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(11/01/13 9:04pm)
Question: I am scared about trying anal with my boyfriend. What should I say?
Answer: Well, you have to consider a few things first. How long have you two been together? If this is a new boyfriend, and he’s ready for this so fast, you may need to ask him to slow it down. If you’ve been with him for a significant amount of time (significant is subjective), you should have an open conversation with him, letting him know what makes you nervous and why it makes you nervous. Hopefully, you can come to some agreement about what’s about to go down. But throughout the entire process, you have to be introspective; anal isn’t for everyone, and you might just not want to do it, which is completely fine. Just tell him, and if he really likes you, he should be able to respect your decision. If he can’t get over that, it’s time to move on.
(11/01/13 8:46pm)
I’m a junior in who started out in School of International Service, switched sophomore year to double majoring in the School of Public Affairs and School of Communication, but now remains undecided in the College of Arts and Sciences. I hear there’s an Accounting Major…that could work.
(10/25/13 1:52pm)
In India, you have to expect the unexpected. Ten minutes before the start of class, the location will move to a building 15 minutes away. One person will get their entire meal at a restaurant before another is even served their drink. But somehow, things always work out in the end. A recent adventure during our 10-day epic travel week across Southern India taught me that you just have to trust that the system will work.
(10/23/13 7:40pm)
It is important to challenge what you believe, so that you know why you believe it. That’s why I decided to backpack around Jordan, the West Bank and Israel this past summer. I have been to refugee camps and through checkpoints. I have experienced the terror that accompanies a rocket attack, and the heartbreak that comes from talking to a Holocaust survivor.
(10/22/13 7:21pm)
The government is working again. But my best guess is that it won’t be for long.
(10/18/13 9:31pm)
Five decades ago, vision-led college students stood up against universities and governments for the practice of freedom, liberty and peace of all individuals. Universities were intellectual hubs of civic engagement in scholarly debates and political organizations. Today, universities are not the same; across the country, college students and professors are restricted in their free speech in classrooms, thus losing academic freedom. AU is no exception.
(10/18/13 9:27pm)
A fight song blared from the loudspeakers and the cheerleaders—las porristas, my friend whispered—rushed onto the field. The team mascot removed his helmet, moonwalking through the crowd to Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean”, and I can still feel the color draining from my cheeks as I examined the thick-lipped, wide-eyed, black-faced mask underneath.
(10/15/13 7:34pm)
The U.S. higher education system is broken. Just as the U.S. housing market collapsed, the collegiate system could collapse in the same way because of the very same risks.
(10/03/13 10:42pm)
My brother went to a small college in an even smaller town. He would tell me how his college was in a bubble, completely separated from the rest of the world. Going to school in a city, I didn’t quite get this whole “bubble” concept. Maybe there would be an occasional weekend when I wouldn’t leave campus, but other than that I felt like I was in the center of everything while I was at AU.
(10/02/13 9:58pm)
It was 9:30 a.m. on Saturday when I checked the news headlines as I waited for the Metro. My eyes skimmed over political news until I saw three words that made my heart stop: “Nairobi mall attack.”
(10/02/13 1:29am)
If our society is not going to pressure me to obtain a college degree, I would have paid my $200,000 tuition at an American university for an unpaid internship instead. Yeah, you read that correctly.
(10/02/13 1:22am)
The Republican Party is treading a dangerous path in its fight to defund Obamacare. The GOP shut down the government, and if this doesn’t work, it’ll put the nation into default until Obamacare is gone. The Republican Party has officially gone insane.
(09/27/13 4:17pm)
Would you give up something you love if you found out it funded something terrible? British actress Helen Mirren did.
(09/27/13 1:44pm)
Having been in Prague for a full month, some of the European glamour has gradually begun to ebb. Real life has started again, and with it the realization that life in Prague runs a bit differently than I’m used to.
(09/25/13 3:14pm)
As debt talks between Republicans and Democrats persist, international players are concerned about Congress and their inability to make economic progress. For AU students, there will be definite repercussions of such decisions; and perhaps not now, but surely down the road.
(09/12/13 6:04pm)
I’m a “When in Rome” type of person, and by that I mean that I try to fit in when visiting a foreign country.
(08/30/13 2:25am)
Students often treat studying abroad as an isolated experience. But in reality, it’s about rediscovering ourselves in an entirely new context.
(08/28/13 2:31am)
With a new year, The Eagle is launching a new set of columnists. Look out for these new columns every Tuesday.