The 1999 Ruhlman Conference, Thursday, April 29, was a day-long celebration of intellectual life at Wellesley College as more than 250 students presented their work to the public in a variety of expressive formats. Each topic was organized around one of the eight major themes of this year's conference: Gender and Sexuality; Identity and Society; Perspective on Difference; Tradition and Innovation; Nature, Science, and Technology; Image, Text, and Subtext; Politics, Power, and Society; and Wellesley in Time and Space. Among this year's presentations were:
Robots on Parade (exhibition)
New Music (performance)
Explority Diversity through Art (exhibition)
Gender and Class: A Bilingual Performace (performance)
Making Molecules (poster session)
Human Tragedy: Tales of Genocide (paper and exhibition)
Better Living through Mathematics (paper)
The Art and Science of Multimedia (computer demonstrations)
What's Fair? Welfare Reform and Affirmative Action (panel discussion)
Made possible by the Barbara Peterson Ruhlman Fund for Interdisciplinary Study, the Conference is open to all members of the College community as well as alumnae, family and friends. "It's an opportunity for a public presentation, and celebration, of academic achievement, something that is often considered to be a private, isolated activity," said Associate Dean Lee Cuba, who conceived the event in 1996. "The Conference demonstrates that academic inquiry is part of an ongoing conversation with a community of scholars across disciplines," he said.
To participate, a student must submit an application to the Dean's Office describing her project and the faculty member with whom she'll be working. "Wellesley has a strong tradition of faculty mentoring students. The Conference is our opportunity to celebrate the fruits of these relationship," he said. Making the presentations public, Cuba said, also allows for older students to be role models for younger students as to the breadth and creativity of academic and artistic pursuits open to them during their years of study at Wellesley College.
The 1999 Ruhlman Conference
Victoria Herget '73 to Chair Board of Trustees
A View from Georgia
Wellesley Summer Theatre Presents: Dancing at Lughnasa
Wellesley College Calendar Summer Issue
Green Hall Renovations on Schedule
Campus Center Plan to be Explored
Stained Glass Restoration
Welcome new employees!
Colleagues in the News
Academic Council Elections
Levitt, Shennan named Associate Deans
Student News of Note
CARD announces Multicultural Awards
"Russian Ruhlman" at Harvard
The Wellesley College Board of Trustees has elected Chicago native Victoria J. Herget to be Chair of the Board, effective July 1. In a unanimous vote, Herget was selected to succeed Gail Heitler Klapper, who has led the Board since 1993. "Vicki brings a high level of energy, creativity, and commitment to Wellesley's leadership team as we prepare to enter the next century," stated President Diana Chapman Walsh. Edward P. Lawrence and Estelle (Nicki) Tanner, Vice-Chairs of the Board, will continue to serve in those capacities.
At its April meeting, the Board also elected two new members, Sidney R. Knafel of New York City and Ellen Gill Miller of McLean, Virginia. In appreciation for their distinguished service, Allison Stacey Cowles and
Margaret Jewett Greer were named trustee emeritae.
Herget is a managing director of Scudder Kemper Investments, Inc. in Chicago, having joined the firm in 1973 upon graduation from Wellesley. She earned her M.B.A. from the University of Chicago and is a Chartered Financial Analyst and a Chartered Investment Counselor. Herget was appointed to the Board of Trustees in 1992 and has chaired the Investment Committee for five years. She and her husband, Robert K. Parsons, have two children.
Sidney Knafel is the founder and managing partner of SRK Management Company, a private investment and venture capital firm. He also serves as Chairman and Managing Partner of the BioReliance Corporation, a provider of outsourcing services for the pharmaceutical industry. Knafel received his A.B. and M.B.A. from Harvard University. His late wife, Susan Rappaport, was a Wellesley graduate. Together they raised two sons.
Ellen Gill Miller will return to the Board in July for her second appointment, having served as an ex officio member from 1994-1997 in her capacity as president of the College's Alumnae Association. She is a founder of Stonebridge Associates, a real estate investment and management advisory firm in Bethesda, Maryland.
