A couple weeks ago WM visited Eric Eversole ’94 in Washington DC to learn about his work as president of Hiring Our Heroes, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce initiative to help veterans, […]
The Wabash doctor who waged a long and ultimately successful battle against smoking sees global climate change as an exponentially greater threat to global public health. Speaking on Wednesday in Baxter Hall during […]
Read More - Jay ’63: Climate Change “One of the Grandest Challenges in History”
This week’s announcement that Peter Prengaman ’98 has been named Associated Press News Director for Brazil was especially gratifying news for those who have followed his remarkable career. And because Peter has been […]
Read More - Prengaman ’98: Thinking Critically, Living Humanely
The Greatest Spectacle in Racing has Wabash written all over it, and Monday night some of the key alumni players took part in a panel discussion on IndyCar and the Liberal Arts, […]
Read More - Alumni and Guests Impress at IndyCar and the Liberal Arts
The IndyCar Two-Seater made a stop on campus as a part of The Bachelor’s “Indycar and the Liberal Arts” presentation Monday. Celebrating the upcoming 100th running of the Indianapolis 500, students, faculty, […]
Today marks Tom Runge’s last day as Director of Alumni and Parent Programs at Wabash and the beginning of a deeply-deserved retirement and third career into what will likely be an even fuller […]
“There are always twists and turns in life,” Dennis Dean ’73 told students and faculty Tuesday in Hays Hall as he delivered the Haines Lecture in Biochemistry. “Some of your worst experiences […]
A landmark book Kirkus Reviews calls “a thorough look at the dissension that tore the country apart,” Daniel Crofts’ Lincoln and the Politics of Slavery examines a little-known episode in the most celebrated aspect of […]
Read More - Crofts ’63 Sheds “Bright, Clarifying Light” on Lincoln as Emancipator
Richard Paige—Professors Joyce Burnette and Ethan Hollander may not have won their respective races Crawfordsville City Council last fall, but both learned a great deal about themselves and their community. They hope […]
In an era of climate change, disease outbreaks, and rapidly advancing technology, understanding science is more important than ever. Yet scientists and the general public often don’t seem to speak the same […]
Read More - NSF Funds Rhetoric/Chemistry Efforts to Translate Science
The Son Also Rises: Surnames and the History of Social Mobility, written by Gregory Clark with Visiting Assistant Professor of Economics Daniel Diaz Vidal, Yu Hao, and Neil Cummins, won the 2015 […]
Byron K Trippet Assistant Professor of Philosophy Matt Carlson‘s paper on “Logic and the Structure of the Web of Belief” was published in the Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy. The main […]
Read More - Carlson Publishes in Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy