Sun, 05/16/2021 - 3:01pm tim
Jane Lindholm, Vermont Edition retired VPR host and now creator and host of the popular podcast But Why: A Podcast For Curious Kids. Photo: Adrian Hicks.
by Joyce Marcel, Vermont Business Magazine If you had a laboratory and wanted to cook up the perfect public radio host, the results would probably come out looking a lot like Jane Lindholm. She has all the ingredients you would expect: child of academics, well-educated, well-traveled, curious as hell and unafraid to try new things.
Lindholm even describes herself as a “back seat listener:” She was one of those little kids in the back of the car whose parents drove around listening to public radio; by default, she grew up hearing everything from “Car Talk” to discussions about the Holocaust.
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12 hours ago
The Sophomore Launch event, sponsored by the Dean of Students Office, will be held via Zoom on May 12 from 6:30 to 7:45 p.m. This event aims to celebrate first-year students for approaching the end of their first academic year at Lawrence and prepare them for the transition into sophomore year and beyond.
During the event, students will have the opportunity to go into four back-to-back informative breakout sessions among a variety of staff members from the Center for Academic Success (CAS) and Wellness Services. Other breakout sessions will also include affinity spaces, having staff present from the Diversity and Intercultural Center (D&IC), International Student Services and Spiritual and Religious Life, according to Rose Wasielewski, Associate Dean of Students and Dean of the Sophomore Class.
As the school year nears a close, administrators in the Dean of Students Office reflected on students experiences during the past academic year amid the coronavirus pandemic in an interview with The Crimson on Tuesday.
Harvard held courses online during the 2020-2021 academic year due to the public health crisis. For the fall semester, the College only invited freshmen and a select group of upperclassmen to live in residence, while juniors, seniors, and a cohort of petitioning students were invited to campus in the spring.
Students living in residence had to comply with a spate of residential guidelines, including social distancing guidelines and Covid-19 testing three times per week.