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Understanding the DOJ’s Lawsuit Against Yale’s Race Conscious Admissions Within the History of Asian Americans and Anti-Blackness
Historical contextualization of the model minority myth and Asian American history in the US allows us to understand how Asian social mobility has been inextricably linked with anti-Blackness.
Lessons from Watercolor Painting
Students are not the only ones adjusting to Zoom University. Yale faculty are facing pressure to adapt their teaching styles and work-from-home approach, and they often do this in creative and innovative ways.
Students Grapple with Socially Distant Socializing
Shattering a friendship so that the PHC can have a conversation with kids who obviously don’t care just doesn’t seem worth it.
Dining at a Distance: A Dispatch from New Haven During the Early Days of the Pandemic
Though restaurants in the New Haven area surrounding Yale are experiencing some of the same general economic effects associated with the novel coronavirus that all restaurants across the United States suffer from, the area’s affiliation with the university has brought about a particularly dramatic change to operations.
Go From Here: The Debate over Affordable Housing in New Haven at the Doorstep of 1151 Chapel Street
The Duncan’s 30-to-40-some-odd residents made up a tiny part of the count of people experiencing housing insecurity in the city, but their dramatic displacement was key to mobilizing public support.
Adaptive Cuisine: America’s Chinese restaurants are closing. Is Junzi Kitchen the solution?
Can bringing Sweetgreen to stir fry help save an embattled industry?
Spring Awareness for a More Inclusive Dramat
“The Dramat already puts on beautiful shows. It has immense potential to also do social good with its resources—it just hasn’t yet tapped into that potential,” Cupp-Enyard said.