Doctor of Musical Arts Recital
1 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Sasha Starcevich will perform on the piano. Info.: (203) 432-4158 or www.yale.edu/music.
Institute of Sacred Music Recital
8 p.m. ISM. Arthur Haas, harpsichordist, will perform works by Bach, Couperin and others. Info.: (203) 432-5180.
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 8 & 9
Yale College Opera Company
7:30 p.m. Off Broadway Theater Space. The opera company will perform Mozart's Così fan tutte. Tickets: $8; $5 for students. E-mail genevieve.essig@yale.edu for tickets.
Saturday, Nov. 9
Student Recital
5 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Adam Johnson
and Martin Wittenberg, trombone. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
Monday, Nov. 11
"The Modern Big Band"
8 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. David M. Brandenburg will lead the Yale Jazz Ensemble in a performance of works by Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Thad Jones-Mel Lewis and Rob McConnell. Info.: (203) 432-4113.
Master of Music Recital
8 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Jemmie Robertson, trombone. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
Piano Recital
8:30 p.m. Jonathan Edwards College Great Hall. Pianist Mei Rui will perform works by Bach-Busoni, Schumman, Liszt and Rachmaninoff.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
Violin Master Class
5:30 p.m. Sudler Recital Hall. Students from the Sch. of Music will perform pieces they are currently working on and Pamela Frank, violinist, will listen and guide them. Info.: (203) 432-4158 or www.yale.edu/music.
"Music for Organ, Brass and Percussion"
8 p.m. Battell Chapel. The Chamber Music Society will present works from the 16th, 17th and 20th centuries. The concert will feature organist Thomas Murray, trumpetist Allan Dean, trombonist Scott Hartman and the Yale Brass Ensemble, directed by Toby Hanks. Tickets: $12, $6 for students. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
Wednesday, Nov. 13
Mid-Day Organ Recital
12:30 p.m. United Church on the Green. Organist Paul Weber will perform. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
Thursday, Nov. 14
"Alessandro Scarlatti in Manuscript"
5:15 p.m. BRBL. The Collegium Musicum, featuring students, staff and faculty, will perform under the direction of Richard Lalli. A lecture will take place prior to the concert at 4 p.m. (see listing under "Talks").
Ensemble IGIGI
8 p.m. Sudler Hall. A concert of new music composed and performed by undergraduates.
Friday, Nov. 15
Doctor of Musical Arts Recital
1 p.m. 15 Hillhouse Ave. Paul Cienniwa will perform on the harpsichord. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
Yale-Princeton Football Concert
8 p.m. Battell Chapel. The Yale Glee Club will perform. Timothy Snyder, director. Tickets: $10; $5 for students. Info.: (203) 432-4136.
Saturday, Nov. 16
Yale Symphony Orchestra
8 p.m. Woolsey Hall. The Yale Sympnony Orchestra will perform the music of Brahms, Barber and Shostakovich with guest conductor Stephen Heyde and soprano Kimberly DeQuattro. Tickets: $8; $5 with Yale ID. Info.: (203) 432-4140.
Sunday, Nov. 17
Saybrook College Chamber Orchestra
2:30 p.m. Saybrook College dining hall. Music directors Perry So and Mark Seto will lead the orchestra in a concert of works by Haydn, Brahms and Stravinsky. A reception will follow the performance. Info.: (203) 436-0950 or www.yale.edu/syorchestra.
Faculty Artist Series
4 p.m. Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church. Violinist Wendy Sharp will be joined by pianist Melvin Chen and guest artist Marka Gustavsson on viola in a concert of works by Telemann, Ravel, Martinu, Ysaye and Harbison. Info.: (203) 432-4158.
"Lord Nelson Mass"
7:30 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel. The Yale Recital Chorus and Orchestra will perform. Info.: (203) 777-5537.

Theater
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 8 & 9; Tuesday-Saturday,
Nov. 12-16
"Breath, Boom"
Tuesday-Friday, 8 p.m.; Wednesday and Saturday, 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Yale Repertory Theatre. Performances of Kia Corthron's play, which follows the fortunes of a girl gang leader named Prix over a period of 14 years. Directed by Michael John Garcés. Senior matinee, 2 p.m. on Nov. 13. Tickets: $20-$40; subscription packages available. Info.: (203) 432-1234 or www.yalerep.org.
