For a Change: Announcing the 25-26 WPI Author Series
The Gordon Library is excited to announce our 25-26 series of conversations with WPI authors, launching in B Term with two events! Our theme this year is For a Change, featuring books that challenge us to change our beliefs and our choices. Details on locations and programs will be announced for each event and also added here throughout the spring:
On November 6 at 3:00 pm, the series will open in the Gordon Library Conference Room and on zoom, with a conversation about Cornel West Matters: Politics, Violence, Racism, and Religion in America (2024, WPI Press), between author and WPI Professor Mahamadou Lamine Sagna (SSPS), and WPI Press Editor in Chief and Head, SSPS, Prof. Rob Krueger. Updated to reflect Cornel West’s independent candidacy in the 2024 US presidential campaign, this second edition explores West’s role as a philosopher, activist, and prominent intellectual with a singular dialectical and sometimes contradictory voice, echoing the title of West’s most influential books, Race Matters (1993) and Democracy Matters (2004). A zoom link will also be made available here. Please note that the Gordon Library’s elevator remains out of service; visitors who wish to avoid using the stairs are welcome to join via zoom. More event information here. On November 20, from 3:30-5pm in Lower Perrault / Fuller, Professor John Sanbonmatsu (HUA), will lead an exploration and conversation about his 2025 book The Omnivore’s Deception: What we get wrong about meat, animals, and ourselves (NYU Press). In this widely reviewed and warmly praised book Prof. Sanbonmatsu proposes a new perspective on our relationship with animals, the food we eat, and with each other. One reviewer (Jeffrey Moussaief Masson) writes, "You cannot read this book without changing your life. It is a work not only of immense moral significance, but a masterpiece." Prof. Sanbonmatsu will be joined in conversation by Prof. Joel Brattin and Prof. Scott Barton. Copies of The Omnivore’s Deception will be available for sale for half an hour before the event begins (3-3:30pm). More event information here.
Additional events are planned for the remainder of the 2025-2026 academic year, with dates, times and places to be announced here. Future authors and events will include:
Those Who Travail & are Heavy Laden: Memoir of a Labor Lawyer (WPI Press, 2025), William B. Gould IV. This WPI Press author, William B. Gould IV, Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, at Stanford Law School and formerly Chairman of the National Labor Relations Board under President Bill Clinton, is a prolific scholar of labor and discrimination law and an influential voice in worker-management relations for more than fifty years. He is the recipient of five honorary doctorates for his significant contributions to the fields of labor law and labor relations. In this remarkable memoir, Gould ties his career in labor law and civil rights to his heritage, his upbringing, and his inspirations. Those Who Travail & are Heavy Laden also carries on the tradition of his great grandfather, the first William B. Gould, whose Civil War diary telling of his daring escape from slavery and service in the Union Navy he and his father William B. Gould III ’25 discovered and published as Diary of a Contraband. Decentering Science and Technology for Development (WPI Press, 2026), Laureen Elgert, Rob Krueger, Elizabeth Long Lingo, Mimi Sheller, Yunus Telliel. Olive Higgins Prouty Poetry Celebration. In collaboration with Prof. Jim Cocola, the Gordon Library is planning our second annual Olive Higgins Prouty Poetry Celebration at WPI. This year’s program is being developed in partnership with the Worcester County Poetry Association and the Clemente Program in the Humanities. Featured poet to be announced.
Please mark your calendars now for our first events, and join us in explorations and conversations that celebrate and share the powerful role of books in making change.
The Gordon Library is excited to announce our 25-26 series of conversations with WPI authors, launching in B Term with two events! Our theme this year is For a Change, featuring books that challenge us to change our beliefs and our choices.
Details on locations and programs will be announced for each event and also added here throughout the spring:
- On November 6 at 3:00 pm, the series will open in the Gordon Library Conference Room and on zoom, with a conversation about Cornel West Matters: Politics, Violence, Racism, and Religion in America (2024, WPI Press), between author and WPI Professor Mahamadou Lamine Sagna (SSPS), and WPI Press Editor in Chief and Head, SSPS, Prof. Rob Krueger. Updated to reflect Cornel West’s independent candidacy in the 2024 US presidential campaign, this second edition explores West’s role as a philosopher, activist, and prominent intellectual with a singular dialectical and sometimes contradictory voice, echoing the title of West’s most influential books, Race Matters (1993) and Democracy Matters (2004). A zoom link will also be made available here. Please note that the Gordon Library’s elevator remains out of service; visitors who wish to avoid using the stairs are welcome to join via zoom. More event information here.
- On November 20, from 3:30-5pm in Lower Perrault / Fuller, Professor John Sanbonmatsu (HUA), will lead an exploration and conversation about his 2025 book The Omnivore’s Deception: What we get wrong about meat, animals, and ourselves (NYU Press). In this widely reviewed and warmly praised book Prof. Sanbonmatsu proposes a new perspective on our relationship with animals, the food we eat, and with each other. One reviewer (Jeffrey Moussaief Masson) writes, "You cannot read this book without changing your life. It is a work not only of immense moral significance, but a masterpiece." Prof. Sanbonmatsu will be joined in conversation by Prof. Joel Brattin and Prof. Scott Barton. Copies of The Omnivore’s Deception will be available for sale for half an hour before the event begins (3-3:30pm). More event information here.
