Daniella Simari shares her family’s touching story of acceptance and love.
Read MoreJacqueline Woo of the class of 2020 thoughtfully reconciles the often unconsidered downsides of travel with its worthwhile, and often personal, benefits.
Read MoreTwo graduate workers share their personal stories and argue why SIPA student workers should vote “yes” on the Strike Authorization Vote. The vote is happening until March 13. Look for the ballot box in Nous Cafe in Philosophy Hall.
Read MoreIn the last week, as most students at SIPA have been struggling with finals, many Indian students have also been gripped with horror as our country fights a brutal battle to preserve the democratic and secular values it was founded on. Many student orgs at SIPA signed a statement expressing their solidarity with Indians who were protesting the CAA both at home and abroad and condemned the government’s discriminatory policies. Conspicuously missing from the list of signatories was the South Asian Association.
Read MoreWe stand in solidarity with University students across India, including the ones who faced police brutality at Jamia Millia Islamia University and Aligarh Muslim University, as well as citizens who are exercising their democratic right of protesting the Islamophobic Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the National Register of Citizens (NRC), and the internet bans that have curtailed freedom of speech in Kashmir and across the country.
Read MoreBorn in New York City and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 23-year-old Peter Zheng is a first-generation Chinese American and the first in his family to attend University. He is the child of Yikeng Zheng, 53, and Xiu Zhen Ma, 51, who immigrated to the United States in the mid-1990s. His parents are the proud owners of two Chinese restaurants in Pittsburgh. Zheng has an additional brother, Shou Ming Zheng, 32, who was born in 1987 in China while Zheng was born in the United States when his mother immigrated to the country in 1994. His story shows the hard work and ambition that is often seen in the children of immigrant to the United States. The following is a condensed and edited version of our current two-hour conversation…
Read More