Three years ago, Joe Johnson was a guy with an idea. Now, he’s the owner of a T-shirt company cranking out 1,500 shirts per month. The idea is almost too simple. Obvious, […]
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Professor of English Agata Szczeszak-Brewer’s personal essay “Mushrooms” was published in Hektoen International: A Journal of Medical Humanities. Earlier, in the summer, the piece was selected as one of six semi-finalists for the […]
“Come one, come all to Wally’s World, a fashion show extravaganza! “See a Wabash man’s week unfold before your eyes as we showcase outfits from all corners of student life, from the […]
Freelance producer and photographer Alex Rinks ’06 is best known for his work on Discovery Channel and History and on shows such as Wicked Tuna, Dude Perfect, Ax Men, and Mountain Men. He was the senior […]
Freshmen in Professor Christie Byun’s Fashion, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship freshman tutorial took over Fusion54, the College’s new collaborative space in downtown Crawfordsville, to model the latest in streetwear from Komäfi by CP Porter […]
“I can’t stress enough how important it was to be in LA. I made more connections in five months there than I made in 22 years in Indiana.—Nick Holland ’19 Who: Nick […]
In his new book, Tobey Herzog dives into an award-winning author’s feints and contradictions and surfaces with a revelation for the literary world. The day after he retired, Professor of English Emeritus […]
The first economist to give the LaFollette Lecture in the Humanities finds common ground between the disciplines. It may be no coincidence that it took nearly four decades for an economist to […]
Professor Emeritus of Classics Joe Day was the Haines-Morris Distinguished Lecturer at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville March 22 to 23, presenting a formal talk (Elegy into Epigram: Why Elegiac Meter became Dominant in […]
WM asked our readers: What does summer look like to you? This summer looks like a great deal of travel, including a just completed scouting trip to Peru for next year’s photo expedition […]
A poet’s venture into dairy farming becomes a journey of mud and guts, faith and trust. by Luke Blakeslee ’11 Venus is autumn’s morning star. I am not. In the first week of […]
1. When reading took hold in Germany in the late 1700s, a group of German intellectuals warned that it endangers your body and mind. They believed that books, particularly works of narrative […]