Emily’s stories, writing, and research have
appeared on NPR, the Smithsonian, the TED stage, and her father’s fridge.

Benjamin Franklin on Networking           (or, how he convinced me it mattered)
Emily Krichbaum Emily Krichbaum

Benjamin Franklin on Networking (or, how he convinced me it mattered)

In the fall of 1727, Ben Franklin — then a 21-year-old printer with a failing business — gathered 12 men for regular Friday evening meetings in Philadelphia. He called it the Junto and was quite intentional about who he invited.

They weren’t the most prestigious or powerful people in the city (nor was he).

Instead, the first members included a self-taught mathematician, a surveyor, a clerk, a joiner and a merchant’s clerk, among others. Each possessed different skills and expertise while sharing a hunger to improve both themselves and their community.

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Where’s Walda: In The Stars
Emily Krichbaum Emily Krichbaum

Where’s Walda: In The Stars

I’d like to think of Dr. Vera Rubin’s work on dark matter as the ultimate example of women in the sciences. Just because you don’t see them, in the history books or on stage, doesn’t mean they weren’t there.

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Where’s Walda: In the Boston Marathon
Emily Krichbaum Emily Krichbaum

Where’s Walda: In the Boston Marathon

Three hours, 21 minutes, and 40 seconds later, Gibb finished the race ahead of two-thirds of the all-male field. That’s a 7:40 mile average. In a freakin’ bathing suit, her brother’s bermuda shorts, and his athletic shoes.

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