A Reluctant Farewell

April 26, 2010 | by Bruce Wallace | Filed under: Faculty |

Don’t be surprised if Theo School people appear bereft these days. They’re losing Maxine Beach, their warm and graceful guru, to retirement.

Making Her Debut

April 26, 2010 | by Samantha Pritchard | Filed under: Faculty |

Tiphanie Yanique kicks off her first book tour at Mead Hall.

An Appreciation: Paul Wice, 1942-2009

February 15, 2010 | by Renee Olson | Filed under: Blog,Faculty |

An award-winning professor known for his sense of humor wisecracks to the very end.

How to Make Freelancing Work for You

February 11, 2010 | by Renee Olson | Filed under: Blog,Faculty |

Caspersen Dean Richard Greenwald offers tips to Wall St. Journal readers—and you.

Drew Poet Honored with Nat’l Jewish Book Award

January 28, 2010 | by Renee Olson | Filed under: Blog,Faculty |

Though I may be deafened by this, let’s have a generous round of applause for MFA faculty member Alicia Ostriker for winning the National Jewish Book Award.

Prof. Kass Backs Up Former Kinks Frontman Ray Davies

January 19, 2010 | by Renee Olson | Filed under: Blog,Faculty |

It wasn’t “all day and all of the night,” but Professor Steve Kass devoted two evenings last fall to performing with Ray Davies, lead singer of the Kinks.

The Overlooked Workforce

December 17, 2009 | by Amy Vames | Filed under: Faculty |

History Department Chair Sharon Braslaw Sundue has written the first in-depth analysis of U.S. child labor before industrialization.

Dig This

December 15, 2009 | by Christopher Hann | Filed under: Faculty |

Amid the rolling hills of Umbria, Drew students are unearthing what appears to be a rest stop on a 2,200-year-old precursor to the Jersey Turnpike.

The Smile Seminar

December 15, 2009 | by Allan Hoffman | Filed under: Faculty,Featured |

Students in Roxanne Friedenfels’ popular courses on happiness are learning the essentials for a blissful life.

Dissident in Exile

December 15, 2009 | by John T. Ward | Filed under: Faculty,Featured |

Egypt’s leading public intellectual, Saad Eddin Ibrahim, risked every­thing to reform Hosni Mubarak’s antidemocratic regime. Even his freedom. By John T. Ward

Older Posts »