FEATURES
Q&A with Ed Askew

A tiple is an instrument with four groups of three strings dating back to the mid-18th century. It has an otherworldly, delicate sound, though. you […]

Up the Line

New Haven Union Station’s Grand Hall, traditionally only glanced at by rushed commuters, looked the same as it did a week, month or year ago. […]

Finance, Personally

Jennifer Cha ’18, an economics major who is working at Goldman Sachs a year out of Yale, says she knows little about saving for retirement. […]

Men’s Rights Move in on Yale

Kursat Christoff Pekgoz has never been to Yale — a school he accused of harboring a toxic environment for its male students. Pekgoz, a Turkish-born […]

POETRY: Formations

There’s the one rock type that I remember, sedimentary, the one that’s stasis in drag — evidence of where humans have jousted with time. It’s […]

Poke: The Politics of Food

These days, you don’t have to cross the Pacific Ocean for poke, a marinated fish salad tracing its origins back to the islands of Hawaii. […]

Wading Into Yale’s Cryptocurrent

Cormac Slade Byrd ’20 wakes up early. Never mind that it’s Sunday: Byrd doesn’t want to miss his 9 a.m. He won’t leave his room […]

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Those Who Bring Good News

How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have […]

True Prison Reform

Whenever someone asks James Jeter to describe prison, he tells the same story: Jeter’s cellmate was walking to dinner. Jeter, then incarcerated at the Cheshire […]

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A Fine Line

When James Chen applied to law school in the early 1990s, he wrote his personal essay on how he planned to lead and serve the […]

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Talk in the Town, Ep. 3: A College of Their Own

In the third episode of “Talk in the Town,” Mag’s one-of-a-kind podcast, reporter Camara Aaron explores the lives of black students in Benjamin Franklin College. […]