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Manhattanville College Opens 'Living The Dream' Exhibit

PURCHASE, N.Y. --  Manhattanville College celebrated the unveiling of the 48-foot rainbow colored “Living the Dream” exhibit on Wednesday, Jan. 29 in the Berman Students’ Center.

Manhattanville student Mia Alicata shows her grandmother Assunta Amicone Alicata her panel on the “Living the Dream” display at Manhattanville College.

Manhattanville student Mia Alicata shows her grandmother Assunta Amicone Alicata her panel on the “Living the Dream” display at Manhattanville College.

Photo Credit: Contributed

The display features 12 panels, each featuring a current Manhattanville student writing about a grandparent’s dreams and how they impacted each student’s personal dreams for the future.

The idea spawned from the emotional response Managing Director of Communications J.J. Pryor and First Lady of Manhattanville College Jean Strauss had on the 50th Anniversary of the Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech this past August.

Both were brought to tears as they watched President Obama give a speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial where King stood 50 years before.

This sparked Pryor to create the “Grandmother Project” which focuses on seven undergraduate students at the college. In interviews with their grandmothers, each student was to compare their grandmother’s dream to their own, noting the progress across generations.

What was supposed to just be a final project for Pryor’s advanced seminar writing class, turned into something much more when Indiadora Nicholson, one of the participating students and president of the Black Student Union, saw the Grandmother Project’s potential.

She thought to expand the project to a dozen students, not to limit the project to just grandmothers but any influential grandparent, and most importantly, to create a massive exhibit that the entire Manhattanville community could be proud of.

The result of Nicholson’s vision became the “Living the Dream” exhibit now on display.

The exhibit shows a wide range of students from different racial and cultural backgrounds displaying the diversity valued at Manhattanville, while showing the major progress made over the past two generations.

“It is great to see the powerful sense of community in Manhattanville,” said Nicholson.

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