Rachel Maus
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IssuesMagazinePietySawdust
Buzzsaw Asks Why… Tom Rochon won’t let us have nice things?
by Rachel Maus December 11, 2013In a time of national crisis, we college students have few things to look forward to. There’s the looming national debt, few promising job opportunities…
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IssuesMagazineSawdustSurveillance
Buzzsaw Asks Why… Cornell hasn’t droned us yet?
by Rachel Maus November 7, 2013According to their website, the Cornell University Unmanned Air Systems team (affectionately referred to as CUAir) is “an interdisciplinary project team working to design, build,…
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A Response to John Picciuto The first time I went out with my now-boyfriend was a super casual trip to get fro-yo. As we approached…
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Healthy Living in College: Is that even possible?
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Fans are outraged, reporting that they had waited in the rain for tickets to see Mr. Kite perform his signature interpretive play in which he dresses as a walrus and throws strawberries at the audience. While critics have trashed the skit, calling it “no more enjoyable than sniffing an old brown shoe,” Kite has developed quite the cult following in the avant-garde art community.
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Twenty years ago, when The Real World first aired on MTV, it would have been hard to guess exactly how much influence reality television would have on American audiences. Reality television gives viewers a window into worlds that they would never be exposed to, along with people to root for, and people to hate, while knowing that these characters are “real.” They are not characters that audiences fall in love with, only to find out what a jerk the actor is in real life. They can see the people we are meant to love and hate, and have the satisfaction of knowing that we are judging them as people and not simply as characters.
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Questions have been circulating since the announcement that funding to NASA would be cut significantly in the coming years. According to a source, NASA has spent countless taxpayer dollars searching for life on the once popular social networking website, MySpace.
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A look at food’s branding advertisements
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IssuesSawdustThrow-Away
Psychologists Discover Early Signs of Hoarding
by Rachel Maus April 26, 2012Leading psychologists have just announced that seemingly innocuous behaviors, such as flipping through old photo albums once a day, could be early stages of Collectingum Uselesscraposis, better known as hoarding.