Yale undergraduate Maya Juman spent four weeks this summer at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) cleaning up a scientific mess concerning a species of tree shrew.
Juman, a junior majoring in ecology and evolutionary biology, is...
Maria Konnikova, journalist and best-selling author, will speak at Yale on Tuesday, Oct. 2, as a Poynter Fellow in Journalism. The event will take place at 4:30 p.m. in the Davenport Common Room, 275 Park St. It is free and open to the public.
William Nordhaus ’63 B.A., ’72 M.A., Sterling Professor of Economics, entered his classroom at Dunham Laboratory Monday morning to a burst of uproarious applause.
Hours earlier, Nordhaus learned that he had been awarded the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic...
One hundred years ago, on November 11 — “the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month” — the Allies and Germany signed an armistice, ending their four-year war, a devastating conflict that had claimed 16 million lives and left more than 20...
The #MeToo movement exploded into public consciousness just over a year ago, spurring conversations about work and power inequality across industries. Key movers who shaped that conversation — then and now — will talk about how this caught fire and where...
Popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt toppled autocratic regimes during the 2011 Arab Spring, but the countries’ fates diverged after the revolutions ended. While Tunisia has established a stable democratic government, Egypt’s shift to democracy was...