Via E-Mail
Imagine my surprise when I read the article “Run Wild” [Around the Bald Spot, fall] about Lydia Henderson ’16, who is working as a research intern at Ndarakwai Ranch in Tanzania. In 2003 I met Nkarsis, the orphaned elephant who has been in the care of Peter Jones at Ndarakwai. She was then two years old and weighed around 1,200 pounds. During our visit, my sons Christopher and Benjamin were allowed to play with her. Nkarsis means queen in Masai, but when we met her, she was still a princess.
—Karin Connelly ’60
From the Twitterverse
Kate Madison @MissKateMadison
Reading @CarletonCollege VOICE while waiting for my first grad school class of the new year to start. It’s like a breath of air from home!
Christine McKinley @MissMcKinley
Wow, @CarletonCollege is lovely. I maaaaybe should have packed my thicker coat.
@_belabo_
me when i visit @CarletonCollege next week

Chessy Cantrell @chessycan
What to do over winter break? Create the @CarletonCollege chapel as a gingerbread house

Via Instagram

frosty trees and that blue sky winter is nice sometimes @sarahasty

Late night broomball on the bald spot #wintercarleton
electric_resonator Frozen breath, toe nails falling off #broomball