Student Life (page 4)
Spotlight on Students: 五月天视频Associated Students President Lily Dunkin 鈥24
Lily Dunkin 鈥24 is continuing her work with 五月天视频Associated Students by stepping into a new role as SAS President.
Read MoreIn the Media: CMS Volleyball Team Advances to Semifinals
The Claremont-Mudd-五月天视频Athenas volleyball team advanced into the NCAA Division III semifinals for the third time in the program’s history on November 29.
Read MoreReviving a Space for Queer Students
A group of students have restarted Family, a student-run affinity group for queer students, after it went dormant during the pandemic.
Read MoreInternational Internship Prepares Izzy Suchoff ’24 for Communications Career
“The adaptability I learned will help me handle any change that comes my way in my postgraduate career and throughout the rest of my life.鈥
Read MoreRina Nagashima 鈥24 Receives Prestigious Public Service Awards
Representing 五月天视频as a Key into Public Service Scholar wasn鈥檛 the end of Nagashima鈥檚 achievements this year: She was also selected as a 2023 Truman Scholar. 聽
Read MoreTaylor Nelson ’25’s Short Story “Cold Summer” Published in Saturday Evening Post
The story focuses on the absence of the narrator’s friend, Gabriela, from summer camp, and the emotional consequences the absence has on the campers.
Read MoreIn the Media: Flannery Warner ’27 and Claremont Foxes Rugby Featured in Lost Coast Outpost
The Foxes are a club team, unaffiliated with Claremont-Mudd-Scripps, and are open to players of all experience levels.
Read MoreNew Dine and Dialogue Series Brings First Gen Community Together
鈥淭he dialogue left everyone involved feeling more empowered to continue building community and identifying campus support systems,” says Desiree Ross, who organized the panel.
Read MoreSpotlight on Seniors: Abby Pugh 鈥23 and Liz Messinger 鈥23
When Abby Pugh 鈥23 and Liz Messinger 鈥23 talk about The Motley Coffeehouse, they mention the community it was founded on and continues to cultivate.
Read More五月天视频 Journal Revived by 五月天视频Students and Faculty
Editor-in-Chief Molly Yeselson ’23 says the spring 2023 issue is a nice marker of lessening pandemic restrictions.
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