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.

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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Fri, March 6, 2026
Lunch Program
Marilou Ryder

Women bring talent, intelligence, and powerful ideas into every room, yet too often their contributions go unseen, undervalued, or overlooked. Confidence alone is not enough. Visibility and influence must be built intentionally. In this high-impact session, Marilou Ryder, author, speaker, and leadership strategist, blends real-world leadership experience, research, and practical tools to help women clarify their strengths, communicate their value, and show up with greater presence and credibility. Participants will explore how everyday behaviors, language choices, and visibility strategies shape professional influence and how to make small, strategic shifts that create meaningful momentum. Attendees will leave with actionable strategies they can immediately apply to strengthen confidence, increase visibility, and move forward with clarity, courage, and purpose—regardless of career stage or industry.

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Marilou Ryder Ed. D., is an author, speaker, and leadership strategist dedicated to advancing women’s confidence, visibility, and influence in work and life. A former superintendent and longtime university professor, she currently serves as Program Chair for the UMass Global doctoral program in organizational leadership, where she designs innovative leadership development experiences and mentors emerging leaders.

Ryder is the author of multiple books for women, including the bestselling titles "Promotion Power: Five Disruptive Career Moves for Modern Women" and "Self-Sabotage: Ten Personal Power Tips to be Your Best Self on a Good Day", which challenge women to rethink how they advocate for themselves, navigate workplace dynamics, and step into bold professional visibility. Through her speaking, writing, and publishing work, she equips women with practical, no-nonsense strategies that translate directly into action and results.

Known for her engaging, direct style and real-world insight, Ryder inspires audiences to move from capable to confident and from potential to powerful impact.

Dr. Ryder is the keynote speaker for the 2026 Women and Leadership Workshop, co-sponsored by the Kravis Leadership Institute, Berger Institute for Individual and Social Development, Berger Institute, Mgrublian Center for Human Rights, and the Women and Leadership Alliance.

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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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Wed, March 11, 2026
Dinner Program
Diane Wagner '87

The Migrant Child Farmworkers – Now High-Profile Professionals© is an original documentary short film (executive producer Diane Wagner ’87, director Jesse Gift) featuring Xolo Maridueña, star of Blue Beetle and Cobra Kai. This poignant and inspiring film showcases eleven children, mostly of poor farm-working families, who overcame homelessness, hunger, poverty, neglect, and abuse to become successful and prominent members of our society. As children, many worked full-time as migrant child farmworkers with their earnings going to help the family survive. Today they are engineers, doctors, lawyers, medical professors, researchers, educators, and leaders elected to the U.S. Congress and California State Assembly and Senate. Their achievements, in defiance of formidable odds, societal cruelty, and adversity, are a testament to the indomitable human spirit.

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Diane Wagner ‘87 is the executive producer of The Migrant Child Farmworkers – Now High-Profile Professionals©. After a successful career in market research consulting for Fortune 500 clients, Wagner is now an independent storyteller who is passionate about telling stories that inspire audiences, especially children, to elevate their self-image, better recognize their potential, and gain access to more educational opportunities.

Wagner studied Economics at Claremont McKenna College and subsequently earned her MBA from U.C. Irvine.

The screening will be followed by comments and Q & A with Diane Wagner and Jesse Gift and might also include featured presenter Xolo Maridueña, Xolo’s Hollywood manager Brandon Guzmán (a former undocumented migrant child farmworker who is also featured in the film), former Congressman Tony Cárdenas, Congressman Raul Ruiz and more. This website will be updated accordingly.

This program is co-sponsored by the President’s Office and Open Academy.

SPECIAL SCHEDULE: Film will be screened during dinner starting at 6:20 pm and will be followed by comments from Diane Wagner and audience Q & A.
 

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Mon, March 23, 2026
Dinner Program
Michael Vorenberg

When does a war begin? When does it end? Start dates and end dates for wars are readily available in textbooks, but are the beginnings and endings really so obvious? Currently, the U.S. claims not to be at war with any nation, yet it is claiming the existence of war as justification for all sorts of policies, from deportation to military occupation of American cities to tariffs. The confusion around the meaning of wartime is not new. It dates back to the U.S. Civil War. Michael Vorenberg, professor of history at Brown University, examines the ways that the Civil War created modern, elastic notions not only of war power but also of war time.
 

