General Public

Trunch: A Trans Lunchtime Social

Join us for a monthly lunchtime social for the transgender, intersex, and/or nonbinary community. This is a meet-up and social gathering that is open to anyone who identifies as transgender, intersex, and/or nonbinary.
FREE to attend. Lunch sponsored by Trans At Yale. Potluck encouraged! Hosted by at the New Haven Pride Center in partnership with Trans At Yale and Party for Socialism and Liberation - CT.

Trunch: A Trans Lunchtime Social

Join us for a monthly lunchtime social for the transgender, intersex, and/or nonbinary community. This is a meet-up and social gathering that is open to anyone who identifies as transgender, intersex, and/or nonbinary.
FREE to attend. Lunch sponsored by Trans At Yale. Potluck encouraged! Hosted by at the New Haven Pride Center in partnership with Trans At Yale and Party for Socialism and Liberation - CT.

Indigeneity in Contemporary Architecture

Ms. Eagle Bull, a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation, has nearly 30 years of architectural design and project management experience. She has successfully led large, diverse, multi-disciplined design teams through all project phases. Tammy believes strongly in the direct relationship between human behavior and the environment. She strives to create environments in which the users will not only function but also thrive.

From East to West: History of the Chinese Collection at Yale 1849-2019

Yale University Library has been collecting Chinese-language materials for 170 years. Six titles of Chinese classical texts were deposited at Yale in August 1849, making the College Library the first academic library in the United States to collect Chinese-language books. Samuel Wells Williams, the inaugural Professor of Chinese Language and Literature at Yale, was largely responsible for the earliest acquisitions for the Library. Yung Wing, the first Chinese citizen to graduate from a major American college, was the most important contributor to the founding of Yale’s Chinese Collection.

Down Through the Years: The Legacy of the Yale Black Seminarians

For the African American community, the 1960s was a period marked by significant movements in the struggle of social change and racial uplift. From the Civil Rights Movement to the rise of Black Power, African Americans shaped an ideology centered around Black Consciousness and the Black Church held an important role, serving as a locus for justice and resistance.

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