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The job-hunting process for new Lawrence graduates amid a global pandemic has caused stress and anxiety. But according to three recent grads, it also has taught them to be adaptable and to tap into campus resources.
Be the Light! Campaign surpassed the $220 million goal. The donations will be used for the renewal of existing facilities, strengthening and expanding academic offerings, and enhancing the student experience.
Here are eight Lawrence alumni who caught our attention in our second Eight Alumni, Eight Stories end-of-year feature.
For 50 years, Lawrence University students have been trekking to the London Centre for a term or two of study in one of the world’s most iconic cities.
Support your fellow Lawrentians while you shop for the holidays! Here's a guide to help you find your way.
Since graduating from Lawrence in 2011, Dr. Mohit Gupta has never ceased his involvement with his alma mater. Gupta has seen what Lawrence has to offer through his own experience.
Annie Kaiser ’11 knows how to keep herself engaged with Lawrence. She hopes that through donations from her and other alumni, Lawrence is better able to meet the financial needs of all of its students.
Richard Zimman ’73 and Valerie Cox know what makes a strong education. The couple's most recent contribution to Lawrence took the form of a generous donation supporting the construction of the new Science Learning Commons.
Lawrence University’s Physics Department is again celebrating close connections with the winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics.
Jim Miller ’80 caught the marathon bug while running cross-country for Lawrence University in the late 1970s. What he’s done with that passion over the 40-plus years since puts him in very select company.
The scientist who was perhaps the earliest champion of working remotely, who has been called the father of telecommuting, who was publishing books on the subject nearly 50 years ago, well before personal computers were even a thing, is an alumnus of Lawrence University.
Lawrence University’s Board of Trustees has welcomed four new members.
Fifty years after walking across the Commencement stage on Main Hall Green at an event that felt part celebration, part protest, part chaos, the Lawrentians of that class give words of encouragement for the 2020 graduates who are navigating their own moment of chaos.