<p>First, as others have said, Ephblog represents only a small portion of the Williams community, and even among Ephblog, there is often a lot of dissention on what is and is not an appropriate topic.</p>
<p>Second, it is untrue to suggest that Ephblog is overly concerned with Midd (it is barely mentioned) or Amherst (mentioned more regularly, but outside of a fun sports rivalry context, it is also not mentioned all THAT much). There are probably about 100 posts about Williams’ finances per single post on the finances at all other schools combined, including Amherst, just browse the archives. You happened to link to ONE post, among literally HUNDREDS on college finances, that focuses primarily on Amherst. (And really, it is a single author who is responsible for the vast majority of discussions about Amherst’s finances in any event). Amherst is also often invoked, along with many other Williams peers, to glean comparative insight into how the institutional policies compare to other schools – there is nothing remotely obsessive about that! Just useful benchmarking, and Amherst as the closest competitor provides the most useful benchmark. </p>
<p>Third, the post itself is actually pretty interesting. Amherst does have some serious financial issues that are at least worth considering. Personally, I don’t think it will end up making a material difference in the experience of a student in the short run, but others disagree. Certainly, the fact that, despite investing a LOT less in campus infrastructure in recent years, Amherst, and not Williams, was forced to take out a 100 million dollar bond to meet expenses isn’t a WHOLLY irrelevant point, especially when Amherst just expanded its student body.</p>
<p>Fourth, on the fundraising point, Williams one year ago completed a 500 million fund drive, so donors are likely pretty tapped out. Amherst and, apparently, Midd are right in the middle of fund drives, so you are comparing apples to oranges.</p>
<p>Fifth, FINALLY back to the OP, check out Williams’ unique Political Economy major. Half domestic / half international, but if you double major in that and, say, East Asian studies or another foreign language / regional major, you would have an awesome IR background. </p>
<p>All that being said, I think Williams, Amherst, and Midd would all be great choices for what you want to do. Why not apply to all, see where you get accepted, and if you are lucky enough to have a choice, try to visit and go where you think you’ll be happiest.</p>