The Yale and Harvard football teams met at the Yale Bowl Saturday, Nov. 22, for the 141st playing of The Game. Yale scored early and never trailed, winning the contest 45 to 28, and with it a share of ...
Hugh Taylor has long studied the endometrium, or lining of the uterus. But it was his patients who got him interested in better understanding endometriosis specifically. Endometriosis is a disease in ...
Speaking to a packed crowd at Battell Chapel on Wednesday, the social psychologist and author Jonathan Haidt ’85 invoked the biblical tale of the tower of Babel as a metaphor for the harms caused by ...
Major law firms across the globe are investing in artificial intelligence (AI) platforms designed to streamline their work. But AI can also play a more socially conscious role in the legal arena: ...
Two students sit back-to-back on folding stools in a museum gallery of African art. One faces a wooden staff topped with a stylized carving of a human head. The other has a pencil and sketchpad. The ...
Examination of an ancient alabaster vase in the Yale Peabody Museum’s Babylonian Collection has revealed traces of opiates, providing the clearest evidence to date of broad opium use in ancient ...
Having spent a decade in the U.S. Air Force, Yale College senior Thomas Ghio is exceedingly grateful for all that the military has given him: a fellowship of life-long friends, an ability to lead, and ...
Kai T. Erikson, the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Sociology and American Studies, Emeritus at Yale, whose eloquent voice in defense of human communities changed the understanding of the way ...
In 2014, Jackson Higginbottom was a pre-medical student in Oklahoma City and, to supplement his studies, he wanted to volunteer at a free clinic in the community. Higginbottom’s classmates all ...
Exercising self-control is about more than simply maintaining a willpower of iron and an eye toward the greater good, a new Yale study finds; it’s really a delicate dance full of waffling deliberation ...
The medical community is noticing a rise in cancer diagnoses for adults under 45 — up nearly 80% since 1990. Dr. Veda Giri, division chief for Clinical Cancer Genetics and co-director of the Early ...
In the United States, the incarcerated population is aging. About 15% of incarcerated adults, or approximately 175,000 people, are now 55 years or older. As the incarcerated population ages, cancer ...