Image courtesy of Aniqa Chowdhury FROM THE BOWDOIN BUBBLE TO THE BIG CITY: Zohran Mamdani '14 was an activist and a changemaker long before his mayoral campaign, founding Bowdoin Students for Justice ...
In recent months there has been a pattern of stories in the Orient exploring the complexities and limitations of Bowdoin’s endowment and operating budget. To add context to the series of articles and ...
Kristen Kinzler AID IN GAZA: Hani Almadhoun discusses the obstacles faced in sending out aid to Gaza in Kresge Auditorium. Almadhoun shared his experience as a member of the UNRWA in conjunction with ...
The American Studies Association, a group of scholars on American culture and history, recently decided to honor the call of Palestinian civil society to boycott Israeli institutions. This academic ...
Miles Berry ENCAMPMENT FOR GAZA: Students for Justice in Palestine formed an encampment on the first floor of Smith Union. Organizers protested Donald Trump’s recent comments on U.S. “ownership” of ...
The combination of high-level classes, concern about plans for the future, and the desire to spend time with those we may never see again contribute to a very difficult year for seniors. Because of ...
This is the offer of the college for the best four years of your life. Picture Bowdoin’s campus. What do you see? A row of aesthetically pleasing first-year bricks. Students playing frisbee out on the ...
Alex Spear JEROME TOWN: Bolos Kitchen and Burger Bar sits in the fall sun on Dunlap Street. Brunswick Restaurateur Mike Jerome, owner of Bolos, discusses his life, the local business scene and his ...
“This story, in a funny way, begins in Paris,” remembered Robert H. Edwards, President of the College from 1990 to 2001. Now 86 years of age, Edwards sat upright at his spotless dining room table in ...
Ishani Agarwal ’20 says she came to Bowdoin “blind.” An international student from Mumbai, India, Ishani gleaned everything she knew about Bowdoin from pamphlets and the internet. Once transplanted to ...
On Maine’s southern border with New Hampshire, a large blue sign stands at the north end of the Piscataqua River Bridge. “Welcome to Maine—the way life should be,” it reads. For decades, motorists ...
Being at a liberal arts college, I constantly hear about the politics of language, but I have never known of in-depth discussions on slurs and epithets. I was reminded of this last week when I ...