Press "Enter" to skip to content

Posts tagged as “international”

(Archive May 2017) The International Student Experience

By Klai Iheb | Observer Contributor

Diversity in the student body.

Being an international student is a big adventure. It is a new life that we should be completely prepared for before going for it. That is why many people decide to leave in the middle of their experience, while others stay for years. I personally learned how to overcome obstacles more quickly than other people. This situation makes me a person who is able to travel and live everywhere in the world and communicate with everybody whatever the language is, and now I am able to say: “It was not easy but I made it.” read more

(Archive November 15, 2011) Guest Speaker: Tineke Floris on European Media

By Leigh Edwards | Observer Contributor

On October 27, Tineke Floris spoke in Professor Sue Goldsteins Journalism class to about her Profession her perception on the news and media in the Netherlands.

Floris is an ESL teacher in the Netherlands for adults 18- 60. Many of her students are refugees, mainly from Iraq and Somalia, who hope to become citizens of the Netherlands. In order for someone to become a citizen of the Netherlands, Floris informed the class that one must learn the Dutch language through taking ESL classes at least five hours a week. read more

Heroiam slava!

By Daniel Dow | Editor in Chief

President Vladimir Putin addressed the world, creating a false and unjustifiable narrative for the invasion of Ukraine; a narrative that calls for the “de-Nazification” of the sovereign nation of Ukraine.

This claim comes after nearly a  month-long build-up of troops along the Ukraine border, with Ukraine and its allies calling for peaceful negotiations and for troops along the board to disperse. These pleas were ignored by Russia, with Putin falsely declaring Russia would begin withdrawing troops, which was quickly spotted to be a lie by the United States and British intelligence, as troops continued to gather on the border. read more

(Archive October 2016) Political Opinions From Across The Pond

By Courtney Wentz | Assistant Editor

Everyone knows what the United States thinks of the upcoming election, but other countries have opinions about the election too.

Giada Lancellotti, 21, from Ostigliano, Salerno, Italy, is worried about who the next president will be. She said, “I know that who we elect in Italy does not really affect other countries, but you are going to elect the president of one of the biggest world powers.”

Lancellotti has never been to the United States, but she understands the rights and how important it is to vote. She knows three languages: English, French, German, and some self-taught Spanish. She is starting University in Pescara, Italy to become a translator in London, England to translate books.

Lancellotti doesn’t like either presidential candidate, saying Trump “is a stupid, racist, xenophobic ‘being’ who shouldn’t be able to speak” and Clint to a “freak,” even though she does think Clinton would be the better choice, saying Trump running the United States “sounds like a joke.”

James Corcoran, 26, from Carlow, Ireland, thinks the election is a “highly important matter,” saying he doesn’t find either candidate appealing. He said President Obama may be hard to live up to because of what he’s done for the United States and its allies.

Corcoran travelled to Minneapolis, Minnesota in 2006. While he was there, he went to an American school for a day and from what he saw we actually do have cliques. When he was in school he studied television, film, and journalism.

He does think Clinton is the better candidate, saying, “Hillary has the capacity and potential to run the country the way in which it should be.” Corcoran believes Clinton could provide a stable economy for the United States. Corcoran also said Trump’s public image wasn’t welcoming, compassionate, or empathic enough.

Tasmin Poole, 18, from Caldecott, South Wales, said “If I were an American citizen, I would vote Clinton and pray that she has the ability to listen to the people because I truly believe Trump will not.” She thinks “Clinton is the lesser of two evils,” which seems to be a common thought.

Poole has been to Orlando, New York, and New Jersey in the past ten years. She said while in New York, Trump was starting to get covered by the media. She is also doing a degree in Modern history.

Poole said if Trump won, “America would lose any respect from the Middle East, Mexico, and South America, along with strong, female led countries.”