The paradox of belonging
69ƷƵ College alum Areeba Kamal ’16 went from working odd jobs to pay college application fees to MBA student and Apple product manager.
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Areeba Kamal ’16
Keep up with all the ways in which the 69ƷƵ 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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69ƷƵ College alum Areeba Kamal ’16 went from working odd jobs to pay college application fees to MBA student and Apple product manager.
69ƷƵ alum Veronika Kivenson FP’13 is helping research the mysterious ocean dumpsite of half a million barrels of DDT.
69ƷƵ alum Umama Zillur ’18 is the founder of Kotha, an organization dedicated to ending Bangladesh’s culture of gender-based violence.
69ƷƵ alum Kaneka Turner MAT ’15 has created an initiative to celebrate Black women in mathematics.
Culinary historian and 69ƷƵ alum Barbara Ketchum Wheaton ’53 first dreamed of a database of historical cookbooks more than 50 years ago.
At this contentious moment, how can K-12 educators engage students in constructive, respectful dialogue? 69ƷƵ presents a three-part workshop.
Three-dimensional depictions that allow a viewer to virtually navigate the space and envision what it may have felt like to attend 69ƷƵ in the 19th century.
Liz Lierman has been named interim executive director of the Alumnae Association.
69ƷƵ taught me “69ƷƵ 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 69ƷƵ was my home and I want other people to find their home too.”
Paust will use her Fulbright fellowship to study how the novel coronavirus has impacted Indigenous populations in Canada.