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  • A multi-story mural on the side of a building in New York City depicts Shani Evans '96 having her hair braided.

    Ministrations

    Spring 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    The image towers over a street in East Harlem, New York, invoking an intimate and peaceful moment—a Black woman having her hair braided. Shani Evans ’96 is the subject, though she says the artwork is meant to represent a universal, rather than a personal, moment of peace and connection.

  • A photo of Judy Harte '68 outside the Lawrence Livermore National Lab in California.

    Laser Focused on Fusion

    Spring 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    For more than half a century, scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Lab (LLNL) in California have dreamed of harnessing nuclear fusion to reproduce the process that powers our sun. Computational physicist Judy Harte ’68 has been there almost from the beginning.

  • Lamiya Mowla ’13

    A First Look Through the Galaxy’s Most Powerful Space Telescope

    Winter 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    Like many science-inclined students, Lamiya Mowla ’13 arrived at Wellesley intending to become a doctor. But an introductory astronomy lesson altered her ambitions—and the course of her life.

  • A photo shows Courtney Streett '09 walking in the Edible Ecosystem on the Wellesley campus.

    Reclaiming Native Connection to the Land

    Winter 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    Courtney Streett ’09, a Native American and member of the Nanticoke Tribe, co-founded a nonprofit, the Native Roots Farm Foundation, to reclaim, cultivate, and celebrate Native relationships with the land, plants, and communities for the next Seven Generations.

  • A photo portrait of Bronwyn Lance '90

    Leading on Capitol Hill

    Winter 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    After nearly 20 years in the House and Senate advising lawmakers on policy, strategy, and messaging, Bronwyn Lance ’90 this year became the first woman in the history of North Carolina’s 11th District to be named chief of staff.

  • A portrait of Michele Moody-Adams '78

    Tracing the Arc of Moral Progress

    Winter 2023

    Class Notes: Profile

    In late May 2020, Michele Moody-Adams ’78 went for a walk, hoping to clear her head during a particularly busy season in her life. Instead the Joseph Straus Professor of Political Philosophy and Legal Theory at Columbia, stumbled upon a protest—and the inspiration for her next book.

  • A selfie photo shows Kimberly Huestis ’05 wearing a pair of her signature porcelain earrings.

    Poetry in Porcelain

    Fall 2022

    Class Notes: Profile

    Since starting her jewelry business, Porcelain and Stone, in 2012, Kimberly Huestis ’05 has made pieces for celebrities, big brands, and private customers. For Madeleine Korbel Albright ’59, she made a mint-colored, gold-speckled brooch based on her best-selling uni necklace—uni means sea urchin in Japanese, and sea urchins are adaptive, tough, and well-traveled—which the former secretary of state received at a Washington Wellesley Club event.

  • A photo shows cancer researcher Nina Bhardwaj '75 talking with a colleague at Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York City.

    Creating Custom Cancer Vaccines

    Fall 2022

    Class Notes: Profile

    A personalized vaccine to fight cancer? It may sound like science fiction or wishful thinking, but it is an idea whose time may finally be coming thanks in part to the work of Nina Bhardwaj ’75, director of immunotherapy at the Tisch Cancer Institute at Mount Sinai in New York City.

  • A photo shows Carol Sanger '70 teaching a class at Columbia.

    The Case for Reproductive Freedom

    Fall 2022

    Class Notes: Profile

    Carol Sanger ’70, professor of law at Columbia and renowned scholar of reproductive rights, is the author of About Abortion: Terminating Pregnancy in Twenty-First Century America, which addresses new connections between abortion law and American culture and politics.