EDITORIAL: Kotlikoff did nothing wrong
On the evening of Thursday, April 30th, Cornell President Michael I. Kotlikoff left an event held by the…
On the evening of Thursday, April 30th, Cornell President Michael I. Kotlikoff left an event held by the…
On Thursday evening, the Student Assembly voted down Resolution 51, calling for Cornell to divest from, “systematic violence against civilians in Gaza.”
The Cornell Review is hosting an essay contest in honor of the theme of this year “Freedom of Expression”. All are welcome to submit an essay and have a chance to win $500!
Racial discrimination in college admissions has been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Now is the time for unity and levelheaded conversation about the best way forward for Cornell.
Resolution 31 is an embarrassment, particularly for students. In fact, this debacle is only an embarrassment for Cornell insofar as how poorly it reflects on the caliber of Cornell students. Cornell students, if the Student Assembly is to be believed, would give up their freedoms—to learn, listen, speak and engage—to avert even the slightest discomfort.
We will get things wrong, and our audience does us a service by correcting our inaccuracies. Such corrections are most constructively delivered in emails to the Editor in Chief or a response published as a Letter to the Editor.
The troublemakers in question should be ashamed of themselves. While shouting that Coulter’s “speech is violence,” they assault the very basis upon which the nation stands.
In our deeply polarized society, Cornell is drowning in demands that it take stands on the issues of…
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