Alumni Profile: Paul Hanle (PhD ’75)
From curating exhibits at the Smithsonian to teaching judges about the facts of climate change, Paul Hanle (PhD ’75) has spent decades helping the public
From curating exhibits at the Smithsonian to teaching judges about the facts of climate change, Paul Hanle (PhD ’75) has spent decades helping the public
What do whales, fizzy water, and a 364-foot Ferris wheel have to do with the climate crisis? In her new book, Our Biggest Experiment: The
“First, do no harm.” All doctors swear by the ancient Hippocratic oath. But we must ask ourselves, do hospitals really do no harm? The production,
This year, the Nobel Prize in Physics was awarded to three scientists, Syukuro Manabe, Klaus Hasselmann, and Giorgio Parisi, for their contributions to the understanding
Senior Elea Hewitt described herself during her gap year as the happiest she had been in years. Returning to Yale from a year spent on
The chemistry of molecule-making is quite particular: sometimes, a reaction produces two mirrored versions of a molecule, but only one remains sufficient for a given
For some Americans, the phrase “climate change” conjures images of barren lands crippled by drought and forests decimated by wildfires. For others, climate change is
Stephen Latham, JD, PhD, stumbled upon bioethics by happenstance in his first job after law school. Now the director of Yale’s Interdisciplinary Center for Bioethics,