Events – Yale Daily News https://yaledailynews.com The Oldest College Daily Thu, 07 Mar 2024 07:10:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 181338879 Swae Lee to headline Spring Fling 2024 https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/03/07/swae-lee-to-headline-spring-fling-2024/ Thu, 07 Mar 2024 05:02:28 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=188092 Swae Lee, Dayglow and Coco & Breezy will perform at this year’s Spring Fling, which is scheduled for April 27 on Old Campus.

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Swae Lee first rose to fame in the 2010s as one half of hip hop duo Rae Sremmurd. Since then, he has largely shifted focus to his solo career, having featured on tracks as wildly popular as Travis Scott’s “Sicko Mode.” Now, Swae Lee is set to perform at Yale as the headliner for this year’s Spring Fling.

Before Swae Lee takes the stage, twin sisters Coco & Breezy will open the April 27 festival with a joint DJ set, followed by indie pop band Dayglow.

The Spring Fling committee announced the lineup in a video shown on Wednesday night during Woads, the weekly Yale-only dance party at Toad’s Place. Although weather conditions pushed last year’s Spring Fling indoors to College Street Music Hall at the last minute, this year’s event is set to return to its traditional location on Old Campus. 

“It’s such a dynamic lineup bringing in a ton of high energy and nostalgia,” Spring Fling Hospitality Chair Olivia Telemaque ’26 told the News. “The headliner, Swae Lee, is such a force. He brings in so much hype, with easily recognizable songs in his huge discography.” 

The process of curating the lineup of musical acts for the annual festival begins over the summer, when Spring Fling leadership meets to decide their joint vision: genres to explore, goals to accomplish and elements to improve from the following year. The search for artists then begins as soon as members of the committee step foot on campus. 

This year’s committee — led by Telemaque alongside Talent Chair Luis Halvorssen ’25, Production Chair Nour Tantush ’26 and Marketing Chair Karela Palazio ’25 — crafted a student-facing survey intended to gauge interest in different musical genres and festival styles. 

Many college music festivals in the United States take place at similar times in the late spring, Halvorssen said, which can make it challenging to secure the artists before other colleges book them. 

“One surprise about this experience is how dynamic the music industry is,” Halvorssen told the News “One week we’ll be discussing a potential artist and by the next week, they’ll be booked by a different event. It makes for a thrilling process and results in so much celebration when an artist is finally booked.” 

This year’s three acts represent a wide variety of musical genres, performance styles and backgrounds. 

Identical twins and DJ duo Coco & Breezy, specializing in Afro-Latina-infused dance and house music, will open up this year’s festival. 

“They are a hugely talented duo, representing Afro-Latina influences as they challenge the bounds of electronic and dance music,” Telemaque told the News. “They infuse so many genres into their craft. As a Black woman myself, it’s so inspiring to see up-and-coming artists reclaiming genres, and breathing so much life, love, and healing into their music. They’re producers, musicians, style icons, and just such a vibe.” 

Tantush matched Telemaque’s excitement, citing that the pair “encompass[es] a lot of what we were looking for.” She noted that electronic dance music was one of the most requested genres in the survey sent out to students this year, which makes inviting this artist to campus especially exciting. 

Besides DJing, Coco & Breezy are also known for their “cool-girl aesthetic” and “eponymous sunglass brand.” Palazio noted that she’s been incorporating the artist’s album covers into her color inspiration for the “entire festival identity.” 

Following Coco & Breezy, the “fun and vibrant” Dayglow, as Halvorssen described the indie pop band, will take the Spring Fling stage.

Led by lead singer Sloan Struble, audience members can expect to hopefully hear some of the group’s top hits like “Hot Rod” and “Can I Call You Tonight?” 

Telemaque said that she has had the songs on repeat for weeks. 

“Their music to me represents the epitome of band music and is very reminiscent of the spring,” Tantush added. “I spent a lot of time over this New Haven winter listening to Dayglow, and I think they have such a youthful and summery sound.” 

That sound aesthetic has influenced the design of the festival’s merchandise, Palazio said, which will be available for purchase prior to the festival. 

Finally, headliner Swae Lee will close out the night. Swae Lee, who acts as one half of the hip-hop duo Rae Sremmund with his brother Slim Jxmmi, has a long history of iconic performances at major festivals including Coachella, Governors Ball and Rolling Loud. 

“He’s everywhere,” Telemaque said. 

All four Spring Fling chairs described a continuous thread of “nostalgia” in this year’s artist lineup; Swae Lee’s headlining performance is perhaps the most emblematic of that theme. 

“We’ve been listening to his music for years and growing up with the challenges that he’s [experienced] too,” Telemaque told the News. 

In 2016, when the viral “Mannequin Challenge” hit its peak, Rae Sremmurd’s hit song “Black Beatles” became the unofficial anthem of the video trend. 

As part of the committee’s efforts to incorporate an air of nostalgia in all parts of the festival, Wednesday’s announcement video — produced by videographer Reese Weiden ’27 — brought the audience back in time. Just as the internet trend in 2016 had people across the country posing as frozen mannequins, the Spring Fling committee did the same, announcing to cheers from the crowd at Toad’s that Swae Lee would headline the festival.

Besides partnering with Slim Jxmmy, Swae Lee has collaborated with a variety of other artists in a plethora of different musical genres throughout his career, which allows him to appeal to a variety of students, Halvorssen said. In addition to working with world-famous rappers Travis Scott and Drake on 2018’s “Sicko Mode,” Swae Lee collaborated with Post Malone on hit song “Sunflower” from the film “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,” also in 2018. He also co-wrote Beyonce’s hit single “Formation.” — just three of Swae Lee’s big-ticket collaborations.

