MASK OFF, MIDD: Asking for what you want
By Maria Kaouris | November 19, 2020If you can’t ask for what you want, you’ll never get it.
If you can’t ask for what you want, you’ll never get it.
Gone are the days of lingering behind after class to chat with professors or to make lunch plans with classmates, engaging in witty rapport and sharing knowing glances — or even pencils — with people next to you.
I wish that I were here to tell you a success story.
The campus community desperately needs to engage with nuanced perspectives around specific aspects of race so we can see how it affects all aspects of our daily lives.
Voting is a right, and barriers to exercising that right should be removed in any form they take.
This is why we’re publishing an election issue.
Assuming political scientists’ fundamentals-based forecast models are accurate, Joe Biden will win next Tuesday’s presidential election with about 53% of the two-party popular vote, and somewhere north of 300 Electoral College votes. But can we trust those forecasts? In 2016, contrary ...
So how should we view this administration and this election?
When I was in high school, I gave a speech that killed my love life.
What would the re-election of this president mean for the future of immigration in America?
Today, marginalized communities face blatant voter discrimination.
We are writing to say thank you.
Cultural differences matter — this is a very Swedish strategy and is not something even remotely possible in the United States.
The concept of “right person, wrong time” implies that there are people who are justified in “saving us for later.”...But how long are we supposed to hang on for?
Democracy is an amazing tool. But only if you use it.
Do you know what an internal condom is?
Attending college during a pandemic and a moment of national unrest was always going to be difficult. Yet one Middlebury-made stresser adds yet another layer: our busyness culture.
This begs the question: what is Middlebury actually selling to us?
It is becoming increasingly evident that Middlebury does not have a concrete framework for addressing the racism that is embedded in the fabric of our institution.
We look forward to future conversations between students, professors and administrators that address the deep-seated racism on this campus, including the role that the AHF plays in perpetuating it.