Additional events are planned for the remainder of the 2025-2026 academic year, with dates, times and places to be announced here. Future authors and events will include:
- Those Who Travail & are Heavy Laden: Memoir of a Labor Lawyer (WPI Press, 2025), William B. Gould IV. This WPI Press author, William B. Gould IV, Charles A. Beardsley Professor of Law, Emeritus, at Stanford Law School and formerly Chairman of the National Labor Relations Board under President Bill Clinton, is a prolific scholar of labor and discrimination law and an influential voice in worker-management relations for more than fifty years. He is the recipient of five honorary doctorates for his significant contributions to the fields of labor law and labor relations. In this remarkable memoir, Gould ties his career in labor law and civil rights to his heritage, his upbringing, and his inspirations. Those Who Travail & are Heavy Laden also carries on the tradition of his great grandfather, the first William B. Gould, whose Civil War diary telling of his daring escape from slavery and service in the Union Navy he and his father William B. Gould III ’25 discovered and published as Diary of a Contraband.
- Decentering Science and Technology for Development (WPI Press, 2026), Laureen Elgert, Rob Krueger, Elizabeth Long Lingo, Mimi Sheller, Yunus Telliel.
- Olive Higgins Prouty Poetry Celebration. In collaboration with Prof. Jim Cocola, the Gordon Library is planning our second annual Olive Higgins Prouty Poetry Celebration at WPI. This year’s program is being developed in partnership with the Worcester County Poetry Association and the Clemente Program in the Humanities. Featured poet to be announced.
Please mark your calendars now for our first events, and join us in explorations and conversations that celebrate and share the powerful role of books in making change.
Latest Announcements - All
- Where in the World Are WPI Students in B-Term '25?This B-Term, nearly 325 students are participating in Interactive Qualifying Projects (IQP) or Major Qualifying Projects (MQP) with WPI’s Global Projects Program. Students participate in a term-long immersive research experience that sharpens their skills and brings a new way of looking at the world. This fall, the Syros, Greece, project center is gearing up for its sophomore year with a 12-student cohort. Robert Hersh, Syros advisor and director, says the small island located 80 miles southeast of Athens supports students with an enthusiastic community, challenging projects, and a working relationship with the University of the Aegean. Hersh, an adjunct teaching professor in The Global School, is familiar with the area, having directed the Thessaloniki, Greece, project center for many years. Opening the Syros project center was serendipity, he says, after a chance visit with a colleague from the University of the Aegean. The colleague’s son is a WPI alumnus, and the conversation turned to how students could use their skills to work with the Syros community. In 2024, the project center hosted its first students. Elizabeth Jordan ’26, who is double majoring in environmental engineering and environmental and sustainability studies, was part of the first Syros cohort and said the Greek island appealed to her because it was unfamiliar. “I was really interested to explore a place I didn’t know much about,” she says. Being part of an inaugural project center was not without hurdles. The lack of previous projects or examples to reference was daunting at first, Jordan says. “But as we settled into the work, we realized it was actually a blessing in disguise. Being the first group at the Syros project center meant we had the freedom to set our own standards and shape the foundation for future teams.” Hersh says he expects student projects to be intellectually stimulating, and he also expects the experience to hold deeper meaning where students can explore their creativity and build cross-cultural understanding. Jordan’s team project exemplified how that all comes together in a project center. Her team, which focused on the challenges of recycling on the island, realized there was much more to the project than just a municipal process. “Once we arrived on Syros, we quickly realized how difficult it was to access reliable information, and our data collection became more limited than expected,” she says. “This challenge ultimately became an important part of our project, helping us understand the underlying reasons behind residents’ hesitations toward recycling and their complex relationship with the local government.” While the projects illuminate difficult questions, the community partnerships that develop reveal why and how answers aren’t so clear-cut. As students learn about the island residents’ way of life and the government structure, they understand why a solution that worked on paper back on the WPI campus isn’t easy to implement on Syros, Hersh says. Students may leave a project center with excellent professional skills—and, he says, they also acquire something even more important. “They realize that it’s a complicated world.” In B-Term 2025, the Global Projects Program is hosting projects in these locations: IQP Cape Town, South Africa, with project advisors Gbetonmasse Somasse (Social Science & Policy Studies) and Alejandro Manga (contingent) Hangzhou, China, with project advisors Hansong Pu (adjunct) and Gu Wang (Mathematical Sciences) Honolulu, Hawaii, with project advisors Zoë Eddy (Department of Integrative and Global