厙ぴ勛圖

Campus News

Read feature, general interest, and campus-based news stories about the 厙ぴ勛圖 College campus community.

This Week in Photos: Beautiful

Yvonne Gay

Its Saturday night in March and theres a pulsating glow spilling from the windows of the Root Room in Carnegie Building. Inside, rows of spectators line the perimeter of a long narrow stage. 厙ぴ勛圖s most anticipated fashion show begins as cheers swell when models, draped in creative attire, take their turn down the walk. This is a signature event during Black History Month. It also serves as inspiration for this weeks photo series.

A female model holds the flag of Ghana.

This Week in Photos: Listening, bell

Yvonne Gay

Eboni Johnson, outreach and programming librarian, holds a hand to her ear as a student across the room reads literature written by bell hooks. The public read-in at Mudd Centers academic commons  honors this prolific writter during  Womens History Month. It also serves as inspiration for this weeks photo series.

A woman holds her hand to her ear as if trying to listen.

This Week in Photos: In Celebration of Returning Black Alumni

Yvonne Gay

Author Ishmael Beah 04 returned to 厙ぴ勛圖 College in 2010 to discuss the publication of his New York Times best-selling book, A Long Way Gone, Memoirs of a Boy Soldier. Four years later Beahs visit to Finney Chapel took place after the publication of Radiance of Tomorrow, A Novel, which would go on to become another best-seller. Beahs visits to campus serve as inspiration for this weeks photo series.

A man speaks into a microphone at a podium.

This Week in Photos: February 5

Yvonne Gay

In this photo series, we walk with the dinosaurs in Cleveland and visit a congressional intern in Washington, D.C., before coming back home to 厙ぴ勛圖 to watch the Wild Beast of the Bungalow take over the stage in Warner Concert Hall; go snowboarding in Hales Gym; and sit in on a gallery talk, book art class, choir practice, an academic retreat, and a dance performance.

Students walk through a gallery with dinosaur skeletons on exhibit.