“Swae’s collaboration with so many different artists is what makes him an excellent choice for

headlining Spring Fling,” Halvorssen told the News.  “If you put his complete collection on shuffle you’ll hear Rap/Hip-Hop, Pop, R&B, EDM, Reggaeton, and even Country. With Swae having such a wide reach, he’ll be a great fit for all music fans.” 

While the committee does not control the specific set lists of the artists they book to perform at the festival, per Tantush, they do extensive research on each artist’s past performances and how their sets will complement one another. 

For Swae Lee, audiences may expect to hear some of his biggest songs, including “Sunflower,” “No Type,” “Unforgettable” and even some songs from his previous work under Rae Sremmurd, like “Come Get Her” and “Black Beatles.”  

In addition to the booked professional artists, Yale students will also have the opportunity to be a part of this year’s festival lineup. The committee will hold both a “Battle of the Bands” and “The Dock” competition to select student bands and DJs to begin the day’s musical festivities. 

“I think the thing I am the most excited and proud of as Production Chair is facilitating a festival which will showcase both the artists we have chosen and also the student talent on campus,” Tantush told the News. “What makes Spring Fling so unique is our ability to combine mainstream acts with Yale’s very own talented musicians.”  

Last year, the committee hosted “Battle of the Bands” at the Yale Farm. The three winners  — DJ Leon Thotsky, PJ Frantz ’23 and Tired of Tuesdays — opened for Ravyn Lenae, Dombresky and Pusha T at College Street Music Hall. 

The Dock, however, is a new creation this year, which Halvorssen spearheaded to reflect the growing presence of student DJs on campus

Both student-artist events will take place after spring break.

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Former Biden White House Counsel Stuart Delery talks career path, leadership at Law School event https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/03/01/former-biden-white-house-counsel-stuart-delery-talks-career-path-leadership-at-law-school-event/ Fri, 01 Mar 2024 07:44:55 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187968 The event, which took place on Feb. 29 in the Sterling Law Building, was co-hosted by the Yale Law Democrats, OutLaws and the American Constitution Society.

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Stuart Delery LAW ’93, who served as White House counsel to President Joe Biden from 2022 to 2023 and is currently a visiting lecturer at the Law School, addressed members of the Law School community at an event held in the Sterling Law Building on Feb. 29.

The event was co-hosted by the Yale Law Democrats, the Law School’s chapter of the progressive legal organization the American Constitution Society and OutLaws — an organization for LGBTQ+ members of the Law School community. According to YLD president Sage Mason LAW ’24, the event aimed to provide the Law School community with an opportunity to hear from a dedicated public servant and alumnus who has spent his career “fighting for justice at the highest levels of government.” 

Mason told the News that the event, which was held off the record, covered a wide range of topics from Delery’s career path and journey from law school, his outlook on leadership to his experience as White House Counsel. 

“As a law student, I’m inspired by Stuart’s commitment to public service and his work ethic, his respect for the rule of law and his faith that law can and should be a tool to improve the lives of all Americans,” Mason said. “It gives me hope for the future, that he’s been able to achieve so much without sacrificing or hiding his identity.”

After graduating from Yale Law School, where he served as an articles editor of the Yale Law Journal, Delery clerked for Judge Gerard Bard Tjoflat of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals and justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Byron White LAW ’46 of the United States Supreme Court. In 2009, Delery joined the Department of Justice initially as chief of staff and counselor to the U.S. Deputy Attorney General, followed by a role as senior counselor to the Attorney General.

From 2021 to 2022, Delery served as Deputy Counsel to President Biden. The following year, he ascended to the role of White House Counsel to the President, marking a historic milestone as the first openly gay person to hold this position. In his role as counsel to the President, Delery advised Biden on a wide range of constitutional, statutory and regulatory legal matters, encompassing presidential authority, domestic policy, as well as national security and foreign affairs. 

His responsibilities included managing responses to prominent congressional and other investigations, along with assisting the President in the nomination and confirmation processes of federal judges. Delery stepped down from the position last year.

At the Law School, Delery currently teaches “The Department of Justice” seminar and previously instructed the “Constitutional Practice: Structure and Norms” seminar in 2020.

Matt Post LAW ’25, co-president of the ACS, wrote that Delery’s involvement in vaccine rollout, student debt relief and the confirmation of a diverse set of judges is “incredibly inspiring.” 

The initiatives he oversaw represent the potential of progressive lawyering,” Post said. “We hope that speaker events like these will inspire students to use their education here to advance policies that improve people’s lives.”

According to Mariko Lewis LAW ’26, a member of the YLD who attended the event, Delery shared insights on leadership in response to a question from an attendee. She said that Delery explained that while leaders are often perceived as possessing extroverted and outgoing personalities, true leadership success comes from authenticity. 

Lewis added that Delery emphasized that attempting to emulate someone else is counterproductive and advised attendees to embrace their unique personalities and abilities to become effective leaders.

“As a Black woman interested in politics and policy, this resonated with me,” Lewis wrote. “It emphasized that rather than following a mold of a specific type of leadership (most often portrayed through a straight, white, confident, male), I should continue to lean into my unique personality and strengths to become a valued and effective leader.”

Gevin Reynolds LAW ’26, who moderated the event, said the event felt like a “full circle moment,” as both he and Delery served together in the White House, and he is also currently enrolled in Delery’s seminar this semester.

Reynolds told the News that throughout the conversation, Delery shared “powerful lessons” from throughout his legal career, particularly his service at the highest levels of government. He highlighted Delery’s leadership in implementing the Supreme Court’s 2013 United States v. Windsor decision, wherein the Court deemed Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional. This ruling established that the federal government could not discriminate against married lesbian and gay couples regarding federal benefits and protections. Reynolds underscored the pivotal role this decision played in advancing one of the most significant expansions of LGBTQ+ rights in the nation’s history.

In an email to the News, Scott Lowder LAW ’24, a member of OutLaws who attended the event, agreed with this sentiment saying that as a gay man, it was “powerful” for him to hear Delery describe the implementation of this Supreme Court decision and the logistics of extending federal benefits to same-sex couples.

