Students should be allowed to study abroad in Israel
Imagine this scenario: You are a third-year student hoping to study abroad in Italy.
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Imagine this scenario: You are a third-year student hoping to study abroad in Italy.
There are memes all over the internet that poke fun at the situation when someone receives a holiday card. Instead of reading the card, the recipient’s mind is focused on the subsequent gift. Memes are funny only because they’re relatable. However, to the children of Manzini, Swaziland, this couldn’t be further from the truth.
It is not breaking news that college years are filled with wild emotions.
Presidential candidate Donald Trump took a big hit in Wisconsin, and now his resilience is questionable. He was hurt in nearly every demographic category. While not a major blow, this loss does stump his momentum. Maybe his loss is a result of his inability to behave in a presidential manner, or more simply, to behave in a proper manner. Concerns about Trump’s campaign organization are not erroneous, even as he has attributed it to his disagreement with a party that treats him unfairly. His slip-ups (think: his tangled stance on abortion and issues with his campaign manager) are not easily looked over. However, his lead remains daunting.
Madrid, London, Paris and Brussels…will it ever end? Last Tuesday, innocent civilians in Belgium were terrorized as horrifying attacks killed dozens in a Brussels airport and a subway station.
I’d be lying if I said I don’t feel sheepish, maybe even insecure, when I tell people I’m undecided about my intended major. In a data-driven culture where studying science, technology, engineering or math (otherwise known as STEM) is deemed both promising and prestigious, a stigma against undecided or humanities-driven students has arisen. I have fallen victim to this stigma, and I want to make amends for doing so.
If you have shopped in a grocery store within the last six months, you have undoubtedly come across products displaying the label “non-GMO” or “GMO-free,” meaning they are not genetically modified organisms. For years past, genetically engineered food has been thought of as a sort of “Frankenfood” by the public. However, contrary to this seemingly popular belief, the technology’s monumental promise is clearer than ever before.
“Communication is key,” a phrase we are probably all too familiar with. Whether it is coming from our soccer coach from grade school, or our current academic advisors attempting to convince us that never contacting them is simply not to our benefit, such a statement is bound to be heard. It is human nature to communicate, to collaborate, to conspire. However, it is also human nature to perceive ourselves as more correct than the next person. So often we value our own opinion over differing ones, and become offended by views that do not match our own.