Friday-Saturday,
Nov. 15-16
"Fighting Words"
Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m. New Theater. Preview performances of Sunil Thomas Kuruvilla's play which traces the lives of Peg, her sister Nia, their landlady Mrs. Davies and the people in the town of Merthyr, as they await news of Welsh boxer Johnny Owen, who leaves to compete for a championship in Los Angeles. Directed by Liz Diamond. Yale night on Nov. 15, free pizza and soft drinks for students. Tickets: $20-$40; subscription packages available. Info.: (203) 432-1234 or www.yalerep.org.

Talks
Friday, Nov. 8
"Back to the Land: Linking Organic Food Production and Consumption Through the Concept of Rent"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Julie Guthman, Univ. of California, Berkeley. Info.: (203) 432-9833 or jscott@pantheon.yale.edu. (Program in Agrarian Studies)
"The Third Lie: Why Government
Programs Do Not Help Children"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Richard J. Gelles, Sch. of Social Work., Univ. of Pennsylvania, will deliver a lecture in the Yale Center in Child Development and Social Policy Luncheon Series. Info.: (203) 432-9935.
Human Rights Workshop
12:15-1:45 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. David Rieff, author of "A Bed for the Night: Humanitarianism in Crisis." (Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International and Human Rights)
"Gertrude Stein Among
the Neuroscientists"
4 p.m. Rm. 319, LC. Steven Meyer, Washington Univ., St. Louis. Open to members of the Yale community. Part of the English Dept.'s 20th Century Colloquium.
29th Annual Hanan Rosenthal
Memorial Lecture
4 p.m. Rm. 59, SPL. Mark G. Raizen, Univ. of Texas, Austin. (Dept. of Physics)
"Succession and Promotion: Elite
Mobility During the Western Zhou"
4 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Feng Li, Columbia Univ. Part of the Council on East Asian Studies Colloquium series.
"Georgia Today: Problems and Prospects"
4 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. The Council on European Studies and the Whitney Humanities Center will sponsor a colloquium with David Zurabishvili, Grigol Chumburidze and Zurab Karumidze, Profile magazine and Univ. of Tbilisi, Georgia; James Wertsch, Washington Univ.; Ivo Banac and Michael Holquist. A reception will follow the lecture.
"Lewis and Clark. Who Cares?
Why Bother?"
5 p.m. Sudler Hall, WLH. James P. Ronda, Univ. of Tulsa, will deliver the second annual Betts Lecture. A reception in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library will follow the lecture. (Howard R. Lamar Center for the Study of Frontiers and Borders)
"Psychological Aspects of Birth Defects and Other Perinatal Stresses; Maternal Substance Abuse and Addiction in the Newborn" and "Attachment Difficulties"
6-8 p.m. ISPS. Dr. Linda Mayes and Dr. James Leckman. Part of the Interdisclipinary Bioethics Project working group exploring "Children Under Stress."
Saturday, Nov. 9
"The Romantic Landscape Print"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour. Info.: (203)
432-2800.
Sunday, Nov. 10
"Life as a Scholar and as a Believer"
6 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel Hall. A dinner discussion with Nancy Ruddle. Info.: (203)
777-5537.
Monday, Nov. 11
"Evaluating School Vouchers by Means
of Randomized Field Trials"
Noon-1:30 p.m. ISPS. The American Politics Seminar will feature Paul Peterson, Harvard Univ. (Institution for Social and Policy Studies)
"Governance in Post-War Afghanistan:
A Framework for Decision-Making"
12:30 p.m. Rm. 121, SLB. Andrew R. Willard, president, The Policy Sciences Center Inc. and Society for Policy Sciences. Refreshments will be available. (Yale Law School Forum on the Practice of International Law)
Master's Tea
3 p.m. Morse College master's house. The Poynter Fellowship in Journalism will sponsor a master's tea by Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer prize-winning architecture critic for The New York Times and The New Yorker. Info.: (203) 436-2185 or www.yale.edu/opa/news/poynter.html.
