Miss Elma Lewis ’43 Honored in Boston Globe
Miss Elma Lewis ’43, one of Boston’s most important Black female luminaries in the arts, education, and civil rights work, is featured in conjunction with the Globe’s celebration of Black History Month.
Miss Elma Lewis ’43, one of Boston’s most important Black female luminaries in the arts, education, and civil rights work, is featured in conjunction with the Globe’s celebration of Black History Month.
An eight-part series posits that everything we think we know about drug addiction, legalization of drugs, the opioid crisis, and 12-step programs is wrong.
The Career Development Center provides services to students and alumni, including career counseling, job fairs, interview prep, cover letter and resume reviews.
The program awards grants of $25,000 to recipients to allow the time and space to create and further develop their writing projects. Fellowships alternate yearly between prose and poetry (it’s a prose year).
Professionals from different industries join the conversations to mentor students, and encourage artistic collaborations using a social justice framework to bring their ideas to life.
Poetry, panel discussions, museums, and more.
This year’s hybrid, bicoastal two-day BCE Conference will confront “(dis)enfranchisement: Getting a Seat at the Table,” with a diverse slate of scholars, executives, documentarians, community leaders, and other creatives.
This platform will provide an opportunity for community stakeholders to actively engage in the BRE Strategic Review, and inform future strategy sessions focused on student satisfaction and campus climate.
Rosado hosted ComEx! Tonight and interviewed comedians Saget, Reggie Watts, and Leslie Jones.
The Emerson alum and his dog have rocketed to social media stardom and endorsement deals with their charming, feel-good posts.