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Published:
Chinaza Aham-neze '26 said the goal of Tuesday's event was to show community support, regardless of the outcome of the election. "We understand that during the election, whether it's highly anticipated, highly stressful..." said Aham-neze. "This is a time for you to really be with your community."
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Environmental studies professor Jay Turner writes for The Conversation about America’s battery plant boom. The future of these job-generating gigafactories, many of them in Republican states, writes Turner, could be at risk if the next president tries to wipe out the programs that made them possible.
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Given the prison system's racial disparities, Ismar Volić, chair of the math department at Wellesley College and director of the Institute for Mathematics and Democracy, called the practice of prison gerrymandering "unnervingly reminiscent" of the three-fifths compromise, which allowed early states to count slaves as three-fifths of a person for census purposes.
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Preserve or destroy? Korea’s last venereal disease detention center sparks debate. Katharine Moon, a professor emerita of Asian studies and political science at Wellesley College, noted that the debate represents a shift in public attitudes toward such sites, which some communities previously sought to dismantle to avoid perceived stigma. According to Moon, activists’ preservation campaign is more about “national history writing [and] keeping alive more permanently the ugly parts of history that people shunned for decades.”