Features
Features
Finance continues to draw Yalies
Fewer Yalies are going into “business and finance," but is it a trend?
Conceiving Sex Weeks
Ten years ago, a group of Yalies launched the school’s first Sex Week. Since then, sex weeks have been hosted on at least six other college campuses across the country.
Yalies talk TED
As the semester wears on, Yalies may feel they are stuck in a grind. But organizers of TEDxYale believe Yale brainpower, channeled through the experience of the group’s debut conference this weekend, can shake them out of their own ruts.
Professors seek continuing education
Students are not the only ones with a myriad of learning options. In between teaching their own classes, professors too are educating one another by choosing among over 40 regularly organized opportunities for learning over lunch.
Redefining the Yale experience
Last Friday, the Whiffenpoofs left campus for their winter tour. But no members will have to worry about missing class, because none of them are currently taking classes.
Elis hit GOP campaign trail
The work of any student volunteer on a campaign can be frustrating, and a handful Yalies who have worked on one of the GOP challengers’ political campaigns this past year.
Open Yale seeks stability
As Open Yale Courses enters its final year of funding from the external grant that helped launch the program, whether the University will fund the program in its current format remains to be seen.
Law professors stir national debate
For students nationwide, knowing when to give up on dreams of being a lawyer can be tough.
New York invests in Yalie
New York City's Chief Investment Officer Ranji Nagaswami SOM '86 brings lessons from Yale to the Big Apple.
Menacing tower seeks facelift
Today marks the open house for Yale’s new information center in the basement of Kline Biology Tower, adding warmth to a previously unfriendly building.
Christopher Shropshire - True Colors
21-year-old Christopher Shropshire decided earlier this year to quit taking classes at his local community college — after just one semester — in order to work.
Taylor Edwards - LEAP
Seventeen-year-old Taylor Edwards, who once identified as very shy, now finds great joy in teaching. Fifth in a six-part series on New Haven youth, Edwards explains her path to confidence.
William Ayala - Elm City International Soccer
William Ayala stands in the middle of the wooden floor of a large, dimly lit gym. One pink-jerseyed opponent passes the soccer ball to another, but Ayala darts forward. He steals the ball away from his opponent, and kicks it between two red cones 15 feet away, scoring.
Previous Next


