Mikaela Lefrak

The World Intern

The World

Mikaela Lefrak was a Summer 2014 Intern for the World.

I was an intern at The World in 2014.In previous lives, I was an AmeriCorps volunteer in Oakland, CA, a Spanish student in Bolivia, an education policy wonk in Washington, DC, and a competent but undistinguished pirate in the South China seas.I received my Bachelor's degree from Middlebury College in Vermont, with a major in literature and minors in both Spanish and African Studies (if you need advice on milking a liberal arts degree, I'm your girl). I'm particularly interested in coverage of immigration, women's issues, the global economy, and anything baseball.


A traditional dish from the Isaan region of Thailand served at the Vermont restaurant Saap

Self-taught chef introduces rural Vermonters to traditional Thai cuisine

Food

Americans may recognize Thai food from Bangkok, but this couple opened a restaurant in rural New England to introduce people to a cuisine that’s native to Thailand’s Isaan region.

A Maryland-based ukulele marching band performs during a 2019 Fourth of July parade.

Global ukulele community keeps music alive, online in pandemic

Music
A bicyclist rides past the front entrance of the former Embassy of Iran.

Iran’s govt buildings in DC are vacant. But they’re full of stories.

History
A group of people is seen on a mobile staircase at an airport.

Metro banned ads for this art exhibition on the immigration crisis, then changed its mind

Arts, Culture & Media
jazz group

‘It was a social revolution’: The Turkish Embassy’s surprising role in desegregating DC jazz

Three elderly Holocaust survivors sit at a table writing.

One day, there won’t be any more Holocaust survivors. This museum is racing to preserve their stories.

Conflict & Justice

Eyewitness perspectives, like those of survivor Halina Litman Yasharoff Peabody, have served as invaluable educational resources for the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum since the institution opened 25 years ago. But as the number of survivors dwindle, the museum must prepare for a future without them.

Sound of Thunder

A heavy metal band from Virginia went viral in Catalonia

Music

Lead singer Nina Osegueda inspires A Sound of Thunder to record a version of the region’s anthem.

Starbucks

What happened to the opera music at Starbucks?

Culture

CEO Howard Schultz is hailed as an innovator, but less known is that many of his Starbucks inspirations didn’t take with Americans. But he’s “a very good listener,” says one historian — and he adapted.

A man checks his own blood pressure using an at-home machine. Researchers hope to expand the range of at-home medical care with new tests and devices.

The doctor’s office of the future might be your living room

Medicine

You can already do things like check your blood pressure or heart rate pretty easily at home, but doctors and researchers are coming up with ways to get a much wider range of medicine into the hands of patients themselves.

Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks about Apple Pay during an Apple event at the Flint Center in Cupertino, California, on September 9, 2014.

We actually pay CEOs like menial laborers — and here’s why

Economics

The modern American economy is based largely on talent and knowledge, but the way we pay people never caught up with the country’s big economic changes. That’s how CEOs get paid huge amounts, even though the incentives don’t work the way they used to.