"Writing on the Environment,
Traveling with Cranes"
4-5:30 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Peter Matthiessen, author and Schlesinger Visiting Writer, will discuss his non-fiction writing. Info.: (203) 432-2250.
"Underground Literature in China
and Today Magazine"
4 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. The Council on East Asian Studies and the Chinese Undergraduate Students will sponsor a presentation by Bei Dao (pseudonym of Zhao Zhenkai), contemporary poet, in Chinese and a panel discussion conducted in both English and Chinese.
"Growing Up Female in a Muslim World"
4 p.m. Rm. 101, LC. Dr. Taslima Nasrin, author of "Meyebela: My Bengali Girlhood." (Freethought)
"The Coming Revolution
in Health Care Policy"
4:30-6 p.m. ISPS. Grant Reeher, Syracuse Univ. will speak in the RWJ Health Policy Seminar. (Institution for Social and Policy Studies)
"After the World Trade Center:
The Struggle to Make a City for Our Time"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. The Poynter Fellowship in Journalism will sponsor a lecture by Paul Goldberger, Pulitzer prize-winning architecture critic for The New York Times and The New Yorker. Info.: (203) 436-2185 or www.yale.edu/opa/news/poynter.html.
"The Ethics of Stem Cell Transplantation"
5:30-7:30 p.m. Location TBA. The Yale Stem Cell Interest Group will feature a talk by Dr. Thomas Duffy.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
"Know Before You Go: A Panel
Discussion on Foreign Archives"
12:30 p.m. Rm. 119B, HGS. Ted R. Bromund, Mary Habeck, Lorenz Lüthi, Marcus Jones, Brian Rohlik and Jennifer Boittin. (International and Area Studies)
"From American Backcountry to the British Court: Benjamin West's 'The Artist and His Family'"
12:30 p.m. BAC. Art in Context talk with Kariann Yokota. Info.: (203) 432-2800.
"Fluorescent Sensors for Tracking
Neuronal Zinc and Nitric Oxide"
2:30 p.m. Rm. 253, SCL. Stephen Lippard, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. (Dept. of Chemistry)
"The Esthetics of the Enlightenment"
4 p.m. 3rd floor, Romance Languages Lounge,
82-90 Wall St. Louis Dupré. (Italian Dept.)
"Exile Literature in Traditional
and Modern China"
4 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Liu Zaifu, The Center of Chinese Culture, City Univ. of Hong Kong, will present a lecture in Mandarin Chinese as part of the Council on East Asian Studies Colloquium Series.
"The Challenges of Accession
for Post-Communist Europe"
4 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. David R. Cameron. Refreshments will be available. (Council on European Studies at YCIAS/Program on European Union Studies)
Master's Tea
4 p.m. Davenport College common rm. A fiction reading and talk by Peter Matthiessen, author and Schlesinger Visiting Writer.
"New Day for Churches in China:
Report on a Recent Visit"
7:30 p.m. Overseas Ministries Study Center, 490 Prospect St. Gerald H. Anderson, OMSC and International Bulletin of Missionary Research. A discussion period and refreshments will follow the lecture. Info.: (203) 624-6672, ext. 315 or www.omsc.org. (Overseas Ministries Study Center)
Wednesday, Nov. 13
"Sources of Conflict in Medical Housestaff Training: A Qualitative Study"
Noon-1 p.m. ISPS. The Bioethics Workshop will feature Julie Rosenbaum. For info. and luncheon reservations, contact Carol Pollard at (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"Islam: The Politics of Legitimacy
in the Aftermath of 9/11"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Michael Peletz, Colgate Univ. Refreshments will be provided. B.Y.O. bag lunches welcome. Info.: (203) 432-3431; e-mail seas@yale.edu. (Council on Southeast Asia Studies/Dept. of Anthropology)
"The Women in Charge: Women
in Environmental and Natural
Resource Leadership"
Noon-1 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Dawn Martin, CEO, Oceana Inc. Part of the Seminar in Environmental and Natural Resource Leadership. Info.: (203) 436-3981 or (443) 995-3573.
"National Parks: Organization,
Policies and Operating Procedures"
2:30-4 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Fran Mainella, National Parks Service. Info.: lisbet.kugler@yale.edu.
