NEWS
September 2021
Medgar Evers College Gives Higher Learning A Brand-New Meaning
By Michael Omoruan
It was on April 30 2021, that then-Governor of New York Andrew Cuomo signed legislation that legalized the use and possession of marijuana for adults 21 years and older. According to the Marijuana Moment, a news publication focused on stories on cannabis, from January to March 2021. 3,687 possession-related summons have been issued by the New York Police Department with the majority issued to black and hispanic people… [Read More]
March 2021
Asian Business Owners Respond To Recent Surge In Hate Crimes
By Michael Omoruan
Hate crimes in major cities in the United States such as Los Angeles, California, and New York City involving Asian people has increased by almost 150 percent from 3 reported crimes to 26 and 7 to more than double at 15 respectively, according to a study conducted by… [Read More]
October 2020
New Clock Counts Down Climate Disaster
By Zarin Siddiqua
In Sept. 2020, artist-activists Gan Golan and Andrew Boyd unveiled a digital clock in Union Square, Manhattan that counts down 7 years, 101 days, 17 hours, 29 minutes, and 22 seconds until the effects of Global Warming become irreversible… [Read More]
Lehman Students Fear The Impact Of Justice Ginsburg’s Death
By Rebekah Gamble
The death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Sept. 18 devastated many Americans. For Lehman students, 68 percent of whom are female, the news caused a wave of uncertainty regarding the future of gender equality… [Read More]
Students, Presidents, & Union Reps Discuss The Impact Of COVID At Lehman
By Emmet O’Boy
College students have seen their worlds change drastically throughout the COVID-19 crisis with dorms shut down, classrooms closed, and social lives screeching to a halt. This has prompted them to question the new academic order they find… [Read More]
September 2020
City Communities Feel Unheard With Schools Reopening
By Rebekah Gamble
New York City schools reopened on Sept. 21, 2020, after Mayor Bill de Blasio promised that its 1,606 public schools would offer “blended learning,” a hybrid of in-person and remote learning. Parents and guardians remain concerned that their children’s health as well as their education will suffer… [Read More]
Lehman Students Oppose Voter Suppression
By Zarin Siddiqua
Five weeks away from the presidential election on Nov. 3, 2020, many Lehman students fear that voter suppression will get even worse due to the current pandemic… [Read More]
May/June 2020
Social Distancing Is Putting Mental Health At Risk
By Zarin Siddiqua
“The whole idea of normal is just so chaotic. I’m the type of person who enjoys going outside and having a productive schedule, but now every day is the same,” said Brian Mendoza, a Lehman junior majoring in English. “It makes me feel anxious and it’s hurting my education because I no longer have the motivation.” Since New York Governor Andrew Cuomo temporarily banned… [Read More]
Domestic Violence Spikes During Pandemic
By July Torres
“No victims should be trapped with their abusers. It’s inhumane,” said Danielle Sosa, a Lehman junior majoring in social work. But as coronavirus policies force people to stay home, that is exactly what is happening… [Read More]
Pandemic Worsens New York City Economic Crisis
By Thalia Mallol
The pandemic has pushed New Yorkers’ cost of living crisis from bad to worse. Before COVID-19 hit, the cost of living in the city was steadily increasing. Now widespread unemployment has deepened people’s financial distress… [Read More]
Newly Approved Home COVID-19 Tests Not Reliable
By Sally Barrilla
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved COVID-19 home tests on April 23 to ensure accurate and reliable sampling for people staying at home. But despite this legal authorization, several essential employees have mixed feelings about these home tests… [Read More]
April 2020
Lehman Goes Remote Amid COVID-19 Crisis
By Deanna Garcia
“We’re careful not to say that Lehman is ‘closed’ because we are still an active community – we’re still Lehman and we’re still here for our students even though most of us are not physically on campus,” said Dean of Students Stanley Bazile. Lehman’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic was followed by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s decision to close all CUNY and SUNY… [Read More]
Healthcare Workers Overwhelmed With COVID-19 Crisis
By Denise Phillip
