Jennifer Nadelmann
Jennifer Nadelmann
Recent Stories
Prof researches melanoma
Dr. Harriet Kluger, an associate professorof medical oncology at the Yale School of Medicine, published a study in the April 15 issue of the journal Clinical Cancer Medicine titled “Plasma Markers for Identifying Patients with Metastatic Melanoma.”
New bioveins open doors for surgery
Bioengineers have designed “off the shelf” veins out of human cells.
Female butterflies face winter courtship woes
Yale researchers published a study in the Jan. 7 issue of journal Science that discovered that the temperature during larval development causesa gender role reversal among African Bicyclus anynana butterflies.
HIV in the Ivory Tower
HIV/AIDS is a problem, even at Yale. Although Chief of Student Health James Perlotto said he was not able to release exact numbers due to privacy and confidentiality policies, he estimated that around 20 undergraduate and graduate students currently enrolled are HIV-positive, and as many as fifty in recent years.
Researchers close in on cancer
A joint study by the Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Immunobiology and the University of Western Australia’s School of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine has uncovered the molecular basis of myeloid leukemia — cancer of the bone marrow and lymph nodes — development in mice with a cancer-causing gene mutation.
Gene illuminates the origins of depression
A team of Yale researchers has discovered a gene that may control depression and lead to the development of more effective anti-depressants.
A makeover for Audubon Street
Salon opens up in troubled business district
Service-oriented stores in the Audubon District, like the new Salon Ivanova, will provide convenient services to attract passersbys in addition to those who come to the neighborhood to visit its art facilities.
A cold war brews on High Street
Business at Froyo World on High Street, which had its grand opening Monday, has been booming. But across the street, the owners of the frozen yogurt store The Liberry are considering closing to renovate, as sales drop.
How’s my sitting? Ask the chair
While vibrating chairs are usually meant for relaxation, a new chair designed by Yale engineers has a more corrective intention: using vibrations to fix posture.
Cops wanted fiancée’s DNA for crime scene tests
Police sought DNA samples from the fiancée of Raymond Clark III, who pleaded not guilty in January to the murder of Annie Le GRD ’13, according to a search warrant released last week.

