April 1998
Volume 61, Number 6
Feature stories:
Biomedical Goes Major
by Bruce Fellman
The new program in biomedical engineering brings together experts in disciplines as varied as cardiology and computer science. The bridge-building approach fulfills President Levin’s vision of “selective excellence” at Yale, and it might lead to a cure for a ubiquitous ailment: the bad back.

Risky Romance
by Patrick Dilger
Teachers and their students have a long history of getting together for amorous dalliances. But a new University policy adopted over the winter takes a dim view of such relationships. To avoid any possible conflict-of-classroom-interest, two words now apply: Just don’t.

Battling Babel
by Mark Alden Branch ’86
Spanish is soaring, French has fallen, and a number of other foreign languages have emerged on Yale’s linguistic landscape. The new Center for Language Study is charged with getting all of the university’s language instructors talking to each other.

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