For much of Cambridge’s history, this tree, the Washington Elm, held tremendous significance in the city’s consciousness, and in the nation’s as a whole.
Reflecting on my experience as a Black student at Harvard, the experiences of other Black students, and suggesting ways in which Harvard can do a better job to support Black students at Harvard.
In order for it to truly be an equitable institution, Harvard must let its false appeal to secularism go, and instead, actively work to give the full spectrum of spiritual identities that together form the undergraduate student body the same support.
As part of the Fall 2022 Campus Poll series this semester, the Harvard Political Review seeks to understand the views of Harvard undergraduates on a variety of political topics, from campus politics to cultural issues to national policy.
Both expanded early voting and mail in voting were passed only as temporary reforms for the pandemic, expiring at the end of 2020. One of the core motivations behind the VOTES Act was to ensure that those reforms were permanent.
Without access to unbiased information on the arguments for and against Question #4, voters may enter the ballot box unprepared to vote on such a contentious issue.
In order to ease immigrants, documented and undocumented alike, into feeling secure of their access to American infrastructure, the Massachusetts law on driver’s licenses must be upheld.