Column: Republicans ignore college students
By Nick Vogt | Jan. 13, 2016I don’t like watching the television set and seeing potential leaders speak only to the outgoing generation, rather than the incoming generation.
I don’t like watching the television set and seeing potential leaders speak only to the outgoing generation, rather than the incoming generation.
Tuesday night, South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley will be center stage in the national political discussion.
Depending on where they call home, students probably heard very different versions of President Obama's executive action on gun control that was announced over winter break.
Should there even be a mandatory university-wide attendance policy?
Last semester, the Republican primary race took a turn for the strange and hateful. Then it took another turn.
Recently, Donald Trump has found himself at the center of another debate about political correctness.
Safe Surrender options are available in all 50 states, so why are they not advertised more effectively?
In the holiday season, a time of rejoicing and sharing, let us not succumb to the often inescapable grasp of political correctness, lest we destroy what makes us so unique and lose sight of the holiday spirit.
There seems to be an attitude surrounding the Millennials that reflects a rejection of the historic way of living.
Everyone’s reason for traveling is different, but I would encourage you to save that money you would spend on a first class seat, safari, or resort and invest in local businesses or a project abroad.
Coffee, energy drinks and Adderall are staples of exams weeks at campuses nationwide.
As most people know, the American prison system has some real problems.
Here’s my pitch — register to vote in SC and vote in the upcoming presidential primary.
Picture, for me, a terrorist.
One manner in which hegemony manifests itself is the societal push towards conformity to the dialect of Standard English.
Mr. Ray must be a parent; his article reads like a father bending a toddler across his knee.
Global terrorism is not going away any time soon, but we cannot fight it with the same losing tactics that we’ve used since Vietnam.