HAGMAGID: We must expect more of our institutional leaders
By Salimah Hagmagid | January 29, 2024This is a conversation about truth. How do we define truth, what does truth mean to us as students and who do we look to for the truth?
This is a conversation about truth. How do we define truth, what does truth mean to us as students and who do we look to for the truth?
As news continuously pours in, it is difficult to find a shred of optimism within the heap of despair and understandably so.
Our responsibility as a University community is to conjure up new ways of imagining inclusivity, solidarity, and infrastructural systems of support for all of its students, staff, and faculty, particularly those who are marginalized and face daily struggles because of it.
During this time of difficulty, the University that we have all come to love and cherish is silently robbing its students.
After having dedicated countless hours towards causes you care about, it’s only fair that you get the chance to be recognized for what you’ve achieved.
It is only fair that the University charge students online tuition rates while these changes are in place.
In acknowledging the hardships we once bared while attending the University, we recognize you all are negotiating a different world, culture and experience with which we have no familiarity.
We must be mindful of the different experiences that others may have had and not assert our own experience as the only one that matters.
Overcoming the challenge of low voter turnout is vital to creating change and generating improvement in institutions like Honor.
By the time they leave, students should have a broader view of who they consider “their people.”
To say that the University is sacrificing academics for athletics ignores all of the positives the department of athletics does to enhance the athlete experience and their futures.
HRL’s process in handling my case was sloppy, self-serving and contradictory to their own words.
The irony of the MRC and the president’s executive order is that they both seek to stifle their adversaries’ speech.
Without climate action, the U.S. will continue to suffer immense losses.
The newspaper’s work prompted the occasional controversy from the earliest days of the publication’s life.