Overall, Reynolds described the event as one of their “most successful of the year.”

“As a YLS student, I am most inspired by how Stuart has used the law as a tool to defend and strengthen civil rights, both at the Department of Justice and at the White House,” Reynolds told the News.  “Despite the significant influence he has wielded throughout his career, Stuart remains one of the humblest people you’ll ever meet.”

Delery received his undergraduate degree from the University of Virginia. 

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Campus vigil commemorates airman Bushnell and Palestinians killed amid war in Gaza https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/03/01/campus-vigil-commemorates-airman-bushnell-and-palestinians-killed-amid-war-in-gaza/ Fri, 01 Mar 2024 07:42:27 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187967 Aaron Bushnell, an active duty airman in the U.S. military, died on Monday outside the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. as part of a protest condemning Israel’s war against Hamas; pro-Palestinian student groups held a vigil on Cross Campus to commemorate Bushnell and the Palestinians killed in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas war.

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Content warning: This article contains references to suicide.

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To talk with a counselor from Yale Mental Health and Counseling, schedule a session here. On-call counselors are available at any time: call (203) 432-0290.  Appointments with Yale College Community Care can be scheduled here.

Additional resources are available in a guide compiled by the Yale College Council here.

On Wednesday, about 100 Yale students and New Haven residents gathered at the Women’s Table on Cross Campus for a vigil to commemorate U.S. airman Aaron Bushnell and Palestinians killed in Gaza amid Israel’s war against Hamas.  

Bushnell, 25, was an active duty U.S. Air Force airman who died on Monday outside the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. According to ABC News, Bushnell said “I will no longer be complicit in genocide” and “Free Palestine!” prior to dying in protest.

Four speakers addressed the crowd of about 100 people, who gathered around the Women’s Table. A Palestinian flag, candles, red roses and signs — one of which featured pictures of Bushnell — adorned the monument. A Yale Police Department car was parked on Cross Campus for the entirety of the event. 

All four speakers at the vigil requested anonymity due to safety concerns.

The first speaker discussed the account of Bushnell’s death and her reaction to it. 

“Personally, when I heard Aaron’s screams, I was shaken to my core. My stomach felt ill and my heart deeply ached. Aaron exposes the moral rot at the heart of the empire,” she said. “I am so sickened and angry at the continual neglect of Palestinian humanity and refusal of so many, including the Yale administration, to acknowledge and denounce a genocide which has been going on for over 75 years.” 

The vigil follows months of student activism related to the Israel-Hamas war. On Oct. 7, Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel, in which Hamas killed at least 1,200 people and took 250 people as hostages, according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry. Israel responded to the attack with a declaration of war and full bombardment of Gaza. As of Feb. 29, Israel has killed more than 30,000 people in Gaza through its military onslaught, according to the health ministry in Gaza. 

After this first speech, attendees participated in a moment of silence “for Aaron, and for the martyrs in Gaza and Palestine,” per the first speaker. 

The second speaker addressed Yale administrators directly, asking the University to “stop calling us on our personal numbers to tell us they disapprove of our actions,” or “threatening us in attempts to silence us.”

According to the speaker, Yale administrators asked organizers to cancel the event on Wednesday due to concerns that “this action will only make things worse, will make more people more upset.”

To that we respond, we are more concerned. And we are more upset,” the second speaker said. “We have been for months and for lifetimes. We are holding space because there has been no response from the administration. No acknowledgment of the 30,000 deaths. No call for a ceasefire and no response to our demands.”

The University’s spokesperson wrote to the News that the University clinicians and administrators who contacted Yalies4Palestine leadership about the event “intended to remind students about mental health issues on campus and available resources for support.” 

“University clinicians and administrators were concerned about the difficult content of the gathering and the potential impact on students,” Peart wrote. “Yale staff reached out to student organizers to share these concerns and offer mental health guidance and support.”

In January, Yalies4Palestine and Yale Law Students for Justice in Palestine organized a walk-out for Gaza and issued a press release listing demands of the University. Demands included public support by the University for a ceasefire, the implementation of boycott, divestment and sanctions in investment policy and divestment from weapons manufacturing and actions against what they called anti-Palestinian and Islamaphobic harassment on campus. 

The University has not publicly responded to these demands. In University President Peter Salovey’s Nov. 3 “remarks on compassion and civility,” he noted that there are “waves of hatred” toward Jewish, Muslim, Israeli and Palestinian people and emphasized that antisemitism and Islamophobia are “empathetically against” the University’s values. In his Dec. 7 statement called “Against Hatred,” Salovey urged “open exchange of ideas” and directed students toward resources for safety and mental health support. 

Yale’s investments in weapons manufacturing have remained a source of student protest in recent weeks and months. The University’s review of their investments policy is nearing a close. 

The third speaker read two poems. The first poem, by Palestinian author and activist Jenan Matari, describes the speaker’s experience of watching graphic videos of the war in Gaza, and of a video depicting Bushnell’s death. The second, entitled “The Birds don’t know about self-immolation,” is an anonymous poem publicized by Jinx Press, a “radical media collective,” on X on Monday. In the poem, the speaker narrates their reactions to seeing other people, the natural world and birdsong after hearing of Bushnell’s death. 

The fourth and final speaker urged students to support workers in weaponry manufacturing and exportation in using their capacity to strike or boycott. If these workers were to boycott, the speaker said, “not a single bomb or weapon is designed, constructed, loaded or shipped … the system would come to a grinding halt.” 

The speaker cited strikes from early November in Spain and Belgium where transportation workers refused to handle Israeli weaponry shipments. 

“As students who have the privilege of housing and three meals a day, we must help mobilize the workers who are the only class capable of leading a struggle against these genocidal regimes,” he said.

