News and Events Home All News Vassar Everywhere Events Press Releases Featured Videos Vassar Everywhere Vassar visiting professor Anurag Mehra, from the Indian Institute of Technology in Bombay, talked with Spectrum News about artificial intelligence. In a guest essay for the New York Times, Visiting Associate Professor of English David Means deftly demonstrates why AI can’t create what a human can. Eloise Grossman ’25 is quoted in a Washington Post story about a celebration for the late novelist Philip Roth. President Elizabeth Bradley was named to City & State’s list of New York’s most influential college and university leaders. Congratulations to Jon Read ’09, Co-Producer of Everything Everywhere All at Once—which swept the Academy Awards! The Black Wall Street Times lauds Dr. June Jackson Christmas ’45-4 as “a gift to Black mental health.” CBS News highlighted Vassar’s contribution to the invention of fudge in the late 1800s. Eco-feminist artist Mira Lehr ’56 is remembered by the New York Times Film Professor Mia Mask, along with actor Mario Van Peebles, participated in an Academy Museum of Motion Pictures symposium panel on the complex relationship between the Western film genre and Black representation in American cinema. View More Items
Vassar visiting professor Anurag Mehra, from the Indian Institute of Technology in Bombay, talked with Spectrum News about artificial intelligence.
In a guest essay for the New York Times, Visiting Associate Professor of English David Means deftly demonstrates why AI can’t create what a human can.
Eloise Grossman ’25 is quoted in a Washington Post story about a celebration for the late novelist Philip Roth.
President Elizabeth Bradley was named to City & State’s list of New York’s most influential college and university leaders.
Congratulations to Jon Read ’09, Co-Producer of Everything Everywhere All at Once—which swept the Academy Awards!
The Black Wall Street Times lauds Dr. June Jackson Christmas ’45-4 as “a gift to Black mental health.”
Film Professor Mia Mask, along with actor Mario Van Peebles, participated in an Academy Museum of Motion Pictures symposium panel on the complex relationship between the Western film genre and Black representation in American cinema.