News

The Upward Bound program at Bowdoin recently celebrated its anniversary on campus, looking back at the six decades it has ...
Some 200 concerts and other events are now put on annually, featuring around eighty performers and streaming live to more ...
The 17,000-panel solar field on Bowdoin land in Brunswick will push the College past its goal of purchasing 100 percent of its electricity from Maine-based renewable sources. As part of its effort to ...
The US Department of State has awarded Fulbright fellowships to fourteen graduating seniors and one recent graduate to teach English, pursue graduate study, or conduct research in Europe, Asia, and ...
Alivia Moore '09, a citizen of the Penobscot Nation, was recently celebrated for conserving land in Swanville, Maine, (Penobscot territory) and creating a permanent place for Wabanaki agriculture, ...
Bowdoin is proud to announce a $50 million gift—the largest in our 231-year history—from Netflix cofounder Reed Hastings ’83 to launch the Hastings Initiative for AI and Humanity.
Featuring works from the collection of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art spanning nearly two thousand years —from approximately 1300 BCE to 400 CE—Flora et Fauna examines how ancient Mediterranean ...
“For a young lawyer who's interested in how the law shapes this country,” said Jordan Goldberg ’14, “it's an immensely exciting opportunity and a true privilege.” Goldberg was referring to his ...
Whether in artificial intelligence, self-driving cars, or genetic engineering, businessman John McQuillan Jr. ’87 has serious concerns about the current rapid rate of scientific progress. “[S]cience ...
It’s time to redefine what populism means in the context of a liberal democracy—that’s the view of Professor Seth Jaffe ’00, who teaches the history of political thought at LUISS Guido Carli ...
The event, which is part of Bowdoin’s Family Weekend, is held to recognize Bowdoin's highest-ranking students—those with grade point averages in the top 20 percent of their class as determined by the ...
Gisiger, who is of Latin American heritage, said she decided to write it with a Latino angle because she didn't feel represented enough in her school. “I didn't see myself in the curriculum,” she told ...