanities Center

WLH
William L. Harkness Hall

WNSL
Wright Nuclear Structure
Laboratory

YCIAS
Yale Center for International and Area Studies

YUAG
Yale University Art Gallery

YUHS
Yale University
Health Services



F R I D A Y ,A P R I L12T H R O U G HS U N D A Y , A P R I L21


Music

Friday, April 12

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Constantin Finehouse, piano. (Sch. of Music)


Saturday, April 13

Master of Music Recital
2 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Chia-Chun Lu, violin. (Sch. of Music)

Artist Diploma Recital
5 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Susanne Juliana Nitsch, viola. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Aki Ohazama, violin. (Sch. of Music)

Yale Symphony Orchestra
8 p.m. Woolsey Hall. Shinik Hahm, music director. Program will include Strauss' "Ein Heldenleben" and Tchaikovsky's "Symphony No. 4." Tickets: $7; $4 for students. Info.: (203) 432-4140.


Sat. & Sun., April 13 & 14

Unity Spring Show
9 p.m. Morse College dining hall. Yale Unity Korean Drum and Dance Troupe. Part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month celebration.


Sunday, April 14

Artist Diploma Recital
8 p.m. Woolsey Hall. Jared Johnson, organ. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Hui-Yi Lavinia Lee, violin. (Sch. of Music)


Monday, April 15

Master of Music Recital
5 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Ying Ting Chiu, bassoon. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
7:30 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Jessica M. Lang, bassoon. (Sch. of Music)

Yale Cellos
8 p.m. Battell Chapel. Aldo Parisot, director. (Sch. of Music)


Tuesday, April 16

Artist Diploma Recital
5 p.m. Battell Chapel. Jason Treuting, percussion. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Battell Chapel. Robert Esler, percussion. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Shane Kim, violin. (Sch. of Music)


Wednesday, April 17

Lunchtime Chamber Music
12:30 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Chamber works performed by Sch. of Music student chamber ensembles. (Sch. of Music)

Brass Showcase
8 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Brass quintets coached by Sch. of Music faculty and the Yale Brass Ensemble directed by Toby Hanks. (Sch. of Music)


Thursday, April 18

Master of Music Recital
5 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Ramon Wodkowski, clarinet. (Sch. of Music)


Friday, April 19

Artist Diploma Recital
5 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Krzysztof Kowalewski, voice. (Sch. of Music)

"Isabelle de Charrièrre and Her Contemporary Women Opera Composers"
5:15-6:15 p.m. Mezzanine, BRBL. A concert and lecture presentation by Robert Adelson, Towson Univ., and Jacqueline Letzter, Univ. of Maryland, with Ann Monoyios, soprano, and Andrew Appel, fortepiano. A reception will follow. Part of "Isabelle de Charrièrre: An International Symposium."

Philharmonia Orchestra of Yale
8 p.m. Woolsey Hall. Concert honors the memory of composer Jacob Druckman, professor of composition at Sch. of Music. Sidney Harth, guest conductor. Program will include Druckman's "Summer Lightning" and "Prism," Britten's "Canadian Carnival, Op. 19" and Tchaikovsky's "Capriccio Italien." (Sch. of Music)


Saturday, April 20

Master of Music Recital
2 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Lindsey Bird, oboe. (Sch. of Music)

Artist Diploma Recital
8 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Cecilia Sangkyung Lee, cello. (Sch. of Music)

Yale Glee Club
8 p.m. Woolsey Hall. The Yale Glee Club, directed by David H. Connell, will perform a program of choral music including Allegri's "Miserere," Imant Raminsh's "Ave verum corpus" and Randall Thompson's "The Peaceable Kingdom."


Sunday, April 21

Music of the Early Restoration Period
2 p.m. BAC. British baroque violinist Monica Huggett.

Master of Music Recital
5 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Kiwon Nahm, violin. (Sch. of Music)

Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Sun Jin Lee, violin. (Sch. of Music)

Theater

Fri. & Sat., April 12 & 13

"Serious Money"
Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 2 p.m. & 8 p.m. Yale Rep. Written by Caryl Churchill, directed by Jean Randich and performed by the Sch. of Drama acting class of 2002. Tickets: $22-$39; subscriptions available. Info.: (203) 432-1234; www.yalerep.org.

"La Tragédie de Carmen"
8 p.m. Battell Chapel. Peter Brook's adaptation of Georges Bizet's opera "Carmen." Directed by Garnett Bruce and performed by singers of Yale Opera. Tickets: $10; $5 for students. Info.: (203) 432-4158; www.yale.edu/schmus. (Sch. of Music)

"The Task"
Friday & Saturday, 8:30 p.m. & 11 p.m. Yale Cabaret. Written by Heiner Muller; directed by Jackson Gay. Tickets: $10; $8 for students; memberships available. Info.: (203) 432-1566; ysd.cabaret@yale.edu.


Monday, April 15

"Garrison Keillor: A Life in Comedy"
7 p.m. University Theatre. Grammy Award-winning radio humorist will read from his work. Tickets: $10-$25. Info. and reservations: (203) 432-1234; www.yalerep.org.


Thurs.-Sat., April 18-20

"Desdemona"
Thursday, 8:30 p.m.; Friday & Saturday, 8:30 p.m. & 11 p.m. Yale Cabaret. Written by Paula Vogel; directed by Magda Romanska. Tickets: $10; $8 for students; memberships available. Info.: (203) 432-1566; ysd.cabaret@yale.edu.


Friday, April 19

"Hot Flashes, Power Surges & Private Summers"
8 p.m. University Theatre. Written by and starring award-winning performance artist Rhodessa Jones. Tickets: $25; discounts for students, seniors and Yale Rep subscribers. Info. and reservations: (203) 432-1234; www.yalerep.org.


