Features
America’s Public Education System, Part 2
Cody Pomeranz ’15 begins his Everybody Has a Story segment, featuring a new and fascinating campus figure each week. Today, he sits down with Professor John Bryan Starr, an expert on the American public education system, to assess its current state and discuss how it could be improved. Special thanks to videographers Hannah Schwarz and
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Features
America’s Public Education System, Part 1
Cody Pomeranz ’15 begins his Everybody Has a Story segment, featuring a new and fascinating campus figure each week. Today, he sits down with Professor John Bryan Starr, an expert on the American public education system, to assess its current state and discuss how it could be improved. Special thanks to videographers Hannah Schwarz and
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Features
“Say Yes to the Dress” Star: Randy Fenoli
Reporter Caroline Pringle ’16 had the opportunity to sit down with Randy Fenoli to talk about his career, his love for fashion, and his reality TV show, Say Yes to the Dress.
Features
Featured Filmmaker: “Somnia”
This week’s featured filmmaker is once again Ben Boult ’14, a film major on the production track. “Somnia” is a short narrative film with a surprising twist that will leave you guessing.
Features
Fiscal cliff looms over sciences
While Yale research may weather the "fiscal cliff," the increasing scarcity of federal grants has forced some faculty to scale back their ambitions.
Features
Amid presidential search, students apathetic
Dressed in a blue sweater and khaki pants, University President Richard Levin stood at the door of the President’s House at 43 Hillhouse Ave. last Wednesday, greeting costume-clad undergraduates who entered the residence for his annual Halloween party. It was clear from his emails that Levin — who announced on Aug. 30 that he will
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City
Swing state students stay involved
As presidential candidates scramble to take the lead in swing states, Yale students who call those states home are struggling to influence the election despite their geographical distance. While all students inteviewed from key swing states, such as Ohio, Florida, Virginia and Nevada, said they plan to send in absentee ballots, many have struggled to
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