A BILLIONAIRE WEDDING PUTS ‘CRAZY RICH INDIANS’ IN THE SPOTLIGHT
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
The over-the-top celebration is taking place in a fast-growing economy that is creating more billionaires and millionaires.
GRAPHICS, CODE

THE RISE IN RECENT UNDERGRADUATE UNIONIZATION EFFORTS, AT BROWN AND BEYOND
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Organizers, labor experts point to pro-labor White House, pandemic, surging labor power.
REPORTING, GRAPHICS

$20,000 IN DEBT, BUT CONTENT: CHINESE MIGRANTS FIND WAYS INTO THE U.S. ECONOMY
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Historic enclaves help recent migrants, as more enter U.S. without visas.
GRAPHICS, MAPPING

WHITE HOUSE RACES TO LEND BILLIONS IN CLIMATE FUNDS BEFORE ELECTION
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Loan office got $400 billion windfall but has been slow to complete deals.
GRAPHICS

RISD FACILITIES STAFF BEGIN INDEFINITE STRIKE TO DEMAND WAGE INCREASES IN NEW CONTRACT
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Strike follows 24-hour work stoppage in March, months of contract negotiations
REPORTING

COMMUNITY COORDINATORS RALLY ON MAIN GREEN, REQUEST VOLUNTARY RECOGNITION OF PROPOSED UNION
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Speakers share experiences as CCs, advocate for student worker organizing.
REPORTING

CS TAS VOTE TO UNIONIZE, BECOME FIRST UNDERGRADUATE LABOR UNION ON CAMPUS
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
303 of 331 votes cast in favor of unionization, 28 against
REPORTING

FACULTY, STUDENTS SHOW SUPPORT AT PICKET LINE AS RISD STRIKE CONTINUES
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Admitted students program moved online, parties met Wednesday afternoon, will meet again Thursday
REPORTING

RISD, FACILITIES WORKERS RATIFY CONTRACT, CONCLUDING STRIKE
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Six-year contract goes into effect immediately, retroactive to July 1, 2022
REPORTING

IT’S GOING TO COST MORE TO STAY COOL THIS SUMMER
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Record temperatures and higher natural-gas prices are lifting power bills.
GRAPHICS

AMERICA’S NATIONAL PARKS ARE BESET BY LONG LINES, INCREASED VANDALISM
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Strain is showing at Zion, Yellowstone and elsewhere: fewer services, reduced staffing, graffiti.
GRAPHICS

CHINA PUTS POWER OF STATE BEHIND AI—AND RISKS STRANGLING IT
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Government support helps China’s generative AI companies gain ground on U.S. competitors, but political controls threaten to weigh them down.
GRAPHICS

RELATED CLOSES IN ON DEAL TO RESCUE NOTORIOUSLY STALLED MASSIVE HOUSING PROJECT
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Work on the sites in Brooklyn, N.Y., has been on pause since late 2023.
GRAPHICS

STUDENTS, COMMUNITY MEMBERS RALLY AT STATE HOUSE IN SUPPORT OF PALESTINE
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Over 500 protestors march through downtown, call for end of U.S. aid to Israel.
REPORTING

TAS ALLEGE JOB UNCERTAINTY, REDUCED HOURS IN BIOLOGY COURSE, UNEXPECTED TERMINATION IN PREVIOUSLY PLANNED ENGINEERING COURSE
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
TAs from BIOL 0200 report hour cuts; TAs for previously planned ENGN 0030 report job loss last spring
GRAPHICS

CS TAS HAVE A NEW UNION CONTRACT. WHAT COMES NEXT?
THE BROWN DAILY HERALD
Contract secures pay increases, outlines job responsibilities
REPORTING