Talks

Friday, April 12

"Cloning Mutts, Saving Tigers: Ethical Emergents in Technocultural Dog Worlds"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Donna Haraway, Univ. of California at Santa Cruz. (Program in Agrarian Studies)

"Challenges of Implementing School-Based Social-Emotional Learning Programs in a Climate of Urban School Reform"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Lab. Maurice Elias, Rutgers Univ. (Bush Center)

"The Sanitized Workplace"
Noon-2 p.m. Presidents Rm., Woolsey Hall. Vicki Schultz. (Women's Table)

"Working Until Dropping: The Economics of Being Old in Rural China"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Scott Rozelle, Univ. of California-Davis. Lunch will be provided. (CEAS)

"Stone Tools from Late Neolithic China"
Noon. Peabody Museum. Geoffrey Cunnar will present his recent research in China on polished stone tools found in early settlement areas. Free with museum admission.

Labor and Population Workshop
12:15-1:45 p.m. Rm. 106, 28 Hillhouse Ave. Tomas Philipson, Univ. of Chicago. Topic to be announced. (EGC)

"Active and Passive Auditory Perception"
3 p.m. Conf. rm., 5th flr., Dunham Lab. Roman Kuc. (Center for Systems Science)

"Depicting Vitality: Energy Made Visual"
3:30 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Adam Hobson will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.

"South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- Was Justice Served?"
4-6 p.m. Aud., SLB. Albie Sachs, justice, South Africa Constitutional Court, will present the Bernstein Lecture. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)


Saturday, April 13

"Recent Developments in Image-Guided Neurosurgery"
10:30 a.m.-noon. Davies Aud., Becton Center. James Duncan, Dennis Spencer and Douglas Rothman. Part of the "Frontiers of Science and Engineering 2002" series for high school students.

Dr. Benjamin S. Carson
3 p.m. Woolsey Hall. Yale trustee Dr. Benjamin S. Carson will discuss his rise from a disadvantaged childhood to Yale and the medical profession, as well as the surgeries he and his medical colleagues perform on children with severe congenital defects. A free copy of Carson's autobiography "Gifted Hands" will be given to all schoolchildren who attend.

"Seeing Red: Color in Context"
3 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Daphna Blatt will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.

"An Amphibean Literature/Uma Literatura Anfíbia"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 114, SSS. Brazilian author Silviano Santiago will present a bilingual lecture in Portuguese and English. (Dept. of Spanish & Portuguese/Kempf Fund)

"Da memória à ficção, através da História/ From Memory to Fiction, through History"
5:30 p.m. Rm. 114, SSS. José Saramago, 1998 Nobel Prize winner for literature, will present a bilingual lecture in Portuguese and English. (Dept. of Spanish & Portuguese/Kempf Fund)


Sunday, April 14

"Color and Emotion"
4 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Ming Thompson will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.

"Democracy, Legitimacy and Succession in the Middle East"
7 p.m. Aud., SLB. Bernard Lewis, Princeton Univ. Part of the series "Democracy, Security and Justice."


Monday, April 15

"Testing Wisdom Across the Lifespan"
1:30-2:30 p.m. Rm. 207, Kirtland Hall. Jennifer Jordon. (PACE)

"The Quest for Sustainable Development"
2-3 p.m. Rm. 102, KGL. Thomas Lovejoy, the World Bank. (Center for the Study of Global Change)

Economic Growth Center Seminar
3:30-5 p.m. Rm. 106, 28 Hillhouse Ave. Peter Schott. Topic to be announced.

Institute for the Advanced Study of Religion Public Lecture
4 p.m. Memorabilia Rm., SML. Laurel Ulrich, Harvard Univ.

"Down the Central Dogma Pathway with Gun and Camera: The Molecular Basis of Protein Synthesis"
4 p.m. Peter Moore. Part of the series "In the Company of Scholars." Location to be announced. Reception to follow in HGS. (Graduate Sch.)

"God and the World's Disorders"
4 p.m. Rm. 119, WLH. William Sloane Coffin, former chaplain of Yale, will deliver the 2002 Robert M. Litowitz Lecture in Ethics and Public Policy. A reception will follow in Rm. 115. (Program on Ethics, Politics and Economics)

"Through the Looking Glass: Central Bank Transparency"
4-6 p.m. Rm. 114, SSS. Alan Blinder, former vice chair of the Federal Reserve Board, will present the first of three Arthur M. Okun Lectures. A reception will follow in the Economics Common Rm., 28 Hillhouse Ave.

"The Strange Career of Race and Cancer in America"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 401, HGS. Keith Wailoo, Rutgers Univ. (Sch. of Medicine/Program in the History of Science & Medicine)

Chubb Fellowship Lecture
4:30 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. Mel Martinez, U.S. secretary of housing and urban development.

"Height as a Noisy Indicator of Health Human Capitol"
4:30-6 p.m. ISPS. Paul Schultz. (Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Seminar Series)

Lecture-Recital on Baroque Flute and Recorder Music
5 p.m. Dwight Chapel. Sch. of Music flutists Jenna-Claire Kemper, Marie-Hélène Breault and Catherine Ramirez will share the results of an independent study project, focusing on a specific transitional period in the early 18th-century history of the transverse flute and recorder.

"Art, Architecture and the Phenomenon of the New Museum"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Thomas Krens, Eero Saarinen Lecturer. (Sch. of Architecture)


Tuesday, April 16

"Accountability and International NGOs: Grappling with Multiple Shifting Responsibilities"
Noon-1:30 p.m. Basement, ISPS. L. David Brown, The Hauser Center, Harvard Univ. (PONPO)

"Dante Gabriel Rossetti's 'The Maids of Elven-Mere'"
12:30 p.m. BAC. Art in Context talk by Julian Treuherz, keeper of art galleries, National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside.

"19th-Century American Sculptors in Italy"
2 p.m. YUAG. Gallery Talk tour led by Joanne E. Thompson, doctoral candidate, history of art.

