- This article is about a university. For other uses of "Yale", see Yale (disambiguation).
Yale University is a private university in New Haven, Connecticut. Founded in 1701, Yale is the third oldest American collegiate institution and one of the most prestigious and well-known in
the world. The University has graduated numerous Nobel prize winners and U.S. Presidents. Its $11 billion academic endowment is
the second largest of any university in the world, after Harvard
University.
Yale is one of the eight members of the Ivy League. The rivalry between Yale
and fellow Ivy League school Harvard is long and storied; from academics to rowing to college football, their historic rivalry is
similar to that of Oxford and Cambridge
in the UK (see Oxbridge rivalry). Yale is the second most prolific university in terms of Rhodes Scholar graduates in the country (after Harvard).
History
Harkness Tower
Yale traces its beginnings to "An Act for Liberty to Erect a Collegiate School" passed by the General Court of the Colony of Connecticut and dated October 9, 1701, which was furthered by a meeting in Branford, Connecticut by a group of ten Congregationalist ministers who pooled their books to form the school's first library. The school
first opened in the home of its first rector, Abraham Pierson in Killingworth, Connecticut. In 1716, the school moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where it remains to this day.
The college was originally known as the Collegiate School; it adopted the name Yale after an early
benefactor, Elihu Yale had bestowed a generous gift of nine bales of goods, 417
books, and a portrait of King George I. Yale expanded gradually, establishing the Medical School (1810), Divinity School (1822),
Law School (1843), Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (1847), the School of Fine Arts (1869), and School of Music (1894). In
the early 20th century, Yale merged with the Sheffield
Scientific School.
Schools and libraries
Yale College is among the most selective in the United States. In 2004, its 9.9% acceptance rate made it the choosiest college
in the United States. In addition, Yale is noted for its law school, medical school, graduate school, and school of music. The
Divinity School was founded in the early 19th century by Congregationalists
who felt that the Harvard University divinity school had become
too liberal.
Yale's library system is the second largest in North America with a
total of almost 11 million volumes. The main library, Sterling Memorial Library, contains about 4 million volumes. The Beinecke Rare Book Library is housed in a marble
building designed by Gordon Bunshaft, of the firm of Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill. Its courtyard
sculptures are by Isamu Noguchi.
Other resources include the Peabody Museum of Natural History and a museum of British art.
Yale's sports teams are called the Bulldogs. They participate in the NCAA's Division I
(I-AA in football).
Heads of Collegiate School, Yale College, and Yale University
Rectors of Yale College (birth-death) (years as rector)
1 Rev. Abraham Pierson (1641-1707) (1701-1707) Collegiate School
2 Rev. Samuel Andrew ( - ) (1707-1719) (pro tempore)
3 Rev. Timothy Cutler ( - ) (1719-1726) 1718/9: renamed Yale College
4 Rev. Elisha William (1694-1755) (1726-1739)
5 Rev. Thomas Clap (1703-1767) (1740-1745)
Presidents of Yale College (birth-death) (years as president)
1 Rev. Thomas Clap (1703-1767) (1745-1766)
2 Rev. Naphtali Daggett (1727-1780) (1766-1777) (pro tempore)
3 Rev. Ezra Stiles (1727-1795) (1778-1795)
4 Timothy Dwight IV (1752-1817) (1795-1817)
5 Jeremiah Day (1773-1867) (1817-1846)
6 Theodore Dwight Woolsey (1801-1899) (1846-1871)
7 Noah Porter III (1811-1892) (1871-1886)
8 Timothy Dwight V (1828-1916) (1886-1899) 1887: renamed Yale University
9 Arthur Twining Hadley (1856-1930) (1899-1921)
10 James Rowland Angell (1869-1949) (1921-1937)
11 Charles Seymour (1885-1963) (1937-1951)
12 Alfred Whitney Griswold (1906-1963) (1951-1963)
13 Kingman Brewster, Jr. (1919-1988) (1963-1977)
14 Hanna Holborn Gray (1930- ) (1977-1977) (acting)
15 A. Bartlett Giamatti (1938-1989) (1977-1986)
16 Benno C. Schmidt, Jr. ( - ) (1986-1992)
17 Howard R. Lamar ( - ) (1992-1993)
18 Richard C. Levin (1947- ) (1993- )
Residential colleges
Yale has a system of twelve residential colleges, instituted in 1930. The system is loosely modelled after the system found in
British universities. However, students are accepted by the university as a whole, and assigned to residential colleges at
random. Though the colleges at Yale, like their counterparts at Oxford and Cambridge act
as social units, the Yale colleges do not act much also as academic units to the degree at Oxbridge. Tutoring does occur
in the Yale colleges much like the Oxbridge colleges.