“The hysteria nurses are feeling stems from the guidelines constantly being changed by the CDC about the way COVID-19 is transmitted; we feel exposed,” said Vinessa Lee, a 5-year veteran Registered Nurse at NY Presbyterian Hospital who also tested positive for the virus. “First, they thought the virus was airborne and we needed the N95 respiratory mask. Then, they told us… [Read More]
Kingsbridge Armory Set To Open As KNIC In 2022 Currently Serves As Food Supplier
By Perla Tolentino
Though temporarily on hold due to the Coronavirus crisis, construction of the Kingsbridge National Ice Center (KNIC) is set to start this year and open to the public in 2022. In the meantime, its immediate role in the community is to serve as a food distribution center… [Read More]
March 2020
The Final Goodbyes Of Basketball Legend, Kobe Bryant
By July Torres
As family, friends, and fans gathered at the Feb. 24 memorial service for legendary basketball player Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna “Gigi” Bryant, Lehman students also mourned the sudden death of the fallen Lakers star. Bryant tragically passed away after a… [Read More]
Lehman Students Praise Bag Ban
By Zarin Siddiqua
Since March 1, New York has banned single-use plastic bags in stores, and many Lehman students say it’s about time. The “Bring Your Own Bag” (BYOBag) law is designed to promote the use of reusable bags. According to the Department of Environmental Conservation, 23 billion plastic bags are typically used… [Read More]
PTS3 STEM Program Funding Cut Will Hurt STEM Students
By David Kolade
Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) students will lose major opportunities to gain research experience on campus when the Pathways to Student STEM Success’ (PTS3) program funding comes to an end in Sept. 2021… [Read More]
Lehman Women Celebrate Empowerment
By Denise Phillip
Women’s History Month is especially relevant to Lehman students, since 68 percent of them are female--a higher proportion than the national average of 56 percent, according to pewresearch.org. The 2020 theme for the month is “Valiant Women of the Vote,” which pays homage to the women who fought for… [Read More]
February 2020
CUNY Students Protest Against Privatization Of Campus And Tuition Hike
By Melissa Tejada
Two months after the Professional Staff Congress (PSC) and City University of New York (CUNY) agreed to a new contract that they promise will fulfill 30,000 full and part-time faculty and professional staff, staff and students are still asking whether the contract meets their hopes… [Read More]
Lehmanites Condemn Racist Responses To Coronavirus Fears
By Sally Barrilla
“Personally, I haven’t encountered any prejudice, but I have heard of some cases going around in New York City, like a taxi driver wouldn’t let an Asian lady in,” said Jayke Lim, an Asian-American Lehman computer science sophomore. “I understand the fear, but it’s not right to deny services to Asians thinking that they might have the virus.” Increased fear of the coronavirus has… [Read More]
Lehman Library’s Design Fast-Forwards From 1980 To 2020
By Deanna Garcia
With redesigned floors, a modernized circulation, question mark-shaped reference desks, contemporary study-group rooms, accent-furnished seating areas and everywhere outlets, the first floor of Lehman’s Leonard Lief Library officially left the ’80s after a year of… [Read More]
December 2019
Adjuncts Demanded $7K or Strike… They Get $6,875 Instead
By Deanna Garcia
Two months after the Professional Staff Congress (PSC) and City University of New York (CUNY) agreed to a new contract that they promise will fulfill 30,000 full and part-time faculty and professional staff, staff and students are still asking whether the contract meets their hopes… [Read More]
Lehman Women’s Tennis Team Won More This Season
By Esgardo Castelan
“I’ve seen the changes by looking at my stats; I won three games last year, but this year I won eight,” said Celine Figueroa, a Lehman junior majoring in exercise science. Figueroa is one of three Lehman women’s tennis team athletes who received recognition at… [Read More]
Central Park Five Exoneree Preaches Reframing The System At Lehman
By Jaquira Truesdale
On Nov. 21, Lehman College’s Recital Hall overflowed with Lehman students and staff eager to hear Yusef Salaam, one of the Central Park Five exonerees falsely accused of raping and injuring… [Read More]
November 2019
Suffering In Silence: Uyghur Muslims Kept In Concentration Camps By China
By Zarin Saddiqua
