ニュース

Holy shit Lolla.” Gracie Abrams, on stage at Lollapalooza, sounded genuinely shocked. The young singer-songwriter, who blew ...
UChicago’s first since the Supreme Court ruled race-conscious admissions unconstitutional, showed corresponding increases in ...
UChicago will pause or reduce admission to some of its Ph.D. and Master’s programs for the 2026–27 academic year. Funding for ...
The lawsuit, filed by four current and former students at elite institutions, alleges that 32 schools have colluded to ...
“The status quo is not an option,” Deborah Nelson, dean of the Division of the Arts & Humanities, wrote to division faculty on June 18.
As the reorganization of the University’s Division of the Arts & Humanities commences, Clifford Ando warns that the fate of the humanities is up for grabs.
A historian, religious scholars, and the students who staged a Renaissance-era conclave reflect on the significance of the first U.S.-born pope—and speculate that the Holy Father might pay a visit to ...
The Maroon has compiled a timeline of federal funding cuts that the Trump administration has implemented and how they have affected UChicago.
Third-year Christopher Sweet is the most recent to join Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency.
Sports culture hasn’t had a place on UChicago’s campus in decades. But it doesn’t have to be this way.
Students, alumni, and faculty reflect on perceived shifts in UChicago’s undergraduate culture—away from “intellectualism” and “quirkiness” and toward pre-professionalism.
The Maroon sat down with two UChicago professors to explore their approaches to teaching, the rhythms of their work, and how they experience life at the University.