Viewing 28 Results

  • A photo shows Nancy Stearns '61 in her New York City apartment.
    Published: 

    After Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022, “I basically just didn’t sleep,” says Nancy Stearns ’61. She vividly remembers what she has called “the bad old days” before Roe, when she was on the front lines of the fight to make abortion legal.

  • Illustration of a reflection of a parent and child standing by the edge of some water, with herons in flight visible in the reflection
    Published: 

    W e have been walking through the Mississippi swamp for hours when someone, a child, I think, finally spots the first heron, its silhouette unmistakable: an inky S-shaped brushstroke set against an ombre sky. “There!”...

  • Illustration of a Black mother in a hospital bed cradling two newborn babies
    Published: 

    Black people are more than three times as likely as white people to die from pregnancy-related causes. Wellesley medical professionals and advocates are at the forefront of addressing this maternal health crisis.

  • Published: 

    This year’s recipients are Lulu Chow Wang ’66, investment trailblazer and philanthropic leader; Laura Wheeler Murphy ’76, public servant and civil liberties and civil rights advocate; and Mara Prentiss ’80, physicist and environmental revolutionary.

  • Published: 

    A palm reader once correctly inferred that “why” is the favorite word of Lulu Chow Wang ’66. The Wall Street leader and philanthropist has always had an insatiable curiosity, she says—a quality that drives her to want to better understand and improve the world.

  • A portrait of Jeri Lynne Johnson '93
    Published: 

    Jeri Lynne Johnson ’93, a conductor and the founding artistic director of the Black Pearl Chamber Orchestra in Philadelphia, knew what she wanted to be from age 7, when she attended her first orchestra concert.

  • A photo of Secretary Albright's iconic serpent pin -- a snake curled around a branch. A diamond hangs from its mouth.
    Published: 

    At the funeral of Madeleine Korbel Albright ’59 at the Washington National Cathedral in late April, while the war in Ukraine raged on, she was celebrated for championing democracy—and breaking one of the world’s hardest glass ceilings.

  • Colorful illustration of a hand holding a piece of RNA, a petri dish, and a planet with an asteroid ring
    Published: 

    As the College celebrates the opening of its new Science Complex, Wellesley magazine asked 15 alums in STEM fields about the pressing questions they hope to answer.

  • Students make themselves at home in the Chao Foundation Innovation Hub.
    Published: 

    In January, Wellesley welcomed students, faculty, and staff into the transformed Science Complex, which encompasses more than 275,000 square feet of sustainably designed space and combines renovations to the College’s historic structures with new spaces for research, collaboration, and teaching. The students quickly made the space their own.