MOORE: Don’t fall into the trap of student loan relief
By Jessica Moore | August 30, 2022Simply put, college needs to be more affordable.
Simply put, college needs to be more affordable.
The University should work more on collaborating with the likes of Morven Kitchen Garden — an organic garden run on volunteer support in the Charlottesville area.
One person alone may not be able to make a difference, but together, we have the power to start a movement.
Incoming Black students deserve to know that they belong here and that the organizations that exist to support them are valued on Grounds.
Parents cannot dictate the life of their college student.
At the heart of this injustice is the notion that heterosexual relationships are permitted, but relationships involving same-sex partners are inherently explicit.
We are entering the seventh year of UPC failing to bring a headlining woman to Grounds, and the ninth year of no solo headlining woman.
Increasing diversity in body shapes and sizes in the medical industry would likely do a lot of good in decreasing fatphobia in healthcare.
With the added knowledge we now have since Black Lives Matter has become mainstream, it is necessary to take a more critical look into policing in the summer of 2017.
Charlottesville is no stranger to providing a space for hatred to preside.
People have value outside of their ability to work, and yet, the American employer-sponsored health system does not reflect that.
Grounds are perhaps pretty when there’s no construction, but what current student knows a University free of construction?
Most importantly, however, the adoption of this policy serves as an example of the Participatory Action Research method, which is not only highly effective but also unique.
Every accused student at the University has the right to a trial.
Strict gun control is needed in this country. Without it, these horrors will continue.
We need legislation that prioritizes biodiversity and defends against agroterrorism.
As a writer, editor and someone finally finding somewhere she belonged in the U.Va. ecosystem, The Cavalier Daily taught me to appreciate the many ways we depend on one another.
In my journey on The Cavalier Daily and in my journal of self-acceptance as a queer person of color, the more I embraced each, the more I felt at home in both.
I am proud to call myself opinionated and I encourage present and future opinion columnists to embrace this word as well.
To the people who put up with me and my antics throughout my time on The Cavalier Daily — thank you for giving me a home at this school.