AUSG Judicial Board finds Mascaro innocent of all coercion charges
Clarification appended.
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Nine candidates took the stage on Saturday as AU College Democrats hosted an SG Candidates Forum prior to releasing its candidate endorsements on Monday morning. Nicole Gray, communications director for AU Dems, and Diane Roznowski, AU Dems press secretary, moderated the event and asked candidates questions from club members and Twitter submissions.
Student Government presidential candidate and sophomore Will Mascaro’s campaign was temporarily suspended this past weekend after a series of complaints were filed with the SG Judicial Board, accusing Mascaro of pressuring other candidates to opt out of their races.
University President Neil Kerwin released his long term plan for diversity and inclusion on Feb. 29, outlining the immediate steps he plans to take to build a more welcoming and supportive university.
The Undergraduate Senate passed a referendum on Feb. 21, which, if students pass in the spring, would eliminate class councils completely from Student Government. The referendum would also remove the ability of a school council president from providing their consent to the appointment of a senator, according to the bill’s author, senior class Senator and Class of 2016 President Kevin Michael Levy.
Since shutting down in November due to fraudulent activity, the Student Government Jobs Board was officially re-launched online on Feb. 15 with new security precautions in place.
Throughout the month of February, AU Recreational Sports and Fitness will host the Student Step Challenge, encouraging students to remain active during winter months.
Indie-rockers Alt-J took to the 9:30 Club stage for two sold out performances last week, giving fans a sight and sound they’d never seen the likes of.
There is nothing if not an abundance of health information at our fingertips these days. Yet, information is conflicting — carbs are good one day, bad the next; coffee cures cancer if you have three cups, but causes cancer if you have four; no one really knows the health benefits of dark chocolate. We can feel so overwhelmed that we don’t even care anymore.
I don’t believe any college students who say they are not stressed. College practically breeds stress.
One of the most disturbing and complex questions that have puzzled literary critics for centuries is: Did Shakespeare really write all of his plays and sonnets? “Anonymous” offers an answer to the thought-provoking question.
Stereotyping is bad.
Infinitely bizarre, “Restless” is an inspirational romantic drama directed by Gus Van Sant (“Good Will Hunting,” “Milk”) that takes us inside the world of two ill-fated teenagers in their struggle for peace and happiness.
There is no denying it: college students love their caffeine. When life is full of late nights, procrastinated homework assignments and cramming way too many things in 24 hours, it seems impossible to make it through the day without it.
It always starts the same way: new school year, new health goals. Eating the cookies from TDR only on the weekend, going to every single Zumba class the gym offers and trading in your beloved Diet Cokes for water are just a few examples.
As a college student, it’s hard to stay informed on current health and wellness issues — whether they are issues of personal health and wellness or the wider issue of the health of our planet.
The word “away” is personal. I can feel “away” only a few miles from home, but also be “away” living in London, yet still feel at home. However, the farthest away I have ever gone, and the farthest away I have ever felt, was during my recent trip to Turkey.
I often feel I spend an inordinate amount of time strategizing how I can see as much of Europe as possible while abroad. However, as I was recently reminded, with this mindset it is sometimes easy to forget how many great places are only a short train or bus ride away from London.
Though it has been statistically proven that traveling and living in any foreign country — be it Sweden or somewhere in the middle of the Sahara — will raise confidence levels, global perspective and even self-esteem, all study abroad programs are not created equal.
Comfort is a surprisingly multi-faceted concept. We elect to put ourselves in new, unknown situations with the hopes of being able to acclimate and transition so that eventually they become comfortable and familiar. But, if you’re like me, as soon as you feel comfortable again you start looking for a new adventure.