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FRESHMAN YEAR

Jayla Butler, Em McPhie, and Ted Moskal Former News Editors

The year didn’t start off on the right

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Black incoming freshmen returning to campus from IHOP were stopped by Clayton police, July 7, who assumed they were part of a group that left without paying. The police escorted the group back to IHOP, where the dean of the College of Literature, on campus at the start of the spring has shared his thoughts on free speech, as well as his ideals about need blind admissions being the came shortly after Student Union passed the Opportunity Fund, which stipends to help offset the costs of Learning Community in House 5, after house to Black students. The Hamsini upperclassmen residents to explore issues and themes related to the Learning Community will remain in House 5 for the upcoming academic year. that the 2019 Bear Beginnings program is transitioning to a nine day schedule with three parts. The new schedule means the retirement programs in the fall, a change that made some students sadder than the changes to the soda fountains.

Sept. 6 launched a spate of crime carjackings occurring between

Student Union and Title Mine held a that month to unpack Trump Secretary guidelines, which limited how student groups handle allegations of sexual distribution equity — too many doses shipped to Missouri’s rural areas, for Black neighborhoods of St. Louis — some students took matters into their Missouri, but had to pause distribution of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson the incident July 16 by emphasizing their disappointment in the city’s the students met with the Clayton city manager and police chief July 19, and a statement on the city’s behalf issued an apology and took full responsibility

29, Clayton Mayor Harold Sanger released a letter claiming that based

“initiating contact with this group was in keeping with policies and procedures.” and a shooting at the Delmar Loop metro station Sept. 12. In response, presence of WUPD off campus and partnered with Uber to subsidize trips free Ubers ended with the start of the second semester.

Workers’ Union (WUGWU) wasted no time in making its demands heard this year. In September, the group partnered with the Student Workers minimum wage to be raised to $15 distribution resumed three days later addressing demands made by Title

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