"Intersections: Theories and Practice
of Civic Engagement"
4 p.m. Dwight Hall Library. Kati Haycock, Education Trust of the American Association for Higher Education. Info.: (203) 432-2420; intersections@hotmail.com; www.yale.edu/dwight/intersections.
"Enantioselectived - Alkylation of Amino Acids Based on the Memory of Chirality"
4 p.m. Rm. 160, SCL. Kaoru Fuji, Kyoto Pharmaceutical Univ. (Dept. of Chemistry)
Master's Tea
4 p.m. Morse College master's house. Noel Paul Stookey, solo folk singer and member of Peter Paul & Mary.
"Russian Folk Songs and the Issue
of Russian National Music"
4 p.m. Rm. 401, HGS. Vadim Prokhorov, writer, composer, author and pianist will deliver the Trumbull Lecture.
"Hard History: Anxious Allies,
German Radios and Hemispheric
Security, 1914-1918"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 103, Luce Hall. Jonathan Winkler. Part of the International Security Studies Colloquium in International History and Security. (ISS)
"Will Climate Warming Affect
Disease Risks for Marine Organisms?"
5 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. C. Drew Harvell, Cornell Univ. Part of the Curtis and Edith Munson Marine Conservation Distinguished Lecure Series, "Climate Change and the Oceans: Global Changes, Local Effects." (Center for Coastal and Watershed Systems)
"Tort Reform and the Future
of the Class Action"
6:15 p.m. Rm. 127, SLB. Philip K. Howard, author and reformer, will debate Richard ("Dickey") Scruggs, anti-tobacco crusader and class action attorney. (Yale Law Federalist Society)
"Human Rights After September 11:
One Year Later"
8 p.m. KGL. Harold Hongju Koh. Info.: (203) 432-3113, ext. 2. (Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences)
Thursday, Nov. 14
"Yale Sch. of Management Leaders Forum: A Conversation with Ewald Kist,
chair of the ING Group"
11:45 a.m.-12:50 p.m. Horchow Hall, SOM. Ewald Kist, chair, ING Group.
"The Distribution of Life-Saving Medical Resources: Equality, Life Expectancy
and Choice Behind the Veil"
Noon. ISPS. Mark Stein. Part of the Working Research Group "Justice and the Allocation of Medical Care." For info. and luncheon reservations, contact Carol Pollard at (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"Cambodia-Vietnam Relations
and the Cambodian Genocide"
2:30-4:20 p.m. ISPS. Nayan Chanda. Part of the Genocide Studies Program Seminar Series exploring "Genocide Through the Ages: Was the Twentieth Century the 'Century of Genocide.'"
"A Conversation: Sacco and Vanzetti
and the Italian-American Community"
4 p.m. YUAG. Art at Four talk with Patricia Klindienst, scholar and writer, and Neil Thomas Proto, attorney, writer and teacher. The talk is offered in conjunction with the exhibition "Justice on Trial: Ben Shahn's Case for Sacco and Vanzetti." Info.: (203) 432-0600 or www.yale.edu/artgallery.
"Alessandro Scarlatti in Manuscript"
4 p.m. BRBL. Ellen Rosand. A concert will take place following the lecture at 5:15 p.m. (see listing under "Music").
"The Sacramental Principle
as the Center of Catholicism"
4:30 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel Hall. Rev. Michael Himes, Boston College, will present the More House Lecture with respondent Louis Dupré . Info.: (203) 777-5537.
Master's Tea
4:30 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Heidi Schmidt, author of "Darling?" and "The Rose Thieves."
"Homophobia in Immigration
and Asylum Law"
6:30-7:45 p.m. Location TBA. Lavi S. Soloway, attorney and founder of Lesbian and Gay Immigration Rights Task Force. Lecture will be followed by a question and answer period. (OutLaws)
"Built Projects: Research,
Design and Performance"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Alan Short, Univ. of Cambridge and principal, Short and Associates, London. Info.: (203) 432-6570. (Hixon Center for Urban Ecology Distinguished Speaker Series/Sch. of Architecture)
"On 'Good Europeans' and Who
Might Be Afraid of Them"
7 p.m. Rm. 208, WHC. Ute Frevert, Univ. of Bielefeld. Refreshments will be served prior to the lecture. (Council on European Studies at YCIAS/
Whitney Humanities Center/Dept. of History)
Friday, Nov. 15
"Plus Ça Change, the More They Stay
the Same: Aboriginal Peoples and the Canadian State in 2002"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Dara Culhane, Simon Fraser Univ. Info.: (203) 432-9833 or jscott@pantheon.yale.edu. (Program in Agrarian Studies)
"Bringing Economic, Social and Educational Policy Into Balance"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Richard Rothstein, The New York Times and Economic Policy Institute will deliver a lecture in the Yale Center in Child Development and Social Policy Luncheon Series. Info.: (203) 432-9935 or www.yale.edu/bushcenter.
