The Red Devil fall sports season is underway!
Meet Patrick Scarborough '24, who anchored the men’s lacrosse team in goal and helped lead them to three Centennial Conference titles.
Learn how a Dickinson international business & management and quantitative economics double major is looking to change the way football is played and coached.
Ethan Hart ’24 (computer science) is a record-holding student-athlete who’s focused on channeling technology to solve impactful problems.
Years after an ancient, near-mythic ship was dragged from the bottom of the Nile Delta, Hunter Omerzo ’24 creates a high-tech model that sheds new light on ongoing research at Oxford.
"Never underestimate yourself or the power of an optimistic attitude," says Damien Labrada '27, a student-athlete and international-studies major who's learning to lead.
Guard Clair Marion ’25 discusses team bonding, academic drive and game performance.
From the moment he first stepped onto the football field at age 7, Presley Egbers ’24 knew he had found his sport.
“Not everyone can change the world, but anyone can change someone else's world for the better.” A.J. Jennings ’25 is a student-athlete and psych major focused on sparking bright futures.
Meet Kobe Fleming '24 and Joe Smyth '25, lifelong friends who grew up playing squash together in New Zealand and are now co-captains of Dickinson's squash team.
When injuries shortened his collegiate football career, Henry Booth ’25 found a different way to contribute to the team. His story also includes a powerfully meaningful internship.
After interning with the athletics department, Andrew Scheiner '25 (comp sci, data analytics) researched tipoffs and jump balls in professional basketball and presented findings at MathFest 2023.
Dickinson student-athletes are always pushing themselves, and each other, to be the best, whether in competition or in the classroom.
Learn about the man for whom Dickinson's McAndrews Fund, McAndrews Award and McAndrews Society are named.
“Dickinson has inspired, motivated and challenged me to be the best version of myself,” says Myra Naqvi '25, an award-winning runner and ROTC member who researched the Russia-Ukraine war.