Difference between revisions of "Yale University"

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'''Yale University,''' located in New Haven, [[Connecticut]], is the second oldest university in the United States (after [[Harvard]].  It was founded it 1701 to train ministers, and was the first university in the United States to award a Ph. D. degree. The University was given its name to honor benefactor Elihu Yale, who donated a substantial amount of goods for sale and books during the early years of the institution, which was then named the Collegiate School. It is a member of the Ivy League, and, with Harvard and Princeton, part of the group known as the Big Three or HYP, which are associated both with academic excellence and with social prestige.  
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{{University
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|name=Yale University
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|image=
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|text=rgb(24,43,85)
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|background=
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|type=Private
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|city=New Haven, Connecticut
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|sports=baseball, basketball, crew-heavy, crew-light, cross country, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, gym, ice hockey, lacrosse, sailing, soccer, softball, squash, swimming, track, tennis, volleyball<ref>http://yalebulldogs.cstv.com/</ref>
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|colors=blue, white
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|mascot=Handsome Dan (bulldog)
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|website=http://www.yale.edu/
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|endowment=$19.3 billion<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nacubo.org/Documents/research/2011NCSEPublicTablesEndowmentMarketValues319.pdf|title=2011 NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments|accessdate=November 20, 2012}}</ref>
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}}
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'''Yale University,''' located in New Haven, [[Connecticut]], is the third oldest university in the United States (after [[Harvard]] and [[College of William and Mary|William and Mary]]). Yale is one of the most [[liberal]] schools in the [[Ivy League]], known in particular for its radical [[feminism]] and its promotion of the [[homosexual agenda]].  [[Hillary Clinton|Hillary]] and [[Bill Clinton]] are graduates of Yale Law School.
  
Yale is one of the eight colleges known to make up the [[Ivy League]] and one of four of the Ivy League schools to accept applications from homeschooled children.<ref>Christian Examiner, Sept. 2007, Vol 25, No 9, Pg. 12</ref>
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In a survey that was conducted by the ''Yale Daily News'' in 2018, queer freshmen were far greater than conservatives:<ref>https://www.thecollegefix.com/more-yale-freshmen-identify-as-lgbtq-than-conservative/</ref>
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{{cquote|A Yale Daily News survey of freshmen students at that university found that more students of the class of 2022 identify on the [[LGBTQ]] spectrum than as [[conservative]], and that queer freshmen even outnumber other sizable demographics in the class, such as [[Protestant]]s and [[Catholic]]s.}}
  
The school is also known for its system of twelve residential colleges, as opposed to dormitories. Students are randomly selected for their residential college before their freshman year, and remain in their residential college for the remainder of their time at Yale. Six of the colleges, including Branford, Saybrook, Jonathan Edwards, Berkeley, Calhoun, and Trumbull, serve as excellent examples of the Collegiate Gothic style of architecture, whereas Davenport, Pierson, Timothy Dwight, and Silliman are Georgian. These first ten were designed by James Gamble Rogers, while Morse and Stiles colleges are renowned examples of Eero Saarinen's modern style. Although they are intended to be covered in ivy, the concrete-stone amalgam used in their construction repels the vines.
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Yale has engaged in cancel culture before, such as when they renamed Calhoun College (one of their residential colleges) to Grace Hopper College simply because Calhoun owned slaves. This is despite the fact that Calhoun was valedictorian at Yale and was named by John F. Kennedy as one of the five most important Senators in US history. Ironically, the university itself was named after the notorious [[slave]] trader Elihu Yale,<ref>https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/conservative-pundit-mocks-cancel-culture-with-tweets-urging-yale-to-change-name-for-slave-trade-link</ref> in spite of the fact that Jeremiah Dummer had more to do with the creation of the university. This has prompted some conservatives to suggest re-naming the entire university "Dummer University".<ref>https://intellectualtakeout.org/2020/06/cancel-yale-and-rename-it-dummer-university/</ref> Yale also produced a high percentage of pro-[[slavery]] clergy,<ref>https://www.nhregister.com/colleges/article/Yale-other-colleges-facing-backlash-of-buildings-11329471.php</ref> and did little to combat racism in [[Connecticut]], which was long the most racist state in [[New England]].
  
