Under the Radar

The Importance of Protest on Campus

Of all the criticism lobbed at hunger strikers and their supporters these past few weeks, most troubling is the charge that strikers were myopically and hyperbolically obsessed about a few faculty hires and texts in light of the real world issues like the presidential campaign or the war in Iraq or the human rights violations in Burma.

Do Your Part in the Strike

In planting themselves at the heart of our University on South Lawn, the hunger strikers serve as a jarring reminder of our urgent need to self-reflect and re-envision ourselves as a community.

Put Money and Action Where Our Mouths Are

In the past weeks’ furor about nooses and graffiti, which dramatize age-old concerns about our Eurocentric curriculum, paternalistic gentrification efforts, and feelings of marginalization from students and faculty, Columbia has had to defend and confront its legacy of diversity and inclusion more so now than ever before.

Dispatches From an Activist’s Notebook

Wednesday had that eerie, out-of-this world feeling that can only be the stuff of protests.

Something to Talk About

Those of us who were even semi-awake last fall remember the last time Jim Gilchrist and the Minuteman Project came to campus.

Turning a Blind Eye to Color

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