Residential Colleges of Yale University (official list ):
- Pierson College - named for Yale's first rector, Abraham Pierson
- Davenport College
- named for Rev. John Davenport (usually called "DPort")
- Jonathan Edwards College - named for theologian Jonathan Edwards (usually called "J.E.")
- Branford College
- named for Branford, Connecticut
- Saybrook College
- named for Old Saybrook, Connecticut
- Trumbull College
- named for Jonathan Trumbull, governor of Connecticut
- Berkeley College
- named for the Rt. Rev. George Berkeley (1685-1753)
- Calhoun College - named for John C. Calhoun
- Silliman College - named for Benjamin Silliman
- Timothy Dwight College - named for the two Yale presidents of that name, Timothy Dwight IV and Timothy Dwight V (usually called "T.D.")
- Ezra Stiles College
- named for the Rev. Ezra Stiles and generally called simply "Stiles," despite an early-1990s crusade by then-master Traugott Lawler to preserve the use
of the full name in everyday speech.
- Morse College - named for Samuel
Morse
Other Campus Buildings
Benefactors
Yale has had many financial supporters, but some stand out by the magnitude of their contributions. Among those who have made
large donations commemorated at the university are:
Famous Alumni
Yale alumni are well represented in the ranks of U.S. presidents, including the last three -- George H. W. Bush, William
Clinton, and George W. Bush. Both the Democratic and Republican candidates for the 2004 presidential election are Yale graduates.
(George W. Bush and John F. Kerry. In the 2004 Democratic primaries, Joe
Lieberman and Howard Dean were also Yale graduates. Some have speculated
that the Yale tradition of placing graduates at the position of U.S. President will continue until at least 2016 with the
possible election in 2012 of Hillary Clinton, who graduated Yale Law
School.
Nobel laureates
- George Akerlof, (2001,
Economics)
- Raymond Davis, (2002, Physics)
- John F. Enders, (1954,
Physiology or Medicine)
- John Fenn (Ph.D.), (2002,
Chemistry)
- Murray Gell-Mann, (1969,
Physics)
- Alfred G. Gilman,
(1994, Physiology or Medicine)
- Ernest Lawrence (Ph.D.), (1939, Physics). Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory & Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory are named after him.
- Joshua Lederberg (Ph.D.), (1958, Physiology or Medicine)
- David Lee (Ph.D. 1959), (1996, Physics)
- Sinclair Lewis, (1930,
Literature)
- Lars Onsager (Ph.D.), (1968,
Chemistry)
- Dickinson
Richards, (1956, Physiology or Medicine)
- William Vickrey, (1996,
Economics)
- George Whipple, (1934,
Physiology or Medicine)
- Eric Wieschaus (Ph.D.),
(1995, Physiology or Medicine)
Technology & Innovation
- Walter Camp, the "Father of American Football"
- Francis S.
Collins (Ph.D.), director, Human Genome Project
- Lee DeForest, inventor of the triode
- W. Edwards Deming (Ph.D.), "total quality management"
(TQM) guru
- Irving Fisher (Ph.D.), economist, "father of monetarism"
- J. Willard Gibbs, mathematician, physical chemist,
thermodynamicist, known for Gibb's Phenomenon
- Grace Hopper (Ph. D.), inventor of COBOL programming language
- Art Laffer, economist, best known for the "Laffer Curve"
- Paul D. MacCready,
"Engineer of the Century," won the Kremer Prize for first human-powered flying machine, pioneer in solar-powered flight
- Saunders MacLane, mathematician, one of the founders of
"category theory"
- Jordan Mechner, videogame developer, created Prince of
Persia
- Stanley Milgram, psychologist, Milgram experiment, coined the concept "six degrees of separation"
- Samuel Morse, telegraph pioneer, inventor of Morse code
- John Ousterhout, creator of the Tcl programming language
- Ronald Rivest, computer scientist, the "R" in the RSA cryptography, 2002 Turing Award receipient
- Eli Whitney, inventor of the cotton gin
Founders, Entrepreneurs, & CEO's
- Robert M. Bass, (BA, 1971) President, Keystone, Inc.