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Michael Vorenberg received his A.B. and Ph.D. from Harvard University and is professor of history at Brown University, where he has taught since 1999. He is the author of Final Freedom: The Civil War, the Abolition of Slavery, and the Thirteenth Amendment, a Finalist for the Lincoln Prize and a major source for Steven Spielberg’s 2012 film Lincoln. His most recent book is Lincoln’s Peace: The Struggle to End the American Civil War, which was published by Alfred A. Knopf in 2025. He is currently on the board of editors of the Journal of Constitutional History and was previously on the board of editors of Law and History Review. He is also a Distinguished Lecturer for the Organization of American Historians. His forthcoming article comparing declared states of emergency in Civil War-era America and present-day America will be published in the summer of 2026.

Professor Vorenberg's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Salvatori Center at CMC.
 

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Tue, March 24, 2026
Dinner Program
David Brooks

David Brooks is an opinion columnist at the New York Times and frequent contributor to media outlets nationwide. He writes about "political, social and cultural trends, the clash of ideas and the always tricky subject of moral formation." (More information forthcoming.)

(Photo credit: Howard Schatz©SCHATZ-ORNSTEIN)

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David Brooks is an opinion columnist at the New York Times and frequent contributor to media outlets nationwide. He writes about "political, social and cultural trends, the clash of ideas and the always tricky subject of moral formation." (Source: NYT)( More information forthcoming.)

Mr. Brooks's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the Valach Speaker Series and the Open Academy at CMC.

(Photo credit: Howard Schatz©SCHATZ-ORNSTEIN)

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Wed, March 25, 2026
Lunch Program
Sir Malcolm Evans, KCMG OBE

How big a problem is torture? Are the right things being done to prevent it? Why does the United Nations appear at times to be so impotent in the face of it? Drawing on his ten plus years of experience as Chair of the UN expert body visiting places of detention in countries around the world in order to "tackle torture," Sir Malcolm, now the Principal of Regents Park College at Oxford University, will tell the story of torture prevention under international law, setting out what is really happening around the world. Challenging assumptions about torture’s root causes, he will give a frank account of what has been done, what can be done and—most importantly and controversially, what is not being done, and why.

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Sir Malcolm Evans, KCMG (Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of St Michael and St George) and OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire), is the Principal of Regents Park College at Oxford University. 

Prior to his role at Oxford University, Sir Malcolm was Professor of International Law at the University of Bristol, where previously he had been Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law. His research interests center on the international protection of human rights, with particular focus on the prevention of torture and the freedom of religion in recognition of which he was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 2015. He also works extensively on issues concerning the international law of the sea, including in particular questions concerning maritime boundaries and the protection of human rights at sea. Among his many roles, Sir Malcolm has served as a member and, from 2011-2020, Chair of the United Nations Subcommittee for the Prevention of Torture. In 2015 he was appointed a Member of the Panel of the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse in England and Wales, then the largest and most wide-ranging public inquiry yet undertaken, which concluded its work in late 2022. He has also served as a member of the Advisory Panel on Freedom of Religion and Belief of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

Sir Malcolm read Law at Regent’s Park College (1979-82), returning for doctoral research (1983-87) for which he was awarded the degree of DPhil. Sir Malcolm holds an Honorary Doctorate from Bangor University and is a Fellow of the Learned Society of Wales. 
 

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Wed, March 25, 2026
Dinner Program
Ken Liu

Through a series of images drawn by artists from the past imagining life in the future, Ken Liu, award-winning author of speculative fiction, asks the audience to think through provocative questions about the science fictional imagination. What do sci-fi authors tend to get wrong about the future? What do they tend to get right? Is science fiction about “predicting” the future? And just why is the future so difficult to pin down?

Photo credit: Lisa Tang Liu

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Ken Liu is an American author of speculative fiction. A winner of the Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy awards for his fiction, he has also won top genre honors in Japan, Spain, and France.