Master's Tea
4 p.m. Morse College master's house. Steve Forbes, president and CEO of Forbes Inc.

"Electoral Realignments: A Critique of an American Genre"
4-6 p.m. General Motors Rm., Horchow Hall. David R. Mayhew will present the Charles E. Lindblom Lecture in Public Policy. (ISPS)

"French Identities in War and Peace"
4-5:30 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Antoine Prost, Univ. of Paris. Reception will follow in common room. (Council on European Studies/YCIAS/ Dept. of History)

"Biomaterials and How They Will Change Our Lives"
4 p.m. Davies Aud., Becton Center. Robert S. Langer, MIT. Part of the Engineering Sesquicentennial Lecture Series.

"Ex Uno Plures: Central Banking by Committee"
4-6 p.m. Rm. 114, SSS. Alan Blinder, former vice chair of the Federal Reserve Board, will present the second of three Arthur M. Okun Lectures. A reception will follow in the Economics Common Rm., 28 Hillhouse Ave.

"Recent Advances in the Study of the Inka Khipu"
4 p.m. Rm. 1, 158 Whitney Ave. Gary Urton, Colgate Univ. (Dept. of Anthropology)

"Black Acts and Blue Laws: Yale, Slavery and Black Education, 1831-1841"
4-6:30 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. Julie Winch of the Univ. of Massachusetts and Hilary Moss, a Ph.D. candidate at Brandeis Univ., will explore such topics as abolitonists' failed effort to create a college for African American youth in 1831, the suppression of Prudence Crandall's school for black girls in 1933 and the Amistad incident of 1839-1941. Robert P. Forbes of Yale will moderate. Info.: (203) 432-3339. (Gilder Lehrman Center)

"Urban Public Education: Separate Again, Still Unequal"
4:30-6:30 p.m. Rm. 127, SLB. Alan Bersin '74 LAW, superintendent of schools in San Diego, will present the Harper Fellow Lecture. (YLS)

"Innovation"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 108, WHC. Sidney Altman. (Issues in Science and the Humanities)

"China's Accession to the WTO and Its Impact on Europe and the U.S."
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Gerard Depayre, deputy European Union ambassador to the U.S. Reception will follow in common room. (Council on European Studies/YCIAS/Program on European Union Studies)

"Bridges Between Heterogeneous and Homogeneous Catalysis: The Case of Single-Site and Multiple-Site Olefin Polymerization Catalysts"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 253, SCL. Tobin Marks, Northwestern Univ. (Dept. of Chemistry)

"Democratic Transhumanism"
5:30-7:30 p.m. ISPS. James J. Hughes, Trinity College. For dinner reservations, contact Carol Pollard at (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.

"Traversing the Terrain of McDonaldization and Clashing Civilizations: Asian American Women and the New Globalization"
7 p.m. Rm. 208, WLH. Bandana Purkayastha, Univ. of Connecticut. Reception will follow. (AACC/AASTF/South Asian Studies Council/ Dept. of Sociology/Women's & Gender Studies)

"No Exit: Constructions of the 'Inferno'"
7 p.m. Great Hall, 409 Prospect St. Conceptual artist Robert Baughn Clifton will present a lecture and multimedia installation. A reception will follow. (Institute of Sacred Music)

"Observing the Equilibrium Structure of Solvated Molecules with High-Brightness X-ray Sources"
8 p.m. Rm. 253, SCL. Christoph Rose-Petruck, Brown Univ. (Dept. of Chemistry)


Wednesday, April 17

"Choosing Our Children: Rights and Responsibilities"
Noon, lower level, ISPS; 7:30 p.m., Slifka Center. Karen Lebacqz, Center for Ethics and Social Policy, Graduate Theological Union; and Pacific Sch. of Religion. (ISPS Bioethics Seminar)

"Who's the Boss?: The Central Bank and the Markets"
4-6 p.m. Rm. 114, SSS. Alan Blinder, former vice chair of the Federal Reserve Board, will present the final of three Arthur M. Okun Lectures. A reception will follow in the Economics Common Rm., 28 Hillhouse Ave.

"Chemical Biology of Collagen"
4 p.m. Rm. 160, SCL. Ronald T. Raines, Univ. of Wisconsin. (Dept. of Chemistry)

"Reassessing Anti-Semitism In America: Why Can't Jews Take 'Yes' for an Answer?"
4 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge, 3rd flr., 82-90 Wall St. Jerome Chanes, Graduate Center, City Univ. of New York. (Program in Judaic Studies)

Dennis L. Cherlin Memorial Lecture
4 p.m. Rm. 220, Dunham Lab. Dr. Aaron Beck, Univ. of Pennsylvania. Topic to be announced. (Dept. of Psychology)

"U-Series Constraints on the Time Scales of Magma Genesis Beneath the Tonga-Kermadec Island Arc"
4-5 p.m. Rm. 123, KGL. Simon Turner, Univ. of Bristol. (Dept. of Geology & Geophysics)

"An Afternoon's Reading of Translations From the Arabic"
4 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Michael Sells of Haverford College will read from Islamic poetry, the Qur'an and the mystical poems of Ibn 'Arabi of Murcia. (WHC)

"Is Humanitarian Law Relevant to Modern Conflicts? The U.S. in Guantanamo, Israel in the Occuped Territories and Russia in Chechnya"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 128, SLB. Françoise Bouchet-Saulnier, legal counsel, Doctors Without Borders. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Law)

"'The Savage Wars of Peace': Small Wars and the Rise of American Power"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Max Boot, editorial features editor, Wall Street Journal. (ISS)

Artist Paula Rego
5:30 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall, YUAG. Paula Rego will discuss her recent work. (Yale Center for British Art/Sch. of Art)

"Democratic Transition and Institutional Crafting: The South Korean Case"
5:30 p.m. Rm. 165, Street Hall. Carl Saxer. Dinner will be provided. (Council on East Asian Studies)

"Folk Singing Contexts"
5:30 p.m. Saybrook College fellows lounge. Part of the Vietnamese Culture Series and Asian Pacific American Heritage Month. (Vietnamese Students Association)

The Reverend Al Sharpton
7:30 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. (Yale Coll. Student Union)


Thursday, April 18

"Clinical Development Fund"
Noon-1 p.m. Beaumont Rm., SHM. Dr. Richard L. Edelson and Dr. Peter N. Herbert. Lunch will be provided. (Medical Sch. Council)

"19th-Century American Sculptors in Italy"
12:30 p.m. YUAG. Gallery Talk tour led by Joanne E. Thompson, doctoral candidate history of art.