A member of the Visiting Committee on the Future of the Campus Landscape, Miller was instrumental in the development of Wellesley's first campus master plan in 75 years. She earned her M.B.A. from Stanford University and her B.A. from Wellesley. She and her husband, Russell Miller, are the parents of two daughters.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
Nominated by their peers,
Andrea
Levitt, Professor of French and Linguistics and Director of
Language Studies, and
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
Alumnae Office Chinese Custodial Service Davis Museum Food Service Information
Services Office of Religious and
Spiritual Life |
Physical Plant Power Plant Purchasing Resources Spanish Summer School
Office Wellesley Centers for
Women
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
Pat Berman, Art, has been awarded a senior fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies for her project "Edvard Munsch and the National Politics of Public Art." She also has been named Affiliate of the Mary Ingraham Bunting Institute at Radcliffe College during her sabbatical for the 1999-2000 academic year.
Judy Brown, Physics, was elected Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America during its recent meeting in Berlin. The citation reads, "For applications of signal processing to musical acoustics, frequency tracking, instrument identification and spectral analysis."
Director of Health Education Catherine Collins participated in The Third Annual New Perspectives on Women, Girls and Tobacco: Putting Smoking in Context conference sponsored by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. She was a panelist for the session, "Reflecting Issues of Self-Esteem and Tobacco Use From the Perspectives of Various Communities," and led a workshop titled "Reaching Women on College Campuses."
Ted Ducas, Physics, has received a grant from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for the participation of two students in the Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship Program at the Gaithersburg, Md., NIST laboratory. Gretchen Campbell '01 and Elaine Ulrich '01 will be participating in atomic and optical physics research involving the use of lasers to cool and trap atoms under the direction of William Phillips, recent Nobel Laureate in Physics. The program represents a partnership between NIST and Wellesley in which the students will work on related research in the Physics Department.
Trinity Repertory Company in Providence, R.I, presented Bunny Harvey, Art, with the Rhode Island Pell Award, named in honor of former Senator Claiborne Pell who sponsored the legislation to establish the National Endowment for the Arts and Humanities in 1965.
Yoon Sun Lee, English, has been awarded a junior fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies for her project, "Asian American Literature and the Resistance to Politics."
Julie Matthaei, Economics, will be working on a book tentatively titled "Beyond Racist Capitalist Patriarchal Economics: Toward a Feminist Economics for the Third Millennium" at the Public Policy Institute at Radcliffe College during her sabbatical for the 1999-2000 academic year.
Takis Metaxas, Computer Science, and Marianne Moore, Biological Sciences, were featured in the Boston Globe ("Sea creatures await you at Logan," April 11, 1999) for their collaboration with artist Jane Goldman on a multimedia exhibit at Logan Airport. They have applied for a grant from the National Science Foundation to complete their project. For a copy of the article, call x2373.
Sherry Mou, Chinese, has been awarded a summer stipend by the National Endowment for Humanities for her project, "A Confucian Appropriation of Women: Liu Xiang's The Biographies of Women."
Susan Reverby, Women's Studies, received the Agnes Randolph Award for History Scholarship from the Center for Nursing History Inquiry at the University of Virginia. She also gave the keynote speech at the "Gendering Health Policy: U.S. and Canadian Historical Perspectives" Conference in Toronto. Her speech was titled "Gendering Health Policy: Historical Reflections from the U.S. Perspective."
Ann Trenk, Mathematics, received a grant from the Army Research Lab for her work "Research and Development Support for Discrete Mathematical Structures."
Ann Velenchik, Economics, has been named Director of the Wellesley Summer School Program, effective July 1.
Wellesley College President Diana Chapman Walsh will receive an honorary doctor of humane letters from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst during undergraduate Commencement ceremonies there Sunday, May 23.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
Joseph Joyce, Economics, Geeta Patel, Women's Studies, and Edward Stettner, Political Science, have been elected to the Board of Appeals for two-year terms.
