Magazine (page 3)
What Comes After Midnight: A Community-Centered Approach to Addressing the Climate Dilemma
Illustration by Briana Loewinsohn ’02 for the Scripps magazine Spring 2025 issue. By M. Nakamura The climate crisis has traditionally been conceived in terms of imminent disaster. In brief: We […]
Read MoreScripps Magazine Spring 2025: President’s Vision
President Amy Marcus-Newhall By certain economic and social measures, this is the best time to be alive. Extreme poverty worldwide has sharply declined in the past two centuries, the world’s […]
Read MoreSafeguarding Our Shared Cultural Heritage
Students use an X-ray spectrometer to examine artifacts from the Scripps collection. By Caitlin Antonios As a person tends to grow nostalgic with age, they often keep an experience from […]
Read MoreBeyond the Bubble: How Scripps Students are Advancing a Healthier World
By Rachael Warecki ’08 Natalia Alameda ’25 At Scripps, students are empowered to venture beyond the “Claremont Bubble.” Whether studying or interning abroad, these global engagement experiences often present watershed […]
Read MoreFraming a Legacy: Celebrating Kirk Delman’s Impact on Scripps and the Arts
Kirk Delman in his office at the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery. By Caitlin Antonios While thousands of students, faculty, and staff have passed through Scripps’ gates over the past 38 […]
Read MoreScripps Magazine Fall 2024: President’s Vision
When I joined Scripps’ faculty in 1992, I did not anticipate how closely tethered to its mission I would become—but my dedication to the wellbeing and success of our community […]
Read MoreRedefining Leadership: Rosanne Rennie Holliday ’61 on Women Supporting Women
By Emily Glory Peters In the early hours of January of 1974, Rosanne Rennie Holliday kissed her young son William goodbye, climbed into her VW Bug, and headed out with […]
Read MoreDetecting Art History’s Mysteries: On the Case with Our Alumnae Conservators
In the field of art conservation, history is seldom static. “Opinions, authenticity, and judgments about works of art and other historical objects are always in flux,” says Mary MacNaughton ’70, professor of art history and Gabrielle Jungels-Winkler Director of the Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery.
Read MoreThe Artful Science
Art conservation students Wendy Lindsey ’11 and Robin Dubin ’12 help restore St. Michael, a 15th century wooden statue from Perugia, Italy, on loan to the College for preservation work; […]
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