Over the winter, Max Hammond gave more time than usual to the piano — about eight hours a day, up from his long-term average of about five. He was applying to conservatories and aiming to impress.
The mathematics major from Los Angeles also took care to...
When Chelsea Coronel, a recent graduate of New Haven’s Wilbur Cross High School, starts at Yale this month, she’ll see familiar faces on the pathways and quads: six of her Cross classmates will be Yale College classmates too.
Jacquelin Onofre-Avila, an...
If you ask Jenny Tan where to meet, don’t be surprised if she says at the intersection — of organic chemistry and machine learning, of science and finance, of health care and podcasting, of 52nd and Park.
“It’s a theme I see a lot in my life,” the...
This month marks the three-year anniversary of the beginning of Scott Strobel’s tenure as provost, which all but coincided with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. In a conversation with Yale News, Strobel reflects on the remarkable ways the Yale...
He had a car and a cello. They had little time left and no place to go.
Jerry Zhou ’21 provided a soundtrack for their final days.
“Feeling music is innate to who we are as humans,” said the Trumbull College student leader and cellist from Tennessee, who...
In an online celebration May 18, President Peter Salovey conferred Yale degrees on thousands of 2020 graduates, admitting them to the attendant “rights and responsibilities.”
Now it’s up to Emily Shandley to make sure Yale’s newest alumni get a record of...
Paul Anastas, the Yale chemist widely known as the “father of green chemistry,” talks about greenhouse gases, science policy, Richard Nixon, and being “a sworn enemy of the status quo.”Paul AnastasFormerly head of research for the U.S. Environmental...
Openly gay collegiate faculty are significantly more uncomfortable at work than are closeted gay faculty, a pattern most severe for those working in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines, according to a Yale-led study.The pattern...