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Your Rights as a Cornell Student Protestor
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As protestors challenge Cornell’s Interim Expressive Activity Policy, The Sun outlines the legal rights of student demonstrators.
The Cornell Daily Sun (https://cornellsun.com/tag/cornell-sun/)
As protestors challenge Cornell’s Interim Expressive Activity Policy, The Sun outlines the legal rights of student demonstrators.
“A great majority of the provisions in the USMCA are quite similar or identical to those in NAFTA … and I would call it a rebranding of NAFTA,” Lee said.
“I think that was the beginning of the decline of my mental health — which for most Cornell students isn’t necessarily great to begin with.”
Although necessary to reduce infections, Papachryssanthou compared such [health department] bulletins to “Scarlet Letters,” which have significant long-term impacts because “people just won’t forget that someone was infected there.”
Bleak. Miserable. Chaotic. These words best describe the current state of what has become the worst American economy in recent memory, according to three Cornell professors.
There is no other institution but the people. We are the ones who have to guarantee that things work. Passing a good law is just the beginning. The people being asked to implement that law are often the same people who are against these laws anyway.
It was a seemingly normal day, a Friday, last Friday to be exact. Classes were done for the week but the day was full of meetings. During a break in one, I happened to get on Facebook and see an article in this here Sun about some Black Students Union. Of course, I was confused because Cornell doesn’t have a Black Students Union. We have Black Students United, but no Black Students Union.