In 1968, the Yale-Harvard football game — “The Game” — ended in a 29-29 tie. Recalling what led to the crushing result for Yale, those who experienced it reflect upon the classic game, and ponder what it means for The Game to be played 50 years later.
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...
“WET: A DACAmented Journey,” written and performed by Alex Alpharaoh, and “What Remains,” with direction and choreography by Will Rawls and text by Yale professor Claudia Rankine, will be staged as part of the Yale Repertory Theatre’s “No Boundaries”...
Yale senior Makayla Haussler and recent graduate Rohan Naik ’18 are among the 12 individuals selected as Mitchell Scholars.
The U.S.-Ireland Alliance, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year, selected the scholarship winners following final...
Yale seniors Rayan Semery-Palumbo, Eren Orbey, and Riley S. Tillitt will head to Oxford University following graduation as Rhodes Scholars representing the United States.
Rhodes Scholarships provide all expenses for study in England. They were created in...
A gift from William ’56 and Lia Poorvu and their children Alison Poorvu Jaffe ’81 and Jonathan Poorvu ’84 has created a permanent endowment for the Center for Teaching and Learning, sustaining the activities of the pioneering center in perpetuity. In...