Trigger Warnings are Bad, Voluntary or Not
Exposure to only the ideas one agrees with or finds “comforting” invalidates the entire purpose of a university education.
Exposure to only the ideas one agrees with or finds “comforting” invalidates the entire purpose of a university education.
Today is the first day of Student Assembly (SA) elections, which are open until May 4 at noon. Accordingly, the Cornell Review reached out for interviews from each candidate for SA President and SA Executive Vice President.
The Review interviewed the two candidates for the Student Assembly’s number two job: Executive Vice President. This article contains their responses on current issues and plans of action should they be elected.
Of interest to Cornell, authorized capital spending includes $2.4 billion for transformation, maintenance, and preservation projects at SUNY and CUNY campuses across the state.
The policy is scheduled to end on May 20, 2023, the end of the spring semester.
Cornell’s free speech revival is far from complete, and not all of the recent developments are good.
Representatives debated “free speech absolutist language,” rejected including an anti-heckler clause, and wondered if the university can ever be politically neutral.
Heard at Cornell is a column that regularly quotes important statements made by Cornellians. This excerpt is taken from the Comments of the Concerned Alumni, authored by Robert Platt Esq. ’73, JD ’76 and Elias Lehrer, ’98. Mr. Platt is a former trustee. The statement was posted to the comment section of UA Resolution 7: Right to Protest, which is scheduled for consideration today.
This organization is a registered student organization of Cornell University