Liu’s most characteristic work is the four-volume epic fantasy series, The Dandelion Dynasty, in which engineers, not wizards, are the heroes of a silkpunk world on the verge of modernity. His debut collection of short fiction, The Paper Menagerie and Other Stories, has been published in more than a dozen languages. A second collection, The Hidden Girl and Other Stories, followed. He also penned the Star Wars novel, The Legends of Luke Skywalker. His latest book, All That We See or Seem, is a techno-thriller about the fight against loneliness in the age of AI.

He’s often involved in media adaptations of his work. Recent projects include The Regular, under development as a TV series; Good Hunting, adapted as an episode in season one of Netflix’s breakout adult animated series Love, Death + Robots; and AMC’s Pantheon, adapted from an interconnected series of Liu’s short stories.

Prior to becoming a full-time writer, Liu worked as a software engineer, corporate lawyer, and litigation consultant. He frequently speaks at conferences and universities on a variety of topics, including futurism, machine-augmented creativity, history of technology, bookmaking, and the mathematics of origami.

Mr. Liu is the Gould Center for Humanistic Studies' 2025-26 Ricardo J. Quinones Lecturer.

Photo credit: Lisa Tang Liu

(Special Note: This event had originally been scheduled for Monday, September 22, 2025. We are honoring the head table sign-ups from that original date. Students who had secured a head table spot (or were waitlisted for the head table) will have the right of first refusal for the head table. If you had a confirmed spot at the head table, we are aware of who you are and we will contact you directly in early March.)

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Tue, March 31, 2026
Dinner Program
Jeff Kukucka

Though often seen as infallible, forensic investigations are done by humans, and humans are imperfect. Jeff Kukucka, professor of psychology at Towson University, will draw from his work as a researcher, expert witness, and government consultant to explain how the brain can produce unsound forensic decisions and how crime labs can (but often neglect to) adopt science-based protections against bias and error.

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Jeff Kukucka is a professor of psychology at Towson University and a decision scientist whose work aims to optimize the human element of forensic and medicolegal decision-making. He previously held a leadership position on NIST's OSAC for Forensic Science—a federal organization that develops and promotes best practice standards for all areas of forensic science—and he recently oversaw the nation's first-ever independent audit of restraint-related deaths in police custody, the findings of which raised concerns over bias and error in autopsy decisions. He also frequently trains forensic examiners and attorneys on these issues, and he has testified as an expert witness in nine U.S. states.

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Wed, April 1, 2026
Dinner Program
Louis Tay

Louis Tay, William C. Byham Professor of Industrial-Organizational Psychology at Purdue University and co-founder of ExpiWell, will address how psychological measurement can transform the way we detect and regulate bias in AI. As AI increasingly shapes consequential decisions in hiring, lending, and healthcare, public debates about algorithmic fairness often conflate three distinct concepts: difference, bias, and unfairness. This undermines both scientific evaluation and effective policymaking. Tay will discuss disentangle these concepts, providing principled approaches for evaluating bias in algorithmic assessments and large language model applications. The talk will conclude with implications for AI governance frameworks, anti-discrimination enforcement, and organizational accountability in an era of automated decision-making.

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Louis Tay is the William C. Byham Professor of Industrial-Organizational Psychology at Purdue University and Co-Founder of ExpiWell. A leading expert in psychological measurement, well-being, and artificial intelligence applications in psychology, Tay has pioneered frameworks for understanding how AI systems can be rigorously evaluated for bias using principles from psychometric theory.

Tay's scholarship has shaped multiple fields through his editorial leadership of major reference works. He has co-edited five handbooks: Big Data in Psychological Research (APA Books), Handbook of Well-Being (DEF Publishers), Handbook of Positive Psychology Assessment (Hogrefe), Oxford Handbook of the Positive Humanities (Oxford), and Technology and Measurement around the Globe (Cambridge). His research has appeared in journals including American Psychologist, Nature Human Behavior, Psychological Bulletin, and Journal of Applied Psychology.

Tay has contributed to United Nations research reports on well-being and consults for top tech companies and Fortune 500 organizations on topics including AI and measurement bias. He currently leads research funded by the John Templeton Foundation examining whether and how AI conversational agents can cultivate character virtues. As co-founder of the tech company ExpiWell, he developed a platform used by researchers worldwide for ecological momentary assessments.

Dr. Tay's Athenaeum presentation is co-sponsored by the President’s Office and Open Academy.