Immediately following the vigil, around 30 of the attendees moved into Sterling Memorial Library to participate in a protest. During this demonstration, students laid on the ground in the main entrance of Sterling for about 20 minutes. At approximately 6:10 p.m., the protesters started chanting “Free Free Palestine” and singing “we breathe together, stop the occupation” and “from the river to the sea,” before exiting the library.

One attendee interviewed by the News said that she came to the vigil because of the importance of commemorating those who have been hurt by the war. 

“I think that it’s important that as a collective, we’re showing that we care about everyone that’s been injured,” said Rosa Serrano GRD ’26 “And I think it’s especially important to do it so visibly at Yale because they still haven’t divested their funds from war machinery manufacturers.”

One attendee at the Vigil said that as a former member of the military, they feel empathy for Bushnell’s “feeling of helplessness at the crimes the military commits.” 

A New Haven resident, who identified themself only as Moss, said they were part of a group of attendees at the vigil associated with the Revolutionary Communists of America, a political party advocating that “the existing capitalist-imperialist systems and institutions of government in this country must be abolished and dismantled” according to their website

Sterling Memorial Library opened in 1931. 

Karla Cortes contributed reporting.

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Students and faculty prepare for Yale Africa Innovation Symposium https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/02/26/the-committee-faculty-and-student-groups-involved-with-the-upcoming-yale-africa-innovation-symposium-expressed-excitement-about-the-event-which-will-take-place-on-campus-from-march-1-2/ Mon, 26 Feb 2024 05:42:44 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187824 The committee, faculty and student groups involved with the upcoming Yale Africa Innovation Symposium expressed excitement about the event, which will take place on campus from March 1-2.

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The Yale Africa Innovation Symposium will be held on Yale’s campus from March 1-2 with international speakers set to lead conversations on solutions to economic, governmental, technological, climate and gender equity issues within African countries and internationally.

After the last symposium in November, the event has grown in scale with support from Yale faculty and students.  The event also hosts new and returning speakers and introduces emergent case studies. Students from many other universities also plan to attend the symposium, talk to experts in their specialties and form cross-school interactions. Visiting students will be hosted by Yale students.

“From the first symposium, the positive feedback we got, we just said, alright, we need to come back bigger and better for YAIS 2,” said Abi Ndikum ’25, founder and executive director of the symposium.

Ndikum expressed gratitude for the support she and her team received that led them to continue developing the symposium. The first time the event was held, YAIS worked under the Yale Africa Student Association to hold the symposium around the same time the group’s Yale Africa Week was held. To spread both organizations’ efforts and successes throughout the year, Yale Africa Week is now held in the fall semester while YAIS is held in the spring semester.

YAIS also receives support from Yale’s MacMillan Center Council on African Studies through input and financial sponsorship. While the YAIS committee works independently to organize the event, the council and other professionals on campus are happy to provide input into the event and support to “assist them to meet their objectives,” professor Cajetan Iheka, chair of the Council of African Studies, wrote to the News. 

Additionally, the symposium receives help from faculty participants, who hope to build strong relationships with visiting scholars and innovators. Ndikum spoke to the News about the importance of connecting current faculty with visiting scholars for academic and professional endeavors outside of the symposium. Faculty in adjacent fields of global strategy and international affairs, such as Steven Wilkinson, Janette Yarwood and Donald Filer, also plan to attend.

“Too often, conversations about Africa center around what the continent lacks, such as resources or stability, instead of highlighting what we are and could be creating … It’s a refreshing approach that emphasizes Africa’s potential and allows for constructive dialogues about our progress and growth,” Modupe Karimi ’26, officer of outreach for YAIS, wrote to the News.

Committee members and faculty spoke about their excitement about how YAIS could be used as an arena to show the success of innovators in Africa. The symposium’s mission focuses on tangible solutions, aiming to accomplish more than just identifying the problems in Africa’s professional fields through hands-on learning.

To address such a need, YAIS holds “Innovation Labs” during the symposium. During these labs, attendants work on case studies with Africa’s foremost leaders in the field. Featured topics will include “Global Trends in Africa’s Creative Economy” with Gbarpolu County, Liberia, Sen. Amara Konneh and “Africa – The Last Digital Frontier,” with Angela Kyerematen-Jimoh, a Ghanaian business leader and Microsoft’s strategic partnership lead for Africa. Iheka hopes that these labs and the symposium serve as a space for students to ask challenging questions and learn from experts in their fields. Nana Ama Ocran ’26, President of the Yale Africa Students Association shares a similar sentiment, excited for attendees to “gain exposure to the innovative approaches used by experts” and for the opportunity to start creating connections with renowned professionals.

YAIS holds a diverse list of speakers from various fields and African regions and countries. The Symposium itself will feature Ambassador Fatima K. Mohammed, permanent observer of the African Union to the United Nations, as its keynote speaker. The speaker list was selected through calls for nominations of last year’s speakers or through connections in the committee’s network. Ndikum said that her team sought innovators at the “forefront” of impact on Africa’s industries to lead both panels and labs.

“The quality of our speakers that we are bringing this year, [is] really top of the bar, and it aligns with the mission of our conference because we want to bring young, bright minds and African innovators into one space together to work on case studies related to these innovator’s industries, to really equip participants with the skills and knowledge needed to move forward in development of the continent,” Ndikum said.

The event will be held at the Yale Science Building and Kline Biology Tower, followed by a gala at the Omni Hotel.

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Independent American journalist discusses his reporting in Ukraine https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/02/26/during-his-visit-to-yale-terrell-jermaine-starr-talked-about-russian-colonialism-the-experience-of-covering-a-war-torn-country-and-how-being-black-has-impacted-his-work-as-a-journalist/ Mon, 26 Feb 2024 05:38:00 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187822 During his visit to Yale, Terrell Jermaine Starr talked about Russian colonialism, the experience of covering a war-torn country and how being Black has impacted his work as a journalist.

