- More than 100 faculty, staff, students, Skidmore retirees and community members attended Skidmore's inaugural Humanistic Inquiry Symposium March 23-24.
- Beatlemore Skidmania 2017 was the last one under the oversight of its faculty founder, Gordon Thompson. He and student coordinator Will Scott '18 reflect on that and the future of the wildly popular tradition.
- Tracing the evolution of diseases, bioarchaeologist Kelly Harkins '04 says, "I've worked on 11,000-year-old bones from South America and on samples from ancient Nubia to medieval Europe."
- It's not Lazar's first Grammy nod, but it's a first for any female mastering engineer in the category "Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical."
- Equally at home with the fortepiano and the modern piano, Breitman will present a program of music by Mozart, Beethoven, and Franz Shubert on Feb. 19.
- Fall music tradition to celebrate the globalization of the Fab Four.
- A fall tradition continues: the popular Ensemble ACJW returns for its fall residency, which features campus and community outreach, and wraps up with an Oct. 17 concert in Zankel Music Center.
- Porter will team with pianist Katie Leung for an Oct. 11 performance.
- Tsou Music Scholar Maureen Mahon is an expert on African Ameican music and culture. Her talk is scheduled Thursday, Oct. 2.
- Distinguished historian Allan Winkler to share insight about the life and music of Pete Seeger in a Sept. 10 lecture at Skidmore.