"The Extraordinary Ordinary Lives of Owls"
1 p.m. Peabody Musum. Talk by members of nonprofit wildlife organization Wind Over Wings. Live owls representing five species will be on hand. Free with museum admission.

"Grasping a Diffuse Reality: Developing Methodology for the Urban Setting: Implications for Health Interactions and Research"
1:30-2:30 p.m. Rm. B45, HGS. Blair Darney, graduate student, public health. Lunch will be provided. (Dept. of Anthropology)

"Dear Lady, Know the Rules and Make No Mistake: Keeping House in Sengoku Japan"
4 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Hitomi Tonomura, Univ. of Michigan-Ann Arbor. (Council on East Asian Studies)

Workshop in Economic History/ Trade and Development Workshop
4-5:30 p.m. Rm. 106, 28 Hillhouse Ave. Jeffrey Williamson, Harvard Univ. Topic to be announced. (EGC)

"Conversion and Apostasy: Jewish-Catholic Relations in France, 1800-1850"
4 p.m. Rm. 401, HGS. Thomas Kselman, Univ. of Notre Dame. (Dept. of History/Program in Judaic Studies)

"The 'Persiles' as Cervantes' Will"
4-5:15 p.m. Davies Aud., Becton Center. Roberto González Echevarría will present the 12th DeVane Lecture in the series "Love and the Law in Cervantes."

"'From Independence to Freedom': A Struggle of Poor Self-Employed Women Workers in India"
4 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. Ela R. Bhatt, founder and general secretary, Self-Employed Women's Association, and founder and chair, SEWA Cooperative Bank, India, will present the Gandhi Lecture. Reception will follow. (South Asian Studies)

"Latin America's Global Reach"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 127, SLB. Panel discussion will feature journalists covering the region. For a list of panelists, visit www.yale.edu/opa/news/poynter.html. (Poynter Fellowship in Journalism)

"Listening to Patients: An Impossible Dream"
5 p.m. Beaumont Rm., SHM. Dr. Victor Altshul. (Program for Humanities in Medicine)

"Reflections on a Career in Science"
5 p.m. Rm. C103, SHM. Evelyn M. Witkin, Rutgers Univ. (AWIS-CT/Office for Women in Medicine/Medical Sch.)

"The World Bank and Its Environment Strategy"
5:30 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Kristalina Georgieva, director, Environment Department, World Bank. (EDSIG/F&ES)

"Plastics: It's Enough to Make Your Skin Crawl"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Sylvia Lavin. (Sch. of Architecture)

"The Photographs of Sally Mann"
8 p.m. Rm. 108, WHC. Anne Higonnet, Wellesley College. Reception will precede talk at 7 p.m.; to attend, call (203) 785-7205 or send e-mail to alicia.grendziszewski@yale.edu before April 15. (Muriel Gardiner Program)


Friday, April 19

"Configurations of 'Community' in the Agendas of Nehruvian Socialism and Its 'Opponents'"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Subir Sinha, Sch. of Oriental and African Studies, Univ. of London. (Program in Agrarian Studies)

"The Enigma of Chrysanthemum -- Ruth Benedict in Postwar Japan"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Sonia Ryang, Johns Hopkins Univ. Lunch will be provided. (Council on East Asian Studies)

"Social Policy Research in Psychology: Is the Emperor Naked?"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Lab. Richard Redding, Villanova Univ. Sch. of Law. (Bush Center)

"Wages and Foreign Exchange Markets"
12:15-1:45 p.m. Rm. 106, 28 Hillhouse Ave. Joseph Tracy, Federal Reserve Board of New York. (EGC, Labor and Population Workshop)

Master's Tea
3 p.m. Davenport College master's house. Rhodessa Jones, founder of the Medea Project: Theatre for Incarcerated Women and co-artistic director of the San Francisco performance company Cultural Odyssey. (Yale Rep)

"The Function of Art"
3:30 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Jane Innis will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.

"U.S. 'China Policy' as an Arena for Disputes About American National Identity"
4 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Alan Wachman, Fletcher Sch. of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts Univ. (Council on East Asian Studies)

Master's Tea
4 p.m. Morse College master's house. Elaben Bhatt, founder and former secretary general of Self-Employed Women's Association, a women's labor movement organization based in India that pioneered the creation of micro-lending to the poor.


Saturday, April 20

"Faces and Lies: Portraits Through the Ages"
3 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Catherine Roach will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.

"Isaac and Iphigenia: Human Sacrifice in the Ancient Mediterranean"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 20o, Old Art Gallery. Sarah Morris. (Archaeological Institute of America/Dept. of Classics/Dept. of the History of Art)


Sunday, April 21

"Beyond 'The Scream': The Terrifying in Art"
4 p.m. YUAG. Student gallery guide Marisa Knox will lead an "Angles on Art" tour.


