Marian Miner Cook
Athenaeum

A distinctive
feature of social and
cultural life at CMC

 

Current Semester Schedule

Athenaeum events are posted here as detailed information becomes available.

Tue, February 17, 2026
Lunch Program
Philip Wallach, in a moderated conversation

According to a recent poll, fewer than one in five Americans approve of the way Congress is handling its job. With modern Congress largely absent from many prominent policy debates, recent Congresses have been among the least productive in American history in terms of legislation enacted. Political pundits, scholars, and even members of Congress themselves are increasingly saying that Congress is an irreparable institution that rarely does its job. The scope and scale of Congressional power are undoubtedly waning. In this moderated conversation, Philip Wallach, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and Scott Sloop '26 will discuss the changing role of Congress, the causes of its decline, why Americans should care, and what lawmakers can do to strengthen the legislative branch and restore the vitality of American democracy.

 

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Philip Wallach is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he studies America’s separation of powers, with a focus on regulatory policy issues and the relationship between Congress and the administrative state.

In his latest book Why Congress (Oxford University Press, 2023), Wallach defends the centrality of Congress in America’s constitutional system, traces the roots of current dysfunction, and suggests how the institution might be restored.

Before joining AEI, Wallach was a senior fellow in governance studies at the Brookings Institution, where he authored To the Edge: Legality, Legitimacy, and the Responses to the 2008 Financial Crisis (Brookings Institution Press, 2015). He was later affiliated with the R Street Institute and served as a fellow with the House Select Committee on the Modernization of Congress in 2019.

Wallach’s scholarly and popular work has been published widely, including in the publications of the Brookings Center on Regulation and Markets, Studies in American Political DevelopmentFortuneNational AffairsNational Review, Law & Liberty, Los Angeles Times, RealClearPolicy, the Bulwark, the Hill, the Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post. A frequent conference participant, he has lectured at William & Mary, the University of Oregon, Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, and the University of Michigan, among others.

Wallach received a master’s and doctorate in politics from Princeton University and a bachelor’s degree from Wesleyan University’s College of Social Studies.

(Source: AEI)

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Tue, February 17, 2026
Dinner Program
Danielle Allen

Danielle Allen, professor of political philosophy, ethics, and public policy at Harvard University, draws an arc from the American founding to the present to explore how the original vision of the Declaration of Independence can serve us still, even as we also recognize and remedy its imperfections.

(Photo credit: Melissa Blackall_PrimaryHR)

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Danielle Allen is James Bryant Conant University Professor at Harvard University. She is also director of the Allen Lab for Democracy Renovation at the Harvard Kennedy School and director of the Democratic Knowledge Project, a research lab focused on civic education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. A professor of political philosophy, ethics, and public policy, she is also a seasoned nonprofit leader, democracy advocate, tech ethicist, and distinguished author. She is a contributing columnist at The Atlantic Magazine, winner of the 2025 Barry Prize, and was the 2020 winner of the Library of Congress’ Kluge Prize, which recognizes scholarly achievement in the disciplines not covered by the Nobel Prize. She received the Prize “for her internationally recognized scholarship in political theory and her commitment to improving democratic practice and civics education.”

Across nearly three decades in higher ed, Danielle has worked to make the world better for young people. She won the Quantrell award for excellence in undergraduate teaching at the University of Chicago, where she also served as Dean of the Division of Humanities (2004-7); she chaired the board of the Mellon Foundation (2015-19), as that foundation expanded the range of institutions in which it invests; she wrote for the Washington Post from 2008-2024, with a column on constitutional democracy; and she has developed a public policy portfolio on issues from cannabis legalization and public health policy to democracy renovation, civic education, and sound governance of and with new technology.

As a scholar, Allen currently concentrates on democracy renovation: studying how to reconnect people to their civic power, experience, and responsibility via civic education and how to redesign our political institutions to improve their responsiveness, increase the accountability of officeholders, and reward the participation of ordinary citizens. Her most recent book, Justice by Means of Democracy, provides the foundation for this work. Her forthcoming book, The Radical Duke, a biography of an 18th century British political reformer, is due out with Liveright/Norton in 2026.

