Gregory Lockard ’03, a writer and editor who previously worked for DC Comics, offers an example of how a comic book comes to life.
Espoir DelMain ’21 is an environmental-studies major from Saint Paul, Minnesota, who worked to bring student voices to the forefront in her first year at Dickinson.
Priscilla Addison ’09 and sister Kimberly share the process they use at ’57 Chocolate, the pioneer bean-to-bar chocolate company they founded in Ghana, West Africa.
"Dickinson’s liberal-arts education has shaped me into the person I am today, a global citizen," says Soo Min Kim ’18, who is striving to promote body positivity as the reigning Miss Korea 2018.
Dickinson artists-in-residence The Newberry Consort will perform “Forbidden Love: The Passion of Héloïse and Abélard," using period instruments, costumed actors and projected art and text.
The Washington Post highlights how Dickinson's faculty members play a critical role in identifying students that are struggling and excelling.
Holly Petraeus '74, P'04, discusses how a Dickinson French major became assistant director at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
New squash head coach comes to Carlisle from New York City, where he served as director of CitySquash.
Dynamic annual Women's Luncheon highlights the accomplishments of four alumnae and how Dickinson helped them achieve success.
Dickinson's Friendship Family Program aims to create a home away from home for international and long-distance domestic students.
Former U.S. representatives Don Manzullo, R-Ill., and Betsy Markey, D-Colo., will address the current political climate and reflect on their congressional experience.
Student-faculty research team travels to China to examine what happens to Chinese villages in the wake of mass out-migration to urban centers.
It's the apocalypse! (D'oh!) What do we do now? In this darkly comic play, survivors retell a 'Simpsons' episode ("excellent!") and a new culture begins.
Lakota/Kiowa and Apache storyteller, artist and activist Dovie Thomason will deliver an origin story of the Wild West myth from an underrepresented perspective.
“Dickinson opened my eyes to perspectives I had never thought of before,” says Liam Stenson Ortiz ’19, who plans to turn his language and science education into an international career in medicine.