Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021July 13, 2022What Artificial Intelligence Can’t See After important roles at some of big tech’s biggest firms, Hong Qu ’99 is training a critical lens on the ethical implications of our technological future. By Lauren Rubenstein When Hong Qu gra…
Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021May 28, 2021Embracing Unpredictability: Professor Chris Chenier Adjunct Assistant Professor of Art Christopher Chenier explores the risks and rewards of code as a creative medium, empl…
Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021May 28, 2021A Hard Life, Well Lived Professor Christina Crosby’s life as a cyclist, faculty chair, and able-bodied person was brought to a devastating halt …
Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021May 28, 2021Unlocking Access: Delaware College Scholars Tony Alleyne ’05, left, and Jordan Bonner ’19, right, work together at Delaware College Scholars, a program aimed at hel…
Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021May 28, 2021Virtually Within Reach Photo copyright Andy & Yu Kai Tan Employing 3D-scanning technology to create computerized models of objects in W…
Category 2021 Issue 1Posted on May 28, 2021May 28, 2021Mending the Lending Gap Greg Heller '04 leads the Philadelphia Redevelopment Authority and is senior vice president at the Philadelphia Housing …
Category 2020-2021 Winter IssuePosted on February 6, 2021July 13, 2022Leading the Way Wesleyan President Michael Roth ’78 (center) and his Cabinet (left to right): David Baird, Andrew Tanaka ’00, Alison Wil…
Category 2020-2021 Winter IssuePosted on February 6, 2021July 13, 2022Man of His Word After just over a year as Wesleyan’s new vice president and dean of admission and financial aid, Amin Abdul-Malik Gonzal…
Category 2020-2021 Winter IssuePosted on February 6, 2021July 13, 2022Practiced Poise As Wesleyan’s provost and senior vice president for academic affairs, Nicole Stanton carries creativity from the dance s…
Category 2020-2021 Winter IssuePosted on February 6, 2021July 13, 2022Interpreter of Biases In the battle for left brain/right brain dominance, Alison Williams ’81 may well be a case study in cheerfully riding th…