Professor Allen’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by Kravis Lab for Civic Leadership, the Open Academy, the Salvatori Center, and the President's Leadership Fund, all at CMC.

(Photo credit: Melissa Blackall_PrimaryHR)

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Wed, February 18, 2026
Dinner Program
Amy Gallo and Ryan Patel, in conversation

Amy Gallo, contributing editor at Harvard Business Review and author of Getting Along: How to Work with Anyone, and Ryan Patel, global business executive and William F. Podlich Distinguished Fellow at CMC, will explore how women approach conflict and connection in the workplace. They’ll discuss how gender expectations influence communication—and how rethinking disagreement can create more equitable, collaborative environments.

(Photo credit for Ms. Gallo's photo: Stephanie Alvarez Ewens)

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Amy Gallo works with individuals, teams, and organizations to help them better collaborate, communicate, and transform their culture to support dissent and debate. She is the best-selling author of Getting Along: How to Work with Anyone (Even Difficult People) and the Harvard Business Review "Guide to Dealing with Conflict." She has published often in Harvard Business Review, where she is a contributing editor. Her writing has been collected in numerous books including on feedback, emotional intelligence, and managing others. 

From 2019 to 2025, Gallo co-hosted HBR's popular Women at Work podcast, examining the struggles and successes of women in the workplace. Gallo has delivered keynotes and workshops at numerous companies and conferences and often appears in media outlets for her perspective on workplace dynamics, conflict, and difficult conversations. Her advice has been featured in multiple news outlets internationally. 

A graduate of Yale College, she holds a master’s in public policy from Brown University. 

Ryan Patel is currently a William F. Podlich Distinguished Fellow at CMC. Patel is an expert in scaling businesses and has served both startups and publicly traded firms. Listed as one of the “Creators to Follow” by LinkedIn Editor in Chief and recognized as a “Top Voice” on Linkedin, Patel is a news commentator board director. Patel also hosts "The Moment with Ryan Patel," featuring conversations with top innovators and executives. 

 This program is co-sponsored by the Financial Economics Institute and Kravis Leadership Institute, both at CMC.

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Thu, February 19, 2026
Lunch Program
Sean Kennedy

Every day, young people enter into California’s criminal justice system. Some are caught up in gang affiliations, others simply in areas of high police surveillance. But often the particularities of their social contexts are entirely ignored after being arrested. Sean Kennedy, executive eirector of the Center for Juvenile Law & Policy at Loyola Law School, works with social forensics teams to bring specific community context information to trial in order to help judges and juries better understand the young people sitting before them in court. Kennedy will explain how the criminal justice system operates for young offenders, and what can be done to address legal inequities for youth from marginalized communities.

(Photo credit: Loyola Law School)

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Sean Kennedy is the executive director of the Center for Juvenile Law & Policy at Loyola Law School. For the past 15 years, he has taught appellate advocacy and the death penalty law seminar at the Law School. In 2013, Kennedy was named Criminal Defense Attorney of the Year by the Los Angeles County Bar Association and received the Fidler Institute Award for Defense Lawyer of the Year from Loyola. He is a recipient of the Public Interest Award by Loyola’s Public Interest Law Foundation. Prior to working in public defense, Kennedy was an associate at Talcott, Lightfoot, Vandevelde, Woehrle & Sadowsky, LLP, where he handled white collar criminal defense cases.

Professor Kennedy’s Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the history department at CMC.

(Photo credit: Loyola Law School)

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Thu, February 19, 2026
Dinner Program
Melissa Kearney

Melissa S. Kearney, professor of economics at the University of Notre Dame and a leading economist of family and social policy, will discuss the forces behind America’s declining birth rates and changing family structure. Drawing on her book The Two-Parent Privilege, Kearney examines how long-term shifts in marriage, fertility, and economic security are reshaping opportunity for children and the future of the U.S. workforce. As fewer Americans form and sustain two-parent households and as more young adults delay or forgo having children, the consequences reach far beyond individual families and affect inequality, workforce readiness, and the nation’s long-term economic prospects. Kearney’s talk will explore why family structure has become one of the most consequential and often overlooked drivers of America’s economic future.

