"Bridging Disciplines and the Theory/
Practice Divide: The Challenges and Successes of the UC/Santa Cruz Center
for Agroecology and Sustainable
Food Systems"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Carol Shennan, Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems, Univ. of California, Santa Cruz. Part of the Program in Agrarian Studies colloquium series.
"The Quality of State Funded Pre-Kindergarten Services Provided Through Faith Affiliated Programs: State and Federal Policy Implications"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Walter Gilliam, assoc. research scientist, will deliver a lecture in the Yale Center in Child Development and Social Policy Luncheon Series. Info.: (203) 432-9935.
"Ruling Inner Asia from Beijing"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. New England East Asianists Series with Gray Tuttle, Trinity College. Lunch will be provided.
"Natural Development:
Toward Creation of a Code"
Noon. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Speaker TBA. Info.: Colleen Murphy-Dunning, (203) 432-6570. (Hixon Center for Urban Ecology)
Human Rights Workshop
12:30-2 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Speaker TBA. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)
"Historical Meaning, Aesthetic Significance, and the Theme
of Forgiveness in Korean Literature"
4 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Korean Studies Lecture Series with David McCann, Harvard Univ.
Saturday, Feb. 8
"Romantics and Revolutionaries"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour.
Sunday, Feb. 9
Catholic Faculty Series: "Life As
a Scholar and As a Believer"
6 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel Hall. A dinner discussion with Prof. Traugott Lawler. Info.:
(203) 777-5537.
Monday, Feb. 10
"International Institutions and the
Business Environment in Developing Countries with Special Reference to Bilateral Investment Treaties"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Political Economy Workshop with Prof. Susan Rose-Ackerman and Jennifer Tobin. Part of the Georg Walter Leitner Program in International Political Economy at YCIAS.
"Agriculture and Environment: Will Intensification 'Save Land for Nature'?"
4 p.m. Rm. 123, KGL. Pamela Matson, Stanford Univ. and Zucker Environmental Fellow, will give a public lecture. (Zucker Fellowship Fund)
Master's Tea
2 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. David Milch '66, writer and producer, "Hill Street Blues" and "NYPD Blue," will speak on "The Curious Use of a Yale Education."
"The Daily Planet: Why the Media Have Trouble Covering the Biggest Story in the World--The World Itself"
4 p.m. Sage Hall lounge, F&ES. Andrew Revkin, environment reporter, The New York Times, will deliver a Poynter Lecture.
Master's Tea
4 p.m. Berkeley College master's house. Pamela Matson, Stanford Univ. and Zucker Environmental Fellow. (Zucker Fellowship Fund)
"A Long-Lived Quick Birther:
The Story of a Birthing Amulet"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 309, Harkness Hall. Prof. Naomi Rogers and Ann Hanson. Part of the "Gender, Sexuality and Antiquity: From the Arts to the Sciences" seminar series. Open to members of the Yale community. Info.: Shilpa Raval, shilpa.raval@yale.edu. (Women Faculty Forum/Yale Classics Dept.)
"Semmelweis Redux: Trying Again
to Figure Him Out"
4:30 p.m. Fulton Rm., SHM. Dr. Sherwin Nuland. Part of the Program in the History of Science and Medicine.
"The New Philanthropies
and the Global Health Agenda"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 103, LEPH. Nina Schawalbe, The Soros Foundation.
"Bone Marrow Cell Therapy
for Multiple Sclerosis"
5:30 p.m. Beaumont Rm., SHM. Prof. Jeffrey Kocsis will speak to the Stem Cell Interest Group. Info. and reservations: rajesh.rao@yale.edu.
"The Landscape of Mass Consumption"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Lizabeth Cohen. (Sch. of Architecture)
"The Future of Television Drama"
8 p.m. Aud., SLB. University lecture by David Milch, writer and producer, "Hill Street Blues" and "NYPD Blue."
Tuesday, Feb. 11
Working Research Group:
"Perspectives on Aging"
8:30-10 a.m. ISPS. Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro. Info. and breakfast reservations: Carol Pollard at (203) 432-6188; carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"One Day at a Time: Ordinary
Peoples' Struggle"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 211, HGS. A brown-bag lunch series in celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Speakers TBA. Open to members of the Yale community. Info.: (203) 432-0763; e-mail grad.diversity@yale.edu. (Office for Diversity and Equal Opportunity/Office of Multicultural Affairs/EPH Minority Affairs Committee)
"Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic
in History: The Romantic Print in the
Age of Revolutions"
12:30 p.m. BAC. Art in Context talk by Gillian Forrester.
