![Image of President Chapdelaine walking her dog on Tempel Green](/media/magazine/2024/fall-2024/BigStoryImages3.jpg)
Forward Together
A few months into her tenure, President Andrea E. Chapdelaine is invested, excited and determined to do the hard work.
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A few months into her tenure, President Andrea E. Chapdelaine is invested, excited and determined to do the hard work.
Vermont State Botanist Grace Glynn ’14 is on the hunt for rare and endangered plants.
Four decades after they were accidentally unearthed on Conn grounds, the remains of an Indigenous American have been repatriated.
At a crucial moment for America, journalism is at a crossroads. Can it be saved?
Ames Prize-winner Ciara McNamara ’24 exposes the spectacle of America’s food system.
Marsha Williams ’81 crisscrosses the globe transporting hope in the form of bone marrow and stem cells.
President Chapdelaine is invested, excited and determined to do the hard work
In this issue:
A few months into her tenure, President Andrea E. Chapdelaine is invested, excited and determined to do the hard work.
Vermont State Botanist Grace Glynn ’14 is on the hunt for rare and endangered plants.
Four decades after they were accidentally unearthed on Conn grounds, the remains of an Indigenous American have been repatriated.
At a crucial moment for America, journalism is at a crossroads. Can it be saved?
Ames Prize-winner Ciara McNamara ’24 exposes the spectacle of America’s food system.
Marsha Williams ’81 crisscrosses the globe transporting hope in the form of bone marrow and stem cells.
In this issue:
Marsha Williams ’81 crisscrosses the globe transporting hope in the form of bone marrow and stem cells.
Christopher Krupenye ’11 proves humans’ closest relatives can recognize friends they haven’t seen for decades.
Professor Emeritus Frank Graziano is working to preserve New Mexico’s cultural heritage one historic church at a time.
Appealing to eclectic music lovers everywhere, WCNI thrives even in the era of Big Streaming.
Andrea E. Chapdelaine, a visionary leader and champion of the liberal arts, will serve as Conn’s 12th president.
A student-curated exhibition puts the focus on the working poor at the turn of the 20th century.
In this issue:
The Hollywood writer-producer had his best year yet, with two wildly different hit shows. He has no intention of taking a break.
A student-curated exhibition puts the focus on the working poor at the turn of the 20th century.
Income inequality in the United States is at its greatest since the Gilded Age. Professor Mark Stelzner explains why.
Filmmaker Katharine Parsons ’74 tells the story of the animal rescuers who braved the California wildfire burn zones to reunite beloved pets with their families.
CC Magazine’s Tim Stevens ’03 explains how he took a totally linear path to arrive fashionably late to the 29th Critics’ Choice Awards.
The story behind our covers for this issue.