Films

Friday, April 12

"We Just Telling Stories"
7 p.m. WHC. A documentary on Rhodessa Jones and the Medea Project--Theater for Incarcerated Women. Selected best documentary at the 2001 San Francisco Black Film Festival. Donations will be accepted. (Yale Rep)


Fri. & Sat., April 12 & 13

"Black Hawk Down" (2001)
7 p.m. & 10 p.m. Harkness Aud. Directed by Ridley Scott. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs.


Saturday, April 13

"Hudson's Bay" (1941)
2 p.m. BAC. Directed by Irving Pichel.

"Some Like It Hot" (1959)
7 p.m. & 10 p.m. WHC. Directed by Billy Wilder. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/yfs.


Sunday, April 14

"Blue Angel" (1959)
7:30 p.m. & 10 p.m. Harkness Aud. Directed by Edward Dmytryk. In German with English subtitles. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs.


Thursday, April 18

"Les glaneurs et la glaneuse (The Gleaners and I)" (2000)
7 p.m. WHC. Directed by Agnès Varda. (Dept. of French)


Fri. & Sat., April 19 & 20

"Monster's Ball" (2001)
7:30 p.m. & 10 p.m. Harkness Aud. Directed by Marc Foster. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs.


Saturday, April 20

"Cromwell" (1970)
2 p.m. BAC. Directed by Ken Hughes.

"Jungle Fever" (1991)
7 p.m. & 10 p.m. WHC. Directed by Spike Lee. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/yfs.


Sunday, April 21

"Iron Monkey" (1993)
7:30 p.m. & 10 p.m. Harkness Aud. Directed by Yuen Wo Ping. Tickets: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs.


For Students Only

Monday, April 15

Master's Tea
4:30 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Psychosexual therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer. Open to Yale undergraduates; sign up in Calhoun College master's office for a lottery drawing.


Conferences/Symposia

Friday, April 12

"Communities and HIV/AIDS Research"
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Winslow Aud., LEPH. Annual AIDS Science Day will highlight the HIV/AIDS research conducted at Yale, the Hispanic Health Council and the Institute for Community Research. Event will include panel presentations, poster session, community booths, meals and a keynote address by Phill Wilson, founder and executive director of the African American AIDS Policy and Training Institute at the Univ. of Southern California. Registration: cira.med.yale.edu; (203) 764-4333; cira@biomed.med.yale.edu. (CIRA/AIDS Program)


Fri. & Sat., April 12 & 13

"The Novel in Portugal and Brazil: The 20th Century"
Friday, 1-6 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday, Romance Languages Lounge, 3rd flr., 82-90 Wall St.; Saturday, Rm. 211, HGS. (Dept. of Spanish & Portuguese/Kempf Fund)

"Satire and Invective in the Ancient World"
Friday, 4:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Annual graduate student symposium will include keynote lecture by David Konstan on Friday and panels on Greek and Roman invective and satire on Saturday. Other speakers include Gareth Williams and Christopher Jones. Info.: classics-colloquium-list@pantheon.yale.edu. (Dept. of Classics/Graduate Sch.)

"Fundamentalism and Modernity"
SLB. The annual symposium of the Robert L. Bernstein Fellowship in International Human Rights" will ask, "What is it about modernity that has produced a fundamentalist reaction?" Albie Sachs, justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, will present the Bernstein Lecture, "South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- Was Justice Served," at 4 p.m. in Rm. 127. (YLS, Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)


Thurs.-Sat., April 18-20

"God and the Ethics of Belief"
Thursday, 7-9 p.m.; Friday, 8 a.m.-9:30 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Conference marks retirement of Nicholas Wolterstorff. Speakers and topics include: Alvin Plantinga, Univ. of Notre Dame, "Can God Break the Laws?"; Derk Pereboom, Univ. of Vermont, "Free Will, Evil and Divine Providence"; and Richard Swinburne, Univ. of Oxford, "The Probability of the Resurrection." Registration: www.yale.edu/wolterfest.


Friday, April 19

"Algeria 1962-2002: Writing Independence"
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge, 82-90 Wall St. Guest speakers will include novelist Assia Djébar and five scholars of francophone literature and the Maghreb: Reda Bensmaia, Brown Univ.; Miriam Cooke, Duke Univ.; Alec Hargreaves, Florida State Univ.; Mireille Rosello, Northwestern Univ.; and Clarisse Zimra, Univ. of Illinois-Carbondale. Info.: www.yale.edu/french/events.html. (Dept. of French)


Fri. & Sat., April 19 & 20

YES Innovation Summit
Friday, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. SLB. Leading entrepreneurs and scholars will examine emerging trends in biotechnology, nanocomputing, artificial intelligence, social entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship in the global economy. Speakers include Dave Neeleman, CEO and founder, JetBlue Airways; John Pepper, chair, Procter & Gamble; and Anthony Perkins, chair and founder, Red Herring. Registration is free until April 12 at www.innovation-summit.com or (203) 589-3667. (Yale SOM/ISPS Bioethics Project)

"Isabelle de Charrière: An International Symposium"
BRBL. Speakers and their topics include: Cecil Courtney, Cambridge Univ., "Discovering Belle de Zuylen/Isabelle de Charrièrre"; Joan Stewart, Univ. of South Carolina, "Isabelle de Charrièrre and Benjamin Constant"; and Gordon Turnbull of Yale, "Isabelle de Charrièrre and Boswell." A concert lecture, "Isabelle de Charrièrre and Her Contemporary Women Opera Composers," will be presented on Friday at 5:15 p.m. An exhibition of de Charrièrre's books and manuscripts by will also be on view. Conference will be held in French and English. Registration required. Info.: (203) 432-2969; www.library.yale.edu/beinecke/idecharp.htm.


