Posts tagged paigehagy
Fountains of Blood

Many protestors wore green. Others held wire hangers. Some women wore tanks or bikini tops with “MY BODY MY CHOICE” painted across their chests and blood-red paint smeared down their legs.

Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Cout case that legalized abortion for nearly 50 years, was overturned that morning on June 24, 2022.

Read More
King’s Announces Collaboration with Primacorp Ventures Inc.

The King’s College announced its new collaboration with Primacorp Ventures Inc. on May 14 via newsletter email, The King’s Insider. President Tim Gibson and the Board of Trustees approved the agreement on April 30.

Under terms of the agreement, Primacorp will provide resources and expertise regarding student recruitment, marketing and fundraising, while the College will retain control of academic standards, institutional messaging and curriculum offerings.

Read More
Letter from the Editor: On the Imperial Tribunal

The IMP asks how we can blame them, saying they fear retribution from the subjects of their articles. But why do they fear retribution? Perhaps it is because they know they’ve taken their satire a step too far and would face disciplinary action if their identities were revealed. If they named themselves, they would have to consider what are mean-spirited insults and what is good-natured humor.

Read More
The Hot Dog King vs. Donald J. Trump

Rossi said he used to have an empire of 500 carts in the ‘90s. Back then, he lived in a beautiful home in Greenwich, Conn. with his family while his company thrived as the largest and most respected in the city.

Then Rossi lost everything, including his home. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani bankrupted him by passing a law restricting owners to only one permit, effectively closing down all of the commissaries in the city. But who was the puppet master behind Giuliani according to Rossi?

None other than the real estate hustler Donald J. Trump.

Read More
New York City in the Winter: A Snowy Photo Essay

On Feb. 1, New York City totaled 17.2 inches of snow, making it one of the largest snowstorms the city has recorded since the late 1800s. | Please enjoy this Winter edition photo essay by EST editors Lucas Drumond and Brittany Bhulai.

Read More
The Reality of NYC Safety-Net Hospitals

Worn-down armrest-less chairs occupied by the occasional patient lined the walls of the room. There were two vending machines off to the side. One sold beverages. The other sold cheap snacks: Doritos, potato chips, pretzels, peanut butter M&Ms, probably some odd breakfast pastry too. I always found it strange to put pastries in a vending machine. Something about it seems unnatural; it’s like seeing a shark on top of a mountain.

Read More
RIP China Chalet

In its glory days—or rather, glory nights—China Chalet boasted high-profile attendees at its restaurant-transformed-nightclub: from actor Timothée Chalamet to rappers Cardi B and Denzel Curry, to the infamous Ghislaine Maxwell. Not only did it become a haven for modern America’s gentry, but it welcomed the serfs as well; it didn’t cater to one community or genre of people.

The underwhelming restaurant warrants a funeral, but the overwhelming, all-inclusive nightclub deserves a celebration of life ceremony. One of the last great New York venues has died of COVID-19.

Read More
New Yorkers Remember 9/11 From Six Feet Apart: A Photo Essay

Thousands gathered at the 9/11 Memorial on Friday to pay tribute to the lives of family, friends and fellow Americans that died in the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center towers on September 11, 2001.

Read More
King’s Announces Center for the Study of Christianity and Black Experience

The King’s College announced the launch of the Center for the Study of Christianity and the Black Experience and the appointment of Dr. Jacqueline C. Rivers as the senior fellow on June 12.

Read More