Yale alumni among U. S. Presidents include both [[George H. W. Bush]] and [[George W. Bush]] (Yale College), as well as [[William Howard Taft]] (Yale College), [[Gerald R. Ford]] (Yale Law School), and [[Bill Clinton]] (Yale Law School).<ref>[http://www.presidentsusa.net/collegelisting.html Colleges and Universities attended by the Presidents].</ref> Senator and potential Democratic Presidential candidate [[Hillary Rodham Clinton]] attended Yale Law at the same time as her husband.
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In 2022, Yale received the ignominious "Lifetime Censorship Award" from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).<ref>https://www.thefire.org/10-worst-colleges-for-free-speech-2022/</ref>
  
A notable practice within the university is that of the Secret Societies, Skull and Bones being the most famous (or infamous). Both George W. Bush and [[John Kerry]], along with droves of other notable statesmen, politicians, and magnates of industry and finance comprised the ranks of this brotherhood.  It should also be noted that John Kerry was a member of the prestigious, although now defunct, Fence Club.  Other societies, some of which are entitled "honor societies" include Scroll and Key, Aurelian, Book and Snake, Berzelius, Manuscript, and St. Anthony's.
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[[Bill Clinton]], [[Hillary Clinton]], and [[Van Jones]] are all proud graduates of Yale, an institution that best exemplifies [[systemic racism]].
  
Yale has a highly competitive undergraduate program, recently admitting as few as 9% of its applicants. Students and alumni are often referred to as Elis (after Elihu Yale) or Yalies.
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==Schools==
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There are numerous components, including the undergraduate '''Yale College''' and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, as well as world-famous professional schools of Law, Medicine, Architecture, Art, Divinity, Drama, Engineering & Applied Science, Forestry & Environmental Studies. Management, Music, and Public Health,  along with many research centers.
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==History==
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Yale was heavily oriented toward undergraduates until 1919, when under President Arthur Hadley (1899-1921) and James Angell (1921–37) it moved rapidly to become a full-scale university. It isolated the undergraduates into separate residential "colleges" taught primarily by a separate faculty, while the big-name professors concentrated on research and gradate-level professional training.
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Yale College was founded in 1701 to train ministers; after the Civil War it became the first university in the United States to award a Ph. D. degree. The University was given its name to honor benefactor Elihu Yale, who donated a substantial amount of goods for sale and books during the early years of the institution, which was then named the Collegiate School. It is a member of the [[Ivy League]], and, with Harvard and [[Princeton University|Princeton]], part of the group known as the Big Three or HYP, which are associated both with academic excellence and with social prestige.
 +
 
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Yale's endowment is typically second to Harvard overall (although Princeton has more per student).
 +
 
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==Colleges==
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The College is also known for its system of twelve residential colleges, as opposed to dormitories. Students are randomly selected for their residential college before their freshman year, and remain in their residential college for the remainder of their time at Yale. Six of the colleges, including Branford, Saybrook, Jonathan Edwards, Berkeley, Calhoun, and Trumbull, serve as excellent examples of the Collegiate Gothic style of architecture, whereas Davenport, Pierson, Timothy Dwight, and Silliman are Georgian. These first ten were designed by [[James Gamble Rogers]], while Morse and Stiles colleges are renowned examples of [[Eero Saarinen]]'s modern style. Although they are intended to be covered in ivy, the concrete-stone amalgam used in their construction repels the vines.
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==Alumni==
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Yale alumni among U. S. Presidents include both [[George H. W. Bush]] and [[George W. Bush]] (Yale College), as well as [[William Howard Taft]] (Yale College), [[Gerald R. Ford]] (Yale Law School), and [[Bill Clinton]] (Yale Law School).<ref>[http://www.presidentsusa.net/collegelisting.html Colleges and Universities attended by the Presidents].</ref> Secretary of State  [[Hillary Rodham Clinton]] attended Yale Law at the same time as her husband-to-be.
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A survey of alumni in 2009 indicated that 53% are Democrats, 25% Republicans, and 19% independents.
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==Admission==
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Yale has a highly competitive undergraduate program, recently admitting as few as 9% of its applicants. The highly prestigious medical and law schools are even harder to get into.
 +
 
 +
Yale is one of the eight schools in the [[Ivy League]].  Yale accepts applications from homeschooled students.<ref>Christian Examiner, Sept. 2007, Vol 25, No 9, Pg. 12</ref>
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Students and alumni were once  called "Elis" (after Elihu Yale); they are now "Yalies".
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
*[[Ohio State University]]
 
 
*[[University]]
 
*[[University]]
 
*[[Harvard University]]
 
*[[Harvard University]]
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*[[Princeton University]]
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*[[Avalon Project]]
  