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On Friday, independent journalist Terrell Jermaine Starr visited Yale to talk about his reporting on the war in Ukraine. 

In a conversation moderated by history professor Marci Shore, Starr talked about his experience as a Black independent journalist in Ukraine and colonialism and race in Eastern Europe. He also discussed how he believes the United States should support Ukraine in its ongoing war with Russia.

“The genesis of my work is really predicated on us better understanding each other, and that we all have to be invested in each others’ safety and security,” Starr said. “The safest, the most progressive thing that we can do for Ukraine is give them guns to fight, because there’s no point of talking about a peaceful Ukraine if they are dead.”

Starr, who grew up in a majority-Black community in Detroit and went to Philander Smith University, an HBCU, said that when he applied for summer abroad programs before his senior year, he picked only African countries as destinations. Nevertheless, he was placed on a trip to Russia. 

That new experience shaped him, he said, and after graduation, he spent two years as a Peace Corps volunteer in a small Georgian village. There, he said, he started understanding colonialism and race outside of the United States through conversations with Georgians, who shared their experiences of being discriminated against by Russians as “the Black people of the Caucasus.” Inspired by his time abroad, Starr also did a Fulbright exchange scholarship in Ukraine in 2009. Living in the region, Starr learned about Russian colonialism.

“Western hegemony and Western colonialism [are] not the only hegemony … and colonialism that exist,” Starr recalled realizing. 

After returning to America, Starr worked as a national political correspondent for various American outlets, covering both the 2016 and 2020 U.S. presidential elections, but traveled to Ukraine every year. When Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, Starr said he was in Ukraine, staying with his friend, who then enlisted in the army. 

He followed his friend and started covering the war from the ground in Ukraine, where he currently resides most of the time. He conducts his reporting from the war’s front lines and writes about Ukrainian civilians. 

“He is here as somebody who is working outside of an academy and outside of a corporate news agency and has been making his own way with a very creative kind of journalism,” Shore said of Starr.

His mission, he says, has become to help cross the bridges between Black and Ukrainian communities with just a selfie stick, a phone camera, “language skills, street smarts and Black Jesus.” 

Experiences away from home have shaped Starr into an advocate for shrinking the empathy gap across cultures and promoting the idea that the Black community in the United States is in many ways similar to the Ukrainian community in Eastern Europe, he said. 

“White nationalism is putting Ukraine’s security at risk,” Starr said, reflecting on the federal bill that would provide aid to Ukraine currently stalled by the Republican majority in the House of Representatives. “This racism that’s targeting us is now being used to weaponize support for Ukraine. Everybody is in this together. So we’re going to have to make a decision about how much care we have for one another.”

Although Starr said that he does not know if his work will inspire people to take political action, he knows that some will trust him better because “he looks like them.”

He added that he also believes Ukrainians feel that he, as a Black man, can understand them better than foreign white correspondents. He said that he does not operate on the idea of “objectivity,” trying to balance opinions as traditional news media outlets do. He described himself as, instead, committed to being truthful and fair. 

“The voice that I’m speaking with … that I communicate with and the honesty and the moral consistency that I bring to the conversation is not something that would pass a lot of editors,” Starr said. “So I don’t need them.”

Claudia Nunes, a visiting fellow in the School of Environment who attended the event, believes that Starr’s reporting brings the aspect of the physicality of the war to communities across the ocean — and across racial, linguistic and cultural barriers. 

“Because he takes the truth this seriously, his reporting appeals to hearts,” Nunes noted. “Our interpretations of what is happening in Ukraine would vary only slightly, not as much as they used to, if we all had access to unfiltered truth. And Terrell gives it to us.” 

The event was sponsored by the Poynter Fellowship; the Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies Program and the European Studies Council.

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Poet and writer Ross Gay visits Yale https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/02/23/poet-and-writer-ross-gay-visits-yale/ Fri, 23 Feb 2024 06:45:46 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187729 Ross Gay, a poet interested in joy, spoke at an event sponsored by organizations around the University this week.

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How do we think about joy and delight? 

On Wednesday afternoon, poet and writer Ross Gay spoke to a crowd in Battell Chapel about how joy can help us find what is beautiful. The event, which was attended by Yalies and community members, was sponsored by the Yale College Dean’s Office; Belonging at Yale and the Lamont Endowed Lectureship; Yale Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity and Transnational Migration; the Yale University Chaplain’s Office and Ezra Stiles College.

“Ross Gay has been a person of importance to many kinds of readers. He’s exceptional in the way that he’s reached many communities and readers through his work. We chose to collaborate with the Chaplain’s Office because Maytal Saltiel has used his writing in her pastoral work,” said Alicia Schmidt Camacho, head of Ezra Stiles College. 

In addition to meeting with members of on-campus poetry organizations, Gay, who is also a community gardener, met with students from the Yale farm and the Chaplain’s Office.

During his visit to New Haven, Gay also hosted a reading and book signing at Hamden’s Possible Futures bookstore.

Gay has written four books of poetry, “Against Which,” “Bringing the Shovel Down,” “Be Holding” and “Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude.” He has also written three collections of essays, “The Book of Delights,” “Inciting Joy” and “The Book of (More) Delights.” His main interests lie in finding joy and delight in the everyday. 

“Mastery is the opposite of delight, the know-it-all has nothing to delight in,” said Gay, who spoke in conversation with University Chaplain Maytal Saltiel at the event. The two talked about the importance of joy in helping to carry our sorrows. Saltiel noted that she views Gay’s work as deeply spiritual and is also interested in how to find delight and joy.

The event received special support from Dean of Yale College Pericles Lewis as part of an inaugural program for fostering dialogues and civic engagement on campus. “We try to support a range of speakers from different backgrounds so that students can learn from people who are leaders in their fields,” wrote Dean Lewis to the News.

