The best imagery and illustrations from the Spring 2020 issue of Colgate Magazine.
“Ask yourselves: Where have you been when your sisters and brothers needed you? We have a role to be there for one another.” During the University’s Martin Luther King Jr. celebration opening ceremony in Memorial Chapel, Christian Johns ’20, co-president of the Student Government Association, addressed the audience.
In nature, at least, spring continues as usual on campus. Leaves begin to appear on the serviceberry tree (Amelanchier canadensis), and the otherwise quiet is broken up by the birdsongs of orioles, warblers, and tanagers.
Travel back in time to 5th-century Athens with Professor Robert Garland in How to Survive in Ancient Greece.
Professor CJ Hauser uses these tiny plastic chickens in her creative writing classes as both a community-building tool and a reminder that writing can happen anywhere. Read the full story in The Writing Totem.
Colgate's studio arts seniors invite viewers to consider new perspectives with their capstone art projects. In "Condemned," above, Andrea Cornelius interrogates first-world inaction in the face of climate change. See more in Art as Perspective.
In a season cut short, the Colgate men's basketball team's collective spirit was more important than ever. Net Gains
To better understand the dynamics of borders and immigration, professor Nicole Simpson and her Economics of Immigration class joined muralist Cimi Alvarado, pictured, in a tour of El Paso, Texas. Read more in Beyond Borders.
In On Target, biochemistry major Hilary Nicholson ’12 uses a decades-old medical concept to take aim at cancer.
Professors in three disciplines weigh in on one important issue: data security. Privacy Matters