Studies) and Jed Lindholm (adjunct) Kathmandu, Nepal, with project advisors Brigitte Servatius (MA) and Herman Servatius (MA) Kyoto, Japan, with project advisors Melissa Belz (DIGS) and Alex Sphar (DIGS) Melbourne, Australia, with project advisors Uma Kumar (Chemistry & Biochemistry) and Joe Sarkis (The Business School) Nantucket, Mass., with project advisors Dominic Golding (DIGS) and Seth Tuler (DIGS) Prague, Czech Republic, with project advisors Fred Looft (adjunct) and Linda Looft (adjunct) Santa Fe, N.M., with project advisors Laureen Elgert (DIGS) and Phil Hultquist (adjunct) Syros, Greece, with project advisor Robert Hersh (adjunct) Tirana, Albania, with project advisors Michele Femc-Bagwell (adjunct) and Mallory Bagwell (adjunct) Venice, Italy, with project advisors Judy Nitsch (adjunct) and Luis Vidali (Biology) Washington, D.C., with project advisors Melissa Butler (DIGS) and Tsitsi Masvawure (DIGS) MQP FinTech (formerly Wall Street), with center directors Adrienne Hall-Phillips (TBS) and Kwamie Dunbar (TBS) Kyoto, Japan, with center director Adam Powell (Mechanical and Materials Engineering) Silicon Valley, Calif., with center director Mark Claypool (Computer Science) Tokyo, Japan, with center director Adam Powell (ME)
- WPI Police Department Reaccreditation AssessmentChief Stephen Marsh is pleased to announce that a team of assessors from the Massachusetts Police Accreditation Commission is scheduled to arrive on campus Nov. 17, 2025, to begin examining various aspects of the WPI Police Department’s policies, procedures, operations, and facilities toward reaccreditation. WPI police first became accredited in 2017, and this will be the third reaccreditation assessment to verify that the department continues to meet the commission’s standards for accreditation. Accreditation is a voluntary process that involves police departments meeting and maintaining over 325 operational standards and best practices. Achieving accreditation is a highly prized recognition of law enforcement professional excellence. Anyone interested in learning more about this program is invited to speak with the department’s accreditation manager, Capt. Brendan Green, or with Chief Stephen Marsh at the WPI Police Department located in Founders Hall.
- Project Advising 101 Series: Responding to Student WritingTuesday, November 18, 2025 12 pm - 1 pm CC: Mid-Century Room In this workshop, participants will review several styles of written commentary, considering how the type, placement, and quantity of comments on student drafts can affect their revision and learning. Participants will learn and practice with a “reader-based” approach that has the potential to: 1) Reduce the time you spend marking student papers 2) Model for your students how to better anticipate and respond to a reader's needs 3) Help your students become less dependent on your editing and directive feedback This workshop is one component of our Project Advising 101 program for faculty new to IQP and MQP advising. The workshop is equally helpful to faculty teaching writing-intensive courses in any discipline, as well as faculty working with graduate students on theses and journal articles. All are welcome to attend! Please register by Tuesday, November 11th, so we can finalize the headcount for lunch.
- Registration is open for Intro to Mindfulness Meditation in B-TermMIEA Intro to Mindfulness is a four-week evidence-based mindfulness curriculum the Center for Well-Being is offering to WPI employees and graduate students at no cost. Registration is now open for the in-person program that runs Tuesdays, 4:00 to 5:15 PM, Nov 11 to Dec 2. Register here
- "Currents of Change" Exhibit Kickoff NOVEMBER 3rd, 3-5pmJoin WPI Archives & Special Collections in celebration of the new 2025-2026 Gladwin Gallery exhibit, "Currents of Change: Electrical & Computer Engineering at WPI from the Dawn of the Electric Age to Present Day". This event will be hosted on the ground floor of George C. Gordon Library on Monday, November 3rd from 3-5pm. It is a casual drop-in/drop-out style gathering with a brief welcome and short program led by ECE faculty at the start. After the introduction, attendees will be welcome to explore the exhibit and some interactive elements on their own. Light refreshments provided. Students, staff, faculty, alumni, and guests are welcome. Registration preferred. Please email archives@wpi.edu with any additional questions.
- Staff Council Engagement Committee UpdateThe Staff Council Engagement Committee has put together a fun-filled calendar of events for everyone to have opportunities for connection and engagement this academic year. Please see below and attached calendar of events for the year! We hope you will join us for an upcoming social on Monday, October 27, 4pm at the Courtyard Marriott Bar (drinks and snacks on your own) for some conversation and connection with peers. Friday, October 31 from 12-1pm join us for a Lunch and Gather drop-in session in Innovation Studio 205. This gathering will be an opportunity to connect with others based on hobbies, interests, likes, etc. Lastly, we are thrilled to partner again this year with Chartwells to offer holiday pie sales at Harvest of Thanks on November 24th. New this year is the opportunity to purchase pies through the StaffCouncil myWPI webpage. Check it out HERE! Save the Dates for '25-'26 Staff Council Events Thank you, Matt Foster, Staff Council Engagement Committee Chair on behalf of, Staff Council Engagement Committee