“It’s heartbreaking seeing that no one is aware of what’s happening,” said Ghofran Nagi, an undecided sophomore at Lehman, of China’s systematic targeting of its indigenous Muslim populations. “I wish that people would share this with others and come up with ideas to spread awareness… [Read More]
Homeland Security Might Be Browsing Your Instagram
By Sumali Ali
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is creating surveillance programs that can monitor social media activity to rule out foreign threats, and the possibility has Lehman students alarmed… [Read More]
Lehman Students Angered By Reversal of LGBTQ Rights
By Jaquira Truesdale
On Nov. 22, the White House will strip away nondiscrimination requirements for LGBTQ citizens, and Lehman students are outraged. According to the Human Rights Campaign, the legal change will allow the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) grant recipients and foster… [Read More]
Indigenous Communities Fight To Ban Columbus Day
By July Torres
Lehman students stand with efforts to remove Columbus Day as a federal holiday. “What Europeans did to Native Americans shouldn’t be celebrated,” said Jocelyn Rodriguez, a Lehman freshman majoring in social work. “I mean, there were people there already, so he didn’t discover anything… [Read More]
Jerome Park Reservoir Renovation Raises Concerns About Access
By Lysa Vanible
“It’s heartbreaking seeing that no one is aware of what’s happening,” said Ghofran Nagi, an undecided sophomore at Lehman, of China’s systematic targeting of its indigenous Muslim populations. “I wish that people would share this with others and come up with ideas to spread awareness… [Read More]
October 2019
Lehman Completes Renovation Of Performing Arts Center
By Deanna Garcia
On its 40th anniversary, Lehman’s Center for the Performing Arts celebrated the completion of a $15.4 million renovation with a grand opening and ribbon-cutting ceremony on Sept. 19.
Started in November of 2017, the upgrades include… [Read More]
Lehmanites Question Petition To Troll Trump With Street Name Change
By Sally Barrilla
A petition to rename the section of 5th Ave. that runs along Trump Tower after former President Barack Obama has gone viral, but Lehman students are divided on its impact.
Created by award-winning director and actor, Elizabeth Rowin via the sociopolitical advocacy platform MoveOn.org, the initiative calls for… [Read More]
District 15 Candidate Prioritizes Student Debt Relief
By Hector Bello
Jonathan Ortiz is running for Bronx District 15’s Congressional seat in the 2020 Democratic primaries on a campaign to eliminate student loan debt, and Lehman students welcomed the initiative… [Read More]
Online Platforms Are Changing Advocacy Movements
By Mayte Peña
Social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram are not only used to post vacation photos; they are now major platforms that prioritize social issues. Social media has changed the way activism works today for millions of users around the world, including many Lehmanites… [Read More]
Bronx’s University Avenue To Be Named After Legendary Artist Stan Lee
By Sally Barrilla
Bronx residents around University Avenue should expect to pass by the “Stan Lee Way” in the spring of next year. The street’s name change, which will cover the section between Brandt Place and West 176th St. in University Heights, was proposed by Bronx Councilmember Fernando Cabrera and accepted […]
Lehmanites Urgently Want Better Gun Control
By Zarin Siddiqua
August’s series of alleged hate-crime shootings have left Lehman students feeling sadness and panic about lack of adequate gun control. Most recently, on Aug.31, sevenpeople were killed and many injured by a shooter in Odessa, Texas […]
Lehman’s Chemistry Department Recognized For Successful Pre-Med Program
By Beauty Kolade
Lehman’s pre-med program was recently ranked 16th out of the 20 best pre-med college programs, according to onlinecollegeplan.com. Lehman was the only CUNY school featured in these rankings, as published on Jan. 9, and […]
NYC’s Proposed Financial Plans Put More Costs On CUNY Students
By Felicha C. Stevens
While New York Mayor Bill de Blasio’s ten-year plan for the city, FY20, makes big promises about greater affordability, his 2020 budget proposal calls for large funding cuts to city agencies including CUNY, Citywide Administrative Services […]
For Lehman Students, Higher Minimum Wage Means Cuts In Hours
By Juan A. Santos
“Superiors decided to cut personnel by keeping 3 out of 4 employees who will now have to work more,” said Lehman sophomore Ahsanul Hague, when asked how the recent rise in New York State’s minimum wage impacted […]
