The creative output of David Lefkowitz ’85 seems designed to encourage us to look closer—at art, and just maybe, the broader world around us.
With AI poised to disrupt education, Carleton’s leaders, librarians, and technologists are working to make sure it supports, not subverts, human intelligence.
Pot is legal in Minnesota, and a Carleton alum was a key player in the push to put racial equity and economic opportunity front and center.
As the performance troupe she founded, Ebony II (now Synchrony II), turns 50, Debra McCray ’76 reflects on dance, race, and magic.
Today’s women’s varsity soccer team traces its origins to a scrappy group of athletes who launched Carleton’s first club 45 years ago.
At 90, Bill Buffett ’55 (above) and Kenneth Fisher ’55 look back—on life lessons, pranks, and acts of service—69 years after Carleton.
Progress is already being made towards goals around sustainability, student support, and interdisciplinary studies in Carleton’s strategic plan.
Ministering to the Carleton That Is and Could Be
Chaplain Schuyler Vogel ’07 on providing welcome to people of all faiths and to those, like him, who have many more questions than answers.
Ground-Level Research on Carbon Removal
In the geology department, students and faculty are researching a promising carbon dioxide removal technology.
Object Lessons: Polaroid ID-2
In Xavier Tavera‘s art class, the Polaroid ID-2, used in apartheid-era South Africa, offers a touchstone for teaching about representation and repression.
More Bald Spot: Fred Hagstrom’s January 6 Acquired by the Smithsonian • Thinking Broadly, Creatively, Deeply