📸Kayley DeLay with a school record-breaking performance to finish second in the steeplechase at the @NCAATrackField Championships today! Her time of 9:25.08 ranks as the third-fastest ever in NCAA competition.
PHOTOS ➡️ https://t.co/mrJwTQQVEw
credit: Scott Boldt
#ThisIsYale
Breaking News: U.S. Soccer and its top men’s and women’s players have agreed to landmark labor deals that guarantee equal pay and shared World Cup prize money.
https://t.co/PCHvwKgUrZ
Senior captain Kayley DeLay earned All-America honors at the NCAA Cross Country Championships today!
Kayley's time of 19:37.7 for the 6K course placed her in the top 10 in the nation!
#ThisIsYale
Baylor acknowledged its failures in addressing sexual violence committed by its athletes, but the NCAA system is set up to minimize consequences for those failures, writes Jessica Luther, co-author of “Loving Sports When They Don’t Love You Back”
https://t.co/uOMPWM8gxa
“I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain.” Happy Birthday to James Baldwin.
Black people make up 13% of the U.S. population—but represent only 5% of doctors. So how does that impact Black patients’ health and well-being?
Dr. Owen Garrick led a study showing Black men had better health outcomes seeing Black doctors. #NPRShortWave
https://t.co/UObxSfokkZ
'Athlete A' a lesson in courage, the importance of women in power, and journalism's critical role | Local Sports | https://t.co/dvwJ5iKgEP https://t.co/7BrJYzNVOn
📣Announcing our 2020-21 women's track and field captain ... Erin Gerardo!
▪️ Pole vault
▪️ Timothy Dwight College
▪️ Ecology & Evolutionary Bio Major
▪️ Aliso Viejo, Calif.
▪️ Santa Margarita Catholic HS
READ ➡️ https://t.co/uT1JGUHI2p
#ThisIsYale
And fucking listen to the black people speaking. You are not there to speak over them. If they are venting their pain and anguish out loud do not speak over them. Allies are there to help when help is needed. Not take control of the narrative. there’s enough of that already.
It’s up to all of us—Black, white, everyone—no matter how well-meaning we think we might be, to do the honest, uncomfortable work of rooting it out. It starts with self-examination and listening to those whose lives are different from our own.