Schmidt Camacho also noted the importance of bringing people together to enjoy art and poetry since the pandemic, not only in Stiles but across New Haven. At Stiles, she has hosted staff art shows, ran a film festival and organized pop-up concerts. Earlier this year, two first-years painted a mural at a local New Haven store and hosted a reception at Ezra Stiles. Last year, she brought Ada Limón, the 24th Poet Laureate of the United States.

One of those first years, Katelyn Wang ’27, was in attendance at Gay’s talk. She became familiar with his work in high school when she read the “Book of Delights” and was excited about hearing from the poet himself. 

“I enjoyed when he offered a reading of his work. It was very different than simply reading his words on paper—you could hear his emotions and storytelling come to life,” Wang wrote to the News. “Gay has a very down to earth, authentic personality, and that was magnified when he delivered his poetry as stories.” 

Battell Chapel was constructed between 1874 and 1876.

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School of the Environment conference looks to the future of tropical forests https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/02/04/school-of-the-environment-conference-looks-to-the-future-of-tropical-forests/ Mon, 05 Feb 2024 04:48:57 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187086 In its 30th annual conference, the International Society of Tropical Foresters discussed the challenges and future of tropical forest management.

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Spanning 12 percent of Earth’s land surface but storing 25 percent of the world’s total carbon, tropical forests pack a punch well above their land share. They are also among the planet’s most vulnerable ecosystems.

The Yale chapter of the International Society of Tropical Foresters hosted its 30th annual conference at the School of the Environment on Feb. 2 and 3. Starting Friday morning and ending on Saturday, the hybrid, two-day event invited attendees to reflect on the challenges tropical forests face while turning an eye to their restoration and preservation. 

Nonprofit directors, economists, policymakers and researchers delivered talks on the current state of forest health and offered potential solutions from their work. The presentations were followed by networking opportunities, a poster presentation session and the conferral of their Innovation Prize Award.

“When you’re thinking about ecosystem restoration and conservation, it’s really so much of a holistic approach that we need to be taking,” event organizer Sophia Roberts ENV ’25 said. “It’s about everything that’s connected and being able to disseminate those co-benefits to the local community.”

Speakers at the event sounded the alarm on current rates of tropical forest loss.

Keynote speaker and Wildlife Conservation Society Executive Director Daniel Zarin explained that the majority of tropical forests could currently be compromised or lost. According to the Forest Landscape Integrity Index — a measure of a forest’s overall well-being produced by data aggregation and algorithms — almost 60 percent of all the world’s forests are in either medium or low integrity, meaning that they are partially or completely destroyed. Zarin added that these losses would come with steep costs to ecosystem resilience and biodiversity.

Recent destruction of the Amazon — the world’s largest tropical forest — has accounted for some of these declines, speakers said.

Ane Alencar, panelist and director of the Amazon Environmental Research Institute, noted that Brazil is among the top ten countries that have reported the greatest tropical forest loss.

Alencar added that almost half of the nation’s domestic emissions have been related to deforestation, primarily related to illegal logging, land use, agriculture and mining.

She said that her research suggested that rural areas contributed to roughly 68 percent of all emissions.

Other presentations directed attention to the scope of agriculture-driven tropical deforestation. According to Peter Umunay, senior environmental specialist at the Global Environmental Facility, commodity and resource-driven cultivation has cost 6.4 to 8.8 million hectares of tropical forest cover each year — an area that falls roughly between the size of West Virginia and Indiana, and accounts for up to 83 percent of all annual tropical forest loss.

Though forest declines continue, speakers also said that the past year has experienced some noteworthy slowing in deforestation rates — many of which were enabled by stronger government intervention. Alencar praised the “strategic enforcement” of conservation laws under Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s presidency, which she said has seen a 50 percent reduction in deforestation over this past year.

“We need one thing, that is political will, to [stop deforestation], and we need engagement of society and also [the] private sector to support that,” Alencar said.

Speaker Kimberly Carlson noted that the same trend had happened in Indonesia, though recent decreases in deforestation rates might be attributed to a wider range of factors. Carlson traced the nation’s regulation efforts to a 2011 moratorium on new permits for palm oil, mining and other agricultural activities across one-third of the tropical forest.

However, these measures also coincided with new land-tenure security programs and a reduction in palm oil prices — all of which could have “cumulatively” resulted in a more significant drop-off, Carlson explained.

In their solutions to current conservation efforts, speakers presented visions of public policy coupled with financial incentives.

In the absence of a “silver [bullet]” for supporting forests, Zarin added that preserving healthy tropical forests will require as much financing as the carbon offsets market. Per Zarin, high-integrity forests still remain at risk of destruction and often lack the necessary resources to protect them.

Unlike carbon offsets, which must definitively yield results, financing forests could operate like healthcare, where money is spent not just for prevention but also proactive support, Zarin said. In this model, money would go towards restoration but also into interventions that could slow the degradation. Zarin noted that 750 million hectares of high-integrity forest are still unprotected by the market, with no finances dedicated towards their preservation, leaving them at risk of disappearing.

“Today, there is no clear-cut blueprint for tackling social issues about the environment,” Frederick Addai ENV ’23 said. “We just need to keep on learning and engaging with people to collaborate on how best to go about with the world.”The International Society of Tropical Foresters was founded in 1950.

Correction, Feb. 12: This article has been corrected to fix several misspellings of Kimberly Carlson’s last name.

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Yale Women’s Leadership Initiative conference to highlight intersectionality, offer networking opportunities https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/02/02/yale-womens-leadership-initiative-conference-to-highlight-intersectionality-offer-networking-opportunities/ Fri, 02 Feb 2024 05:36:13 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=187039 On Feb. 3 and 4, the Yale Women’s Leadership Initiative will hold its annual conference, which draws speakers from around the world to discuss empowerment and leadership in various fields.