- John Thomas
Daniels, founder, Archer Daniels Midland
- Robert Glaser, (B.A. &
M.A.) founder & CEO, RealNetworks
- Roberto Goizueta, former CEO, Coca-Cola (Emory University's business school is named after him)
- Charles B.
Johnson, chairman, Franklin Templeton Investments
- Mitch Kapor, investor (Kapor Enterprises), former founder & CEO,
Lotus software
- Herbert Kohler, chairman
& president, Kohler Company
- Clarence King, founder of the US Geological Survey (USGS).
- Edward Lampert, founder
& chairman, ESL Investments
- John Franklyn
Mars, CEO, Mars Inc. (as in Mars & M&M candy)
- Robert Moses, middle 20th century New York City construction czar.
- Gifford Pinchot, founder of the US Forest Service
- Robert Sargent Shriver III (Law),
part-owner of the Baltimore Orioles
- Timothy Perry Shriver, CEO of the Special Olympics
- Frederick W. Smith, founder & CEO, FedEx
- Harold Stanley, founder,
Morgan Stanley
- Richard
Thalheimer, founder & CEO of The Sharper Image
- Juan Trippe, founder & CEO, Pan
Am
- Frederick E. Weyerhaeuser, founder, Weyerhaeuser
Academics
Presidents & Vice Presidents of the United States
Law & Politics
- Dean Acheson, former Secretary of State
- John Ashcroft, U.S. Attorney General (2001-present), U.S. Senator (1993-2001), Governor of Missouri (1985-1993)
- David Boies, famous lawyer (Microsoft antitrust, Bush v. Gore, Napster v.
RIAA)
- William F. Buckley, political pundit
- McGeorge Bundy, former Cabinet official
- Edmund Gerald "Jerry" Brown, Jr. (Law), Mayor of Oakland, California (1999-present), Governor of California (1975-1983)
- Hillary Clinton (Law), U.S. Senator, New York (2001-present)
- Howard Dean, Governor of Vermont (1991-2003), Democratic presidential candidate (2004)
- William H.
Donaldson, Chairman of the S.E.C. (2003-present), co-founder of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
- David Gergen, political
pundit
- Nathan Hale, patriot & martyr, "I only regret that I have but one
life to lose for my country."
- James Jeffords, U.S. Senator, Vermont (1989-present)
- John Kerry, U.S. Senator, Massachusetts (1985-present)
- Tony Knowles, Governor of Alaska (1994-2002)
- Paul Krugman, respected economist, Princeton professor, NY Times
columnist
- Joseph Lieberman, U.S. Senator, Connecticut (1989-present)
- Gary Locke, Governor of Washington (1997-present)
- John Negroponte, Ambassador to Iraq (2004-present)
- George Pataki, Governor of New York (1995-present)
- Clark T. Randt, Jr., U.S. ambassador to China (2001-
present)
- Sargent Shriver, main organizer and first director of the
Peace Corps. Husband of Eunice Kennedy, and father of Maria Shriver (news
journalist and wife of Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger).
- Potter Stewart, Supreme Court Justice (1958-1991)
- Robert Taft, Governor of Ohio
(1999-present)
- Clarence Thomas, Supreme Court Justice (1991-present)
- Byron White, Supreme Court Justice (1962-1993)
- Pete Wilson, Governor of California (1991-1999)
- Ernesto Zedillo, President of Mexico (1994-2000).
History, Literature, Art & Music
- Hiram Bingham, rediscovered Machu Picchu, Peru
- Harold Bloom, American literary critic
- James Fenimore Cooper, author of The Last of the Mohicans
- Charles Ives, composer, classical music.
- John Knowles, author of A Separate Peace
- Maya Lin, architect, best known
for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
- Henry R. Luce, co-founder of TIME magazine
- David McCullough,
famous historian, winner of two Pulitzer Prizes, best known for his
books on American Presidents Harry S. Truman and John Adams.
