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Immigration attorneys and activists get creative with Know Your Rights trainings, as they say residents need to know when their rights might be violated and how to prove it.
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Mark Colville, a co-founder of the Amistad Catholic Worker House in New Haven, was charged with disorderly conduct and interfering with an officer.
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The Yale Center for British Art is preparing to reopen to the public on March 29 after being closed for two years for a building conservation project.
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Beginning this fall, all West Haven police officers, firefighters and dispatchers can attend UNH with a full scholarship.
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New Haven officials are celebrating new restrictions on smoke shops in the city. They say smoke shops promote tobacco usage among youth and are linked to criminal activity.
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A New Haven tenants union is resuming protests against the trustee of their State Street apartment building.
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The exhibit, "Shining Light on Truth: New Haven, Yale and Slavery," has been open at the New Haven Museum for about a year. The exhibit has been impactful for students because many can see how the fight for equality got its start at the local level, a museum official said.
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A bill in the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø legislature would require theaters to publish the actual start times for movies. Is that a good idea? Plus: the art of the movie trailer.
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Early Tuesday, before a federal judge blocked President Donald Trump's order to freeze federal grants and loans, Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s office said a project designed to reconnect New Haven neighborhoods adversely impacted by the construction of I-91 would be affected by the President's federal funding freeze.
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With Brady Corbet’s epic drama, ‘The Brutalist,’ nominated for 10 Academy Awards including Best Picture, we take a long look at brutalism and brutalist architecture.