Undergraduate

VIRTUAL: Re-Imagining the American Theater: A Conversation with Stephanie Ybarra, Clint Ramos and Eisa Davis

Please join us for a conversation exploring and re-imagining a more inclusive American Theater and how young Theater Makers can affect change. We will specifically lean into the challenges faced by BIPOC artists in predominantly white spaces.

Free Admission, Open to the Yale community, Ample time for Q & A.
Pre-Registration REQUIRED by Thursday, 10/15 at NOON.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Socially Distanced Drop-ins @ the Office of LGBTQ Resources

Reserve your spot in the Office of LGBTQ Resources lounge or cafe! Spots are made available for reservation at two times: advance reservations are available from noon three days before your visit, and same-day reservations are available at noon the day of your visit. Any unreserved advanced or same-day spots remain available up until a given time slot. Visitors may reserve up to two hours per day.

Webinar: Defying Illegality: Organizing in and around Migrant Detention

Amidst ongoing debates about policing and mass incarceration, migrant detention centers have been focal points for mobilizations against the U.S. carceral regime. Through coordinated protest, testimonial acts, and hunger strikes, incarcerated migrants have drawn attention to systemic abuses in prisons, while defending their rights to belonging, family unification, and transnational mobility. Their actions revealed the ways that ICE used the COVID-19 pandemic to further repress prisoners.

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