The price of life as a low-income student: a response letter
Dear Lindsay,
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Dear Lindsay,
Hello class,
Dear primary voters, to the Youth,
Social distancing, isolation, impending economic crisis, radical reconstruction of everyday life — do these words ring a bell to you? If so, you’re probably scrolling through [insert brain-melting social media platform here], looking for the next small dose of dopamine to fuel your reality denial.
Will graduating seniors have a commencement this year? What will Duke employees do without their income? What happens to PhD candidates defending their theses? How does the low-income student plan for a financially cumbersome future in lieu of travel costs and lost work-study wages?
For my senior thesis*, I have decided to study the vocal aberrations that are normalized during rushing season. Below are standout quotes from varying rush events. It seems there is more to worry about than we may have imagined.**
Dear President,
Are you or a loved one a former or current pre-medical student at Duke University? This new program may be right for you.
So you’re a young immigrant woman. Young, because if you’re anything older, you’re just an ageless, bitter, unmarried aunty who is forever condemned to condemn younger women for not being married yet.
Hi! I’m LinkedIn Employee Jane Doe.