Saturday, April 20

"New Mechanisms: New Treatments"
8 a.m.-1 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. Symposium will highlight recent advances in basic and clinical neuroscience and explain their promise for revolutionary advances in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of mental illness. Presentations will be non-technical in nature, and there will be time for questions from the audience. Info.: Georgia Miller, (203) 974-7723. (Dept. of Psychiatry/Yale Mental Health Education Program)


Biomedical Sciences

Friday, April 12

"The STAT Signaling Pathway: Roles in Cell Growth, Apoptosis and Human Disease"
8:30 a.m. Beeson Library, 6th flr., HRT. Dr. Xin-Yuan Fu. (Section of Allergy and Clinical Immunology)

"Bile Secretion and Cholestasis"
1-1:50 p.m. Rm. 92, LMP. Dr. Sean Sheehan. (Section of Digestive Diseases & Pediatric Gastroenterology/Hepatology)


Tuesday, April 16

"Mouse Models of Multistage Carcinogenesis: Angiogenic Mechanisms and Experimental Therapeutics"
8:30 a.m. Fitkin Amph. Douglas Hanahan, Univ. of California, San Francisco. (Cancer Center)

"CFTR: From Fish to Phenotype"
5-6 p.m. Rm. 92, LMP. Dr. John Mickle. (Section of Digestive Diseases & Pediatric Gastroenterology/Hepatology)


Wednesday, April 17

"Negotiation and Conflict Resolution in the Operating Room"
6:55 a.m. Fitkin Amph. Dr. Zeev Kain. (Dept. of Anesthesiology Grand Rounds)

"Mechanisms of Mitochondrial Inheritance and Dynamics"
Noon. Brady Aud., BML. Michael P. Yaffe. Univ. of California, San Diego. (Dept. of Cell Biology)

"Tau Protein in Alzheimer's Disease: A MAP Gone Mad"
4 p.m. Rm. 226, OML. Lester Binder, Northwestern Univ. Tea will be served at 3:45 p.m. (Dept. of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology)


Thursday, April 18

"The Plasticity of Dendritic Cells in Response to Pathogens"
11 a.m. Fitkin Amph. Nic Hacohen, Whitehead Institute. (Section of Immunobiology)

"History of Medicine in Anatolia" & "Colorectal Cancer: It's All in the Genes"
5-6 p.m. Rm. 216, JEH. Dr. Kerem Bortecen and Dr. Lori Slezak. (Dept. of Surgery Grand Rounds)


Friday, April 19

"Colon Cancer"
1-1:50 p.m. Rm. 92, LMP. Joan Hong-Curtis. (Section of Digestive Diseases & Pediatric Gastroenterology/Hepatology)

"Advances in Insulin Treatment"
1 p.m. Rm. 206, BCMM. Dr. John E. Gerich, Univ. of Rochester. (Endocrine Physiology and Therapeutics Conference)


And...

Friday, April 12

Red Cross Blood Drive
9 a.m.-1:45 p.m. YUHS. For eligibility questions, call (203) 881-5074. To make an appointment to donate blood, call (203) 432-1826.

Dedication of La Casa's New Mural
2 p.m. 301 Crown St. A celebration of a new cultural and artistic landmark. Part of "Semana Chicana: Contemporary Chicana/o Influence in the U.S." Info.: (203) 436-0536; (203) 436-1808. (MEChA de Yale)

Barrio Fiesta Dinner and Show
6:30 p.m. A Filipino American cultural celebration. Location to be announced. Part of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month. (KASAMA Filipino)

Dance Party
10 p.m. 301 Crown St. Part of "Semana Chicana: Contemporary Chicana/o Influence in the U.S." Info.: (203) 436-0536; (203) 436-1808. (MEChA de Yale)


Saturday, April 13

"Roxi and the Trash Mystery"
11 a.m. Peabody Museum. A Betty Baisden puppet theater presentation. In honor of Earth Day, Roxi Fox will learn about recycling. Free with museum admission ($5; $3 for children and seniors).

"Taste the Memories"
Noon-4 p.m. AACC. Volunteer chefs will serve their favorite dishes and share stories associated with the food. Tickets ($7; $5 for children) will be on sale at the event. Proceeds will benefit the mentoring program Helping Our Ladies Learn and Achieve. Info.: (203) 432-4131. (H.O.L.L.A.)

"How to Paint a Bird"
3:30 p.m. Peabody Museum. The last in a series of four workshops for adults and teens. Using birds from the Peabody's ornithology collections, artist and naturalist Roland Clement, former vice president of the Audubon Society, will teach the methods necessary to create accurate watercolor representations of birds. Beginner and advanced painters welcome. Registration is required by calling (203) 432-3776. Free with museum admission ($5; $3 for children and seniors).


Sunday, April 14

"2002 Julia's Run for Children"
10 a.m. (7:45-9:30 a.m., registration; 9:30 a.m., half-mile "fun run" for children) Cross Campus. Four-mile run is a tribute to the memory of Julia Rusinek '99, who died at the age of 21. Registration: $12 in advance; $15 on the day of the run; includes t-shirt, raffle ticket and refreshments. Proceeds will benefit Leadership Education Athletics in Partnership (LEAP). Info.: www.juliarun.org; juliarun@systec.com; (516) 487-9502.


Monday, April 15

Weight Watchers at Work
12:15 p.m. Rm. 405, YUHS. Free open information and registration meeting will introduce the Winning Points Program. Fee for the 14-week series is $162.50. Info.: (203) 432-1892.


Tuesday, April 16

"Advanced Customer Service for Managers"
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Rm. LLI, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $110; $90 for members of the Yale community. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.

"Walk for Fitness and Health"
12:10-12:50 p.m. YUHS. Moderate walking and exercise program beginning with warm-up and stretching routines. Good walking shoes are recommended. Info.: (203) 432-1892. (YUHS, Office of Health Promotion & Education/Athletic Dept.)


Wednesday, April 17

"Constructive Confrontation: Dealing with the Trouble Employee"
9 a.m.-noon. Rm. LLI, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $65; free for members of the Yale community. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.

