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Calendar of Events & Lectures


Displaying 18 of 3260 events.

Events

Transcription and the Mechanism of Somatic Hypermutation

| ZUCKERMAN AUDITORIUM, MSKCC, 417 E. 68TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Immunology Program
David Schatz, Ph.D., Professor, Yale School of Medicine

Higher Order Chromatin Architecture in Human Health and Disease

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Jesse Dixon, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor, Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Tracking Host Responses to the Microbiota

| M-107, MSKCC, 1275 YORK AVE.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Immunology Program
Greg Barton, Ph.D., Professor, University of California, Berkeley

Characterizing Germline Cancer Mechanisms at Scale: Risk, Tumor Evolution, and Treatment Outcomes

| M-107, MSKCC, 1275 YORK AVE.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Computational Systems and Biology Program
Alexander Gusev, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

In Vitro Reconstitution of Mammalian Life Cycle

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Nobuhiko Hamazaki, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, University of Washington

In Vitro Reconstitution of Mammalian Life Cycle

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Nobuhiko Hamazaki, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, University of Washington

On the Front Lines of New York City’s Yellow Fever Epidemics

| WEBINAR
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Other Tri-Institutional Events
We know a lot about New York’s 18th-century doctors, who left behind diaries and letters and accounts of their work. We know far less about front-line workers such as gravediggers, those who provided food and firewood to the poor, and nurses, who were often working-class women and men who played extraordinarily important roles during the yellow fever epidemics that slammed the city in the 1790s. This talk explores front-line workers and the mixed-race hospital staffs they formed to care for the ill during a period of great change and uncertainty in New York City.
Carolyn Eastman, Ph.D., Professor of History, Virginia Commonwealth University

Self Organization of Movement from Single Cells to Multicellular Swarms

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Orion Weiner, Ph.D., Professor, University of California

Self Organization of Movement from Single Cells to Multicellular Swarms

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Orion Weiner, Ph.D., Professor, University of California

Self Organization of Movement from Single Cells to Multicellular Swarms

| 116 ROCKEFELLER RESEARCH LABORATORIES, MSKCC, 430 E. 67TH ST.
Tri-Institutional Events (at MSK & WCM), Developmental Biology Program
Orion Weiner, Ph.D., Professor, University of California

Tri-Institutional Calendars

The close proximity among the three institutions which comprise the Tri-I has led to a culture that encourages interinstitutional interactions and shared resources, including access to lectures and seminars from internationally renowned scientists and clinicians: