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‘New flavor of standardized testing’: admissions office shares details on Yale’s new ‘test-flexible’ policy

In an interview with the News, the admissions office explained the motivations behind its new “test-flexible” policy, which will once again mandate that applicants submit standardized test scores starting next fall — but will allow applicants to choose between submitting SAT, ACT, AP or IB scores.

Ricky D’s Rib Shack launches new game for patrons

Following a strong seven year run, Ricky D’s Rib Shack is using a new mobile game to increase customer engagement and rewards.

Anyway, Love

I’m not known as someone who tries — and let alone succeeds — to be mysterious or nonchalant. I think that if I tried to […]

Zahra Virani
Valentine’s Day Essentials for Singles

Well, the list is short, very short, my single friends. There is one thing you should get this Valentine’s Day: a crush. If you don’t […]

Phone Cartoon

Phone

Manhattan high schoolers lead attack against food waste

NYC teens are combating food injustice, one leftover at a time.

New Haven artificial reef continues to grow

After receiving funding from the Yale Planetary Solutions seed grant in spring of 2022, the New Haven Artificial Reef project is actively expanding.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: Bulldogs steal a win from Dartmouth, earn first conference victory of season

The Yale women’s basketball team earned their first conference win in a hard-fought battle against the Dartmouth Big Green.

Students walk out of class to stand with Gaza

At noon on Tuesday, hundreds of students gathered on Cross Campus for a walkout titled “There is No Back To School in Gaza.” Students listed demands of the University, including publicly supporting a ceasefire and boosting support for Palestinian studies and scholars.

The News welcomes its newest staffers

Nearly 100 Yalies joined the Yale Daily News over the last semester. Today, they begin producing content as staffers for the Oldest College Daily.

In Bob we trust

8 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2023. The Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York. 20 minutes from my hometown of Yonkers, an hour from my new home of Yale. The lights go down as the first movement of Beethoven’s 9th Symphony plays from the PA system. The audience of 1800 erupts in rapturous applause. As I am frantically clapping, screaming and crying, the man of the evening waltzes onto the stage. The 82-year old Nobel Prize winner, philosopher of modern song, voice for the outcasts and skeptics of the American spirit, the man I have revered for nearly a decade has arrived. Seeing Bob Dylan in the flesh for the second time in my life is the surreal, out-of-body experience I need, especially in my first semester of university.