NY Times featured Dyson Professor Melanie Dupuis in “Cotton Totes Climate Crisis”

Dyson College of Arts and Science

Weighing the two materials against each other, “we end up in an environmental what-about-ism that leaves consumers with the idea that there is no solution,” said Melanie Dupuis, a professor of environmental studies and science at Pace University.

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In The Media

Pace University Alumni Association Appoints Sabrina A. Griffin ’92 Chair, and Kelly Herbert ’06 Vice Chair for Leadership Council

Sabrina A. Griffin ’92, of St. Petersburg, Florida, and Kelly Herbert ’06, of Brooklyn, New York, have been appointed to serve as the chair and vice chair of the Pace University Alumni Association Leadership Council as of July 2021.

Kelly Herbert '06 and Sabrina A. Griffin '92

Sabrina A. Griffin ’92, of St. Petersburg, Florida, and Kelly Herbert ’06, of Brooklyn, New York, have been appointed to serve as the chair and vice chair of the Pace University Alumni Association Leadership Council as of July 2021.

Griffin, who will serve as chair, is a senior consultant with Jennifer Brown Consulting, LLC, a diversity and inclusion firm, where she develops business cases for clients, creates long-term strategy plans, conducts focus groups to assess corporate culture, and guides clients on establishing and/or rebranding employee resource groups to align with business objectives.

Griffin is an alumna of the Lubin School of Business where she received an MBA in finance. She serves on the President’s Council and the Presidential Taskforce on Diversity and Inclusion. Griffin received her bachelor’s degree in marketing and management from New York University’s Stern School of Business.

Griffin previously worked at Chubb & Son, Inc. for over thirty years, most recently as assistant vice president and diversity manager, overseeing leadership development programs for women, people of color, and LGBTQIA+ employees.

As chair of the Pace University Alumni Association Leadership Council, she will support the Association’s guiding principles and set of the Leadership Council’s priorities. Griffin will also serve as one of the Association’s representatives responsible for reporting annually to the Board of Trustees through the Development and Alumni Relations Committee.

As a leader of the Association, Griffin aims to bring her whole self to her new role, especially her passion for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).

“When I think about diversity, equity, and inclusion, with regard to an alumni association, I focus on inclusion and consider how to broaden offerings that appeal to every member of the Pace alumni family,” she shared. “When you get that right, diversity and equity can be achieved. By discovering what is important to people at their particular stage in life, you can develop programming around a variety of topics. Everyone won’t be interested in the same thing, but there should be something for everyone.”

Herbert, who will serve as vice chair, is a litigator in the New York office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher. Her practice involves complex commercial litigation, data and privacy issues, government investigations, appellate law, and constitutional law. She also has a robust pro bono practice centered on immigration rights, racial justice, election law, and LGBTQIA+ issues.

Herbert is an alumna of the Dyson College of Arts and Sciences where she received bachelor’s degrees in psychology and english language and literature, with a minor in women’s and gender studies. While at Pace, Herbert was the recipient of many academic honors including the David A. Bickimer Promise of Learning Award by the Academy of American Poets, the Scholarly and Critical Writing Award, and Dyson College’s Senior Awards for Excellence in both Psychology & English. Herbert then earned her Juris Doctor from Fordham University School of Law, where she was elected to the Order of the Coif.

After graduating from Pace, Herbert was instrumental in founding the University’s LGBTQA+ Center in New York City and ultimately ran the Center for its first four years. In that capacity, she developed many educational and social programs, facilitated discussion groups, and advised students, staff, and faculty on LGBTQIA+ issues and campus policy. Between her time spent as a student and as a staff member, Herbert dedicated 13 years of service to Pace. In honor of her lasting contributions to Pace, the Kelly Herbert Writing Award was established. The Award was endowed in 2011 and is awarded annually to students who demonstrate excellence in writing about LGBTQIA+ topics, life, and love.

As vice chair of the Pace University Alumni Association Leadership Council, she will aid the Office of Alumni Relations and the chair in setting priorities for the Council and the execution of the Association’s guiding principles.

Herbert hopes to strengthen the alumni network and create an environment where people are comfortable reaching out for opportunities and eager to support fellow alumni. She aims to nourish a sense of shared responsibility to care for others and create a strong, tight-knit Pace alumni community.

“I look forward to showing alumni that they are not on their own,” she shared. “My hope is that the Association will not only communicate—but demonstrate—that the greatest benefit of becoming part of the Pace alumni family is that you inherit a diverse, accomplished network of people who are ready and willing to help.”

About the Pace University Alumni Association

The Pace University Alumni Association creates a space for alumni to engage with each other, current students, and the University to enrich the alumni experience. Alumni will build community, celebrate Pace, and share innovative ideas to move the University forward. Through programming and volunteer opportunities, the Association provides a home for alumni where they can support and strengthen their affinity to the university. After administering an all alumni survey in November 2019, the University's Board of Trustees along with the Office of Alumni Relations partnered to ensure a structure was established to provide a sense of community, connection, and belonging for all Pace alumni, therefore creating the Alumni Association. Follow Pace Alumni on social media: Twitter: @PaceUAlumni, Facebook: @PaceAlumni, and Instagram: @paceualumni or stay up to date by visiting the Pace University Alumni Association’s Webpage.

