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In the geology department, students and faculty are researching a promising carbon dioxide removal technology.
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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.
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Fred Hagstrom’s newest artist’s book—about the the January 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol—was recently purchased by the Smithsonian to be placed in its American Art and Portrait Gallery Library in Washington, D.C.
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Louis Newman’s new book goes beyond college prep to training for life.
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Under a bed of snow in the Cowling Arboretum, thousands of seeds are awaiting spring, ready to start filling Carleton’s prairies with big bluestem, Golden Alexanders, porcupine grass, and other native species.
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As an artist, Xavier Tavera focuses on the borders—between countries and between what’s visible and what’s not.
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See the latest news from your classmates. (Carleton sign-in required.)
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Greetings from Paul Schmelzer, the new editor of the Voice
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The last few months have seen an outpouring of public commentary about higher education: on the overall value of a college degree, on whether student loan debt should be forgiven,…
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Kao Kalia Yang ’03, celebrated author of The Latehomecomer, adds a new skill: librettist. Her memoir The Song Poet is the first Hmong story adapted for the operatic stage.