OPINION
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PAN: Deafening silence

Yale ought to deploy its resources to speak up and speak loudly. It should coordinate with other schools in the legal fight against the Trump administration on science, vaccines, funding and civil rights. Yale should vocally call out the Trump administration’s worst excesses. If universities band together, they cannot be picked off one by one. 

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RIFFI: NIH funding cut is impacting students

This year, I was selected as one of the seven American Cancer Society scholars here at Yale, as part of the Yale BioMed Amgen Scholars […]

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MOHAN: On the politicization of astrophysics

If the goal is to depoliticize universities, why are we making federal support for apolitical, educational goals contingent on agreement with inherently political positions? 

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WARRIOR: Yale must protect its students. Here’s how

Liberal values like free speech and open discourse are anathema to authoritarians like Trump; free universities cannot exist in unfree societies. For Yale to pursue its mission of “improving the world through scholarship,” it must stand up to Donald Trump. President McInnis and the Board of Trustees must act.

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AKHTAR: In defense of MAPHR

While there are many valid critiques of human rights, having a consistent, interdisciplinary space to discuss the possibilities and limits of this framework has been invaluable to shaping my worldview and better understanding the kind of impact I might want to have in my career.

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DANZIGER: Yale, keep hot lunch

If the University truly values the sense of community it promotes, they should invest in strengthening it — not slowly undermining college dining to save money. If Yale can afford to keep hot lunch, it should.  

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LETTER 2.21

An alumnus reflects on police-student relations, based on his own experience with Yale Police in 2010.

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BOSTEELS: Argue more

As college students, everyone in the dining hall is a peer: someone you can engage with at an equal level and who has no authority over your life or your beliefs. And specifically as Yale students, we talk obsessively about dialogue; just open the opinion section of the Yale Daily News website and every third article — including this one — is a meditation on the ways to reach a better quality of speech at Yale.

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WITT: Proximite rage and responsibility

Rage, especially that of the young and idealistic, is proximate. When there’s an injustice in the world people often get mad at what’s close to them and not what’s really to blame. Yale students upset about Israel’s conduct in Gaza get mad at Yale; Yale students upset about climate change get mad at Yale; Yale students upset about New Haven get mad at Yale.

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MOHAN: On acceptable conversation

If Yale’s mission is to “train future leaders,” as per its mission statement, then Yalies better understand the three in four Americans that are of faith. If Yale is to be George Pierson’s “society of friends,” then we ought to understand our friends’ most closely held beliefs. Either way, we need to talk about religion.

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GORLICK: Embracing un-scheduling

Some people use GCal. Others use pretty planners and agendas. Truth be told, I never did get good enough at using either.