Kaiden J. Yu ’23 documents a march on the National Mall opposing vaccine mandates.
Kaiden J. Yu ’23 recaps the 2021 cross country season with photos from several meets.
Reid Alexander ’22 and Kaiden J. Yu ’23 share photos of seniors at the Senior Run-In, First Friday and the flag football tournament.
Kaiden J. Yu ’23 follows the first-ever Senior Walk around campus with a camera.
Kaiden J. Yu ’23 shares photos of posters from a D.C. protest against anti-Asian racism and violence.
Kaiden J. Yu ’23 tours a diminished high school building through an edited lens.
You probably remember where you were when you heard the news. After four long days of vote-counting, the election was called for Joe Biden on Saturday, November 7. The news spread quickly. Many found out not from their TVs or phones but from a crescendo of honking horns or shouts from strangers. People flooded outside, their instinct to see other faces, to share the moment. In our city, celebrations erupted. For many, it may have felt like the first bit of good news in a long time. People shouted, cried, hugged each other, banged pots together, danced, sang. Among them