PVTA Announces Free Fares for All Riders, New Amherst-Greenfield Line Buses were already free for Five College students, but they will be free for all riders between Nov. 1 and June 30, 2025. The Greenfield line will stop in Leverett and Sunderland.
Board of Trustees Town Hall Sees Low Attendance The Board of Trustees hosted a town hall for students to learn more about its members, functions, and decision-making processes last Thursday. But the meeting, intended to increase student engagement with the board, drew few students.
Poet Ilya Kaminsky Discusses His Relationship to Language and Hearing Kaminsky, a poet and professor at Princeton, read from a recent collection before a conversation with Professor Ilan Stavans. He talked about writing in his non-native English, the centrality of silence to language, and poetry’s place in the war in Ukraine.
Bayoumi Talks Arab-American Experience In Response To War Author and Brooklyn College professor Moustafa Bayoumi dissected the impacts of Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian sentiment in wartime. He also emphasized how Arab-Americans are often overlooked within U.S. culture.
The Evergreens: Home and Heart of the Dickinsons This week, the Emily Dickinson Museum reopened The Evergreens, home to Austin and Sue Dickinson, after an extensive restoration. Chanelle Jaeger ’27 recounts her tour experience and explores the history of the house.
College Hires Part-time Rabbi After Months-Long Search The hiring of Rabbi Shahar Colt was announced last week, after the college’s Jewish community had been without a leader for more than six months. Colt will begin part-time next semester before moving into a full time role.
Ora Szekely Discusses What We Do and Don’t Know About the Israel and Hamas Conflict Ora Szekely, associate professor of political science at Clark University, explained the historical context of the Israel and Hamas conflict, and provided an explanation of current events at a talk on Nov. 2.