Andrew Logan ’18April 25, 20172min
On April 28, the Center for the Americas will host its 2017 Americas Forum on “Food Justice and Sustainability” at the Ring Family Performing Arts Hall at 2:30 p.m. The keynote address will be given by Alok Appadurai ’00. Appadurai is the the founder of Fed by Threads, a sustainable, sweatshop-free, multi-brand, American-made organic vegan clothing store that has fed over half a million meals to Americans in need. He also recently founded GoodElephant.org, a global network that aims to promote social and environmental reform by nurturing compassion and empathy. His time at Wesleyan helped to inform his current projects. As a…

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Olivia DrakeApril 25, 20172min
Four Wesleyan students participated in a literacy program March 24 at the Green Street Teaching and Learning Center. The students, who are members of Wesleyan's QuestBridge/First Class organization, read social justice-themed books to the Green Street students and spoke about being a first-generation college student. QuestBridge/First Class provides support to low-income and/or first-generation students on campus. The student volunteers included Yuhsuan Liu '20, Aysha Khan '19, Jada Jenkins '20, and Mya Valentin '19. The literacy program was organized by Belen Rodriguez '19 and Emma Llano '19. "We thought this would be a great way to interact with younger students in Middletown who…

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Lauren RubensteinApril 25, 20174min
Wesleyan has joined 67 of the nation’s top colleges and universities in an alliance to substantially expand the number of talented low- and moderate-income students at America’s undergraduate institutions with the highest graduation rates. This growing alliance, called the  American Talent Initiative (ATI), brings together a diverse set of public and private institutions united in this common goal. ATI members will enhance their own efforts to recruit, enroll, and support lower-income students, learn from each other, and contribute to research that will help other colleges and universities expand opportunity. “Bringing students of diverse backgrounds to campus enhances the learning experience…

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Lauren RubensteinApril 25, 20172min
Numerous Wesleyan faculty and students in the sciences attended the March for Science in different parts of the state and country on Earth Day, April 22. Laura Grabel, the Lauren B. Dachs Professor of Science and Society, professor of biology, professor of environmental studies, professor of feminist, gender and sexuality studies, spoke at the New Haven march. "I decided to march because science is being seriously threatened by the Trump administration," she explained. "Trump has not filled almost all of the science positions, has no science advisor, and is using little evidence-based thinking in his decision making. Some of his appointments are puzzling and…

Lauren RubensteinApril 25, 20173min
Professor of Theater Ron Jenkins was a guest on the BBC program "Sunday" to discuss his new play, "Islands: The Lost History of the Treaty That Changed the World." The play, commemorating the 350th anniversary of the Treaty of Breda in which the Dutch ceded Manhattan in exchange for the tiny spice island of Rhun, premiered April 21 and 22 at Wesleyan's Center for the Arts. Jenkins' interview begins about four-and-a-half minutes in. Or, on the BBC page, scroll down and select the "Islands" chapter. "We're performing the actual text of the 1667 Treaty of Breda. In this treaty, if you look closely at the words, you'll…

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Lauren RubensteinApril 24, 20173min
President Michael Roth writes in The Washington Post about the Hungarian government's efforts to close down the Central European University (CEU), a leading private university founded by liberal Hungarian-born financier George Soros. CEU is accredited in the United States and registered in New York State, but has no U.S. campus. The Hungarian government has targeted the school by passing a law requiring universities to have campuses in the place where they are registered. The response has been mass demonstrations and even threats to suspend Hungary's European Union membership. Pointing to  recent debates over free speech at American universities, Roth writes: While we in the United…

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Olivia DrakeApril 24, 20172min
During the Edgar Beckham Social Justice Awards ceremony on March 23, seven students, one alumna and one staff member were honored for their dedication to social justice. The Edgar Beckham Social Justice Awards honor the late Dean Edgar Beckham, whose dedication to social justice continues to positively impact the Wesleyan community. The student-led planning committee aims to celebrate the students, faculty, staff and Middletown community members whose efforts align with the ideals that guided his work. The award recipients include: Foot in the Door Award, Melisa Olgun '20 Excellence in the Arts, Rachel Kaly '17 Excellence in Environmental Justice, Belén…

Andrew Logan ’18April 21, 20172min
Wesleyan Professor of Anthropology and Feminist, Gender and Sexuality Studies Gina Athena Ulysse's newest publication, Because When God Is Too Busy: Haiti, Me, & The World, (Wesleyan University Press, April 2017), is a collection of poems, performance texts, and photographs that explores longing for a sacred and ancestral past—now entangled by Western and postcolonial inheritances. Both a lyrical and meditative work, the publisher calls it "a poetic journey through silence, rebellious rage, love, and the sacred." In it, Ulysse blurs the lines between genre and medium, as well as the personal and geopolitical. Edwidge Danticat, a former MacArthur Fellow and National…

Andrew Logan ’18April 20, 20172min
Wesleyan co-authors published a paper titled “The Stories Tryptophans Tell: Exploring Protein Dynamics of Heptosyltransferase I from Escherichia coli” in the January 2017 issue of Biochemistry. The co-authors include chemistry graduate student Joy Cote; alumni Zarek Siegel ’16 and Daniel Czyzyk, PhD '15; and faculty Erika Taylor, associate professor of chemistry; Ishita Mukerji, the Fisk Professor of Natural Science, professor of molecular biology and biochemistry. Their paper investigates the intrinsic properties of Tryptophan amino acids found within the protein, Heptosyltransferase I, to understand the ways this protein moves during catalysis. Understanding the movement of this protein is an important step in developing…

Frederic Wills '19April 20, 20172min
Tushar Irani, associate professor of philosophy, associate professor of letters, recently published an essay titled “What is good rhetoric?” for Aeon, a digital magazine for culture and ideas. Related to his current book, Plato on the Value of Philosophy, the essay calls on the public to consider the civic good that rhetoric serves in democratic politics, and the effect it may have on our ability to engage in independent thought. The essay discusses the difference between good and bad political rhetoric. By drawing on Plato’s understanding of persuasive speech, Irani draws a distinction between flattering rhetoric and “self-moving” rhetoric. The…