MMWSS Has Gone Virtual – Join Us September 22 and 23 Online

Jascin N. Leonardo Finger • September 12, 2022

Due to unforeseen circumstances, the MMWSS is going virtual! While we are disappointed not to see you all in-person, we are excited that this will allow us to offer the MMWSS to a larger group, make it even more accessible, and offer it for FREE!


We will gather from approximately 1-6PM on Thursday, September 22 and again from 9-5PM on Friday, September 23.


The program is FREE but you will need to register via the MMWSS website.

Our speakers and panelists will all still be with us and we will offer our salons via break-out sessions. These salons are not only empowering but a place where we start to make real-world solutions for women in STEM. So please join us. And a special thanks you our sponsors who are making this possible:


Dana-Farber Cancer Institute                 Axcelis                                   Mass GeneralBrigham

Mount Holyoke College                          D.E. Shaw & Co.                     Vassar College

Agios                                                        Stinson                                   Schwartz Hannum

MassBio                                                   Simons Foundation               Novartis                            Tupancy-Harris Foundation                    American Astronomical Society     

Massachusetts Technology Collaborative               

Kenan Institute for Engineering, Technology and Science       


JNLF

 

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July 31, 1883. I had two or three rich days! On Friday last I went to Holderness, N.H.. to the Asquam House; I had been asked by Mrs. T to join her party. There was at this house Mr. Whittier, Mr., and Mrs. Cartland, Professor and Mrs. Johnson, of Yale . . . The house seemed full of fine, cultivate people. We stayed two days and a half. And first of the scenery. The road up to the house is a steep hill, and at the foot of the hill it winds and turns around two lakes. The panorama is complete one hundred and eighty degrees. Beyond the lakes lie the mountains.  The Asquam House sat atop Shepard Hill and was built in 1881. A hotel, it has space for fifty guests, it was located near Squam Lake and became part of a summer enclave that developed there in the later part of the nineteenth century. Today, the area is a National Historic Landmark, but sadly, the hotel was demolished in 1948. Maria would have been familiar with these people seen here – and others I did not include – but particularly John Greenleaf Whittier who was something of a family friend. He was close to one of her younger brothers, William Forester. JNLF
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