Human Rights Workshop
12:15-1:45p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Graeme Simpson, Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, Johannesburg, South Africa. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International and Human Rights)
Working Research Group:
Perspectives on Aging
1:30 p.m. Location TBA. Dr. George Valiant, Harvard Univ. For info. and luncheon reservations, contact Carol Pollard at (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"The Saint of Modernization:
The Personal Diary of Park Chung Hee"
4 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Carter Eckert, Korea Institute, Harvard Univ. will present a lecture in the Council on East Asian Studies 2002-2003 Korean Studies Lecture Series.
Chubb Lecture
4:30 p.m. Luce Aud. Edward James Olmos, actor, producer, director and social activist will deliver the initial Chubb Lecture of this term.
"Ground Zero: The Rebuilding
of an American City"
5 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall. Alexander M. Garvin will deliver the first Elihu Yale Lecture. (Elihu Club)
Saturday, Nov. 16
Workshop on Hardship in Rural China
8:45 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Keynote address in Chinese by Lu Huilin, Beijing Univ. and Harvard Univ. with respondent, Lu Xiaobo, Columbia Univ. Three panels, in English, will highlight recent research by faculty and students. Info.: www.yale.edu/ycias/ceas/ruralhardshipworkshop.html. Registration: (203) 432-3426; e-mail eastasian.studies@yale.edu by Nov. 11.
"New England Weather"
11 a.m. Peabody Museum. The John H. Ostrom Program Series will feature Mel Goldstein, meteorologist. Admission: $5; $3 for children and seniors; free with valid Yale I.D. Info.: www.peabody.yale.edu.
"Romantic Watercolor:
The Hickman Bacon Collection"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour. Info.: (203)
432-2800.

Films
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 8 & 9
"Road to Perdition"
7:30 and 10 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. Directed by Sam Mendes. Fee: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs. (Yale Medical Sch. Film Society)
Saturday, Nov. 9
"Jane Eyre"
2 p.m. BAC. Directed by Robert Stevenson.
Sunday, Nov. 10
"Eat Drink Man Woman"
7:30 and 10 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. Directed by Ang Lee. In Mandarin with English subtitles. Fee: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs. (Yale Medical Sch. Film Society)
Wednesday, Nov. 13
"Testament"
7-9 p.m. Rm. 119, WLH. Directed by Lynne Littman. Part of the Atomic Cinema Series. (East Asian Languages and Literatures)
"Sankofa"
7 p.m. Aud., Luce Hall. Directed by Haile Gerima. In Fanti with subtitles. Info.: www.yale.edu/ycias/african/film/htm.
Thursday, Nov. 14
"Fireworks"
7 and 9:30 p.m. Aud., WHC. Directed by Takeshi Kitano. Part of the 2002 Japan Film Series, "Japanese Cinema: Classic, Modern and Beyond." Info.: (203) 432-3426 or alexander.han@yale.edu. (Council on East Asian Studies/Film Studies Program)
Friday, Nov. 15
"Brava Gente"
1:15 p.m. In Portuguese with no subtitles. Romance Languages Lounge, 82-90 Wall St. Preceded by tertulia at 12:45 p.m. Info.: (203) 432-1150 or (203) 432-5439. (Dept. of Spanish & Portugese)
Friday & Saturday, Nov. 15 & 16
"My Big Fat Greek Wedding"
7:30 and 10 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. Directed by Joel Zwick. Fee: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs. (Yale Medical Sch. Film Society)
Saturday, Nov. 16
"Mansfield Park"
2 p.m. BAC. Directed by Patricia Rozema. Info.: (203) 432-2800.
