Don Blosser ’59: Let’s let Jesus speak for himself
Don Blosser is a retired Bible professor at Goshen (Indiana) College and a retired pastor. He is a member of Michiana Voices for Middle East Peace.
Don Blosser is a retired Bible professor at Goshen (Indiana) College and a retired pastor. He is a member of Michiana Voices for Middle East Peace.
Gerald R. "Tony" Hurst, an adjunct professor at Goshen College, died peacefully at the Greenhouse Village Strawberry Fields Home Thursday, Feb. 14, in Goshen, at the age of 75.
The Goshen College Chamber Choir and Orchestra will spend their spring break touring and performing in churches in Colorado, New Mexico and Arizona from Feb. 23 through March 1, 2019, with a home concert on Sunday, March 3 at 7:30 p.m. in the Goshen College Music Center’s Sauder Concert Hall.
Goshen College will host a two-day conference examining the college’s transformative Study-Service Term (SST) program, to be held on campus March 5-6, 2019. This conference is free and open to the public.
Goshen College senior Demarkus Stuckey has had to overcome poverty and a heart murmur to become one of the best players in the NAIA this season.
The 18th Annual GC Conference on Religion and Science will feature Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, an atmospheric scientist and evangelical Christian. Dr. Hayhoe will offer two free public lectures on Friday, March 29, 7:30 p.m.and on Saturday, March 30, 10:30 a.m. in Goshen College’s Church-Chapel.
When Florence Schloneger '69 sold her family farm in Kansas, she donated $10,000 – a portion of her earnings – to the Kanza Heritage Society to help preserve the heritage of the Kaw Nation, whose land the Gronemann family farmed.
With the support of her husband Zach, Leah took a bold step and started Goshen Youth Arts, a not-for-profit organization that gives young emerging artists the tools and training to make serious art.
Rose Hutchinson is the oldest living Goshen College Alum. She was born in 1913 and graduated with the Class of 1935. At the age of 105, she is still an active member of her church and community.
Students in Merry Lea’s Master’s in Environmental Education program discuss vexing social problems in their Environmental Issues and History class. They prepare presentations on topics like micro-plastics and nuclear disasters. All the same, students say they find hope in the course.