Cementing family legacies
A Mount Holyoke College alum and a professor emeritus, who are both historians, wrestle with their family histories in a new podcast.
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A Mount Holyoke College alum and a professor emeritus, who are both historians, wrestle with their family histories in a new podcast.
Mount Holyoke College students presented at the annual LEAP Symposium, the premier showcase of their summer research or internship experiences.
The annual weekend-long event, which welcomes the families and friends of students to the Mount Holyoke College campus, showcased a variety of events and programming, from a panel Q&A with College leadership to a Fall Fest celebration.
In front of a packed crowd in Mount Holyoke’s Gamble Auditorium, a panel of legal scholars and political experts discussed what we could expect not only from the upcoming presidential election but also from more hyper-focused local races.
The annual Noche Latina celebration has returned to Chapin Auditorium after being held elsewhere on campus for two years. The night was jam-packed with food, fun and community.
Mount Holyoke College President Danielle R. Holley provided an introduction for a showing of “Nomadland,” directed by Chloé Zhao ’05, at Amherst Cinema. The event, part of a series called “Five on Film,” highlights alums of the Five College Consortium.
Naomi Dupre-Edelman, assistant director of math leadership programs at Mount Holyoke College, is one of 26 people named to the Massachusetts Education Policy Fellowship program held by the Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy.
Artist Harmonia Rosales spoke at the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum about her work, including her painting “The Harvest.”
Alum Sheryl McCarthy ’69 interviewed Mount Holyoke College President Danielle Holley on the CUNY TV show “One to One.” They explored topics such as the role of women’s colleges and the power of humanities in today’s career-focused world.
Prentis Hemphill ’04 will be at Mount Holyoke College to discuss their book “What It Takes To Heal.” The book poses the question: ““What would it do to movements, to our society and culture, to have the principles of healing at the very center?”