College Closed
Hunter College is closed today in recognition of Columbus Day.
Hunter College is closed today in recognition of Columbus Day.
Classes follow a Monday schedule.
Robert Seltzer 2020-2021 Lunch Lecture Series Presents: Shattered Homes: Jews in Hiding in Eastern Europe during the Holocaust Found in homes, objects are personal and familial. Some are “Jewish” by provenance used in daily lives or family celebrations, while others by virtue of “birth” as they performed religious functions. And if this was the case, […]
Roosevelt House presents a live Zoom discussion of the new book Isolationism: A History of America’s Efforts to Shield Itself from the World by Charles A. Kupchan. In it, Kupchan traces for the first time the complete history of isolationism from its roots in a speech made by George Washington to its 21st century resurgence. The author will be […]
Deadline to file a Graduation Application for Fall 2020/Winter 2021.
Do you need help filling out your financial aid application? Register now to attend a virtual FAFSA Filing Workshop, and get help in filing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. Six workshops are being offered in October and November. File your 2021-2022 FAFSA to: Be considered for the Excelsior Scholarship and Tuition Assistance Program […]
Join us online via Zoom to learn more about Hunter Hillel and the Jewish Studies Center at Hunter College! Find out more about our spring offerings, meet with Jewish Studies professors, and win prizes in a raffle! Please RSVP for Zoom details.
In the modern world, everything is connected, including how we kill. Join us for a thrilling evening as author and Hunter alumnus Phil Klay MFA‘11, discusses his debut novel Missionaries with author Matt Gallagher. In Missionaries, Klay, also an Iraq War veteran, examines the globalization of violence through the interlocking stories of four characters and […]
Roosevelt House presents a live Zoom discussion of Desk 88: Eight Progressive Senators Who Changed America by Senator Sherrod Brown. In a book only a “sitting senator” could write, Sherrod Brown (D-OH) explores the careers and legacies of some of the history-making progressives who sat at the same Senate floor desk he has occupied for the last 13 years. […]
This November marks the 59th presidential election in the United States. It has been, as commentators often say, “unprecedented.” Indeed, there have been—and surely will continue to be—newsworthy fireworks. Some are standard-variety; some are not. All have been contentious, and some raise serious questions about the American political order. The faculty of Hunter’s Political Science department […]