Sunday, Nov. 17
"Solaris"
7 and 10 p.m. Harkness Aud., SHM. Directed
by Andrei Tarkovsky. In Russian with English subtitles. Fee: $3; free with $10 membership. Info.: www.yale.edu/ymsfs. (Yale Medical Sch. Film Society)
"Waking Life"
7 p.m. Rm. 101, LC. On Monday, Nov. 18, Robert Sabiston will lecture and answer questions about the movie. (Sch. of Art)

Conferences/Symposia
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 8 & 9
"Eisenman/Krier: Two Ideologies"
Friday, 6:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9:30a.m.-5 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall, YUAG. The symposium and accompanying exhibition will explore the work and ideas of two notable theorists, who are often at odds on fundamental issues. Roger Kimball, literature and architecture critic and managing editor of New Century Magazine, will deliver the keynote address on Friday. Speakers on Saturday will include: Stan Allen, Maurice Culot, Peter Eisenman, Kurt Forster, Roger Kimball, Leon Krier, Sanford Kwinter, Emmanuel Petit, Alan Plattus, Demetri Porphyrios, Michelangelo Sabatino, Vincent Scully, Robert Somol, Anthony Vidler, Sara Whiting and Mark Wigley. Registration is required. Info: (203) 432-2288 or www.architecture.yale.edu. (School of Architecture)
"HIV/AIDS as a Threat to Global Society"
Friday, 6-8 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Sterling Aud., SLB. The Yale College International Conflict Research Group will host a conference to promote awareness of and examine the international security implications of the AIDS pandemic through three panels: "Causes and Dimensions of HIV/AIDS," "Regional Case Studies" and "Solutions and Policy Challenges." Stephen Lewis, United Nations special envoy for HIV/AIDs to Africa and Mark Schneider, International Crisis Group, will deliver keynote speeches. Info.: www.yale.edu/icrg/; genevieve.tremblay@yale.edu; ziad.haider@yale.edu. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights/YCIAS/
CIRA/Cente)
Monday, Nov. 11
"European Emigré Writers and National Boundaries in the 20th Century"
Rm. 211, HGS. 11 a.m. Keynote address by Jeffrey Mehlman, Boston Univ.; 1 p.m. Graduate student paper presentations followed by a roundtable discussion; Noon. Lunch will be served. The keynote address and conference are open to members of the Yale community.
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 15 & 16
"Man and Beast: A Symposium
in Honor of Naomi Schor (1943-2001)"
WHC. The conference will provide a forum for discussions aimed at rethinking the relationship between man and beast. Panel discussions will include "At the Limits of the Human and Non-Human" on Friday; "Kinships and Contracts with the Beasts" and "Culture and the Creatures" on Saturday. Info.: (203) 432-0673; manana.sikic@yale.edu.

Biomedical Sciences
Monday, Nov. 11
"Pleasure Is Nature's Fifth Influence"
4 p.m. Peter B. Gordon Memorial Library, JPL. Dr. Michel Cabanac, Univ. de Laval, Quebec, Canada. Refreshments will be served prior to the lecture at 3:45 p.m. Info.: (203) 562-9901. (John B. Pierce Laboratory)
Tuesday, Nov. 12
"Monoclonal Antibody Therapy
of Lymphoma: Does It Work and
How Does It Work?"
8:30 a.m. Rm. LMP 1092, Fitkin Amph. The Charles Janeway Lecture Series in Tumor Immunology continues with a lecture by Dr. David G. Maloney, Univ. of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. (Cancer Center)
"Molecular Biology 101: Everything You Wanted to Know, But Never Dared to Ask"
1-2 p.m. Cohen Aud., E-floor, Harris Bldg. Yale Child Study Center Departmental Conference featuring Dr. Paul Lombroso. Open to members
of the Yale community. Info.: Robert King, (203) 785-5880.
