Why I became a SAW mentor
“The SAW Center is an amazing place to meet people from across the campus and learn from each other.”
- Featuring
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Emma Rubin ’20
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke 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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“The SAW Center is an amazing place to meet people from across the campus and learn from each other.”
Erin Hancock ’20’s lifelong interest in weaving and folk arts came together when she found a 200-year-old loom in 鶹ý’s Skinner Museum.
6,500 bags. An 18-wheeler and several vans filled with donated food. Spring admits begin their Mount Holyoke career with community service.
Mount Holyoke Associate Professor of Art History Jessica Maier has received a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
North and South Rockefeller Halls, affectionately known as the “Rockies,” are among the most popular residence halls on campus. But the current halls actually represent the second version of the dormitory.
For Mount Holyoke music professor Tianhui Ng, conducting the Pioneer Valley Symphony is a chance to work with community members from all over the region.
Lexi discusses how attendance at a psychology lecture as a first-year student prompted her to suggest an experiment to Mara Breen, associate professor of psychology and education and to become part of a research team.
Shannon Seigal ’19 has combined her interests in environmental sustainability and social justice and taken advantage of every opportunity.
In a New York Times article, 鶹ý assistant professor Rebeccah Lijek describes the pressures faced by junior researchers in academia.