I Think of You
Looking for Lovelace: In Search of Role Models for Women in Computing
In the field of computing, there is a paucity of people that do not identify as white, cis-gendered and male. This problem is most…
Read MoreReclaim Our Space: SPEAKOUT
You descend into the Mug and see students gathered in silence, facing the stage. The only objects on the stage are two empty chairs….
Read MoreBikini Atoll
The pen taught me about the artificial sun. Account—the perceived right to atomic murder: reporting from a city deli (open late), by cuts of…
Read MoreErlenmeyer Flasks and Lip Gloss: Experiencing Femininity in the Biomedical Sciences
In class, I am often viewed as a “Science Barbie.” I know what my classmates are thinking most of the time: throw a lab…
Read MoreFloated Along in Flood Wall Street: A Vassar Student’s Observations
The ideology of Flood Wall Street was valiant, and it was sound. It was touted by its organizers not as an isolated event, or…
Read MoreWhat’s it Really Worth? A Behavioral Economist on Values in Art
Ben Ho may not be an expert in the art world, but he does know a thing or two about applying Economics to the…
Read MoreThe Inaccessible Tools to an Accessible Education
As a student registered with the Office of Accessibility and Education Opportunity at Vassar, I was recently given a computer program made by Texthelp…
Read MoreWhat’s Left of the Revolutionary Arts Movements of the Arab Spring (And Why We Shouldn’t Call It Revolutionary)
If you look up Arab artists of the past five years on any Western media outlet, there is typically a smattering of articles about…
Read MoreAmerican Beauty: An Interview with Jon Eisenmann
You probably haven’t heard of artist Jon Eisenmann, at least not yet—his debut exhibit goes up in Minneapolis this January, and shit is it…
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