News

They hid revolvers in teddy bears, they smuggled explosives in their underwear, they flung Molotov cocktails, they bombed German supply trains, they distributed underground bulletins, and they ...
The ecological behavior of crayfish may sound like a very specific field of study, but it has important wider implications regarding the ways climate change could impact the environment, said Sophia ...
Associate Professor of Government and Asian Studies Christopher Heurlin shares his thoughts on the origins of the long-standing trade dispute between Washington and Beijing. In an interview with ...
President Zaki, faculty, staff, and the unique class of 2024, thank you all for being here. If you had told me four years ago of all the highs and lows of college, of all the immense knowledge we ...
A new outdoor bench has been installed on campus in honor of Bowdoin’s fifteenth president, Clayton Rose, who stepped down last year. The item is a gift from faculty in recognition of Rose’s excellent ...
Bowdoin's Environmental Studies (ES) program is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary, a milestone that is galvanizing faculty, staff, and students to reflect on what it means to study and teach the ...
This summer we are launching a series about the humanities, examining why Bowdoin faculty are committed to teaching literature, languages, the arts, history, philosophy, and religion—and how students ...
Since the Bowdoin College Museum of Art received 100 extraordinary objects from the Wyvern Collection as a long-term loan, the artworks have become "an integral part of the day-to-day life of the ...
In part three of a series of articles that looks at the humanities at Bowdoin today, we examine the evidence supporting the idea that studying the humanities helps Bowdoin graduates find jobs—and ...
Backed by Bowdoin fellowships, more than a dozen students this summer investigated sea star locomotion, lobster communication, microplastic pollution, and the implications of rising temperatures on ...
The first article in the series looks at the value of low-tech classes and what happens when students put away their gadgets and just focus on reading, and talking about what they are reading. The ...
Like most grant titles, this one is far from catchy: “Life history strategies within a population depend on cellular and organismal traits that underlie differences in resource acquisition and ...