"What is Employee Performance and Development?"
Noon-1 p.m. Open to members of the Yale community. Location to be announced. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.

"'So What's Your Problem?' Dealing with Difficult Personalities at Work"
1-4 p.m. Rm. LLI, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $65; free for members of the Yale community. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.


Thursday, April 18

Cover Letter Workshop
9 a.m.-noon. Steiner Rm., SHM. Fee: $65; free for members of the Yale community. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.

Weight Watchers at Work
12:15 p.m. Rm. 405, YUHS. Free open information and registration meeting will introduce the Winning Points Program. Fee for the 14-week series is $162.50. Info.: (203) 432-1892.

Book Signing
1 p.m. Yale Bookstore. Award-winning photographer Wing Young Huie will discuss his book "Lake Street, U.S.A."


Saturday, April 20

Pan-Asian Dinner & Show
6 p.m. Ballroom, SHM. Part of the Asian Pacific American Heritage Month celebration.


Sunday, April 21

Sogdian Tombs Workshop
10 a.m.-5 p.m. Rm. 200, Old Art Gallery. Boris Marshak, visiting scholar from the Hermitage Museum, will lead a casual discussion of slides from the tombs of Yu Hong, An Jia and the Miho couch in China. (Council of East Asian Studies)

"Step Across This Line"
3 p.m. Aud., WHC. The video recording of Salman Rushdie's Tanner Lectures on Human Values will be screened.


ONGOING ACTIVITIES

Tours

Yale Astronomy Public Nights
First Thursday of each month, 7:30 p.m. Top level, Pierson-Sage Parking Garage. Visitors will have the opportunity to view astronomical objects such as the moon, planets, star clusters and galaxies through one of the department's many telescopes. Astronomers will be on hand to describe the objects. Info.: a href=http://www.astro.yale.edu/publicnights>www.astro.yale.edu/publicnights.

Guided Tours of Campus
Monday-Friday, 10:30 a.m. & 2 p.m.; Saturday & Sunday, 1:30 p.m. Yale Visitor Center, Dwight Hall. Info.: (203) 432-2300.

Highlights Tours of the Peabody Museum
Saturday & Sunday, 1 p.m. Lobby, Peabody Museum. Free with museum admission ($5; $3 for children and seniors; free with valid Yale I.D.). Info.: (203) 432-5050; www.peabody.yale.edu.

Masterpiece Tours of the Yale Art Gallery
Saturday, 1:30 p.m.; Sunday, 3 p.m. YUAG. Tours of the permanent collection led by docents.


Exhibitions

School of Architecture
Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. "Zaha Hadid Laboratory," through May 10.

School of Art
10 a.m.-5 p.m. "Undergraduate Senior Projects," through April 28.

Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. "My Soul Has Grown Deep Like the Rivers: Langston Hughes at 100," through April 20; "Isabelle de Charrièrre," through May 3.

Jonathan Edwards College Master's House
Thursday, 4-6 p.m., or by appt. "The Aura of the Cause: A Photo Album for North American Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War," through May 28. Info.: (203) 432-0356.

Sterling Memorial Library
Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-4:45 p.m. Memorabilia Rm. "Charles A. Lindbergh: A Commemorative View," through May 21.

Yale Center for British Art
Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-5 p.m. "Paula Rego: Celestina's House," April 18-July 14.

Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday, noon-5 p.m. "The African Roots of the Amistad Rebellion: Masks of the Sacred Bush," "The Muskrat and the Osprey: The Hidden Quinnipiac Marsh," "O.C. Marsh: His Life and Legacy," "Life in Ancient Egypt" and "Hall of Native American Cultures," on view indefinitely. Admission: $5; $3 for children and seniors; free with valid Yale I.D. Info.: www.peabody.yale.edu.

Yale Physicians Building Art Place
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. The fifth in a series of exhibitions featuring paintings, photographs, sculptures, pottery and quilts by local artists and University faculty and staff; through September.

Yale University Art Gallery
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, 10 a.m.- 5 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday, 1- 6 p.m. "John Singer Sargent: The Painter as Sculptor," through April 21; "Art for All Seasons: Asian Art at Yale," through Sept. 1; "The Synthetic Century -- Collage from Cubism to Postmodernism: Selections from the Collection," through April 28.


Meetings

Alcoholics Anonymous
Monday, 7:30 a.m., Dwight Hall, Open Big Book Meeting; Tuesday, 7:30 a.m., Dwight Hall, Open Living Sober Meeting; Wednesday, 7:30 a.m., Dwight Hall, Open Promises and Traditions Meeting; Wednesday, 8 p.m., YUHS basement, Meeting; Thursday, 7:30 a.m., St. Thomas More Chapel Hall, Open Step Meeting; Friday, 7:30 a.m., Dwight Hall, Open Topic Discussion Meeting; Sunday, 8 a.m., YUHS basement, Open Discussion Meeting.

Alzheimer's Disease Support Group
First Thursday of each month, 1:15 p.m. 6th flr., 1 Church St. The Alzheimer's Disease Research Unit is offering a support group for relatives and friends of those with Alzheimer's disease. Dessert and coffee will be served. Info.: (203) 764-8100.

ASHA-Yale
Second Thursday of each month, 7 p.m. Rm. 119/120b, HGS. ASHA-Yale is a volunteer organization dedicated to promoting basic education in India. Info.: asha@yale.edu; www.yale.edu/asha.

Becoming Better Teachers: A Medical Education Discussion Group
Fourth Tuesday of each month, noon-1 p.m. Computer lab, Medical Sch. library, 333 Cedar St. (Office of Academic Development)

Greater New Haven Toastmasters
Second and fourth Wednesday of each month, 6:30-8:15 p.m. Rm. 405, BASS. All members and guests are welcome to join the public speaking improvement group. Info.: Sid Kelly, (203) 882-2542, (203) 937-1922 or skelly16@snet.net.

