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May 1, 2019 •
2018-2019 Issues, 2018-2019 Issues, Sacred •
Views: 486
By Megan He acred is my home, in a beloved Midwestern town, in a house tucked into the woods, where the sunlight filters through the trees. But I was unfulfilled, craving a new beginning, without appreciating what had shaped me all...
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January 9, 2019 •
2018-2019 Issues, Empathy, Poetry •
Views: 1031
By Chandler Wakefield We come in pieces of burlap knapsacks from Trader Joe’s made into dolls. We come as shoes worn and worn through, T-shirts from foreign sports teams that none of the kids know. We come as NGOs fighting foreign...
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December 7, 2018 •
2018-2019 Issues, 2018-2019 Issues, Empathy, Print •
Views: 488
Poetry in the face of violence By Meghana Mysore “I never wear shoes I can’t run in.” t a recent conference with the UNHCR, Emi Mahmoud ‘16, poet and activist, was asked to say something about the million South Sudanese refugees...
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August 9, 2018 •
Online Content, Summer Blogs •
Views: 775
by Annie Nields CANTERBURY Let’s learn a new language together. Maybe we could start from scratch — recover the flour and yeast from the cabinet watch it rise together in the corner of the bedroom, watch it press against the glass...
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July 3, 2018 •
Blogs, Morocco 2018, Online Content, Reporting Trips •
Views: 1155
by Jordan Cutler-Tietjen CLUMSY MOBILE ME Past security I fumble with what I own Which was so comfortable in the buckets Who cycle belonging and belonging Through a black box. So that I can string my belt around myself I clutch my passport...
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October 3, 2013 •
Online Content, The World at Yale •
Views: 1634
BY MITCHELL HIGHTOWER On Tuesday October 1, Roniere Menezes, professor of Brazilian literature, literary theory, and comparative literature at the Federal Center of Technological Education of Minas Gerais in Brazil, explored Brazilian...
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