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The Yale Women’s Leadership Initiative will hold its annual conference this week on Feb. 3 and 4, bringing together women from across the globe to engage in the celebration of female leadership and empowerment at Yale and beyond. 

WLI is an organization founded by Yale undergraduates in 2006 with the mission to empower women and offer opportunities for leadership and development. The group aims to enrich the professional and social lives of Yale women by offering the opportunity to learn from, speak with, and network with women leaders in a variety of fields, per Sabrina Guo ’27, who is a member.

The 2024 conference will host speakers at Yale to discuss prominent topics on female leadership and empowerment and to help advance careers for women in fields including law and policy, STEM, healthcare, arts and media and entrepreneurship. 

Anita Wu ’03  LAW ’06, co-president of the Yale Club of Los Angeles and an attorney at Brown Neri Smith & Khan LLP, will hold a career development workshop at the conference.

To me, whatever inspiration and support we can give to Yale’s talented emerging leaders as they blaze their own paths forward is a critical part of Yale’s mission and what makes the Yale community so special,” Wu told the News. “It’s how Yale alumni can contribute beyond what we can achieve ourselves.”

Wu is one of several speakers who will be at the conference. Other speakers and panelists include Sally Buzbee, executive editor at the Washington Post, Robin Wheat, former executive director of the Nassau County Minority Caucus, and Grace La, professor of architecture at Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Priyanka Babu ’24, the conference’s director, told the News that, given the large size of the organization, it is important for them to leverage their platform to highlight intersectional feminism and provide a variety of networking opportunities. “The goal of the conference is not only to provide an enriching networking and pre-professional experience for students, but also to contribute to a broader conversation regarding inclusivity and empowerment on campus and in today’s professional landscape,” Babu said.

Babu said that she is particularly proud of the Women in Science Leadership panel that she put together. 

The panel features Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunobiology at the School of Medicine, and Margaret Porter Scott, vice president of biochemical and cellular pharmacology at Genentech.

“These remarkable women are true trailblazers in the field in every sense of the word, both in their science and leadership roles,” Babu told the News. 

Babu emphasized to the News the tremendous contributions of Iwasaki and Porter Scott to the field of medicine. 

Babu told the News that Iwasaki has “single-handedly” spearheaded COVID-19 and long COVID-19 research efforts and has played a central role in public health media outreach during the pandemic.

Porter Scott, Babu said, leads groundbreaking research at Genentech, often regarded as the first biotechnology company, and serves as chair of Genentech Women in Science and Engineering. 

“It is an honor and a privilege to host these two incredible speakers,” Babu told the News. “The WLI team is excited to highlight extraordinary women in science leadership roles while creating meaningful networking experiences for undergraduate students.”

Guo, a moderator of several panel discussions, told the News that she is excited about being involved with WLI and advocating for women’s empowerment. 

Guo is the founder of Girl Pride International, a 501(c)(3) that focuses on supporting displaced, refugee and migrant girls’ intellectual, material and social needs. 

“I’ve seen how cross-cultural dialogue can connect people around the world, and how these connections can transform into treasured lifelong friendships and invaluable mentorships,” she told the News. “I joined WLI and helped to coordinate this conference to build more of these cross-cultural bridges, and to also just bond with amazing women leaders across the nation.”

The conference will be held this week on Feb. 3 and 4 at the Humanities Quadrangle.

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Elliott Abrams explores American and Middle East dynamics with the Buckley Institute https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/01/29/elliott-abrams-explores-american-and-middle-east-dynamics-with-the-buckley-institute/ Mon, 29 Jan 2024 07:35:13 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=186901 Elliot Abrams spoke with the Buckley Institute about U.S ties to Middle Eastern conflict and its policies in Iran, Israel and the Gaza Strip.

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Elliot Abrams, senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, visited the Buckley Institute on Jan. 25 to speak on America’s past and current stance on Middle Eastern conflict and its interest in Israel, Gaza and Iran. Abrams was met with questions from audience members who both supported and disagreed with his stance on Iranian conflicts and Israel-Hamas relations, making for a diverse discussion.

The Buckley Institute, which — per its mission statement — organizes these lectures with speakers of traditionally conservative viewpoints to create lively discussion on Yale’s campus, brought Abrams to campus. Abrams previously served in various presidential administrations — including those of former U.S. Presidents George W. Bush ’68 and Donald Trump. Abrams’ talk aimed to create a space for conversation on American attitudes toward the Middle East, as well as the effect of those attitudes on the ongoing war that Israel is waging in Gaza. He spoke of potential two-state solutions and Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, which he attempted to contextualize in a longer history of tension.

Since Hamas’ attack against Israel, in which — according to Israel’s Foreign Ministry — Hamas killed 1,200 people and took around 250 as hostages, Israel has unleashed a full-scale military operation in Gaza, killing more than 26,000 Palestinians as of Jan. 26, according to Palestinian health officials.

“I am struck by the fact again that all of these [foreign leaders] speeches say we need to create an independent sovereign Palestinian state,” Abrams said. “Free of Israeli occupation, Palestinians wouldn’t be free, it’s not a democracy … I think a lot more thinking needs to be done than sloganeering about the creation and the nature of a Palestinian state as a kind of magic answer to all of the problems of the region.”

Abrams marked the 1967 Six-Day War and the 1973 Yom Kippur War as turning points in American attitudes toward Israeli statehood in the Middle East. He spoke about a period of “peace processing” where the United States, Israelis and Palestinians held similar interests and asserted that the goal of such processing would be the creation of two states, Israel and Palestine, living in peaceful accord.

Attendees asked Abrams how he might respond to those who would oppose Palestine’s existence as a sovereign state, and whether he thought a middle ground could be offered. Abrams included historical colonies and territories under British, American and Canadian governance as arguments for a Palestinian colony under Israel’s governance.

