Yale Forest Forum Lunch
Noon. Marsh Hall Rotunda. Alexey Yaroshenko, Greenpeace, Russia.
"Are There Too Many Entrepreneurs? A Model of Client-Based Entrepreneurship"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Political Economy Workshop with James Rauch, Univ. of California, San Diego.
Yale-Stimson Seminar Public Lecture
Noon. Rm. 119, HGS. Kenneth Kaunda, former president of Zambia. Info. www.yale.edu/ycias.
"Global Warming and Associated Changes in Continental Hydrology: Implications for Water Resource Management"
2 p.m. Rm. 102, KGL. The fourth of five Richard Foster Flint Lectures in Glacial and Quaternary Geology by Syukuro Manabe, Princeton Univ. (Dept. of Geology and Geophysics)
"The Virtual Nomad: Imagined Migration Through Tokyo in the Days Before the Bubble Burst"
4 p.m. Rm. 206, Old Art Gallery, 56 High St. Jonathan Reynolds, Univ. of Southern California. (Council on East Asian Studies)
"A Place in the Sun for the Neutrino"
4 p.m. Rm. 59, SPL. R.G. Hamish Robertson, Univ. of Washington, will present the first of three lectures in the Leigh Page Lecture Series (Physics Dept.)
"China Under a New Leadership: Domestic Policies, International Relations and
Legal Reforms"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 211, LC. Panel discussion with Profs. Deborah Davis, Paul Gewirtz, Charles Hill, Pierre Landry and Jonathan Spence. (Chinese Partnership Program/YCIAS)
"24/7"
6:30 p.m. Hastings Hall, A&A. Bernard Tschumi. (Sch. of Architecture)
Tuesday, April 15
"Will a Delaware of Europe Emerge?:
The Future Development of European Corporate Law"
Noon-1:30 p.m. Rm. 121, SLB. Peter Doralt, Univ. of Vienna and the Austrian Delegation to Working Groups on the EU Council on Corporate Law. (Law Sch.)
"Roubiliac's Pope"
12:30 p.m. BAC. Art in Context talk by Prof. Jill Campbell.
"Transcendental Moment: Martin Johnson Heade at Newbury Marshes"
3:45 p.m. YUAG. Prof. Timothy Barringer. Part of the series "Object Lessons."
Journalism and Japan Speaker Series
4 p.m. Rm. 202, Luce Hall. T.R. Reid, former correspondent, The Washington Post and author, "Confucius Lives Next Door: What Living in the East Teaches Us About Living in the West." Info.: www.yale.edu/ycias/ceas. (East Asian Studies)
"Modernism and Realism:
Joyce, Woolf, Proust"
4-5 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Prof. Peter Brooks presents the 12th DeVane Lecture in the series "Visions of the Real."
"Fonética Y Fonología Del Español:
Ideas Para La Clase"
4 p.m. Romance Languages Lounge. Manel Lacorte. (Dept. of Spanish and Portuguese)
First Annual Anthropology
Undergraduate Colloquium
4:30-6:30 p.m. Rm. 1, 158 Whitney Ave. The colloquium will feature eight undergraduate presentations in cultural and physical anthropology and archaeology. Info.: www.yale.edu/anthro/society.
"Delivering Justice Today"
4:30-6 p.m. Rm. 127, SLB. The Honorable Judith S. Kaye, chief judge of the State of New York. (Law Sch.)
"The Role of Polyene Forbidden Excited States on the Photobiology of Vision and Photosynthesis"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 253, SCL. Robert Birge, Univ. of Connecticut. (Dept. of Chemistry)
Master's Tea
4:30 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Roger Cohen, editor, Mother Jones.
"Homosexuality After Fascism"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 309, WLH. Dagmar Herzog. (Larry Kramer Initiative for Lesbian and Gay Studies/German Dept.)
"A Vision for the American Landscape: Challenges and Opportunities Facing the Land Trust Movement"
5 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Rand Wentworth, president, Land Trust Alliance.
