
A Bates education, says rhetoric major Matthew Baker ’17 of Clinton, Md., has taught him how “to listen to my own intuition, listen to my gut, and listen to what feels right within myself.”
Categories Academic Life Collaboration
A Bates education, says rhetoric major Matthew Baker ’17 of Clinton, Md., has taught him how “to listen to my own intuition, listen to my gut, and listen to what feels right within myself.”
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