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Released: 11-Mar-2009 3:00 PM EDT
Journalist Kimberly Dozier Will Be Wellesley College Commencement Speaker
Wellesley College

Kimberly Dozier, a CBS News correspondent reporting from Baghdad, Iraq, became the victim of a car bombing on Memorial Day 2006. In her subsequent memoir about the attack and its aftermath, she wrote about recovering from injuries including shrapnel in the head, a fractured femur, severe burns and emotional distress. Dozier, a Wellesley College alumna from the class of 1987, will address the approximately 600 members of the Class of 2009 and their friends and families at Wellesley College's 131st Commencement.

Released: 20-Mar-2009 1:00 PM EDT
Researcher Works on Greener Gardens, Cleaner Waterways - Even Healthier Astroturf
Wellesley College

Dan Brabander wants to put the green in "“ and take the lead out of "“ urban gardens. As associate professor of geosciences at Wellesley College, his focus is on environmental geochemistry and public health. To that end, he has received funding from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and has formed a partnership with Boston's Food Project, a nonprofit organization that helps foster organic urban gardens. For the past five years, Brabander and his Wellesley College student researchers have been testing for lead contamination in urban backyard gardens in Boston neighborhoods.

Released: 20-Mar-2009 1:00 PM EDT
College Students Explore Green Living in Cooperative Housing
Wellesley College

The student residents of Wellesley's sustainability co-op housing have made a commitment to buying and cooking locally and sustainably. Also essential to the new model of co-op living on campus is a community-based lifestyle. Nine students currently live in the sustainable housing wing of Simpson Hall on the Wellesley College campus in rooms that share a common living area and kitchen.

Released: 11-May-2009 11:15 AM EDT
Researchers Study How Contemplation Changes Students, Affects Careers
Wellesley College

College is supposed to change lives for the better. Higher education, after all, teaches skills and knowledge that often result in better jobs and more income. But what if the most life-changing result of college involved becoming a kinder, gentler person? That's the focus of a Wellesley College study, "Impact of Buddhism on Undergraduates in the U.S. Today," by Professor of Religion James Kodera and Buddhist advisor Ji Hyang Padma.

Released: 3-Jun-2009 10:30 AM EDT
Legally Blind, Wellesley College Senior Chosen as the 2009 Commencement Speaker
Wellesley College

At age 7, Mona Minkara started seeing wild colors swirl through her vision. Doctors first dismissed her symptoms, but eventually her family learned a startling diagnosis: Their daughter was suffering from macular degeneration and cone-rod dystrophy. She was going blind.

Released: 24-Sep-2009 7:00 AM EDT
Professor of Political Science Wins Career Achievement Award for Study of City Politics
Wellesley College

City politics have provided Wilbur C. Rich with a most satisfying career as a professor of political science. Now they have brought him honors for a lifetime of achievement. Wellesley College’s William R. Kenan Jr. professor of political science, Rich has been awarded the Norton Long Career Achievement Award from the American Political Science Association (APSA) at its 2009 annual meeting this month.

Released: 8-Oct-2009 10:40 AM EDT
Economists Say Economic Crisis Will Cause More Retirements
Wellesley College

When the stock market and the housing market plummeted, many thought that decimated retirement accounts and lower home equity would force older workers to delay retirement. Instead, the economy may actually force many into retirement, say two Wellesley College economics professors.

Released: 20-Oct-2009 3:45 PM EDT
Cobwebs, Candy Corn and the Creepy Carillon: Wellesley College Bell Ringers Host Halloween Haunted Tower
Wellesley College

This Halloween, the eerie theme of the Addams Family will ring out over a darkened Wellesley College campus. This and other terrifying tunes will emanate from Galen Stone Tower, which stands 182 feet tall, and the students who play the carillon within. The guild is opening the tower to the brave-hearted who can scale the spine-chilling stairs to the carillon, encountering skeletons, spiders, ghosts and cobwebs on the climb, during a Halloween Haunted Tower, Saturday, Oct. 31, from 5-7 pm.

Released: 10-Nov-2009 8:30 AM EST
New Book Reveals the Range of Islamist Thought for Western Readers
Wellesley College

Wellesley College political scientist Roxanne L. Euben has published a new book designed to expand the understanding of Islamic thought in the Western world. "Princeton Readings in Islamist Thought: Texts and Contexts from al-Banna to Bin Laden" is an anthology of key writings from the early 20th century to the present.

Released: 17-Nov-2009 12:50 PM EST
Wellesley College Scientists Win EPA Grant to Support Earth-Friendly Heating Options for Poor Nations
Wellesley College

Wellesley College alumna Catlin Powers, class of 2009, fights to bring heat, clean water and other necessities to those in need -- from the high-altitude regions of the Himalayas to economically depressed areas of the Dominican Republic, Ghana and India. Powers and other investigators, including project advisor Nolan Flynn, associate professor of chemistry at Wellesley, have won $10,000 from the EPA's P3 Awards, a national student design competition focusing on people, prosperity and the planet.


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