“Even a Palestine under Israeli control doesn’t have to be a terrible place. Most of the places that were British colonies are democracies. U.S, Canada, Australia, the Caribbean, they were British colonies. Why? Because under the British they had a fair amount of self-government,” Abrams said.

Attendee Ely Altman ’25 expressed gratitude for the diverse perspective on campus that the Buckley Institute pursues: in this case, attendees who are “critical of Israel” alongside “people who like Israel.” 

Attendees said that they were glad to have received information from an educated lens from policymakers with opinions across the political spectrum. Other students held the same sentiment regarding receiving diverse leaders on campus but did not agree with some of Abram’s viewpoints. 

The William F. Buckley, Jr. Program has over 730 student fellows.

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Ruby Bridges addresses a packed Woolsey Hall for 2024 MLK Commemoration https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2024/01/26/ruby-bridges-addresses-a-packed-woolsey-hall-for-2024-mlk-commemoration/ Fri, 26 Jan 2024 06:42:44 +0000 https://yaledailynews.com/?p=186844 In the second consecutive year of in-person MLK commemorations since the COVID-19 pandemic, Ruby Bridges discussed her personal experiences, highlighting the need for educational equality and breaking harmful cycles of hate.

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On Jan. 24, civil rights activist and author Ruby Bridges spoke to a packed Woolsey Hall, which was filled with students, faculty and members of the New Haven community in commemoration of the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 

Bridges joined Stephanie Owusu ’24 and William Johnson, the director of educational strategy at the William Caspar Graustein Memorial Fund, onstage. On Nov. 14, 1960, Bridges became the first Black student to integrate into William Frantz Elementary, an all-white school in Louisiana. 

At the event, Bridges shared accounts of her experiences and called on all in attendance to actively push toward combating barriers that divide people. 

Risë Nelson, chair of Yale’s MLK Commemoration planning committee and director of diversity, equity, inclusion & accessibility of Yale University Library & Collections, introduced Bridges at the event.

“We couldn’t be happier to welcome Ms. Bridges to Yale,” Nelson said. “Her insights, coupled with the significance of the 70th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education this year, promise to enrich our understanding and dedication to advancing educational justice.”

As attendees streamed into Woosley, they were met with a performance by Harmony in Action, Music Haven’s advanced student chamber orchestra. Composed of New Haven students, Harmony in Action performed several pieces including “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” a hymn that is often referred to as “the Black national anthem.” 

Following the performance, members of the MLK planning committee Risha Chakraborty ’25 and Yasmeen Abed ’23 provided an opening introduction. Their remarks were followed by Nelson who dedicated the commemoration event to children and educators. Nelson’s remarks were followed by Kimberly Goff-Crews, secretary and vice president for student life, and University President Peter Salovey. 

Before Stephen Shepherd ’27 welcomed Bridges, Owusu and Johnson to the stage, the a cappella group Shades of Yale performed a gospel rendition of “Amen/We Shall Overcome.” 

Throughout the evening, Owusu posed questions to both Bridges and Johnson on the topic of educational equity and equality.

Bridges began by describing what education means to her, highlighting the ability education has to foster understanding and empathy. For Bridges’s parents, the chance for their daughter to attend William Frantz Elementary meant a chance for her to go to college and have a better life full of opportunities. 

Bridges further discussed the sacrifice that her parents made when they agreed to send her to William Frantz Elementary School and emphasized that people still must fight for the opportunity of education. 

Bridges then relayed her personal story, including her walk escorted by U.S marshals through a crowd of people protesting her attendance at the school. Bridges specifically emphasized that she felt protected by her childhood innocence, recalling that she was not initially aware of the racism when she began her first walk. 

At six years old, Bridges remarked that the crowd of angry protesters initially felt like a New Orleans Mardi Gras parade. 

Bridges told the story of meeting Barbara Henry, who was her teacher and who she calls her best friend to this day, within the school. At first impression, Henry, a white woman, looked exactly like the crowd of people outside, Bridges said. Yet, Bridges described the care Henry showed her. She said she felt that she could have a good day because of her relationship with Henry. 

Bridges connected this story to the message of King and his famous words that one must judge a person based on their character and not the color of their skin. 

Bridges then moved on to illustrate what she sees as the fight people are currently engaged in of good vs. evil, discussing how racism is only one of the “many tools” to divide us.  

Bridges also described her first encounter with racism as the moment when a white child said he couldn’t play with her because his mom said so. This story introduced another one of Bridges’ central messages: how adults who impart knowledge to children can prolong the injustices of the past. 

Johnson followed this by reflecting on his work in education, adding it is the responsibility of educators, parents and other adults to teach goodness. 

In an interview with the News before this event, Owusu spoke on the power of the commemoration event and Bridges’ words.

“I remember, even in kindergarten, being taught that you can make change at this age just like Ruby Bridges did,” Owusu said. 

Risha Chakraborty ’25 said that she appreciated the relevance of Bridges’ message in our currently “fraught world.” Chakraborty said she specifically took away an understanding of the innocence of children in relation to issues such as racism.

“I think she really wants everyone to realize the impact they have on shaping the younger generations of the world and commit to allowing our children to keep their innocence and fight for good for as long as possible,” Chakraborty said. 

Following the discussion, Ward 1 Alder Kiana Flores ’25 presented Bridges with an official citation from the New Haven Board of Alders. Alpha Phi Alpha, the oldest intercollegiate historically African American fraternity, and the Yale Black Alumni Association gifted Bridges a crystal from New Haven and Yale. 

Bridges closed out her responses with a central message on the need for good in today’s world. 

“It is time for our movement, it is time for those of us who consider ourselves good to come together…we need each other.,” Bridges said. “That is my message.”

Last year, Dr. King’s eldest son Martin Luther King III spoke at the 2023 MLK commemoration in Woolsey Hall. 

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