Print Magazine 2024
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ researcher Pedro DiNezio emphasizes solving the problems of climate change in the here and now.
- Higher education is beset by challenges, and É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ is not alone in needing to surmount them. While we face today’s difficulties and prepare to meet tomorrow’s, we remain tethered to certain truths, including that a broad university education is
- In new audio storytelling project, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ scholar Doris Loayza works to preserve the traditional tales and lore of the Peruvian highlands.
- The 2009 math and astrophysics double major has successfully transformed herself from a scientist to an educator to a storyteller sailing with the enterprise known as 'Star Trek.'
- For artist and professor of printmaking Melanie Yazzie, making art is about much more than creating something aesthetically pleasing.
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ alumna Julie Chavez reflects on her new memoir, which chronicles her journey through a mental health crisis to finding a new motto: ‘Be adequate.’
- What began as a hobby for É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ economics undergrad Lucas Gauthier came together as a photographic portfolio documenting the already-evident and potential effects of climate change.
- Supporters revivify not just the building but also what it fosters and represents.
- Pursuing a passion for music, É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ economist Murat Iyigun transforms from recognized expert on economics of the family and economic history to regional rock star with a growing musical reputation.
- É«ÊÓÆµÏÂÔØ geologists Lizzy Trower and Carl Simpson win $1 million in support from W.M. Keck Foundation to try to solve an evolutionary puzzle and to extend Earth’s temperature record by 2 billion years.