President Levin is ‘back in action’ 8.28.09
University President Richard Levin has resumed his normal workload after taking some time off this summer to recuperate following a successful surgery for prostate cancer in April.
University President Richard Levin has resumed his normal workload after taking some time off this summer to recuperate following a successful surgery for prostate cancer in April.
People packed into the President’s Room in Woolsey Hall on Wednesday for a sustainability bazaar.
As the University’s annual budget-planning memo gets pushed back another week, department heads are left waiting and wondering how much of Yale’s $100 million budget gap will fall on them.
University President Richard Levin conducts many of his meetings from the same wicker rocking chair that once belonged to Ezra Stiles, who graduated from Yale College in 1746 and went on to serve as Yale’s seventh president.
Richard Levin, who assumed office in 1993, has served as Yale’s president in a period of remarkable economic prosperity. Now, as he outlined Dec. 16 in a 2,000-word letter to faculty and staff, he and his colleagues face the challenge of balancing ambitious new initiatives with the reality that Yale’s endowment is worth an estimated three-quarters of what it was on June...
As legislation providing for a federal cap on greenhouse-gas emissions died in the U.S. Senate on Friday, University President Richard Levin warned that Congress’ failure to tackle the issue of climate change sends the wrong message to other global powers.
A goal few knew Levin set forth 10 years ago.
In a bizarre, Internet-fueled conflagration, University President Richard Levin became the target of an angry letter-writing campaign from conservative Christians on Wednesday over what he says was a misquotation in a Washington Post column.
As the wife of Yale’s 22nd president and director of undergraduate studies for Directed Studies, Jane Levin is a University power player who does more than just stand by her man — although she does that as well.
To University President Richard Levin, the American research university is not just an educational institution.
Levin, the longest serving president in the Ivy League, will travel to New York City today to deliver what will be his third high-profile speaking engagement this semester alone.
Fifteen years ago today, a 46-year-old economist put on a fine suit, tucked a speech in his pocket and headed to the Sterling Memorial Library. Richard Levin, the newly appointed dean of the Graduate School, was getting another promotion.