Search results
Persons affiliated with Yale University
- Yalies are persons affiliated with Yale University, commonly including alumni, current and former faculty members, students, and others.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Yale_University_people
People also ask
Who are Yalies?
Is 'Yalie' a pejorative term?
What does 'Yalie' mean?
Why should you join Yalies?
How many times did Yale use 'Yalie'?
What makes a Yalie so special?
A 'Yalie' is a WASP, blue blood, biased, ancient, with a hyper social thyroid and not particularly intellectual." It reflects class differences, he said, when I called to find out more. It also means "a preppy who is too preppy."
Dec 29, 2020 · On the surface, the definition is obvious. But what about when I graduate from Yale? What about this year, when students are no longer united by a physical campus and are studying from their homes across the globe? It’s impossible to make some blanket statement about all Yalies.
May 20, 2019 · What is it that makes us different as Yalies — more likely to stand out in a crowd? Can you really spot a Yalie anywhere? I couldn’t blame you if you said it’s as simple as asking someone their residential college or favorite sandwich at Alpha Delta.
Decade after decade, Yalies have set out to make our world better. We are looking for students we can help to become the leaders of their generation in whatever they wish to pursue. * When President Brewster wrote this in 1967, Yale College was a single-gender institution.
A 'Yalie' is a WASP, blue blood, biased, ancient, with a hyper social thyroid and not particularly intellectual.” It reflects class differences, he said, when I called to find out more. It also means “a preppy who is too preppy.”
Yalies are persons affiliated with Yale University, commonly including alumni, current and former faculty members, students, and others. Here follows a list of notable Yalies.
Mar 7, 2013 · These are the real Yalies, the people who truly belong — and this is of course a fallacy. That I weigh my own Yalie-ness against that standard is a defense mechanism, a way of coping with the fact that, even as a second-semester senior, I sometimes feel I don’t belong.