For years, whenever the production team at Winston-Salem Theatre Alliance needed a particular prop or costume, they had to search in different storage locations in town.
At any given time, there was at least two scene shops used to store costumes, props and set pieces.
âIf you needed a red tie, we would be like, âWhere is the red tie? Is it in that building or that building?ââ Jamie Lawson, artistic director for Theatre Alliance, said. âWe had to drive to it.â
Those days are gone.
In February, Theatre Alliance moved out of its rented performance space at 1047 Northwest Blvd. and completely made the move to its permanent new home at 650 West Sixth St in downtown Winston-Salem.
December 18, 2020
The Next Generation
Women’s Health Research at Yale and Yale School of Medicine’s Office of Education are integrating findings and best practices on sex-and-gender differences into the school s curriculum.
Photo by Robert Lisak
A steadily growing body of research over decades demonstrates the value of studying the health of women and how sex and gender influence health. These findings cover a wide variety of diseases and conditions and include sex-and-gender differences in prevalence, risk factors, how diseases and conditions develop over time, and the safety and efficacy of treatments.
However, medical students are not widely taught this data-based information. Women’s Health Research at Yale and Yale School of Medicine’s (YSM’s) Office of Education are changing this.