As Demand Grows, Lehman’s Supply Of Parking Spaces Gets Scarcer
By Deanna Garcia
Over the last five years, Lehman’s enrollment has increased from 12,398 to the current total of 14,787 students, according to its Department of Institutional Advancement, and yet the college’s parking lot remains […]
Trump’s Emergency Declaration Upsets Lehman Students
By J. Manuel Rivera Cortes
“Isn’t that unconstitutional?” asked Lehman sophomore and psychology major, Ana Gomez, about President Trump’s declaration of a national emergency on Feb. 15. During his speech that day at the White House Rose Garden, the […]
NY’s Tuition-Free Program Has Not Relieved CUNY Students’ Financial Burden
By Perla Tolentino
New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo introduced the Excelsior Scholarship two years ago to much fanfare as a program promising tuition liberation to all N.Y. four-year colleges. But while Cuomo’s big offer was said to be […]
Former President Bush’s Passing Signals End Of An Era
By J. Manuel Rivera Cortes
“The man served his country for over 40 years. He wasn’t the best president, but he served our country well,” said sophomore Orlando Green, a sociology major, regarding the passing of President George Herbert Walker Bush. On […]
CUNY $6M Grant Will Help Revamp Lehman’s Child Care Center
By Perla Tolentino
The U.S. Department of Education awarded CUNY a $6 million grant exclusively for child care centers. Lehman, Brooklyn, Baruch, Bronx Community, Kingsborough, and LaGuardia colleges were announced as recipients of the […]
Lehman Soccer Regroups After Playoffs Loss
By Emmet O’Boy
After three long months, Lehman’s men’s soccer season ended at the semifinals of the City University of New York Athletic Conference (CUNYAC) playoffs. After winning the playoffs two years in a row, “this loss was especially […]
Bullet Shatters Glass In Carman Hall
By J. Manuel Rivera Cortes
On Oct. 23, Professor Amod Choudhury discovered a bullet in his office in Carman Hall. “I was on a phone call with the Dean’s office when I noticed a copper-like bullet on the ground near the window,” said Choudhary. Upon further […]
Train Dysfunction Frustrates Lehmanites And Local Riders
By Perla Tolentino
The Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) transports more than 5.6 million New Yorkers on a daily basis. But recently, despite official pledges to improve the system, Lehman students and many other riders suffer the […]
Journalists Offer Advice To Lehman’s Aspiring Journalists
By Hector Bello
Tell new stories and be unstoppable -- this was some of the advice that three MSNBC journalists had for Lehman students hoping to work in media. Daniela Pierre-Bravo, Devyn Rafols-Nuñez, Lauren Coffelt and Leonor Ayala […]
CCNY Campus Goes On Lockdown After Another High School Shooter Scare
By Emmet O’Boy
On the afternoon of Oct. 18, students and residents of the CUNY City College of New York (CCNY) Towers were told via email to stay indoors after students at the adjacent A. Randolph High School reported a possible […]
Dreamers Persist Against Threat Of DACA Termination
By Perla Tolentino
Trump’s attempt to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, has yet to reach a solution either in Congress or the nation’s courts. On Oct. 17, according to the AP, the Justice Department informed the […]
Lehman Students Fear Their Rent Will Triple If HUD Bill Passes
By Juan Vasquez
A new bill from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) calls for a threefold increase in rent for Americans least able to pay. Ben Carson, the Secretary of HUD, presented the bill on April 25. If passed, it will [...]
Locals Fear New Kingsbridge Development Spells Gentrification
By Perla Tolentino
Kingsbridge residents see a construction site at Jerome Ave and West 196th Street as one more sign of encroaching gentrification. According to a January article in The Real Deal New York Real Estate News, the project’s mastermind, Alan [...]
Lehman Food Bank Expands From Energy Bars To Seven Tons Of Food
By Leonel Henriquez
“To be clear, this is Suzette’s baby,” says Assistant Director of Campus Life (CL) David Charcape of CL’s Associate Director Suzette Ramsundar. The program Ramsundar fostered is the Lehman Food Bank. “She has [...]
Bronx Residents And Lehman Students Criticize Kanye’s Pro-Trump Tweets
By Jorel Lonesome
“People viewed Kanye West as an outspoken visionary who rapped about racial issues in his songs, but he has done a complete three-sixty and turned into an ignorant sell out,” says Qianna Stratton, 30, Bronx resident [...]
