This term’s independent learning week schedule hinders the University’s students and professors to fully engage in self-reflection and religious ruminations manifested during Lent’s Holy Week.
Author: The LaSallian
Three decades after the people marched along EDSA for liberation, the nation teeters on the edge of having its hard-fought history of struggle completely rewritten.
A peso for your thoughts?
Students find themselves constantly in the dark about the rationale behind increasing fees each year, as DLSU maintains a stoic silence on the matter.
End of the road
The transportation crisis in the country demands improvement, yet the flaws of the PUV Modernization Program could worsen it than solve it.
Undeterred, 63 years later
It is not in The LaSallian’s identity to be passive chroniclers. Instead, we are steadfast in our duty to question, tell, interpret, and persuade.
The University’s online infrastructure has led to inconvenient enrollment experiences for students, despite the convenience online systems are supposed to provide.
LA Sessions
The LA approves the establishment of the USG Philippine Ethnic Diversity Council that will focus on providing programs and activities that promote multiculturalism in the University. Read more at thelasallian.com/2023/06/25/la-forms-ethnic-diversity-council-amends-compliance-rules-for-tatak-animo/. June 21, 2023 The LA approves the new Commission for Officer Development Manual with a bill that grants the Commission autonomy in its operations. Meanwhile,…
While consuming satirical content is inarguably amusing, it is not simply a form of entertainment. Beyond the humorous delivery of information lies a deeper lens into reality.
OFWs have always been the country’s pride—heroes, as we hail them. But words mean nothing when they are faced with the circumstances of abuse, or even death.
Ordinances will not stop Happy Ts—The LaSallian goes around the vicinity of Taft Ave. to find how Lasallians keep getting their hands on booze despite a liquor ban.