The University of Chicago Magazine
A human parasite gets its start in ancient Mesopotamian irrigation ditches, a gaze betrays the difference between love and lust, a prehistoric protein mutation sets the stage for modern biology, and science verifies the old adage that birds do, indeed, fly south for the winter.
Researcher Maud Slye’s (EX 1899) contentious career helped open the field of cancer genetics.
A Divinity School historian’s study of medieval Europe becomes a wellspring of historical fiction.
An eminent astronomer joins the faculty as a University Professor, new economic direction for the Becker Friedman Institute, a visionary leader for the Grossman Institute, endowed human rights, funding for outreach and research to improve education and reduce crime, and more.
A German student, a South Asian language, a UChicago career.
The University implements changes in its approach to sexual misconduct and discrimination.
What does it take to build an ultra energy-efficient research facility?
Official or unofficial, solemn or frivolous, shared experiences bind us to the University.
Readers weigh in on the Aspen Institute; the global views of Bret Stephens, AB’95; the University’s political leanings; the multiple choice question twins face when heading to college; the propriety of publishing a racial epithet; Alma Lach’s (EX’38) legacy; Robert Maynard Hutchins’s views about World War II veterans and the GI Bill; feline friends; and more.