Alexia Sontag, Mathematics, has been elected to the Agenda Committee for a three-year term as a Group C representative.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
During the 1998-99 academic year, Wellesley students have earned many prestigious awards including a British Marshall Scholarship and two Thomas J. Watson Fellowships. What follows are national award winners not previously mentioned in the Illuminator:
Amelia Em Brown '99
Helen Virginia Cantwell '92; J.D.,
Harvard Law School '95
Alice Marie Shumate, '93; Ph.D.
candidate in ecology and evolutionary biology, Dartmouth College '99
Bridget Kathryn Smith '00
Karin Anja Haag '99, and Sarah Stafford Strunk '99, PAD Teaching
Assistantships/Fulbright Grants to Germany
Emily Ellen Wishneuski '99, Fulbright
Grant to Austria with an English Teaching Assistantship
Angela Cecile Carpenter DS '99,
Institute for International Public Policy
Charlotte Oyejoke Ashamu '01
Mayra Miryea De La Garza '99
Maria Clewes Garrett '98
Miriam Beth Neirick '99
Jennifer Evelyn Smyth '99
Marianne Jane Montgomery '99
Sarah Elizabeth Wall '97
Laurie Ann Burlingame '99, Public
Policy and International Affairs
Kamil Fulwood '99
Bridget Kathryn Smith '00
Alison Barker '99, Edna Chiang '99, Amanda Dickerson '00, Jamie Steele '99, Alessandra Vecchi '00, and Giulietta Versiglia '99 were co-recipients of a Katharine Timberman Wright Award for their work at the Somali Development Center in Jamaica Plain. Founded in 1996, the community center focuses on Somali refugees and immigrants living in the Greater Boston area. The students teach classes in English as a Second Language and citizenship as well as tutoring. The group is coordinated by Lidwien Kapteijns, Women's Studies.
Gretchen Campbell '01, Jenny Ross '00, Ann Sanders '01, and Tyler Wellensiek '01, spent their Spring Break at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Tx., doing physics experiments aboard the 'Vomit Comet,' as part of NASA's program for college undergraduates. The team filmed their zero-gravity experiments to use in an educational video about science for young girls.
Ann De Leon '99 was awarded first prize for the Lufthansa Excellence in German Studies contest, an award she received as part of the cross-registration program of Wellesley College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. De Leon, a native of Mexico City, plans to continue her study of German this fall as a Fulbright Scholar at the Univerisity of Bonn.
Kristen Looney '01, served as the first Community Service Senator this semester, a special interest position created to represent those involved in community service at Wellesley, including dormitory Volunteer Representatives and the staff of the Center for Work and Service Community Service Office.
Summer Smith '99, won Wellesley's 104th annual hoop-rolling competition May 1. Smith was met at the finish line by President Diana Chapman Walsh (herself the hoop-rolling winner of '66), who presented her with a bouquet of yellow flowers, the Class of 1999's color.
Sharon Tisdale '99, received the Katharine Timberman Wright Award for her work on Project A+, a bilingual tutoring project co-sponsored by Wellesley College and Framingham Public Schools. The project's goal is to improve the achievement levels of Walsh Middle School students by pairing each student with a Wellesley student mentor.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
The Multicultural Achivement Awards were instituted by the Committee Against Racism and Discrimination (CARD) to recognize individual and group efforts at combating prejudice of all kinds and fostering tolerance on our campus. The awardees have worked toward the development of a respectful and pluralistic community and have shown an ability to work with groups across constituencies and to promote cultural understanding at Wellesley.
The recipients were honored at an awards luncheon, May 14, and their accomplishments were described as follows by Carlos Ramos, CARD member:
Jennifer Chau '99
Jennifer Chau has incorporated multiculturalism into every facet of her experience at Wellesley. As the founding member and co-chair of UNITY, Jen has fostered cross-constituency dialogue among Senior Staff, House President's Council, and Cabinet. During her time as College Government Vice President, she was an active participant in the conception, organization, and facilitation of the campus wide pluralism discussion. This year, as President of College Government, Jen helped plan the campus wide discussion on Social Class. In addition, she is one of the founders of the multiracial-multicultural organization, Fusion, and she helped to plan for Multicultural Council's "Beyond the Box II" conference.
