Six college presidents on abortion
In the wake of the SCOTUS ruling on abortion, Mount Holyoke’s President joins with other college presidents reaffirming reproductive rights.
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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In the wake of the SCOTUS ruling on abortion, Mount Holyoke’s President joins with other college presidents reaffirming reproductive rights.
Mount Holyoke College received nearly 5,000 applications for admission this year — an all-time record number.
Mount Holyoke President Sonya Stephens slams the notion that women should not be recruited in the sciences.
Nancy Welker ’63 credits her pioneering success in a male-dominated science field to her time studying at Mount Holyoke College.
This year, Mount Holyoke has surpassed its previous application record set in 2019 and had a 14% increase from fall 2020.
Mount Holyoke College alum Areeba Kamal ’16 went from working odd jobs to pay college application fees to MBA student and Apple product manager.
Mount Holyoke taught me “Mount Holyoke connected me to a world that gave me access to the impossible,” says Mary Ann Villarreal ’94, the first in her family to attend college. “I give back because I felt like Mount Holyoke was my home and I want other people to find their home too.”
Madeline Fitzgerald ’21 compares arriving at Mount Holyoke to Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz” going over the rainbow — leaving her hometown with few LGBTQ+ people and discovering that many MHC students are members of the LGBTQ+ community.
In late 1895, Mount Holyoke students decided to form a fire brigade. And in doing so, they made history. The New York Journal reported that theirs was the first all-women’s fire department in the nation.