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Melissa S. Kearney is the Gilbert F. Schaefer Professor of Economics at the University of Notre Dame and director of the Aspen Economic Strategy Group. She is a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. Her research focuses on poverty, inequality, social policy, and the economics of families and fertility.

Kearney is the author of The Two-Parent Privilege (University of Chicago Press, 2023), named a Best Book of the Year by The Wall Street Journal and The New Yorker. 

She holds a B.A. in economics from Princeton University and a Ph.D. in economics from MIT.

Professor Kearney's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Lowe Institute of Political Economy at CMC.

(Source: University of Notre Dame)

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Fri, February 20, 2026
Lunch Program
Cristian Eduardo and Yazmin Vafa

With sex trafficking at the forefront of many political conversations, misconceptions about the nature of demand, profit, and power often surround public perception of sexual exploitation and the commercial sex trade. Drawing on survivor experiences and the recently released report that examines purchasers of commercial sex, “Buyers Unmasked,” this Athenaeum panel explores the demographics that are overrepresented in the sex trade. Yazmin Vafa, director of Rights4Girls, and survivor-advocate Cristian Eduardo shine a light on these important issues, helping answer the question: Who fuels the sex trade and at what cost?

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Cristian Eduardo is a prominent advocate, speaker, and educator dedicated to advancing the rights of immigrants, 2SLGBTQ+ individuals, and those affected by human trafficking. As a queer immigrant from Mexico, a survivor of human trafficking, and a person living with HIV, his advocacy is profoundly shaped by his lived experience, fueling his fight against hate and stigma across all sectors. Eduardo serves as a member of the U.S. Advisory Council on Human Trafficking, where he leverages his expertise to advise the President’s Interagency Task Force on federal anti-trafficking policies. His work centers on ensuring these policies are survivor-led, trauma-informed, and focused on holistic recovery. Eduardo partners with non-profit organizations and legislative stakeholders nationwide, providing training and technical assistance at the intersection of human trafficking, immigration, the 2SLGBTQ+ community, and trauma related mental health challenges. Eduardo is a Survivor Leader at New Yorkers for the Equality Model, co-chair of the New York State Anti-Trafficking Coalition, and serves on various advisory boards and committees, including the Interagency Task Force on Human Trafficking. Additionally, he is a key collaborator in HIV prevention efforts, serving on the NYC HIV Planning Group to inform the city’s Integrated HIV Prevention and Care Plan. Eduardo has received numerous honors, including the Advocate of New York City award from the NYC Office to End Gender-Based Violence, the 2023 NJ Freedom Award, and the 2025 Liberator Award Survivor of the Year.

Yasmin Z. Vafa is co-founder and Executive Director of Rights4Girls, a national human rights organization dedicated to ending gender-based violence against young women and girls in the U.S. An award-winning human rights lawyer and advocate, Vafa's work focuses on the intersections of race, gender, violence, and the law. She has successfully advocated for several laws at the federal and state levels, testified before the U.S. Senate, state legislatures, and international human rights bodies, and co-authored multiple reports detailing the over-criminalization of girls and young women of color, particularly, survivors of sexual violence.  Vafa and her work have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, National Public Radio, ABC News, and more. She currently serves on the U.S. Advisory Committee on the Sex Trafficking of Children and Youth, serves as adjunct faculty for the National Judicial Institute on Child Sex Trafficking— an intensive judicial training she co-designed and leads with the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, and previously served on both the Department of Justice National Girls' Initiative Advisory Committee as well as the DOJ National Task Force on the Use of Restraints on Pregnant Women and Girls Under Correctional Custody. She has received numerous awards for her work including the Lois Haight Award for Excellence and Innovation for her legislative advocacy from Congress. 

This conversation will be moderated by Vivienne Arndt '28 and introduced by Macy Puckett Scripps '28.

This program is co-sponsored by the Mgrublian Center for Human Rights at CMC.

