New Haven celebrates the 375th anniversary of its founding this year. For generations, people have found inspiration around campus and community. In this video, Yale College students Gracie White and Christian Probst, both members of the Class of 2016, took their choreography of Robert Skoro's song "In Line" around the city of New Haven, from Alexander Liberman's painted rolled steel structure "On High" (1979), which sits in front of the Robert N. Giaimo Federal Building in downtown New Haven, to the free and publicly accesible Yale University Sculpture Garden on York and Chapel streets, to the gorgeous Lighthouse Point Park at the Eastern point of New Haven Harbor (http://bit.ly/14aqa7e). Gracie White and Christian Probst are both members of Yale Dancers, Yale's oldest student-run dance organization. The pair first performed their version of Skoro's "In Line" at the Yale Dancers Fall Performance in November 2012 and have since performed it in numerous venues including recently at TedxYale, which was held February 23, 2013 at New Haven's Shubert Theater. Gracie White does not have a traditional dance background, and instead grew up performing in a circus. She trained aerials and hand balancing with Circus Juventas from 2005 though 2011, and then took a gap year to work professionally in New York with Company XIV. Christian Probst on the other hand started taking tap, ballet and jazz lessons when he was seven at the Krupinski Academy of Dance and hasn't kept his feet or body still since. Although tap dancing still remains his favorite form, Christian enjoys excelling in all areas of dance. ---- Video filmed, edited, and produced by Julia Myers Original song "In Line" by Robert Skoro used with permission Costumes provided by the Yale Costume Collection, with special thanks to Linda Wingerter