Governor Hopeful Cynthia Nixon Tackles NYCHA
By Andrea Nieves
Along with calling for functional healthcare, justice and transit systems, New York gubernatorial candidate Cynthia Nixon is taking on the city’s housing authority. For Lehman students who have endured harsh conditions in public [...]
Nixon For Governor? Lehman Students Are On The Fence
By Shaiann Frazier
“The only words in my head are not again,” said Jason Nieves, 27, a Lehman business major. He explained, “it’s not because she is a female, it’s because she is a celebrity. Nixon can have all the qualifications, but it’s the [...]
Target’s Self-Checkout System Frustrates Workers And Customers
By Perla Tolentino
The Marble Hill Target on 225th street in the Bronx recently introduced new self-checkout registers to improve customers’ shopping experience, but the changeover has disappointed many workers and local shoppers. Their [...]
Bronx Residents Oppose FCC’s Eradication Of Net Neutrality
By Jorel Lonesome on 4/30/18
Along with politicians, activists and tech companies, many Bronx residents oppose the Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) ruling on December 14, 2017 to discard net neutrality, which demands that ISPs treat all web [...]
Student-Led Celebration Praises A Fuller Spectrum Of Black History
By Genesis Ramos on 3/31/18
In celebration of Black History Month, an event called “Lift Every Voice: A Celebration of the Black Diaspora” was held on Feb. 21 in room 222 of the Student Life Building. The discussion expanded the popular conception of black history [...]
Student Government Considers Costly Event
By Hector Bello on 3/31/18
The Student Government Association (SGA) is deliberating whether they should spend $17,000 of their $30,000 budget on a concert. This appears to be the latest of a series of initiatives on which the SGA has been working during [...]
Student Panel Shines At Second Annual Activism Symposium
By Deirdre Fanzo on 3/31/18
Lucero Luna Miranda, an undocumented student at Lehman, told her audience that she is not afraid to be herself—not anymore. Miranda was one of four Lehman students who interwove personal narrative with academic writing and research [...]
Bronxites Fear New Ice Rink Will Cause Meltdown
By Perla Tolentino on 3/31/18
After more than five years of discussions, the monumental Kingsbridge Armory will soon be drastically transformed, and many locals worry they will be on the losing end of the deal. Built in 1910, the Eighth Regiment Armory has not been [...]
Bronxites Tackle Discrimination In XFL Revival
By Jorel Lonesome on 2/28/18
Vince McMahon is relaunching his ill-fated Xtreme Football League (XFL), and many Bronx residents object to its new discriminatory rules and what some see as McMahon taking a page from Donald Trump’s playbook. “I think this [...]
MTA Moves Lehman Students At A Snail’s Pace—At Best
By Hector Bello on 2/28/18
Lehman students have not seen any relief in subway delays and service suspensions, despite an MTA announcement in July of 2017 that promised improvements. This hits many Lehman students hard, as the MTA’s dysfunction [...]
Parkland Shooting Leaves Lehman Students Doubting Campus Safety
By Hector Bello on 2/28/18
“If it can happen in Florida, then it can happen over here in any college in New York too,” said Lehman Biology major Carelitza Fernandez about the shooting in Parkland Florida. Fernandez explained that her fear increased following [...]
Lehman Students Denounce Lack Of DACA Deal
By Shaiann Frazier on 2/28/18
Nearly two weeks after the Trump administration’s legislative deadline passed, the future of over 700,000 immigrants remains in limbo, and Lehman students continue to demand their renewed protection under legislation known [...]
Lehman College Mourns The Loss Of Yoryi Dume
By Deirdre Fanzo on 2/28/18
On the afternoon of Jan. 31st, Joseph Magdaleno notified the Lehman community via email that Yoryi Dume, a senior at Lehman, had passed away over the winter break. The email did not disclose a cause of death. This news [...]
New Tax Laws Will Hit Lehman Students Hard
By Thomas Behnke on 1/31/18
“It’s not fair,” Erica Mejia, a Lehman senior, said. “My family made just too much [for me] to qualify for aid, so it’s all on me. It’s bad enough we have to go into debt to get an education. Now even the little breaks are being taken away.” Mejia was lamenting the [...]
