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For Dyshann Anderson, winning new clients starts with showing up — even when he’d prefer to work quietly behind the scenes.
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ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø entrepreneurs Karin Smith of Kindred Thoughts Bookstore, Vincencia "Vee" Adusei of VASE Construction and Yves Joseph of RJ Development open up about the joys and challenges of running a Black-owned business.
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Pizza truck owner Louise Joseph said she remembers the first time she realized people, even in apizza-crazed New Haven, liked her wood-fired pies.
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The festival will be held on the New Haven Green on Saturday, Aug. 16. The event will showcase over 200 Black owned-businesses and organizations, offering products, goods and services, according to city officials. The event is designed to advance inclusive economic growth.
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Black entrepreneur Jay Norris built Guesst Software to help landlords and tenants share accurate sales data, overcoming challenges in the tech world with innovation and persistence.
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As a Black-owned business, Sterling Family Medicine strives to make patients feel seen by practitioners who understand their life experiences.
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Chamber musicians from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) will be in New Haven Friday to perform works by HBCU composers.
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In the Spring of 2024, CoDE’s Education Chair Christi Moraga, a career teacher who has served on multiple national book award committees, proposed a multicultural book drive. CoDE would offer to donate four award-winning children’s books to a host of libraries across the county. Librarians, including those at Gilead Hill School and Hebron Elementary, picked a wishlist of four books off a larger list. But CoDE was quickly notified that the Hebron school librarians would not be accepting these books.
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Carter’s mother offered a prayer for her daughter at the ceremony Friday afternoon. Despite her ambitious personality, it took ten years of service for Carter to realize that she wanted to be a chief.
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UConn faces a $134M deficit, but its real crisis lies in a weak endowment, state cuts and tuition spikes. Former faculty leader Jeffrey Ogbar breaks down what’s at stake.