"'England Made Me': Bill Brandt and Signs of British and Continental European Identity"
5:30 p.m. BAC. Ian Jeffrey, author.
"Encouraging Jekyll, Managing Hyde: Controlling Science Today"
7:30 p.m. Slifka Center. Bioethics and Public Policy Seminar Series with Kenneth Pimple, The Poynter Center for Ethics and American Institutions, Indiana Univ.
"Wordsworth and Winnicott: On Communicating and Not Communicating"
8 p.m. Rm. 108, WHC. Mary Jacobus, Cambridge Univ. Reception will be held at 7 p.m. Info.: (203) 785-7205. (Muriel Gardiner Program in Psychoanalysis and the Humanities)
Wednesday, April 16
"Whose Sustainable Forestry?
Science Versus Politics"
Noon. Marsh Hall Rotunda. Yale Forest Forum Lunch with Michael E. Conroy, senior program officer, Ford Foundation.
"Shackles for Prometheus: Hazardous
and Forbidden Knowledge"
Noon. ISPS. Bioethics and Public Policy Forum with Kenneth Pimple, The Poynter Center for Ethics and American Institutions, Indiana Univ.
"Documenting Indonesian Rule
in East Timor, 1975-1999"
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. John Taylor, Southbank Univ, UK, and author of "East Timor: The Price of Freedom." (Council on Southeast Asian Studies/Genocide Studies Program)
"Form vs. Shape: Louis I. Kahn's
Yale University Art Gallery"
12:20 p.m. YUAG. Art à la carte by Dean Sakamoto.
"Taming the Genie: What Limits to
Forest Certification Systems?"
2:30 p.m Marsh Hall (Rotunda or classroom). Michael E. Conroy, senior program officer, Ford Foundation.
Post-Communist Workshop
4 p.m. Rm. 119, 8 Prospect Place. Ellen Comisso, Univ. of California, San Diego. Info.: www.yale.edu/ycias/pcw.
Master's Tea
4 p.m. Calhoun College master's house. Tom Wolfe, best-selling author.
"Catalytic Cycloreductions, Cycloadditions and Cycloisomerizations: Enones as Latent Enolates in Catalysis"
4 p.m. Rm. 160, SCL. Michael Krische, Univ. of Texas, Austin. (Dept. of Chemistry)
"If They Have Mass, Why Can't You
Tell Me What It Is?"
4 p.m. Rm. 59, SPL. R.G. Hamish Robertson, Univ. of Washington, will present the second of three lectures in the Leigh Page Lecture Series. (Physics Dept.)
"A Multicomponent Space-Charge Transport Model for Ion-Exchange Membranes"
4 p.m. Rm. 211, Mason Laboratory. Peter Pintauro, Case Western Reserve Univ. (Dept. of Chemical Engineering)
"Incorporating the Excluded: A Solution
to International Poverty and Terrorism"
4:30 p.m. Rm. 120, SLB. Hernando de Soto, advisor to former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori, will speak as the next Downey Fellow. A reception will follow in the Sterling Library Memorabilia Rm.
"Is Agriculture the Enemy of Nature?
Agro-Food Globalization and the Worldwide Farmers' Movement for Agroecology"
5 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Prof. Kathleen McAfee.
Public Lecture
7:30 p.m. McNeil Lecture Hall, YUAG. Tom Wolfe, best-selling author.
Thursday, April 17
Brown-Bag Lunch
Noon. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Regina DeAngelo. Info.: www.yale.edu/ycias/african. (African Studies)
"Can't Buy Me Love? Exchange Processes Within Couples"
4-5:30 p.m. Rm. 107, Williams Hall, 80 Sachem St. Jutta Allmendinger, Munich Univ. (Center for Comparative Research)
"Neutrinos: The Road Ahead"
4 p.m. Rm. 59, SPL. R.G. Hamish Robertson, Univ. of Washington, will present the third of three lectures in the Leigh Page Lecture Series. (Physics Dept.)
"Reshaping Languages and Persons: Christianization in Bosavi"
4 p.m. Rm. 1, 158 Whitney Ave. Bambi Schieffelin, New York Univ. (Dept. of Anthropology)