Bronx Success Story Ends In Tragedy
By Zoe Fanzo on 1/31/18
“He was the quintessential Lehman student -- determined and dedicated to his family and community,” President José Luis Cruz said in a statement mourning the loss of Lowell Hawthorne, founder and CEO of Golden Krust Bakery & Grill, and [...]
Lehman Students Anguished By Libyan Slave Trade
By Shaiann Frazier on 1/31/18
“As an African, I feel those who have been taken into slavery are my brothers and sisters,” said Felix Mwake, 32, a teacher at Lehman’s Child Care Center. Mwake, who was born and raised in Kenya, was referring to the slave trade in Libya, where [...]
Two Back-To-Back Fires Rip Bronx Residents From Their Homes
By Leonel Henriquez on 1/31/18
2017 ended in flames for tenants of two Bronx buildings that caught fire within 48 hours of one another. The first fire, in the Norwood section of the Bronx, saw an entire building evacuated. Thirty-seven families were displaced after the [...]
Bronx Residents Disagree On Amazon HQ Bid
By Zoe Fanzo on 11/30/17
“An Amazon headquarters in the Bronx will drive out native Bronxites,” Bronx resident and Hunter College freshman Andrew Shkreli told the Meridian. Shkreli opposes the call from Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. and [...]
New Yorkers Re-Elect Mayor, Reject Constitutional Convention
By Thomas Behnke 11/30/17
“I knew de Blasio was going to win, but I think the convention vote was a missed opportunity. Lehman freshman Jasmin Delgado said when asked about the recent mayoral election results. The vote on the Constitutional Convention [...]
President Cruz Starts Campus Renovation
By Leonel Henriquez on 11/30/17
When Lehman President José Luis Cruz cut the ribbon at the Lehman Performing Arts Center renovation last week, it marked the start of a host of capital improvements slated for 2018. Next year will see the [...]
Christopher Columbus Inspires Parades, Protests, And Vandalism
By Thomas Behnke on 10/29/17
Contemporary protests of Columbus Day decry how Christopher Columbus oppressed the indigenous peoples of the Americas, as did the wave of Europeans that followed in his wake. Following the recent demands [...]
Hurricanes Hit US As White House Keeps Pushing Climate Change Denial
By Deirdre Fanzo on 10/29/17
On Oct. 23, Nicaragua announced it would join the Paris Agreement, a global pact to combat climate change, leaving the U.S. and Syria as the lone holdouts from the accord. The statement came five weeks after the [...]
KKK Attempts To Recruit Lehman Students
By Eileen Sepulveda on 10/29/17
On Sept. 29, the Meridian received a letter from the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Addressed to the editor, the letter stated that the KKK was under “extreme fire for being a hate group.” This characterization [...]
After Charlottesville Lehman Students Want An End To Racist Violence
By Zayna Palmer on 09/22/17
Following racist violence at a white supremacist gathering in Charlottesville Va. that led to the killing of one protestor, Lehman students feel endangered by this event because they do not feel safe. Students are terrified [...]
Lehman Community Disagrees Over Puerto Rico’s Bid For Statehood
By Shaiann Frazier on 09/22/17
In June of 2017, 97 percent of Puerto Ricans voted in favor of making the commonwealth of 3.4 million America’s 51st state. While they wait to see whether Congress will pass a statute admitting the new state, many Lehman students with ties to the island remain [...]
Dreamers In Limbo: White House Rescinds DACA
By Thomas Behnke on 09/22/17
On Sept. 5, the White House issued a statement through Attorney General Jeff Sessions that it was formally rescinding the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program. The policy, introduced by President Obama in 2012, allowed undocumented immigrant minors [...]
Lehman Undergrads Showcase Activism Through Academia
By Jean Carlos Soto on 04/01/17
The Activism in Academia Symposium, held on April 7 at the Segal Theater of the CUNY Graduate Center, offered academics and selected students from across CUNY an opportunity to discuss and present work that challenged what Lehman English professor Olivia Moy called [...]
May Day Protest Attempts To Spark Change
By Juan Vasquez on 04/01/17
Cries of “No borders! No nations! No more deportations!” echoed through the Lehman quad as a protest organized by the International Socialist Organization and the Lehman D.R.E.A.M. Team fought for sanctuary campuses. Official sanctuary status would mean [...]