Letter to the editor: Student Body President Reedy Newton welcomes students back to campus
By Courtesy of Reedy Newton | Aug. 21, 2022Student Body President Reedy Newton welcomes students to campus for the beginning of her year of leadership.
Student Body President Reedy Newton welcomes students to campus for the beginning of her year of leadership.
Addressed to President Bob Caslen, Mattie Johnson Roberson asks the university to rename the fitness center to the Celia Dial Saxon Wellness and Fitness Center. Johnson is the president of the Ward One Reunion Organization which collects the history on the community.
Co-chairs of the Richard T. Greener Memorial Committee share the letter they sent to President Bob Caslen and the board of trustees this morning.
Now is not the time to be “color blind,” especially when black USC students are reminded of their race every day.
McMaster's force of the presidential vote for Caslen is not what USC needs or wants.
Ride-sharing apps have caused too many problems which could easily be fixed.
The Student Government Fall Awards was meant to be a tasteful ceremony, but it turned into a drunken nightmare.
Second-year law student John Gardner responds to Christina Roffe's column, " Students should have more extra credit opportunities."
Emotional support animals are an important, but overlooked, aspect of mental healthcare.
U.S. prison suicide is a problem we don't take seriously enough.
Panic about the strike on Syria overlooks some important factors.
Dating apps aren't great experiences for asexual people.
Jake Holmgreen, a third-year political science student, writes about the anniversary of the Balfour Declaration and how it should remind Americans of the importance of supporting Israel.
Deborah Beck, executive director of Student Health Services, responds to concerns about mental healthcare on campus.
DACA is worth saving, particularly for Dreamers enrolled in college.
To do away with the monuments of our past is cultural annihilation.
The situation with North Korea is far more complicated than it appears.