Yale Daily News

Updated: Friday, November 20, 2009 3:52 p.m.

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West Campus stays safe

WEST HAVEN — The last reported “crime” at Yale’s 136-acre West Campus occurred four to five years ago, said Thomas Paddock, one of the four head security officers who cover the area.

Yale scientists to study female soldiers

Starting in December, Yale researchers will conduct one of the first ever studies exclusively about female soldiers. Scientists will investigate whether female soldiers are more likely than males to have difficulty adjusting to civilian life after being in combat, School of Medicine professor and principal researcher Rani Desai said.

U. Chicago professor sheds light on medical ethics

“Everything you might have ever learned in a philosophy class about medical ethics,” William Meadow whispered to a crowd of about 20 students, “[is] useless.”

Seminar focuses on evolutionary medicine

A new graduate-level evolutionary medicine course that will be open to juniors next semester is unique in its field, according to eight professors at Yale and other universities.

Yale researchers track immune system cells’ movement

Researchers from Yale’s Mechanical Engineering Department recently developed a technique to control the movement of immune system cells by taking advantage of how these cells track bacteria.

Meteors disappoint

Though not expecting the skies to flare as they did on Nov. 13, 1833, meteor shower enthusiasts were prepared to face the cold and give up sleep for the post-midnight and pre-dawn spectacle that meteorologists predicted for Nov. 17, only to be obstructed by clouds.

Conference pushes access to medicine

Students from around the world gathered at the eighth annual Universities Allied for Essential Medicines (UAEM) conference, held on Nov. 14 and 15 at the Yale School of Medicine, to discuss how to distribute medicines to poor countries. While students acknowledged that many institutions have become aware of medical access issues, there are still many political roadblocks.

250 vaccinated for swine flu

The swine flu vaccine is now available for high-risk students, YUHS Director Paul Genecin said in an e-mail to the News Friday.

Zimmer puts H1N1 in evolutionary context

Charles Darwin may be long dead, but his theories are alive and well in the swine flu epidemic.

Fewer science hires delayed

At a time when many faculty searches have been delayed because of the recession, Yale is hiring more faculty members in the sciences than in the social sciences or the humanities, University administrators said.

Discovery could help treat HIV

Yale University researchers have synthesized molecules that could help discover new methods of therapy for HIV and prostate cancer.

Finding food in academia

When Darra Goldstein proposed writing a dissertation on food and Russian literature, her doctoral advisers were “aghast.” Food, they said, had no place in academia.

Yalies to study environment in Hawaii

While many tourists imagine the island of Hawaii as a tropical paradise, it soon may no longer be able to support residents’ current standards of living.

Bulldogs help communities in Brazil

A group of Yale alumni traveled to Brazil last week to plant trees in the Atlantic Rainforest and ask the government to provide better health care for Brazil’s minority communities.

Yale-affiliated researchers link motor, sensory skills

Researchers at the Yale-affiliated Haskins Laboratories have uncovered a link between motor learning and sensory perception, a discovery that could help to treat motor disorders such as Parkinson’s disease.

Med school participates in NIH study

The Yale School of Medicine is participating in a study by the National Institutes of Health to determine whether testosterone treatments for older men are effective at preventing age-related health problems.

Vaccinated women have healthier babies

When administered to pregnant women, the influenza vaccine can prevent flu-related infant hospitalization, research efforts led by Yale School of Medicine professor Marietta Vázquez ’90 showed in late October.

Yale hosts start-up boot camp

The Yale Office of Cooperative Research and the law firm Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati hosted a “Start-Up Boot Camp” for aspiring life science and technology entrepreneurs Tuesday afternoon at the Hope Memorial Building.

Açaí berries just a (pricey) trend

It’s 2 a.m. and you’re cramming for a midterm tomorrow. Your brain is in need of a serious recharge, so you head to Durfee’s for an energy drink. You find a variety of products, including drinks and supplements enhanced with açaí berry extracts. Your caffeine-addled mind can’t tune out the spam e-mails that advertise açaí products as improving general health or sexual...

Yalies find genetic link to PTSD

Yale researchers have discovered a strong link between genes and the likelihood that someone will suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).