"Towards Establishing a Biochemical System to Understand Maintenance
of Body Pattern"
4 p.m. Rm. I304, SHM. The Genetics Seminar Program with Robert Kingston, Massachusetts General Hospital. (Dept. of Genetics)
"Pathways Utilized in Penicillamine-Induced Apoptosis"
5 p.m. Rm. 201, WWW. Pamela Havre. (Cancer Center)
Wednesday, Nov. 13
"New Ideas in Pain Management"
7-8 a.m. Rm. 216, JEH. Dept. of Surgery Informational Meeting with Dr. Robert Udelsman and Dept. of Surgery Grand Rounds Lecture by Dr. Raymond Sinatra.
"Vesicle Transport in the Squid Giant
Axon by Myosin-V: The Globular Tail Domain Binds to Vesicles and Forms
Motor Complex with Kinesin"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 131, BML.George M. Langford, Dartmouth College. (Dept. of Cell Biology)
"Mechanism of the Human Papillomavirus DNA Replication: Roles of Viral Proteins, Chaperone Proteins and Cyclin E/cdk2"
4 p.m. Rm. 226, OML. Tom Broker, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. A tea will be served prior to the lecture at 3:45 p.m. (Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology)
"Lung Cancer: Current Therapies
and Future Directions"
6 p.m. East Pavillion Cafeteria, YNHH. Dr. John Murren and Marianne Davies. (Cancer Center)
Thursday, Nov. 14
"Soft Tissue Sarcomas"
9 a.m. Rm. 201, WWW. Dr. Brian O'Sullivan, Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto, Ontario. (Dept. of Therapeutic Radiology)
"Education, Past, Present
and Future Generations of Ob/Gyn"
4 p.m. Rm. B-131, Brady Aud., Lauder Hall. Dr. Sterling Williams, The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. (Dept. of Obstetrics and Gynecology)
Friday, Nov. 15
"Adult Development--A 60 Year Prospective Study"
10:15 a.m. Aud., CMHC. Dept. of Psychiatry Grand Rounds Lecture by Dr. George E. Vaillant, Brigham and Women's Hospital.

For Students Only
Thursday, Nov. 7
Thursday Conversations
1:30-2:30 p.m. Rm. B46, McDougal Graduate Student Center. Beginning English class.
5-6 p.m. Rm. B46, HGS, McDougal Graduate Student Center. Advanced English. (Office of International Students and Scholars/McDougal Graduate Student Center)
Friday, Nov. 8
Friday Conversations
12:30-1:30 p.m. Common rm., McDougal Graduate Student Center. An opportunity for international students to practice their English conversation skills. Free coffee. (Office of International Students and Scholars/McDougal Graduate Student Center)
Wednesday, Nov. 13
Open Mike Night
7:30 p.m. Blue Dog Café and common rm., McDougal Graduate Student Center. Graduate and professional student performers are welcome. Sign up online at www.yale.edu/graduateschool/mcdougal or e-mail mcdougal.center@yale.edu.
Thursday, Nov. 14
McDougal Music
8 p.m. Common rm., McDougal Graduate Student Center. Pianist Stephen Hackman will perform. Refreshments will be served.
Friday, Nov. 15
Graduate School Dean's Reception
and Celebration of the 5th Anniversary
of the McDougal Center
4:30-6:30 p.m. Common rm., and rm. 119, McDougal Graduate Student Center.
"Jurassic Jazz I"
8-11 p.m. Peabody Museum. A semi-formal jazz reception for graduate students will feature live jazz music. Tickets are on sale in rm. 123 in the McDougal Graduate Student Center

Sports
Dates and times of athletic events are subject to change. For the most timely information about sporting events visit the website at www.yale.edu/athletic or call (203) 432-1435.
Friday, Nov. 8
Volleyball
7 p.m. PWG. Yale vs. Cornell. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Women's Hockey
7 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. Cornell. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Saturday, Nov. 9
Volleyball
4 p.m. PWG. Yale vs. Columbia. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Women's Hockey
4 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. Colgate. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Friday, Nov. 15
Women's Swimming
6 p.m. PWG. Yale vs. Columbia. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Men's Hockey
7 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. Rensselaer. Tickets: $7 general admission; $3 for children 14 and under; $8-$10 reserved seating.
Saturday, Nov. 16
Football
12:30 p.m. Yale Bowl. Yale vs. Princeton. Tickets: $5-$13. Yale employees and their immediate families, and Yale retirees and one guest receive free admission. Present valid I.D. 11:30 a.m.- 1 p.m. at Gate A or E. Free parking in Lot A and D.