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Thu, April 2, 2026
Dinner Program
Jonathan Mahler P’26

Jonathan Mahler P’26, staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, will discuss his recent book, The Gods of New York: Egotists, Idealists, Opportunists, and the Birth of the Modern City, 1986–1990, which examines the metamorphosis of New York City. Offering a “kaleidoscopic and deeply immersive portrait of a city whose identity was suddenly up for grabs” (Amazon), Mahler explores how the late ’80s marked a period of profound transformation. Bringing to the forefront a cast of outsized characters, extraordinary wealth, social problems, and mounting crisis, he illustrates the city’s rebirth as a glitzy capital of global finance—and, as the New York Times observes, a "Petri dish of ego, ambition, and class division." This era permanently reshaped New York’s ethos and social fabric—birthing figures whose influence dominates today and foreshadowing the forces that now divide the nation, all the while elevating Zohran Mamdani to power.

(Photo credit: David Jacobs)

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Jonathan Mahler P’26 is a longtime staff writer for The New York Times Magazine and the author of the bestselling Ladies and Gentlemen, the Bronx Is Burning, which was adapted as an ESPN miniseries; The Challenge; and The Gods of New York, which was named a best book of the year by the New York Times, the New Yorker, the Economist, and Amazon. At the Times magazine, he covers a wide range of topics including politics, entertainment, education, media, the law, sports. His journalism has received numerous awards and been featured in The Best American Sports Writing.

(Photo credit: David Jacobs)

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Mon, April 6, 2026
Dinner Program
G. John Ikenberry

For eighty years, the United States has been the leader of a liberal international order, drawing allies and partners from around the world together in a system of trade, political, and security cooperation. Under Trump 2.0, the United States is now taking a wrecking ball to this order. Across the wider world, arms conflict, mercantilism, populist nationalism, and imperial geopolitics is on the rise, while multilateralism and global problem-solving is in decline. Does liberal internationalism—the cooperative building of world politics around openness and rules-based relations—have a future? Surprisingly, argues G. John Ikenberry, professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University, the answer is yes.

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G. John Ikenberry is the Albert G. Milbank Professor of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University in the Department of Politics and the School of Public and International Affairs. Ikenberry is also a Global Eminence Scholar at Kyung Hee University in Seoul, Korea. In 2018-2019, Ikenberry was a Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford University. In 2013-2014, Ikenberry was the 72nd Eastman Visiting Professor at Balliol College, Oxford, and a Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. Ikenberry is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 

Ikenberry is the author of eight books, most recently, A World Safe for Democracy:  Liberal Internationalism in the Making of Modern World Order (Yale, 2020), and Debating Worlds: Contested Narratives of Global Modernity and World Order (Oxford, 2023). He is also author of After Victory: Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order after Major Wars (Princeton, 2001), and Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the American World Order (Princeton, 2011).

Professor Ikenberry will deliver the 2025-26 Lecture in Diplomacy and International Security in Honor of George F. Kennan.

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Tue, April 7, 2026
Dinner Program
Ruth Marcus

Ruth Marcus, writer and political commentator, contributor to the New Yorker Magazine, and former staff writer, associate editor, and columnist at the Washington Post, will address issues confronting the modern American press including political interference and polarization, commercial dependence and powerful ownership structures, regulatory vulnerability, competition from social media, national attention deficit, AI generated content, rise of public distrust and alternative facts, journalistic ethics and dilemmas, and more. Is freedom of the press, as enshrined in the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, under siege? What are the stakes for our democracy and how do we sustain and preserve this central constitutional principle?

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Ruth Marcus is a contributing writer at The New Yorker who focusses on law, the courts, and the rule of law under President Trump. She joined The New Yorker after a 40-year career at the Washington Post, where, most recently, she was an associate editor and an opinion columnist. During her time at the Post, from where she resigned in protest in spring 2025, she covered the White House, the Supreme Court, and the Justice Department; served as deputy national editor; and was a deputy editor overseeing the op-ed section. She was a finalist for the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Commentary. 

Marcus holds a B.A. from Yale College, where she wrote for the Yale Daily News, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

(Excerpted from the New Yorker Magazine)

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Marian Miner Cook Athenaeum

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