With results coming in on the student referenda on NROTC, it looks like the return of the military program has been dealt a blow, albeit by a narrower margin than many expected. This is as it should be—“don’t ask, don’t tell” is a foolish and discriminatory policy, and it would be nonsensical to reward any institution for such retrograde practices.
With results coming in on the student referenda on NROTC, it looks like the return of the military program has been dealt a blow, albeit by a narrower margin than many expected. This is as it should be—“don’t ask, don’t tell” is a foolish and discriminatory policy, and it would be nonsensical to reward any institution for such retrograde practices.
A much-debated student survey on the possible return of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps to campus will open online next Monday, according to members of the student councils organizing it.
A much-debated student survey on the possible return of the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps to campus will open online next Monday, according to members of the student councils organizing it.
As the date approaches of the survey to gauge student opinion on the possible return of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, the first organized discussion of the issue raised criticism that r
As the date approaches of the survey to gauge student opinion on the possible return of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps, the first organized discussion of the issue raised criticism that r
The debate over the return of Naval Reserve Officers’ Training Corps to Columbia has raised important questions about our University and its students, and the way in which we influence, and are inf
The debate over the return of Naval Reserve Officers’ Training Corps to Columbia has raised important questions about our University and its students, and the way in which we influence, and are inf
Long before my letters of acceptance and rejection from universities trickled in, I was sitting in a café with my Columbia interviewer—who, herself, had graduated not long ago.
Long before my letters of acceptance and rejection from universities trickled in, I was sitting in a café with my Columbia interviewer—who, herself, had graduated not long ago.