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Alumni Profile: Dr. Yvette Edwards ’87

Dyson College of Arts and Science

For Dr. Yvette Edwards it’s been a long but ultimately fulfilling road from Kingston, Jamaica, where she was born, to her private practice in South Carolina, one that incorporates chiropractic, nutrition, weight loss, and regenerative medicine.

I am very grateful for the opportunity to help all the people placed with me to enhance and recover naturally.

Image
Dr. Yvette Edwards

For Dr. Yvette Edwards it’s been a long but ultimately fulfilling road from Kingston, Jamaica, where she was born, to her private practice in South Carolina, one that incorporates chiropractic, nutrition, weight loss, and regenerative medicine.

Arriving in the United States in 1980 and raised by a single and financially struggling parent, Edwards very much wanted to be independent upon graduation from Pace. An initial career assessment as a student revealed that she could excel in many different areas, so she selected a major in chemistry, a course of study that was listed as leading to high-paying professions.

It has led to her best life in more ways than one.

She said, “It allowed me the opportunity to mix and make products starting from scratch, and I have been able to use this skill in figuring out the best combination of nutritional supplements that lead to health and healing for so many folks.”

Edwards didn’t start out with a plan to pursue medicine. At one point, she did consider becoming a medical doctor, but her philosophy on life and belief that the body is self-healing discouraged her.

After graduating from Pace, she was immediately recruited by a chemical company, BASF, where she flourished for nearly a decade, working in automotive quality assurance.

Then one day, Edwards needed to accompany her mother, who was struggling with walking, to a chiropractic appointment during a visit to South Florida. At the time, she was neither overly familiar with this modality nor aware of its holistic approach to health. Edwards was astounded when her mother, who’d entered the office with a walker, exited “practically running” following her appointment. After having a personal experience of recovery for back-related issues, Edwards decided to enroll in Sherman College of Chiropractic in Atlanta, where she eventually graduated with honors.

It has been almost twenty years that she has been a licensed chiropractic physician, work that is both financially and personally rewarding.

“I am very grateful for the opportunity to help all the people placed with me to enhance and recover naturally,” she said.

Today, she has expanded her practice to include an associate doctor of chiropractic, and she provides nutritional consults, weight-loss therapy utilizing UV-light technology, and non-surgical knee pain recovery, thereby helping others recover from illnesses they otherwise expected to be lifelong.

When asked what advice she would provide students, her response, of course, is wholistic.

“Stay disciplined enough to finish [school], don’t worry about your future, and hold your image of success,” she said.

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Fall 2021: Move-in Tips

New York City
Westchester

If you’re a residential student living on campus for Fall 2021, you’ve probably gotten a lot of emails from Residential Life and Housing Operations. But, we’ve got some helpful tips to make your move-in go smoothly—in New York City and in Pleasantville.

students with moving bins
students with moving bins

If you’re a residential student living on campus for Fall 2021, you’ve probably gotten a lot of emails from Residential Life and Housing Operations. From scheduling move-in appointments to COVID-19 testing, we’ve hit you with all of the pertinent information. But, we’ve got some helpful tips to make your move-in go smoothly—in New York City and in Pleasantville.

Check ‘em out:

  • Arrive on time. Try to arrive at your residence hall during the window of time for which you signed up. It is okay to come AFTER your appointment, but please do not come BEFORE your appointment.
    • If you are arriving after 6:00 p.m., you may need to contact the RA on Duty to come down and check you in (the contact information for the RA on Duty will be easily available in each residence hall).
  • Speak to staff at the Check-In tables. Students arriving between 9:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. should check in with the Residential Life Staff stationed at their residence hall. There will be an easily identifiable check-in location at each residence hall.
  • We’ll make it quick. The initial check-in process is very quick, and simply allows the staff to verify that each student has completed all steps necessary for moving in. Some students may also need to pick up keys and/or ID cards at this step in the process.
  • Bring a couple of people. Three people, max. Students may have up to two people enter the residence hall to assist them in moving their things in. We suggest that one person always stays with the car (if arriving by car) to ensure that it can be moved if necessary. For this reason, we recommend that no more than three people accompany each student to move in (two to help move things into the building, one to stay with the car). We ask that helpers limit their stay to just the time needed to move things in and assist in setting up the room. After move-in, as per the Guest Policy for the start of the academic year, residential students may only have other members of the Pace Community visit them in the residence halls.
  • Parking stuff. If arriving at your residence hall by car, you will want to unload quickly, but then have someone move the car to a parking lot. There is parking available in the Pleasantville Campus, but there is no Pace parking for the New York City Campus. There are many private parking garages in the area, and they are easily identifiable (and security and other Pace staff can help direct you to them).
  • We’ll help keep the process moving. Pace staff will be present on site to assist in direction of both vehicle traffic and foot traffic. Pace Security staff will work to ensure that cars keep moving as they are unloaded. Student and staff volunteers from the Pace Community will be present to also assist, but each student should be ready to move their own things into the building.
  • Hello, dolly. A limited number of rolling moving bins will be available at each location, but depending on demand at any given time, we cannot guarantee that bins will be available to everyone. Students who have a cart, wagon, dolly, or hand truck are encouraged to bring it to help with their move in process.

Enjoy the rest of your summer and reach out anytime with additional questions to housingoperations@pace.edu. You can also find more information and explore our buildings online on the Housing website.

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