Sylvia Hiestand, Director of International Studies and Services
Sylvia Hiestand's understanding of multiculturalism goes beyond tolerance and acceptance of difference: she tries to make people appreciate the diversity and richness that different backgrounds bring to this campus. She founded the Multicultural Council to foster this understanding, and has been its advisor for ten years until last fall. She was among the founding members of ICAN, and has participated in its orientation programs ever since. She was also a member of the Committee for Diversity. In addition, she opened Slater as a place for meeting and discussion to all people on campus interested in international and multicultural issues. She regularly organizes and sponsors lectures and discussions on current international and multicultural issues, trying to promote understanding, tolerance, and appreciation of differences. She has also participated in many staff and student training sessions on cross-cultural issues, most recently for the Beyond the Box Multicultural Student Conference. For many years, Sylvia has given support to many international students who have always had in her a strong point of reference and an advocate.
Arianne Miller '99
Arianne has been consistently involved in multicultural affairs organized by students. From her first year, she has been very involved with Ethos, an organization to which she was elected President in her junior year. She has also been very active in Multicultural Council.
Rosemary Moffat '99
Rosemary has been very active with Wellesleyís international student population. She was president of Slater her junior year. Rosemary has shown a commitment to helping Wellesley realize its potential as a diverse community by taking part in Multicultural Council, Common Ground, and African Awareness Now.
Joanne Murray, Associate Dean of Students and Director for the Center of Work and Service
Joanne Murray has worked tirelessly to envision and to set up structures at the college that would promote education about tolerance and provide helpful avenues available when conflicts and crises involving race and culture arise. Some of the efforts that she had either initiated or been involved in, have been the creation of the Cultural Advisor Network, the hiring and support of each Cultural Advisor and close work with the Student Multicultural Council. She spearheaded the ìConversations about Collegeî forum on class issues at Wellesley and the creation of the new Multicultural Space on the 4th floor of Schneider Center. She has acted also as the advisor to the ICAN student group.
Kavitha Nair '99
Kavitha Nair is the President of WASAC (Wellesley Association for South Asian Cultures. To help make WASAC members feel more at home in the greater community, Kavitha has participated in dialogues with both WASAC and other leaders of the Asian community. Kavitha was a Managing Editor of GenerAsians, the campus Asian and Asian-American magazine, and is a member of the Mayling Soong Committee. In addition, Kavitha has worked extensively with other groups, including Ethos and MESA, on a variety of projects. She has also worked with Slater and PSA to promote solidarity between all groups in the South Asian community. Kavitha has also been involved in both Political Science and Anthropology department searches for faculty in Asian Studies. She has also been involved in a drive towards Arabic language, which involves both South Asian and Middle Eastern Students.
Erica Schattle '99
Erica Schattle wrote a stellar Multicultural Recommendation for the Music Curriculum. The report is a 21-page original and well-researched document that explores and compares Wellesley's curriculum with those of other peer institutions. The Music Department is currently in the process of revising its curriculum based on the models that she found, presented and synthesized in her project.
Erin Wilkinson '99
Erin has been extremely active this year in pursuing the rights of disabled students at Wellesley. She convened and led the Disabled Student Services Ad Hoc Group, and through it has worked to identify the problems in the existing services for disabled students, as well as suggest remedies for them. She has advocated for improvements in disabled student services to CARD, Dean of Students Geneva Walker-Johnson, and AA/EEO Director Linda Brothers. Erin also convened along with CARD and Lorraine Palmer, a campus-wide "Disability Support Group".
World Languages Cultural Consultant Group 99
Jenifer Anderson '99, Angela Carpenter '99, Jane Choi '99, Mayra De La Garza '99, Sarah Glueck '99, Cristina MartÌnez '99, Erica Rosales '99, Sandra Salazar '99, Chris Souza '00 and Jenni Lund, Advanced Technology Specialist.
This group of 9 seniors and one staff member has promoted cross-cultural understanding not only at Wellesley College, but also in the town community and for the state of Massachusetts beyond the confines of the campus, thus featuring Wellesley as a leader I the commitment to working for a more tolerant society. The World Languages Cultural Consultants group has run support groups for first and second year students feeling cultural isolation and alienation. They have participated in a panel on ìDiversityî that was held at the Wellesley Town Hall for the Board of Selectmen and televised on the local cable station. Another initiative they undertook was teaching the integration of culture into the curriculum to teachers of elementary, middle and high school students from the state of Massachusetts. They have been responsive to the Wellesley motto of serving others and not themselves, in an effort to share their own cultural heritages and to learn about others. They manifest the proactive efforts which multiculturalism can embrace and engage.
