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lism to create change. In March of 2024, Kevin Sweitzer wrote an editorial in the Michigan Daily criticizing the name of a house in our West Quad residence hall. Winchell House had been named after a 19th century UM professor, whose published work supported white supremacy. In 2024, Kevin submitted a formal request under the process we established to reconsider the names of university spaces. After a review by our prominent mittee of historians, humanists, and many other experts, we removed the Winchell name. Kevin is graduating today, from a university changed for the better. CSG President Daniel Greene, who also graduates today, spent much of his time in office advocating for greater affordability, food security, mental health services, and diversity. The results produced by CSG this year include a housing survey, the expansion of a food pantry for students in need, greater mental health awareness, and a plan to help student anizations achieve their full potential. 演講稿英語 4 As Daniel goes on to Teach for America, he leaves a university that is changed for the better. The changes you have seen on campus and around the globe also provide a roadmap that can serve as a guide to the changes you can create in society. Purposefully contributing to change requires courage, trust, and the willingness to listen and consider many voices. It works best when trust is built by finding mon ground, and when we reject the view that it is “us versus them” — that there must be winners and losers. This is how we can overe the erosion of trust and begin to collaborate to work through differences. It takes courage to open ourselves up to opi