- Camille Paglia, cultural critic and feminist scholar
- Cole Porter, composer
- Garry Trudeau, Doonesbury cartoonist
- Noah Webster, author of the dictionary of the English language
- Thornton Wilder, playwright, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for the play Our
Town
- Naomi Wolf, feminist
writer
- Tom Wolfe (PhD), journalist, author of The Right Stuff and Bonfire of the
Vanities
- Robert Woodward, journalist and co-author of the Pulitzer Prize winning book All the President's Men
Film
- Angela Bassett, actress
- Jennifer Beals, actress, best known for (Flashdance)
- Jordana Brewster,
actress, plays Mia in "The Fast and the Furious"
- Bruce Cohen, film producer, won
Academy Award for American Beauty
- Michael Cimino, Academy Award winning director
- Jennifer Connelly*, Academy Award winning actress
- Claire Danes, actress, recently in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines,
also in Baz Luhrmann's Romeo and Juliet opposite Leonardo
DiCaprio
- Jodie Foster, Academy Award winning actress and director. BA in Literature. Graduated magna
cum laude.
- David Alan Grier,
actor, comedian
- Kathryn Hahn, actress
- George Roy Hill, Academy Award winning director
- Holly Hunter, Academy Award winning actress
- Elia Kazan, Academy
Award winning director
- Ron Livingston, actor, best known for Office Space, plays "Jack
Berger" in Sex and the City
- Frances McDormand (MFA), actress
- Paul Newman, Academy
Award winning actor
- Edward Norton, actor
- Vincent Price, actor
- Gene Siskel, movie critic
- Oliver Stone*, Academy Award winning director
- Meryl Streep (MFA), Academy Award winning actress
- John Turturro (MFA), actor
- Sam Waterston, actor
- Sigourney Weaver (MFA), actress
- Jennifer Westfeldt, actress, screenwriter (Kissing Jessica
Stein)
Television
- Dick Cavett, TV
personality
- Anderson Cooper, CNN anchor of "Anderson Cooper 360"
- David Duchovny, (M.A. English Literature) actor in the X-files
- Dick Ebersol, president of NBC
Sports division, helped launch Saturday Night Live
- Sara Gilbert, actress, best known for her portrayal as the daughter
Darlene Conner on the sit-com Roseanne
- Michael Gross (DRA 1973),
actor, best known as the father "Steven Keaton" (the father of the Michael
J. Fox character) on Family Ties
- Leo Laporte, host of "The Screen Savers" on TechTV
- Chris Noth (MFA), plays "Mr. Big"
on Sex and the City
- Stone Phillips,
television anchor for NBC
- Robert Picardo, the holographic doctor on the syndicated Star Trek: Voyager
- David Hyde Pierce, actor, best known for the character Dr.
Niles Crane on Frasier
- Steve Skrovan, executive
producer of Everybody Loves Raymond
- Ben Stein (Law), economist, host of "Win Ben Stein's Money."
- Ming Tsai, chef on "East Meets West
with Ming Tsai" on PBS
- Margaret Warner, Senior
Correspondent (co-anchor) on The News Hour with Jim Lehrer, a
nationally televised news program broadcast every weekday on PBS.
- Henry Winkler (MFA), actor, best known for the character Fonzie on Happy Days
Fictional
(* attended, but did not graduate from Yale)
Famous Professors
Professors who are also alumni of Yale are listed in italics.
- Harold Bloom (Ph.D.
1955), writer and critic, author of "Genius"
- Yung-Chi
(Tommy) Cheng, pharmacology, inventor of AIDS drug 3TC, known as Epivir.
- John Gaddis, historian, Cold
War expert
- David Gelernter (1976), computer scientist, co-creator of the Linda programming language
- Paul Hudak, computer scientist,
known for his work on the Haskell programming language, author of "The Haskell School
of Expression"
- Benoit Mandelbrot, mathematician known for fractal
geometry
- William Prusoff,
pharmacology, inventor of AIDS drug d4T, known as Zerit.
- Robert Shiller,
economist, author of "Irrational Exuberance", well known for his work in investor psychology
- Jonathan Spence, historian, author of "The Search For Modern
China"
Famous On-Campus Tragedies
Yale's high public profile led to three on-campus bombings. On May 1, 1970, an explosive device was detonated in the Ingalls Rink during events related to the trial of
Black Panther Bobby Seale. On June
24, 1993, computer science professor David Gelernter was injured in his office on Hillhouse Avenue by a bomb sent by serial killer and Harvard graduate Ted Kaczynski, aka the Unabomber. On May 21, 2003, an explosive device went off at the Yale Law School,
damaging two classrooms.
External links
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