MMC Launches New Web Site

College Debuts New Web Site

October 29, 2013, New York, NY – Marymount Manhattan College went live today with a completely redesigned web site that boldly highlights the uniqueness and excitement of the private, independent liberal arts college on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

The new site, the result of months of planning and design work, was conceived to better portray Marymount Manhattan’s successes and is easily navigated by visitors interested in learning about MMC students, faculty and alumni.

MMC President Judson R. Shaver held a virtual ribbon cutting in the campus Commons, clicking a mouse to “cut” a virtual ribbon with virtual scissors, revealing the lively new homepage showing a biologist and a dancer.

With nationally recognized programs in the fine and performing arts, Marymount Manhattan offers 25 majors across the liberal arts spectrum and seeks to show students that they can become artists, scientists, business leaders while discovering their passions at MMC.

President Shaver acknowledged the power of a strong, interactive web site: “This is the method used by the vast majority of potential students, their families and supporters of Marymount learn about us, connect with us. The new site is our opportunity to invite in talented and gifted students all over the world to get to know Marymount Manhattan, to visualize themselves here at our campus in the middle of the most exciting city in the world.”

Marymount Manhattan College transformed the previous site and content management system created in the last millennium into a state-of-the-art system to engage and inform visitors through updated and dynamic academic pages, with fresh content, photos and videos throughout.

See the new site at www.mmm.edu.

Published: October 29, 2013

Math Department Holds The Eleventh Annual Pi-Day Contest

Every year, the Mathematics department holds a College-wide π-Day contest. Students, faculty, and staff are invited to submit an original sentence, paragraph, poem, or short story that uses the digits of π in order (π ≈ 3.1415926..).