"Seafaring, Narrative and Know-How"
4 p.m. Rm. 101, Rosenfeld Hall. Margaret Cohen, New York Univ. (French Dept.)
"Branch Banking, Bank Competition
and Financial Stability"
4-5:30 p.m. Common Rm., 28 Hillhouse Ave. Workshop in Economic History with Kris Mitchener, Santa Clara Univ. Open to members of the Yale community.
Master's Tea
4 p.m. Jonathan Edwards College master's house. Donna Tartt, author.
"The Relationship Between Partner Violence, HIV and Drug Abuse Among Women on Methadone: HIV Intervention and Prevention Implications"
4:15 -5:45 p.m. ISPS. The Yale AIDS Colloquium Series with Nabila El-Bassel, Columbia Univ.
"Cinema in Colonial and Post-Colonial Zanzibar: The Films, the Fans,
the Finances"
4:15 p.m. Rm. 203, Luce Hall. Laura Fair, Univ. of Oregon. (African Studies)
"Black Hospital Movement"
5 p.m. Beaumont Rm., SHM. Dr. Vanessa Northington Gamble, Univ. of Wisconsin. (Program for Humanities in Medicine)
"Trading for Carbon: The Business Response to Climate Change"
5 p.m. Bowers Aud., Sage Hall. Panelists will include: Andrei Marcu, International Emissions Trading Association; Lee Solsbery, Environmental Resources Management; Anda Kalvins, Ontario Power; and David Findlay, Dupont. Reception to follow.
"A Party in Both Senses of the Term: Transnational Black Politics and Myths
of Racial Unity"
5:30 p.m. Rm. 102, LC. Michael H. Hanchard, Northwestern Univ. (Dept. of African American Studies)
"The European Family"
7 p.m. Rm. 208, WHC. Martine Segalen, Univ. of Paris-X. Part of the series "'When Was Europe?'
A Series of Conversations with Europeans About European Identity." A reception will be held prior the lecture. (Council on European Studies/WHC/
Dept. of History)
"Teach-in: Chesa Boudin/Yale Coalition
for Peace Debate"
8 p.m. Luce Hall. Prof. John Gaddis and Rashid Khalidi, Univ. of Chicago. Part of "The War in Iraq: A Yale Univ. Teach-In Series."
Friday, April 18
"Whither Water at Yale? Study of Water
at Yale"
9 a.m. Sage Lounge. A breakfast meeting and discussion group. Info.: www.yale.edu/forestry/events/calendar.html or cindy.kushner@yale.edu.
"Russian Rural Communities: Compass Patterns and Compassionate Paternalism"
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Seminar Rm., ISPS. Alexander Nikulin, The Moscow Sch. of Social and Economic Sciences. (Program in Agrarian Studies)

T H I S
W E E K ' S
S T O R I E S

Review committee suggests changes to enhance education in Yale College


'Feral' robot dogs trace pedigree to Yale engineer


Yale tutors show students how 'America Counts'


University holding more 'teach-ins' on war with Iraq


University issues health crisis alert for Yale travelers


Daily News alumni discuss how journalism has changed


Actor Christopher Reeve advocates for stem cell research


Dialogue about war in Iraq continues in campus events


Exhibit traces career of experimental British photographer


Yale to train future medical leaders in re-focused program


Study finds new drug holds promise in ovarian cancer treatment


Three students are awarded Goldwater Scholarships


Truman Scholarships given to two potential leaders


Adviser to Peru's former president to present Downey Lecture


OBITUARIES

Yale Entrepreneurial Society will co-host 'Innovation Summit'


Book club event will feature a talk by Dr. Ben Carson


Yale hosts fifth Powwow


Discussion by scholars will examine the current state of affairs in China


Conference highlights graduate students' work . . .


Brudner Prize winner explores the history of sexuality in talk


Campus Notes

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