- John Philip Trinkaus
- Early Life
- Trink’s Undergraduate Research at Wesleyan University
- Trink's First Visit to the MBL
- Trink and the MBL Embryology Course
- Trink's Graduate Research at Johns Hopkins University
- New Location & New Research Problem
- Fundulus as Choice Organism
- Trink's work on the Yolk Syncytial Layer (YSL) in Fundulus Epiboly
- Trink’s MBL Research on Cell Motility with C. A. Tickle
- Conclusion
- Alfred Huettner
- Cathy Norton
- China at the MBL: 1920-1945
- Collecting at the MBL
- Cyclins at the MBL
- Edmund Beecher Wilson
- Edwin Grant Conklin
- Envisioning the MBL: Whitman’s Efforts to Create an Independent Institution
- Eugene Bell Center for Regenerative Biology and Tissue Engineering 2010-2018
- Shinya Inoué: Capturing Dynamic Cellular Processes
- Squids, Axons, and Action Potentials: Stories of Neurobiological Discovery
- The Biological Bulletin
- The Ecosystems Center (1975-2018)
- The MBL Embryology Course 1939
- The Marine Biological Laboratory
- The Neurobiology of Vision at the MBL
- Using Biodiversity
- Collecting Methods & Surveys
- “Report upon the Invertebrate Animals of Vineyard Sound and Adjacent Waters, with an account of the Physical Features of the Reg
- “A Biological Survey of the Waters of Woods Hole and Vicinity. Part III. A Catalogue of the Marine Fauna” (1913)
- Methods for Obtaining and Handling Marine Eggs and Embryos (1957)
- Experiments
- Supply & Sale
- Collecting Methods & Surveys
- Viktor Hamburger and Experimental Embryology
- Visual Media in Embryology
- Woods Hole 150
Following the death of her husband, Lin, Yen was left nearly destitute. Her family had lost all of their money and possessions during the war, and Yen was forced to find a way to support herself and their two children.
Yen quickly enrolled at Columbia University, graduating with a Masters in Public Health in 1949. Two years later, she finally found a position—as the senior staff physician at Battey State Hospital in Rome, Georgia. After several years, Yen became a physician and clinician at the Georgia State Tuberculosis Hospital—a position she maintained until her retirement in 1967.
Yen Hui Ching lived in retirement for twenty years before passing away on June 25th, 1987.
Suggested citation
Jiang, Lijing, and Kate MacCord. 2015. "China at the MBL: 1920-1945". MBL History Project digital exhibit. https://history.archives.mbl.edu/browse/exhibits/china-mbl-1920-1945