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Mon, February 23, 2026
Dinner Program
Will Grant ’94, Norman Hull ’85, and Suzanne Segal ’82, panelists

Since 1985, the Gould Center for Humanistic Studies has provided opportunities for humanistic research and study to students and faculty at CMC. During this 40th anniversary celebration, in addition to reminiscences about the Center and its impact, the centerpiece of the evening’s program will be a panel consisting of several alumni who will discuss how their humanistic studies at CMC have had a vital and lasting impact on their lives and careers post CMC. Panelists include Will Grant ’94, Norman Hull ’85, and Suzanne Segal ’82, who will speak about their careers in non-profit leadership, the chaplaincy, and the law. Bringing together current students, faculty, and staff with Gould Center Board members and other Gould Center alumni, the evening will serve as a triumphant tribute to the power and importance of the humanities in the world today. 

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More information about panelists is forthcoming.

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Tue, February 24, 2026
Dinner Program
Glenn Loury, in conversation with Michael Fortner

In recent years, American public life has entered a period of reassessment and backlash. The post-2020 surge in anti-racist politics has been met by the rollback of affirmative action, growing skepticism toward DEI initiatives, and the reemergence of white identity politics. These developments raise a deeper and more unsettling question: have we entered a new phase in American political culture—one that signals a broader rejection of the moral premises of the Black freedom movement itself? In this moderated conversation, Glenn Loury, professor emeritus of social sciences, economics, international and public affairs at Brown University, will explore what these shifts mean for American citizenship, democratic legitimacy, and public discourse. Drawing on his recent work on race, inequality, and civic belonging—as well as his book Self-Censorship—Loury will examine not only the politics of backlash, but the quieter, often overlooked phenomenon that accompanies it: the growing tendency of citizens, scholars, and institutions to withhold dissenting views out of fear of social sanction. 

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Glenn C. Loury, Merton P. Stoltz Professor Emeritus of Social Sciences, Professor Emeritus of Economics, and Professor Emeritus of International and Public Affairs, joined Brown University in 2005. He is an academic economist who has made scholarly contributions to the fields of welfare economics, income distribution, game theory, industrial organization, and natural resource economics. He is also a prominent social critic and public intellectual, having published over 200 articles in journals of public affairs in the U.S. and abroad on the issues of racial inequality and social policy.

Loury is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a past Vice President of the American Economics Association. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and was for many years a contributing editor at The New Republic magazine.

Among the issues Loury studies are racial affirmative action; dysfunctional social identity; status transmission across generations; and cognitive theories of racial stigma. He also writes popular essays on social and political themes as a public intellectual.

Michael J. Fortner, Pamela B. Gann Associate Professor of Government and George R. Roberts Fellow at Claremont McKenna College, will moderate the conversation.
 

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Thu, February 26, 2026
Dinner Program
Ian Faquini and Natalie Cressman

The unlikely duo of Brazilian composer/guitarist Ian Faquini and American trombonist/vocalist Natalie Cressman explores the rituals, relationships, and emotions of human nature through the Brazilian songwriting tradition. Through serenely balanced musical vignettes that touch on Afro-Brazilian deities, indigenous culture, and folkloric figures, their music will take us on a journey through many different regions of Brazil and the myriad of musical dialects found in this culturally rich country. Through original songs and classic repertoire that spans generations of oral tradition, this presentation dives into the enduring quality of human-scaled musical narratives and the many forms of spirituality that can be remarkably empathic even if you don’t understand Portuguese.

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Describing the musical partnership of Natalie Cressman and Ian Faquini as a duo is accurate, but their collaboration contains multitudes. She’s a trombonist, vocalist and songwriter from San Francisco. He’s a composer, guitarist, and singer from Brasilia. Together they’ve honed a singularly expansive creative communion encompassing their love of the Brazilian songbook, jazz, Impressionism and sophisticated pop songcraft. 

Their original material features lyrics in Portuguese, French and English set to music drawing from a vast stylistic spectrum. With sumptuous two-part vocal harmonies hugging Brazilian-accented Portuguese accompanied by trombone and acoustic guitar, Cressman and Faquini’s richly orchestrated sound seems to emanate from a much larger ensemble.

Ian Faquini and Natalie Cressman's Athenaeum performance is part of a 4-part musical series for this academic year: Devotional and Spiritual World Music featuring Ghanian, South Asian, American Gospel, and Brazilian traditions. 

