STUDENT LIFE
Sixty-eight students complete Matriculate live training

Matriculate at Yale recently held its live training session for the 2023 cohort of advising fellows.

Published author Coco Ma ’25 announces new fantasy book series

Coco Ma ’25 MUS ’21, author of the “Shadow Frost” trilogy, will release a new two-book series titled “DEATHLINGS” in fall 2023.  A recent graduate […]

Silliman Head of College Laurie Santos to take one-year leave to address burnout

The “Psychology and the Good Life” professor and Good Life Center founder announced on Monday that she will take a one-year leave from Yale to address her own sense of overwork.

Yale’s residential college gyms reopen

As in-person learning begins, residential colleges have opened their gyms for student use.

YHHAP “loses out” when confronting remote operations

In compliance with University and Dwight Hall policies, YHHAP will operate remotely, a decision that makes service to the community more difficult than before.

Jewish alumni raise concern that Commencement ceremony is scheduled on Shabbat

Alumni have expressed concerns that they must choose between celebrating religion and their time at Yale.

Record number of students participate in virtual sorority rush

Yale’s four sororities host their second consecutive year of virtual rush, welcoming a record number of prospective members.

Yale’s dining halls reopened after weeks of grab and go

On Friday, Jan. 28, dining halls in all of Yale’s residential colleges resumed service for the semester, and all 14 made the transition back to in-person dining on Monday.

‘I had to choose between my education and my safety’: How Yale’s withdrawal and reinstatement policies leave students no choice but to stay

Whether because of specific University policies, failure to communicate these policies to students or longstanding rumors, many students feel they have no choice but to remain enrolled at Yale, even when it might not be in their best interest.

New Haven and Yale community discuss rising meat prices

Biden’s meat packing initiatives are a step in the right direction, but they leave much to be desired, animal rights activists and local chefs say.

Unsafe in the classroom: pandemic remains a threat for Yale’s immunocompromised students

As Yale College plans to resume in-person dining Monday and in-person classes next week, some immunocompromised students fear for their safety and feel they are being left behind in Yale’s policy making decisions.