Miss Porter's School • 60 Main Street • Farmington, CT 06032 • 860-409-3500 • admission@missporters.org
A great deal of policy change has occurred on the national executive level in recent months. Join us for a webinar discussion by a panel of Ancient experts, working in fields affected by these changes, on the consequences and implications of the first 100 days of the new administration in the White House. This event is co-hosted by the Alumnae and Development Office and the Alumnae Board’s Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging Committee.
Moderator:
![]() | Pam McKee ’82 serves as senior director of foundation engagement at the National Women’s Law Center, having previously worked as the development director for Abortion Forward (formerly NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio). An historian of African art, she has taught at several Ohio colleges and universities, and worked in nonprofit development in the arts, social services, and educational sectors. She currently resides in Washington, D.C. and Rupert, Vermont. |
Panelists:
![]() | Gaylynn Burroughs ’95, P’27 is vice president for education and workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) where she oversees NWLC’s advocacy, policy, and litigation efforts to protect and advance the rights of women and girls at work and at school. Gaylynn previously led the employment task force and economic security team at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and was policy director for the Feminist Majority and Feminist Majority Foundation. She received her Juris Doctor and Master of Laws from the New York University School of Law and her Bachelor of Arts from Yale University. |
![]() | Ariane de Vogue ’84 spent 30 years as a journalist, first at ABC News and most recently as a Supreme Court reporter for CNN. She studied all aspects of the judiciary including issues surrounding voting rights, campaign finance, gay rights, affirmative action and abortion. She covered the nomination process of countless lower court judges as well as eight of nine current sitting justices. She and her husband, David, have three children and reside in Washington DC. |
![]() | Juliana Garcia-Uribe ’99, P’26 attended the University of Chicago where she graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in history. During college, she participated in the Summer Links program through the University Community Service Center, and worked at a family resource center in Pilsen, working closely with immigrant families in Chicago. Participating in Summer Links was a transformative experience. Following college, Juliana attended the Le Cordon Bleu School Paris; and obtained the Le Grand Diplôme® de Cuisine and Pâtisserie. She worked in various high-end hotel restaurants for several years before pivoting to attend law school at DePaul University in Chicago. Juliana currently works as an immigration attorney in Hartford, Connecticut, handling all kinds of immigration cases, from family, humanitarian, employment-based petitions, to representing clients in immigration court. Juliana lives in Hartford with her husband, two daughters and son, and two dogs. She is actively engaged in her neighborhood. |
60 Main Street
Farmington, CT 06032
860-409-3500
admission@missporters.org
Miss Porter’s School admits qualified students, who identify as girls, of any race, color, religious affiliation, national and ethnic origin, ancestry, mental or physical disability, or sexual orientation to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the School. The School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religious affiliation, national and ethnic origin, ancestry, mental or physical disability, or sexual orientation or any other status protected by applicable law in the administration of its educational policies, admissions and financial aid policies, and athletic or other school administered programs.
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