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Mon, March 2, 2026
Dinner Program
Jeff Sebo

Jeff Sebo, director of the Center for Mind, Ethics, and Policy at New York University and author of The Moral Circle and Saving Animals, Saving Ourselves, will discuss current debates about the sentience and moral status of nonhumans. Can insects experience happiness and suffering? Can AI systems have desires and preferences? How should we treat them when we feel unsure, and what follows for our practices, policies, and priorities?

 

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Jeff Sebo is Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, Affiliated Professor of Bioethics, Medical Ethics, Philosophy, and Law, Director of the Center for Environmental and Animal Protection, Director of the Center for Mind, Ethics, and Policy, Director of the Food Impact Program, and Co-Director of the Wild Animal Welfare Program at New York University. 

He is the author of The Moral Circle and Saving Animals, Saving Ourselves and co-author of Chimpanzee Rights and Food, Animals, and the Environment. He is also an advisory board member at the Jeremy Coller Centre for Animal Sentience, an advisory board member at the Insect Welfare Research Society, an advisor at Eleos AI, and a senior affiliate at the Institute for Law & AI. 

In 2024 Vox included him on its Future Perfect 50 list of "thinkers, innovators, and changemakers who are working to make the future a better place."

Professor Sebo's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Gould Center for Humanistic Studies at CMC.

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Wed, March 4, 2026
Dinner Program
James Stocker

James Stocker, associate professor of global affairs at Trinity Washington University, will discuss how the logics of state, revolution, and foreign intervention have played out in contemporary Lebanese history, from independence through the civil-war and post-civil war period to shed light on debates about the country’s future.

(Parents Dining Room)

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James R. Stocker is associate professor of global affairs at Trinity Washington University. He is the author of Spheres of Intervention: US Foreign Policy and the Collapse of Lebanon, 1967–1976, which is being newly reissued in paperback in 2026. He has been a visiting researcher at Georgetown University and the American University of Beirut. He received his Ph.D .from the Graduate Institute of Geneva, where he received support from the Swiss National Science Foundation. He is a RAND Next Generation Faculty Leader.

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Thu, March 5, 2026
Dinner Program
Sandeep Robert Datta P'26

Sandeep Robert Datta P’26, M.D., PhD., professor of neuroscience at Harvard University, will discuss how new technology is revolutionizing our understanding of the brain and how abrupt changes in the compact between universities and the government threaten to derail this progress.

 

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Sandeep Robert Datta P’26 is a professor in department of neurobiology at Harvard Medical School. His lab focuses on understanding how sensory cues — particularly odors — are detected by the nervous system, and how the brain transforms information about the presence of salient sensory cues into patterns of motivated action. This work involves studying genes involved in detecting sensory information, revealing the patterns of neural activity deep in the brain that encode sensory maps of the outside world, and probing the fundamental statistical structure of behavior itself. His lab has developed AI-based technologies that allow researchers to understand how the brain builds body language and revealed why COVID-19 causes patients to lose their sense of smell. 

Datta has published numerous articles on his research in journals including Cell, Science and Nature, is a reviewer and an editor at multiple scientific journals, and is an Associate Member of the Broad Institute. Dr. Datta has received the NIH New Innovator Award, the Burroughs Welcome Career Award in the Medical Sciences, the Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, the Searle Scholars Award, the Vallee Young Investigator Award, the McKnight Endowment Fund Scholar Award and has been named a fellow of the National Academy of Science/Kavli Scholars program. Datta has also co-founded or advised many neuroscience start-ups, including Neumora, Gilgamesh Therapeutics, Osmo, Tenvie and Axiom Labs.

A graduate of Yale College, Datta earned his M.D./Ph.D. at Harvard University, then worked as a postdoc with the Nobel laureate Richard Axel at Columbia, and joined the Harvard faculty in 2009.