Marxist Reading Group
Alternate Fridays beginning Sept. 14, 4 p.m. Rm. 108, WHC. Readings available in WHC main office. Info.: www.yale.edu/amstud/marxism; john.mackay@yale.edu.

Overeaters Anonymous
Monday, 7-8 p.m. Women's Center, 198 Elm St. Beginners and Big Book meeting; men are welcome. Info.: Sophia, (203) 752-9000; oasolution@hotmail.com.

Yale Korean BioScience Society (YKBS)
Second Thursday of each month, 6-9 p.m. Rm. c015, SHM. Seminars will be presented by the professional group. Info.: www.yale.edu/ykbs.

Yale-New Haven Yiddish Reading Circle
Wednesday, noon-1:15 p.m. Slifka Center. Reading of modern and classical Yiddish literature. Reading knowledge of Yiddish is desirable. Info.: (203) 288-8206.

Yale Poetry Group
Alternate Thursdays beginning Jan. 17, 8 p.m. Calhoun College fellows room.

Yale Toastmasters Club
Alternate Tuesdays and Fridays, noon. Open to members of the Yale community. Info.: www.yale.edu/toastmasters; (203) 436-3903; ann.straub@yale.edu.


Religion

University Public Worship
Sunday, 11 a.m. Battell Chapel. The Reverend Pamela Bro will breach on April 14; Darienne Gagne, Divinity Sch. intern, will preach on April 21. Info.: (203) 432-8750. (Church of Christ in Yale, member church of the United Church of Christ)

Episcopal Church at Yale
Student Life Center (SLC), 341 Elm St. Sunday, 5 p.m., Dwight Chapel, Holy Communion, followed by dinner on the first Sunday of each month at the SLC. Sunday, 10 p.m., Christ Church, 84 Broadway, Compline, medieval song prayer service. Wednesday, 6:15 p.m., Berkeley Divinity Sch., Midweek Communion, meet at SLC for transportation. The Reverend Kathleen Dorr, chaplain. Info.: (203) 789-6387.

First & Summerfield United Methodist Church
Sunday, 11 a.m. 425 College St. The Reverend Ralph Lord Roy. Info.: (203) 624-2521.

First Unitarian Universalist Society of New Haven
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. 608 Whitney Ave. Info.: Francis, (203) 562-0672.

International Church at Yale
Sunday, 11 a.m. Dwight Chapel. Info.: www.yale.edu/icy.

Luther House -- The University Lutheran Ministry in New Haven
Sunday, 4:30 p.m. 27 High St. Service of Holy Communion in a contemporary setting. Bible study and service opportunities are available. Info.: Carl Sharon, (203) 432-1139; www.yale.edu/lutherhouse.

Muslim Students Association
Rm. 012, basement, Bingham Hall. Friday prayers, 12:45 p.m.; Isha prayers, nightly, 9 p.m. Info.: www.yale.edu/msa.

New Haven Friends
Sunday, 10:30 a.m. 225 East Grand Ave. Transportation will leave from Phelps Gate at 10:10 a.m. Info.: (203) 468-7364.

St. Thomas More Catholic Chapel and Center
268 Park St. Sunday Mass, 10 a.m. & 5 p.m.; Mass, Tuesday-Thursday, 5:30 p.m.; Reconcilation, Tuesday, 6-7 p.m., or by appt.; evening prayer, Monday, 5:30 p.m. Info.: (203) 777-5537.

Services at the Joseph Slifka Center for Jewish Life at Yale
80 Wall St. Orthodox, Monday-Thursday, 7:30 a.m. & 7 p.m.; Friday, 7:30 a.m. & 25 min. before sunset; Saturday, 9 a.m. & after sundown (call for times); Sunday, 8:30 a.m. Conservative/Egalitarian, Monday, 6:45 p.m.; Wednesday, 8:30 a.m.; Friday, 5:45 p.m.; Saturday & Sunday, to be announced. Reform, Friday, 5:40 p.m. Downtown Minyan, Saturday, 10 a.m. Info.: (203) 432-1134.

Taize Candlelight Prayer
Tuesday, 9:07 p.m. Dwight Chapel. An ecumenical service of song, silence, prayer and praise featuring music from Taize. Info.: carl.sharon@yale.edu; www.yale.edu/lutherhouse; (203) 432-1139. (University Lutheran Ministry in New Haven)

Unitarian Society of New Haven
Sunday, 9:15 a.m. & 11:15 a.m. 700 Hartford Turnpike, Hamden. The Reverend Kathleen McTigue. Info.: (203) 288-1807.

Yale Orthodox Christian Fellowship
5 p.m. Lovett Rm., Battell Chapel. Vespers. Info.: Xenios Papademetris, (203) 387-4220 ; www.yale.edu/ocf.


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

Zedillo named head of Center for Study of Globalization

Other International Initiatives at Yale University

SOM Institute to explore how corporations are regulated by world's governments

Journalists covering Latin America will discuss the region's 'global reach'

HUD secretary to visit as a Chubb Fellow

Visiting architect describes his creative process

In Focus: Yale Recycling

Exhibition features art by 'consummate storyteller'

Peabody receives grant for Machu Picchu exhibit

Difficult quest for black education explored in forum

Noted psychologist Neal E. Miller, pioneerin research on brain and behavior, dies

Study estimates the likelihood of stroke in elderly patients who have had heart attacks

Biotechnology companies are thriving in Connecticut with help from Yale science

Lecture to explore how biomaterials 'will change our lives'

Conference on 'God and the Ethics of Belief' pays tribute . . .

Event to explore latest research on mental illness

Gustav Ranis reappointed as Henry R. Luce Director of YCIAS

'Hot Flashes' explores world of womanhood after 50

Museum spearheading annual cleanup of New Haven Harbor

At the powwow

Transatlantic polo

Campus Notes



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