The Dinner Table Column: Our true feelings on sexting
Hello and welcome back to The Dinner Table column that coincides with The Dinner Table Podcast. This week, we're discussing sexting and the ethics behind it.
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Hello and welcome back to The Dinner Table column that coincides with The Dinner Table Podcast. This week, we're discussing sexting and the ethics behind it.
“Holy s**t!”
At six years old, I was watching music videos with one of my closest friends when she wanted to show me a new artist she had found. I spent the next four minutes watching a girl with long blonde curls hug a guitar on her bed in a pretty green dress, and then I proceeded to spend the next month singing the very few words I knew of the song, which were, "He's the reason for the teardrops on my guitar."
Islands are disappearing. Australia has experienced record wildfires. Rising sea levels are rapidly changing city landscapes on California’s coast. Climate change is the greatest threat humanity faces.
Hello and welcome to the first Dinner Table column, where we bring conversations to the dinner table that your family wouldn’t. Today we will be discussing Goop, a lifestyle brand started by Gwyneth Paltrow, the ethics behind it, the health risks, and everything else surrounding it.
I figured out I had obsessive-compulsive disorder, or OCD, when I started high school, mainly because I couldn’t stop picking off all my fingernails or checking to make sure my front door was locked 15 times.
Two separate seasons. Two program wins.
Jim Morrison, the troubled frontman of The Doors, was the author of probably my favorite poem, "The Severed Garden." Morrison, who surely knew his final hours were approaching — owing to his hedonistic lifestyle — wrote that “death makes angels of us all, and gives us wings where we had shoulders smooth as raven’s claws.”
By Reclaim MSU
As The State News’ editor-in-chief, I was tasked with introducing this issue, our survivors issue.
By Grace French, founder and president of The Army of Survivors
By Tashmica Torok, founder and executive director of The Firecracker Foundation
I’ve spent the bulk of my senior year trying to reconcile my relationship with Michigan State University.
Editor’s note: This article contains sensitive subject matter.
Growing up, I went to a primarily black school district until my sophomore year of high school. Then, I transitioned to a primarily white high school and went on to attend a primarily white university.
The execution of Fred Hampton should be considered one of the most infamous and important moments in the history of our nation.
Upon being accepted to Michigan State University, I felt a sense of relief — I was accepted into a Big Ten University. As a first-generation Latinx college student, that was something exactly planned for me.
Out of everyone I know, I am the least likely person to ever change their major. And most people I know would agree with me.
Since my junior year of high school, I knew I wanted to be a journalist.
Currently, I am $23,000 in student debt and it was not an easy trek to start.