 
==Notes and references==
 
==Notes and references==
<references/>
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Colleges and Universities]]
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 +
{{Nb_US_universities|Connecticut}}

Latest revision as of 22:09, August 7, 2022

Yale University
City: New Haven, Connecticut
Type: Private
Sports: baseball, basketball, crew-heavy, crew-light, cross country, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, gym, ice hockey, lacrosse, sailing, soccer, softball, squash, swimming, track, tennis, volleyball[1]
Colors: blue, white
Mascot: Handsome Dan (bulldog)
Endowment: $19.3 billion[2]
Website: http://www.yale.edu/

Yale University, located in New Haven, Connecticut, is the third oldest university in the United States (after Harvard and William and Mary). Yale is one of the most liberal schools in the Ivy League, known in particular for its radical feminism and its promotion of the homosexual agenda. Hillary and Bill Clinton are graduates of Yale Law School.

In a survey that was conducted by the Yale Daily News in 2018, queer freshmen were far greater than conservatives:[3]

A Yale Daily News survey of freshmen students at that university found that more students of the class of 2022 identify on the LGBTQ spectrum than as conservative, and that queer freshmen even outnumber other sizable demographics in the class, such as Protestants and Catholics.

Yale has engaged in cancel culture before, such as when they renamed Calhoun College (one of their residential colleges) to Grace Hopper College simply because Calhoun owned slaves. This is despite the fact that Calhoun was valedictorian at Yale and was named by John F. Kennedy as one of the five most important Senators in US history. Ironically, the university itself was named after the notorious slave trader Elihu Yale,[4] in spite of the fact that Jeremiah Dummer had more to do with the creation of the university. This has prompted some conservatives to suggest re-naming the entire university "Dummer University".[5] Yale also produced a high percentage of pro-slavery clergy,[6] and did little to combat racism in Connecticut, which was long the most racist state in New England.

In 2022, Yale received the ignominious "Lifetime Censorship Award" from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).[7]

Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, and Van Jones are all proud graduates of Yale, an institution that best exemplifies systemic racism.

Schools

There are numerous components, including the undergraduate Yale College and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, as well as world-famous professional schools of Law, Medicine, Architecture, Art, Divinity, Drama, Engineering & Applied Science, Forestry & Environmental Studies. Management, Music, and Public Health, along with many research centers.

History

Yale was heavily oriented toward undergraduates until 1919, when under President Arthur Hadley (1899-1921) and James Angell (1921–37) it moved rapidly to become a full-scale university. It isolated the undergraduates into separate residential "colleges" taught primarily by a separate faculty, while the big-name professors concentrated on research and gradate-level professional training.

Yale College was founded in 1701 to train ministers; after the Civil War it became the first university in the United States to award a Ph. D. degree. The University was given its name to honor benefactor Elihu Yale, who donated a substantial amount of goods for sale and books during the early years of the institution, which was then named the Collegiate School. It is a member of the Ivy League, and, with Harvard and Princeton, part of the group known as the Big Three or HYP, which are associated both with academic excellence and with social prestige.

Yale's endowment is typically second to Harvard overall (although Princeton has more per student).

Colleges

The College is also known for its system of twelve residential colleges, as opposed to dormitories. Students are randomly selected for their residential college before their freshman year, and remain in their residential college for the remainder of their time at Yale. Six of the colleges, including Branford, Saybrook, Jonathan Edwards, Berkeley, Calhoun, and Trumbull, serve as excellent examples of the Collegiate Gothic style of architecture, whereas Davenport, Pierson, Timothy Dwight, and Silliman are Georgian. These first ten were designed by James Gamble Rogers, while Morse and Stiles colleges are renowned examples of Eero Saarinen's modern style. Although they are intended to be covered in ivy, the concrete-stone amalgam used in their construction repels the vines.

Alumni

Yale alumni among U. S. Presidents include both George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush (Yale College), as well as William Howard Taft (Yale College), Gerald R. Ford (Yale Law School), and Bill Clinton (Yale Law School).[8] Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton attended Yale Law at the same time as her husband-to-be.

A survey of alumni in 2009 indicated that 53% are Democrats, 25% Republicans, and 19% independents.

Admission

Yale has a highly competitive undergraduate program, recently admitting as few as 9% of its applicants. The highly prestigious medical and law schools are even harder to get into.

Yale is one of the eight schools in the Ivy League. Yale accepts applications from homeschooled students.[9]

Students and alumni were once called "Elis" (after Elihu Yale); they are now "Yalies".

See also

Notes and references