New Class Has Students All Fired Up
Blacksmithing is alive and well in the Department of Studio Art thanks to a new sculpture course, which has proven very popular with students in its first year.
Blacksmithing is alive and well in the Department of Studio Art thanks to a new sculpture course, which has proven very popular with students in its first year.
After sitting idle for 40 years in a backyard, the VW bus belonging to an early civil rights pioneer is recovered thanks to efforts by the College.
Followed by close to 50,000 fans online, finance major Sofie Siegel takes them on a nightly romp through the magical world of Final Fantasy.
Geology major Clara Meierโs trip to Alaska to gather evidence of a mass extinction illustrates the research opportunities afforded undergrads.
The REACH Program celebrates its 10th anniversary empowering students with cognitive disabilities to participate fully in college.
In order to better understand the fascinating and critical world of bees, biology major Matthew Magee is trying to discover how they earn their wings.
Are bonnetheads the first sharks found to eat veggies? Professor Gorka Sancho and two marine biology students are hot on their tails.
Studying abroad takes on a whole new meaning for the Alsarraf family, with six of their eight children traveling from Oman to study at the College.
Twelve years after graduating from the College's N.E. Miles Early Childhood Development Center, these long-lost classmates are back on campus.
Although John Creed's office is filled to the brim with papers, books and mementoes from his 27 years at the College, the defining feature is "the chair."