¾ÅÉ«ÊÓÆµ

Skip to Main Content

Wesleyan in the News, July 2022

Wesleyan’s intellectually dynamic faculty, students, alumni, staff, and parents frequently serve as expert sources for national media. Others are noted for recent achievements and accolades. (Updated July 29, 2022)

Frank G. Binswanger Jr. ’50, P ’76, ’78, GP ’13, ’15, former member of Wesleyan’s Board of Trustees and corporate real executive, has died. Frank and his brother John ’54, P’83, GP’ 06, ’10, ’16 established the Binswanger Prize for Excellence in Teaching in honor of their father. Each year at Commencement members of the Alumni Association Executive Committee choose three faculty as recipients of the prize. (July 28)

Carolyn Renzin ’95 has been named FanDuel’s new chief legal and compliance officer, according to . (July 28)

Erika Franklin Fowler, professor of government and the director of the Wesleyan Media Project, told the  that the cost of political advertising in would likely rise if Connecticut became an early primary state. (July 27)

Jack Fessenden spoke to  about the future of film. (July 25)

Royette Tavernier Dubar, assistant professor of psychology, wrote a  about how ‘ghosting’ on social media impacts mental health. (July 25)

Merve Emre, a 2022-23 Shapiro-Silverberg Distinguished Writer-in-Residence, published a  of Australian writer Gerald Murnane. (July 25)

Stephen C. Angle, a professor of philosophy and East Asian studies, spoke to the  about the benefits of Confucianism in everyday life and his new book “Growing Moral: A Confucian Guide to Life.” (July 23)

Peter Rutland, professor of government, identified the four main groups of elite that emerged in Russia in the past decade in the . (July 23)

Hilary Jacobs Hendel ’85, P’18, wrote  about the importance of approaching mental health care with a trauma informed perspective. (July 18) 

Peter Rutland, professor of government, spoke to  about the state of the Russian economy during the war with Ukraine. (July 16)

Antonio Farias, former Vice President for Equity and Inclusion ¾ÅÉ«ÊÓÆµ,  to the Commission on Presidential Scholars. (July 16)

Nebula Award–winning author Jack McDevitt, MALS ‘72, whom Stephen King has called “the logical heir to Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke,”  in January 2023. (July 15)

After five years as assistant coach, Trevor Michelson ’13, MALS ‘22 recently took over . (July 15) 

Professor of Astronomy Seth Redfield spoke to  about the photos from the James Webb Space Telescope. (July 14)

A documentary series directed by Matt Tyrnauer ‘91 examines the behind-the-scenes story of Victoria’s Secret. “Fantasy is more real than reality to Americans, generation after generation,” Tyrnauer told . “For me, that’s a constant theme.” (July 14) 

Erika Franklin Fowler, professor of government and director of the Wesleyan Media Project,  about the increase in political ad spending nationally and the stakes in the Connecticut gubernatorial race. (July 12) 

HealthyPlanEat, a startup led by Rosemary Ostfeld, assistant professor of the practice environmental studies, was mentioned in a  story about Connecticut’s top ranking as a state that supports local farms and farm stands. (July 11) 

TED science curator David Biello ‘95 presented a  piece about the search for extraterrestrial life, uncovering how it may look and how we’ll know we’ve found it. (July 8)

Michael Bennet ’87, Democrat of Colorado, is seeking a third term in the United States Senate, according to a . “I just don’t accept that we somehow have to accept, for our children and our grandchildren, a diminished expectation of what their opportunity looks like,” he said. “And I don’t accept that we can’t strengthen this democracy in very fundamental ways to pass something off to the next generation of Americans that we’re proud of,” Bennet said. (July 4)

Gary Yohe, the Huffington Foundation professor of Economic and Environmental Studies, Emeritus, addresses Congress’ intentions with the Clean Air Act when it was passed in 1970 in . “They knew more than 50 years ago that tasks being sent to the administrative state were major because of their potential enormous economic and political significance,” Yohe writes. (July 2)