Victor Kazanjian, Dean of Religious and Spiritual Life
Victor Kazanjian has transformed religious life at Wellesley into a truly multicultural arena. Victor transformed what used to be called "the Chaplaincy" into "the Office of Religious and Spiritual Life", a truly multicultural, multi-faith effort which he oversees. The associated Multi-faith Council and Religious Life Team which he coordinates brings students and advisors representing the different religious groups together to further religious life at the college. Victor also created the project, "Beyond Tolerance," which models constructive interaction and learning between members of different religious groups. Finally, the challenge of religious pluralism was a major theme at a conference Victor co-organized at Wellesley in September of 1998, "Education as Transformation: Religious and Spiritual Life on College Campuses."
CARD is also one of some 70 administrative, faculty and student organizations on campus that have banded together this year to form the Alliance of Multicultural Organizations (AMO) whose mission is to increase communication between groups, coordinate efforts, and work toward identifying and pursuing a shared vision and agenda for multicultural change at Wellesley.
For more information about AMO, please contact one of its steering committe members: Adrienne Asch x3248, Linda Brothers x2240, Julie Matthaei x2181, or Ting Ni x4905.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
'RUSSIAN RUHLMAN' AT HARVARD -- Russian Studies Day at Harvard University, April 30, gave 15 students from Harvard, Wellesley, and Wheaton an opportunity to discuss their senior theses with an audience made up of faculty, fellow students, and family.
"What stood out for me was the competence of many of the students both in the academic and the performance sections. It was really a celebration of academic excellence," said Marshall Goldman, the Kathryn Wasserman Davis Professor of Russian Economics at Wellesley and the Associate Director of the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard. He is pictured here with Wellesley student participants (left to right): Claire Felt, Kelly Seifert, Terry Peterson and Miriam Neirick.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
The Galen Stone Tower restoration is on schedule and slated for completion in November, according to Pam Gentile, project manager. The installation of the scaffolding involved "threading" steel beams through the tower structure, securing debris netting, and installing a perimeter green fence at the base of the Tower to provide security.
The top turrets of the Tower have been power-washed, the mortar joints re-pointed, and some of the decorative limestone is in the process of being re-pointed. Custom bricks of many different shapes and configurations for the tower's facade are being fired for the next stage of the restoration.
The Green Hall air conditioning project is also proceeding well, though there have been schedule revisions and delays in some areas, including a small fire in the emergency generator room in Founders on April 19. In late May and early June, technicians will be installing individual thermostats in offices. The cooling system should be fully functional by July 1, Gentile said.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
At the direction of the Board of Trustees, President Diana Chapman Walsh has appointed a planning committee to explore the feasibility of building a campus center at Wellesley. The planning will be a collaborative process led by Will Reed, Vice President for Finance and Administration, and Patricia Byrne, Vice President for Planning. The three key areas the committee will consider the programming needs, possible locations, and overall costs.
President Walsh noted that the need for a new campus center has been discussed for a long time but that an in-depth study must be conducted before the decision to build, or not to build, can be reached. Deans Lee Cuba and Geneva Walker-Johnson also will serve on the committee that will include students, faculty, staff and trustees.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
|
This past Wintersession four Wellesley students traveled to Tbilisi, Georgia, with Anthropology Professor Philip Kohl and students from Amherst, Mount Holyoke, Williams, and Macalester Colleges. This was the first year that Wellesley sponsored the program. A similar program was started 10 years ago by Williams College and the University of Tbilisi. The program was interrupted by civil war in 1991, following the break-up of the Soviet Union. Professor Kohl hopes to turn the Georgia trip into an exchange program between Wellesley College and the University of Tbilisi. This August, he plans to lead a three-week summer field school in pre-historic archaeology outside of Tbilisi for interested Wellesley students.
|
Stretching across the entire northern border of the Republic of Georgia, the Caucasus mountains have served to foster a national identity, and to divide the peoples of Georgia into numerous isolated ethnic groups. After the break-up of the former Soviet Union, Georgia's "natural" and political borders have created nation-wide ethnic conflicts, forcing many to fight or leave.
