Music Helps By Eliezer Morse The music helps, My mind picks the notes like grapes And i feel the juice sweeten the bitters in my stomach, Make me wine drunk With lead-y […]
Summer Fun
By Jessica Rose So, you’re wrapping up for the winter, enjoying the spring blooms of cherry, tulip and magnolia scattered amidst the sprouting greenery, and preparing for the busy (or not so […]
A Food Journey
By Sheri Bell On Saturday, April 26, 2018 my husband and I went to the Lobster Shack restaurant in Cape Elizabeth, Maine. We arrived at 6:15 p.m. and found the line out […]
Drone Ethics
By Erik Squire There are multiple ethical issues that arise with the United States’ use of drone warfare in the Middle East; two such issues which readily come to mind are extrajudicial […]
Wealth Inequality: Part 2
By Zachary Guiod The two regions with the most people living in extreme poverty are Sub-Saharan Africa and Southern Asia. In Southern Asia, 30 million children have no access to education to […]
Defining Morality
By Kamal Karimi I believe that there is no accurate way to determine what is moral and what is not. Beliefs are different from person to person; one person may be less […]
Meet Randa Jarrar
By Gio DiFazio Say what you want about the political climate in this country over the lasts 20 years, Barbara Bush had an impact on millions of young lives. Unfortunately, for millenials, […]
From the Desk of the Managing Editor
By Troy Hudson On Saturday, April 21, close to twenty people attended SMCC’s Community Garden Cleanup Day, which you can read about on the front page. I was among them, despite having […]
A Food Journey: Empire Chinese Kitchen
By Sheri Bell On Friday, April 13, I had the pleasure of dining at Empire Chinese Kitchen. I was a bit put off at first by the menu, as I can be […]
Dancers of Diligence
By Rebecca Dow Come one, come all — enjoy the show as Jessamyn Schmidt’s Dance Performance class expresses a combination of art through movement, consisting of techniques and ideas explored and refined […]