Goshen College students share perspectives from Ignition show
As The Accidentals came to Goshen for a show at Ignition Music Garage, a group of Goshen College students led by adjunct instructor Marshall V. King documented the visit.
As The Accidentals came to Goshen for a show at Ignition Music Garage, a group of Goshen College students led by adjunct instructor Marshall V. King documented the visit.
Last summer, singer-songwriter Sadie Gustafson-Zook '17 released I’m Not Here, her first album of original material. The 23-year-old wrote a handful of the album’s eight songs during Study-Service Term to Peru as part of her undergraduate studies at Goshen College. She is currently pursuing a master’s degree in jazz voice at Longy School of Music in Cambridge, Mass.
Goshen College broadcasting students won awards from the Broadcast Education Association and Indiana Association of School Broadcasters this month.
The solar array is just the latest effort the college has made to reduce its energy consumption. Buildings have been renovated with energy-saving light systems and the vast expanse of green lawns in front of dorms and education buildings have been replaced with mini-prairies that feature native plants.
Why would a student choose a Mennonite college over either a large public university with a lot of opportunities and a lower sticker price, or an elite Ivy League institution?
In celebration of Eastern Mennonite University’s centennial year, a symposium was held centered around the centennial histories of the five MCUSA colleges: Bethel, Goshen, Bluffton, Hesston and EMU.
Sara Ruth Klassen '14, Liz Core Shenk '14 and Aaron Shenk '11 are the new owners of Spacious Heart Yoga in downtown Goshen. Their mission: to make yoga as available and accessible to anyone as possible.
Former GC president Vic Stoltzfus remembers marching with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Dr. Kenneth Rutherford, who lost his legs in a landmine explosion and is now a leader in advocating for landmine removal, will be the keynote speaker at Goshen College’s 120th commencement ceremony on Sunday, April 29 at 3 p.m.
Emily Rodgers '03 talks about music, depression, sensitivity and suicide.