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Mon, March 9, 2026
Lunch Program
Daniel Scroop

Daniel Scroop, a historian of the United States based at the University of Glasgow in Scotland and currently a Fulbright Scholar in the U.S., charts the relationship between U.S. history and the public realm since the end of the Second World War. Based on new research in the vast correspondence of William E. Leuchtenburg (1922-2025), one of America's preeminent historians and for several decades its leading historian of the New Deal, he examines how one historian's choices about civil rights, Vietnam, and the turmoil on campuses in the 1960s and 1970s illuminate the character of American liberalism and its connection to the historical profession in the second half of the twentieth century.

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Daniel Scroop is a historian of the United States based at the University of Glasgow in Scotland where he is Director of Research for the School of Humanities and a member of the Andrew Hook Centre for American Studies. He writes on the New Deal, American liberalism, and the shifting ideological contours of U.S. history, and is author of Mr Democrat: Jim Farley, the New Deal, and the Making of Modern American Politics, the first book-length study of Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign manager. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, a winner of the Constance Rourke Prize of the American Studies Association, and a recipient of the Walter Hines Page Fellowship at the National Humanities Center. 

Scroop completed his undergraduate and postgraduate level studies at the University of Oxford, where her earned his B.A. in 1995 and his D.Phil in 2001. 

During spring 2026, he is a Fulbright Scholar at Emory and Henry University in south-west Virginia, where he is teaching and writing on the place of history in American public life since 1776.

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Mon, March 9, 2026
Dinner Program
Don Romesburg '93

Historian Don Romesburg '93, a lead scholar implementing California's groundbreaking FAIR Education Act, will discuss the long journey to bring LGBTQ history education to the nation's K-12 schools. Today, many states have followed California’s inclusive lead, yet other states and the federal administration are enacting systematic erasures of queer and trans histories. In 2025, the Supreme Court further restricted inclusive curriculum in ways that have sent shockwaves across the country. Romesburg will contextualize these tensions and share strategies to make dynamic history education relevant for all students and families.

 

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Don Romesburg ’93 is the author of Contested Curriculum: LGBTQ History Goes to School (Rutgers UP, 2025) and editor of the Routledge History of Queer America (2018). As the lead scholar working with advocates to pass the FAIR Education Act, he helped usher LGBTQ content into California's 2016 K-12 History-Social Science Framework and subsequent textbooks. He now trains educators on implementation. For these efforts, he is the namesake of the LGBTQ+ History Association’s Don Romesburg Prize for K-12 Curriculum. Romesburg is also a co-founder of the GLBT Historical Society Museum in San Francisco and Managing Editor of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly. 

Romesburg earned a Ph.D. in U.S. History with an interdisciplinary emphasis on Women, Gender, and Sexuality from the University of California, Berkeley, an MA in history from University of Colorado, Boulder, and a history BA from Claremont McKenna College. 

He now serves as Dean of Social Sciences and Fine Arts at Clark College in Vancouver, WA.

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Tue, March 10, 2026
Dinner Program
Steve Grove '00

Steve Grove '00 has spent his career at the intersection of politics, media, and tech. His recent book, How I Found Myself in the Midwest, shares his journey of leaving a successful career at Google in Silicon Valley to move back to his home state of Minnesota to join state government, and then local news, where he now serves as the publisher of The Minnesota Star Tribune. Grove's boomerang journey back home landed him in a state that's faced a series of crises that have caught global attention in the last five years. His talk will explore what he's learned about navigating crises—and strengthening technology, government, and media organizations from the inside.

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Steve Grove '00 is CEO and publisher of the Minnesota Star Tribune. Previously, he was Minnesota’s commissioner of employment and economic development. Before moving back to his home state, Grove built a career in Silicon Valley as an executive at Google and YouTube, most recently as the founding director of the Google News Lab and previously as YouTube’s first head of news and politics.

A graduate of Claremont McKenna College with a Master’s degree from the Harvard Kennedy School, Grove has written for several national publications and has served as an advisor to the White House and State Department on counter-terrorism strategy. Steve and his wife Mary are the cofounders of Silicon North Stars, a nonprofit that helps underserved youth find career pathways in technology. They are the proud parents of eight-year-old twins, a yellow lab, and two farm cats.

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Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

Claremont McKenna College
385 E. Eighth Street
Claremont, CA 91711