OPINION: A "cents-ible" look at SOBAC
By Page Soper and Muhammad Coovadia | April 9, 2019After this year’s 45-hour-long SOBAC weekend, it became abundantly clear that student organizations need more funding.
After this year’s 45-hour-long SOBAC weekend, it became abundantly clear that student organizations need more funding.
This month, I am especially committed to honoring womxn of color.
The term “Reichstag fire” refers to a false premise used by an authority to implement “emergency” or extreme measures.
We need a culture of activism that gives life to conversation.
There’s so much more to life, and even to news, than the trending story. We just need to look for it.
Students and faculty should expect to hear someone who acknowledges the positive and negative traits of the viewpoints they are arguing against.
Claims made in a recent op-ed are brazen and the piece is constructed almost entirely from speculation, hyperbole and anecdote.
A humanitarian crisis is defined by its urgency and its severity. It is also defined by power — who has it and how it is used.
Moving forward, how can we make sure that marginalized groups are included and are at the center of environmental discourse?
A non-exhaustive, comprehensive guide of major discursive blind spots that permeate discussions of current events and how to deal with them.
UR – at its foundation and in its everyday practices – elevates the status of white heterosexual cisgender men at the expense of everyone else.
A letter about recent events from the Office of the Chaplaincy.
A response to the article, “Balancing fatherhood and classes: A nontraditional student’s experience at UR."
I am unwilling to hold the president of the U.S. to the same standard as the man on the street, or even a backbencher congresswoman.
As time has gone on, my passion for UR dies a little bit every day because of the lack of social inclusivity and opportunities for students.
The UR College Democrats and College Republicans endorse the resolution to defend speech protected by the First Amendment on campus.
I’ve never felt threatened or intimidated for voicing my conservative beliefs in the classroom or in The Collegian.
We can promote both free speech and inclusivity, but we have to define what that looks like and what we expect from our community.
Whether you agree with the current state of affairs or not, it is your right to vote and have your voice heard.
As long as a candidate does not advocate policy you find so repulsive that you could not stomach voting for them, vote for the virtuous candidate.