A year ago, I met a Georgian woman who had fled to Russia after her village had been destroyed in the brutal, on-going conflict with Abkhazia, the northwest region of Georgia. I was moved by her story and was eager to learn more about this remote republic.
This past Wintersession I had the chance to travel to Tbilisi, the capital and most populated city of Georgia, with Professor Kohl, Anthropology, and a group of students from Wellesley and other colleges.
Even though the population of Tbilisi is just over a million, it is monstrous by Georgian standards&emdash;one fifth of Georgia's entire population. During our three weeks in Tbilisi, we lived with Georgian families and attended lectures in Georgian history, language, art, and politics. During the weekends, we traveled to places outside of Tbilisi, including Gori, the birthplace of Stalin, where we inspected his ominous museum. We also attended a Georgian Orthodox service in the 11th Century Cathedral of Svetitskhoveli located in Mtskheta, Georgia's old capital.
In addition to the lectures and weekend excursions, individual internships were organized by our intrepid guide, Zaaliko Kikodze, a man who seemed to personally know everyone in Georgia. The internships gave us the rare opportunity to experience a part of Georgian culture that is unseen by most foreigners. Within the whole group, we had a broad range of internships. Among the Wellesley students, Cassie Culley '99, examined Georgian financing at a newly opened private bank; Sara Wohlers '00, observed architects designing buildings; and Georgia Antonopoulos '01, assisted an organization that promoted democracy and human rights. I worked with a sculptor who helped me create works in wood and marble and introduced me to many Georgian artists.
Before leaving the country, we traveled on a rusty Soviet minibus (that broke down several times) along the rugged Georgian Military Highway up into the Caucasus mountains, where we skied and enjoyed the beautiful view. At 12,000 feet, surrounded by immense snow-capped mountains, Georgia seemed immaculate, untouched by the current ethnic conflicts and economic crises. I felt both uplifted and inconsequential. I bet that the Caucasus were just as inspiring to Scythian nomads who wished to cross them over 2,500 years ago.
Even after seeing only one small piece of Georgia, I am overwhelmed. One day I want to return and create big sculptures with my artist friends and explore western Georgia and other areas in the Caucasus. Like a guest at a Georgian supra dinner, I eagerly will taste everything and raise my glass in satisfaction: Guamarjos!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
![]() |
Winner of the 1992 Tony Award for Best Play, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play, this production is brought to you by the same new company which brought you A Midsummer Night's Dream last summer. Dancing at Lughnasa is directed by Irish born director Nora Hussey and features: Derek Nelson, Lynne Moulton, Nicole Jesson, Ciaran Crawford, James Butterfield, Lianne Marie Holmes, Alicia Kahn and Katrina Connor. The set and lighting design is by Kenneth Loewit.
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
After seven months of painstaking restoration work by Serpentino Studio in Needham, Mass., the stained glass in Houghton Memorial Chapel was reinstalled May 12-13. To celebrate, Arthur Femenella, a stained glass preservation consultant, gave a talk and slide show presentation about the process in a small ceremony at the Chapel on May 13.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Return to top of page
Editor-in-Chief: Mary Ann Hill, mhill@wellesley.edu
Managing Editor: Betsy Lawson, elawson@wellesley.edu
Editorial Staff: Eileen Devine
Editorial Interns: Sasha Pfau '99
Maren Swanson '02
Pel-Hsin (Michelle) Tsai '00
The Illuminator is the published monthly during the academic year by Wellesley College's Office for Public Information, a division of Resources and Public Affairs, 230 Green Hall, 106 Central Street, Wellesley, MA 02481. Issues are published the first week of every month during the academic year, except for combined issues in September/October and January/February. Special Family Editions are also published.
Please submit editorial content to the above listed mailing address or e-mail: elawson@wellesley.edu
[ Return to Public Information home page ]
Betsy Lawson elawson@wellesley.edu
Sasha Pfau apfau@wellesley.edu
Office for Public Information
Date created: May 21, 1999
Last updated: June 9, 1999
Page expires: May, 2000