Master's Tea
3:30 p.m. Morse College master's tea. President Richard C. Levin.
"Unfolding Drama: Robert Morris'
Felt Piece"
3:45 p.m. YUAG. Prof. Jessica Stockholder.
"Two Powers in Heaven Reconsidered"
4 p.m. Rm. 401, HGS. Adiel Schremer, Bar-Ilan Univ. (Program in Judaic Studies)
"Pessoa, Shakespeare and Some Others"
4 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge, 82-90 Wall St. George Monteiro, Brown Univ. (Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese)
"Courbet and the 'Pavillon du Réalisme'"
4-5 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. The fifth DeVane Lecture in the series "Visions of the Real," presented by Prof. Peter Brooks, will include a slide presentation.
"The Business of Sustainable Transportation"
4:15 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Robin Chase, CEO, Zipcar. Info.: Michelle Portlock, (203) 432-6953. (Industrial Environmental Management Program)
"The Lawyers Role in Deliberative Democracy: Facilitation Consensus
and Other Processes"
6-7:30 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Quinnipiac-Yale Dispute Resolution Workshop with Carrie Menkel-Meadow, Georgetown Univ. Law Center.
"The Benefits for Research in the U.S.: Lessons from National and International Debates"
6-8 p.m. ISPS. Celia Fisher, bioethicist-in-residence. Part of the bioethics reading group "Ethics of Research Involving Vulnerable Populations." Info. and dinner reservations: Carol Pollard, (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
Wednesday, Feb. 12
Black Business Alliance
Executive Leaders Series
11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Steinbach Lounge, 54 Hillhouse Ave. Carla Harris, Morgan Stanley.
"Regulating Women's Bodies for the Public Good? Law and Public Health Practices
in the Tijuana Sex Industry"
Noon. ISPS. Bioethics faculty workshop with Yasmina Katsulis. Info.: Carol Pollard, (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"Cézanne, Vollard and 'The Bathers' Lithographs"
12:20 p.m. YUAG. Art à la carte with Lisa
Hodermarsky.
"The Evolution of New Oxidation Reactions for Target-Directed Synthesis"
4 p.m. Rm. 160, SCL. Justin DuBois, Stanford Univ. (Dept. of Chemistry)
"Geologic Storage of CO2
in Deep Saline Aquifers"
4 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Catherine Peters, Princeton Univ. (Dept. of Chemical
Engineering)
"Culture and Reasoning: Make Sense of the Sense-Making Across Culture and Domains"
4 p.m. Rm. 220, Dunham Lab. Diversity Colloquium with Kaiping Peng, Univ. of California at Berkeley.
"Mining the Frontier Forests of El Dorado: Local Realities, TNCs and the Quest for Sustainable Forest Management in the Guiana Shield"
5-6:30 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Janette Forte, Iwokrama International Centre for Rainforest Conservation and Development, Guyana. Part of the "Globalization and the Environment: International Agendas and Local Responses" lecture series. (F&ES)
"Bodies Politic: Sex and Violence
in Korean Japanese Fiction"
6 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Melissa Wender. An informal dinner will take place in Luce Hall common rm., 2nd floor, 5-5:30 p.m. (Council on East Asian Studies)
Thursday, Feb. 13
"Romantics and Revolutionaries:
Regency Portraits from the National Portrait Gallery"
11 a.m. BAC. Gallery talk tour.
"Medical Technology, Innovation
and the Nature of Medical Progress"
Noon. ISPS. Daniel Callahan, director, International Programs, The Hastings Center. Part of the working research group "Justice and the Allocation of Medical Care." Info. and luncheon reservations: Carol Pollard, (203) 432-6188 or carol.pollard@yale.edu.
"The State and Ethnicity in Burma"
2:30-4:20 p.m. ISPS. Curtis Lambrecht. Part of the Genocide Studies Program seminar series "Genocide Today: Fieldwork and Analysis."
"Inventing Literary Property in Germany versus Berlin--The Puzzle of Divergences
in the European Union"
4-5:30 p.m. Rm. 107, Williams Hall. Richard Biernacki, Univ. of California, San Diego. (Center for Comparative Research)
"The Importance of Women to Economic and Political Development in the Middle East and Southwest Asia: Lessons from Egypt and Pakistan"
4 p.m. Rm. 101, LC. Isobel Coleman, Council on Foreign Relations. (International Security Studies/Women's Faculty Forum)
"HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and
Central Asia: What Can Be Done
on the New Frontier of the Pandemic?"
