Feature Posts

There’s probably nothing wrong with you

Leora Eisenberg | July 21, 2018

I spent almost the entire two first years of my college experience wondering if there was something wrong with me. I never liked going out to the Street — every time I’d tried, I hadn’t

Read More

The faces of autism

Hari Srinivasan | July 6, 2018

It’s serendipitous that I write this column in April, which just happens to be Autism Awareness Month. It’s promising to see events that raise awareness about autism, such as the annual 3K walk organized by

Read More

The endless uphill of social media

Sophie Stuber | June 29, 2018

Stanford’s beautiful campus and close access to open spaces were a huge draw for me. Growing up in the mountains of Colorado caused me to appreciate the value of nature. I knew that I needed places

Read More

Don’t romanticize destructive habits

Chanel Johnson | June 23, 2018

According to the American College Health Association, nearly one out of five university students is affected by anxiety or depression. There are many reasons why these disorders may be prevalent on college campuses, including smartphone addiction, the

Read More

Changing the way we teach race

Natachi Onwuamaegbu | June 16, 2018

In the eighth grade I was asked if I wanted to step out of the room while the class learned about slavery. When I politely declined, I was allowed to sit with my classmates as

Read More

Are Your Shoes Classist? Are You?

Alejandro Villa Vasquez | June 8, 2018

You see them every day, probably. They’re ugly, but we’re expected to believe they’re a subversive type of ugly, emblematic of revolutionary sentiments and avant-garde innovations in fashion and culture itself. Yes, I mean the Balenciaga Triple

Read More

How campus culture cultivates body-image issues

Ellen Schneider | June 4, 2018

College cultivates a toxic culture surrounding beauty expectations for women and forces us to try to imitate unrealistic ideals. As college students, we tend to be under perpetual stress. It’s an expected, although unwelcome, aspect

Read More

The stories we choose

Meghana Mysore | May 26, 2018

In her TED Talk on the “single story,” Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie addresses our adherence to single stories — of places and their political landscapes, of others, and of ourselves. We advance the single story because

Read More

Juuling: An Alarming Trend Reversing Decades of Health Gains

Donna Orem | May 18, 2018

Cigarette smoking has been on a steady decline among teens for the past decade. That’s good news … but, a new craze called “Juuling” is threatening to reverse that. A Juul is a brand of

Read More