Column: Indictment stirs abortion debate
Young people should join the abortion debate
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Young people should join the abortion debate
If you walk to class along Greene Street most mornings, you cannot fail to notice the people preaching on the street or handing out religious materials. You also cannot fail to notice that they are ignored by the vast majority of students passing by. Despite being a practicing Christian, I admit that I have, for the most part, paid them little attention myself, either because I am legitimately trying to get somewhere quickly or because I am somewhat embarrassed by the heavy-handed methods often employed by those of my faith in such preaching.
Anyone who paid attention to news coverage during the last months of 2015 will remember that Europe’s immigration crisis was (and will almost certainly continue to be) a major topic. The massive influx of refugees from the Middle East is wearing down European willingness and capacity to receive more asylum seekers. However, much less attention was given to the reverse process — the thousands of young people leaving the (relative) comfort and safety of the West to jump headlong into the Syrian bloodbath.
The West has been left in shock by the Paris attack, only the latest in a string of massacres by the self-proclaimed Islamic State, just as it has been each time terrorists perpetrate this kind of vicious atrocity.
Most of us have heard of the famous Stanford experiment held in the 1960s and 1970s in which children were given one marshmallow and told that they would receive another if they didn't eat it for about 15 minutes.
Graham Glusman: Yes
This is a response to "Head to head: Is college necessary for success?" that ran on Oct. 27.
The sexual revolution was supposed to liberate women from oppressive social restrictions on what they did with their bodies.
As I walk around the USC campus, I can’t help but notice the ubiquity of curse words in normal conversation. Many times in passing I hear — out of perhaps a 15-second excerpt of a dialogue — two or three f-bombs dropped.
Uber, an app connecting users with rides, has become increasingly popular among college students.