
For faculty - past, present and future
Pharmaceutical leader’s newest gifts are a tribute to Yale’s inspiring teachers
In 1879, 23-year-old Robert McNeil, who had recently graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science, paid $167 for a fully outfitted drugstore that would soon bear his name. McNeil undoubtedly hoped that the store’s soda fountain would prove as much a draw to the residents of Philadelphia’s Kensington section as the medicines he planned to make and sell, but he could hardly have imagined that a drug stamped with the McNeil name would one day be the first choice for pain and...
Scientist is doubly honored for protein-folding breakthroughs

Last October marked a month to remember for the School of Medicine’s Arthur L. Horwich, M.D., Sterling Professor of...
A brother's generosity and an uncle's skill love on in endowment

On a recent visit to the School of Medicine, Roy Polayes, of Hartsdale, N.Y., recalled the many weekends at his...

Hope sustains center’s research on paralysis
Veterans join scientists to fight spinal cord injuries and neurological diseases

Neurosurgeon, geneticist sees a day when doctors can head off catastrophic stroke