4-5 p.m. CIRA, 40 Temple St. Robert Hecht, The World Bank. (Center for Interdisclipinary Research on AIDS)
"Culture, Power and Working-Class
Identity in Korea"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. Hagen Koo, Univ. of Hawaii. Part of the Korean Studies Lecture series. (Council on East Asian Studies)
"Genetically Engineered Crops:
Myths and Realities"
4:30-6 p.m. ISPS. E. Ann Clark, Univ. of Guelph, Canada. Part of the bioethics working research group "Genetically Modified Plants."
"The Reverend Michael Gosselin Lecture
in Poetry and Faith"
4:30 p.m. Saint Thomas More Chapel Hall. Prof. Guiseppe Mazzotta. Info.: (203) 777-5537.
"The Power of Monuments and Monuments of Power: The Evaluation of Architectural Styles in Mycenaean Greece"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 407, PH. Rodney Fitzsimons, Iowa State Univ. (Dept. of Classics)
"Yale's School of Medicine:
Passing the Torches to Others"
5 p.m. Beaumont Rm., SHM. Dr. Gerard N. Burrow will deliver the McGovern Lecture.
"A Conversation with Robert Gober"
5:30 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall, YUAG. Robert Gober, artist. (Larry Kramer Initiative for Lesbian and Gay Studies/YUAG)
"Holocaust Comedies in Film"
7 p.m. Rm. 208, WHC. Thomas Elsaesser, Univ. of Amsterdam. A reception will be held at 6 p.m. Part of the series "When Was Europe? A Series of
Conversations with Europeans About European Identity." (Council on European Studies/WHC/
Dept. of History)
Friday, Feb. 14
"Metropolitan Orphans and Grassland Mothers: The Moral Economy of National Unity in the Northern Frontier of China"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar rm., ISPS. Uradyn Bulag, City Univ. of New York. Part of the Program in Agrarian Studies colloquium series.
"When Are Overnights Overmuch for
Young Children of Divorcing Parents?
Old Controversies and New Data"
11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Yale Center in Child Development and Social Policy talk by Marsha Kline Pruett. Info.: (203)
432-9935.
"Natural Development: Toward Creation
of a Code"
Noon. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Speaker TBA. Info.: (203) 432-6570. (Hixon Center for Urban Ecology)
"Wenzhang Zuofa: Essay Writing
as Education in 1930s China"
Noon. Rm. 211, HGS. The Council on East Asian Studies China Workshop with Prof. Charles Laughlin.
"Improving the Health of the Poor
in Developing Countries: Toward
a Renewed Global Response"
Noon-1 p.m. Rm. 115, LEPH. Robert Hecht, The World Bank.
"The Gentle Civilizer of Nations: The Rise and Fall of International Law 1870-1960"
12:30-2 p.m. Faculty lounge, SLB. Human Rights Workshop with Martti Koskeniemmi. (Orville H. Schell Jr. Center for International Human Rights)
Black History Month Lecture
7:30 p.m. Battell Chapel. Danny Glover, actor and activist. Must have ticket to enter. Tickets: (203) 432-0740. (Calhoun College/Afro-American Cultural Center)
Saturday, Feb. 15
"The Romantic Print in the
Age of Revolutions"
Noon. BAC. A Gallery Talk tour.
T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S
Yale's partnership with city showcased at colloquium
Graduate School increases stipends
Actress Meryl Streep discusses her role as proponent of organically grown food
Faculty grants support collaborations in cutting-edge research
Student's CD benefits Alzheimer's program
ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS
Biologist wins award for plant research
Journalist describes forces fueling 'wheel of bin Ladenism'
Flip side of creative genius explored in Yale Rep's next play
Love and lust compete in opera production of Mozart classic
Globalization changing nature of citizenship, says scholar
MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS
Memorial service for Kyle Burnat
Recent visitors
Yale Books in Brief
Bulletin Home|Visiting on Campus|Calendar of Events|In the News
Bulletin Board|Yale Scoreboard|Classified Ads|Search Archives|Deadlines
Bulletin Staff|Public Affairs Home|News Releases|
E-Mail Us|Yale Home Page