Women's Hockey
2 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. St. Lawrence. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Men's Soccer
4 p.m. Yale Soccer-Lacrosse Stadium. Yale vs. Princeton. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.
Men's Hockey
7 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. Union. Tickets: $7 general admission; $3 for children 14 and under; $8-$10 reserved seating.
Sunday, Nov. 17
Women's Hockey
2 p.m. Ingalls Rink. Yale vs. St. Lawrence. Tickets: $3 general admission; $1 non-Yale students over 15; free for Yale students and children 15 and under.

And...
Friday, Nov. 8
Luncheon Meditation
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 109, Ste. 107, 100 CSS. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.
Memorial Service for Dr. Gustav E. Lindskog
4 p.m. Battell Chapel. A reception will follow in Dwight Hall. (Dept. of Surgery)
Ramadan Dinner
6 p.m. Davenport College common rm. Celebrate the opening of the fast with food from Mughal India Restaurant and learn about the Muslim holy month. $5 per person. RSVP and tickets: gul.raza@yale.edu. Open to members of the Yale community.
Friday & Saturday,
Nov. 8 & 9
Invitational Mock Trial Tournament
Friday, 4:15 p.m. and 8 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. WLH, HGS and Street Hall. The Yale Mock Trial Association will host its seventh annual tournament. Individuals from Boston Univ., Brown Univ., Darmouth College, Princeton Univ., Univ. of Southern California, Cornell Univ. and Univ. of Pennsylvania will participate. Info.: Craig Bucki, (203) 436-0771 or e-mail craig.bucki@yale.edu.
Saturday, Nov. 9
"Stone Paper Scissors"
10:30 a.m.-noon. BAC. Participants will explore alternative methods of making books and telling stories. Gallery visits will investigate paintings that tell a story to set the mood. For children 7-9 years of age. Registration is required. Info. and registration: (203) 432-2858.
Introductory Tour
11 a.m. BAC. A tour and survey of British painting. Info.: (203) 432-2800.
Memorial Service for Albert J. Solnit
2 p.m. Battell Chapel. A reception will follow in Branford College. Info.: (203) 785-5759.
Monday, Nov. 11
Veteran's Day Celebration
Noon. Hewitt Quadrangle. A ceremony will be held to honor Yale graduates who served in the military -- in wartime and peacetime. The ceremony will include a color guard, national anthem, remarks and the laying of a wreath on the cenotaph. Open to members of the Yale community.
"Identification Day"
1-4 p.m. Peabody Museum. Bring any object and have it identified by experts. All specimens are welcome; living creatures must be safely secured in a breathable container and returned to its native environment. Free with museum admission ($5 for adults; $3 for children and seniors; free with valid Yale I.D.).
Memorial Service for Andrew Forge
3 p.m. Battell Chapel.
"Africa: Made in God's Image"
4:30-6 p.m. ISM. Opening reception for exhibition of paintings by Ray Dirks. (Institute of Sacred Music/Overseas Ministries Study Center/Divinity Sch.)
Book Signing
6 p.m. Yale Bookstore. Jay Winter, who provided the forwards to new editions of "German Students' War Letters" and "War Letters of Fallen Englishmen," will discuss and sign copies of the books.
Tuesday, Nov. 12
"SQL: Level 1"
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Rm. LL4, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $195. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.
"Word 97/2000: Mail Merge"
9-11:30 a.m. Rm. LL3, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $80. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.
"Conflict Management Part I"
9 a.m.-noon. Rm. LL1, 221 Whitney Ave. Fee: $65; $50 for members of the Yale community. Registration: www.yale.edu/learningcenter.
Employee Health/Wellness Fair
10 a.m.-2 p.m. Lecture hall, SML (Use Wall St. Entrance). The Yale Health Plan will offer free flu shots, free cholesterol screenings, info. on services and benefits, refreshments and complimentary gifts. Open to members of the Yale community. Info.: (203) 432-7214.
Book Signing
2 p.m. Yale Bookstore. David Schmahmann, author of "Empire Settings," will discuss and sign copies of his new book.
Wednesday, Nov. 13