Bagli’s recent piece about Stuyvesant Town relates to Fox’s story in that both discuss important social issues. Previously, housing was an issue of race and now it has evolved into a struggle of economic class that determines who lives there. Bagli targets the conflict of income within different socioeconomic classes while Fox focuses on a housing complex’s history and her grandparent’s activism to allow black families to live there. Traditionally, Stuyvesant Town was an area that housed World War II veterans and now its function for the next 20 years is still to provide and preserve affordable housing to middle class families. It no longer is a place where discrimination is prevalent or where significant tax breaks and financial support is given to veterans. It’s a high-profile complex with rents of $4,200 or more, which is a lot for middle-income families to afford. In both pieces, the issue of eviction is mentioned to show residents had a hard time fitting in and staying in the area.