Yale University

                                                                       Yale University
Yale University is a private university in New Haven, Connecticut. Founded in 1701 as the Collegiate School, Yale is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States. The University has many Nobel Prize and President of the United States, including William Howard Taft, Gerald Ford (LL.B), George HW Bush (BA), Bill Clinton (JD), and George W. Bush (BA). Academic acceptance is U.S. $ 12.7 billion, which is the second largest in the world (behind the big rival, Harvard University).

Yale undergraduate teaching stresses that are not common compared with other research universities. Undergraduate college is one of the most voters in the United States, only received less than 10% of registrants, and has created more Rhodes scholars than any other institution, with the exception of Harvard. Undergraduate students live in college housing system that is unique. Yale graduate school programs including drama, music, architecture, and medicine. Yale Law School is one of the most voters in the United States, and has graduated some of the U.S. president and members of the Supreme Court. Altogether, the university has more than 3000 faculty members, among them Professor Sterling is regarded as the highest ranking.

 

Yale is one of eight members of the Ivy League (Ivy League). Rivalry between Yale and Harvard historic length; from academia to paddle up to the football, they are similar to the competition between Oxford and Cambridge.

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