Posted on November 8, 2019
5 Tips That Make Networking A Whole Lot Easier
Here are a few pearls of wisdom to help assuage any anxiety you may have about networking.
Posted on November 8, 2019
Here are a few pearls of wisdom to help assuage any anxiety you may have about networking.
Posted on November 7, 2019
For some students, quad break is truly that—a break from studies, a chance to regroup. But for 26 students this year, quad break was a chance to immerse in entrepreneurship and social enterprise in NYC and in refugee ministries in Buffalo, NY.
Posted on November 4, 2019
The collection will move to Baker Library in order to take advantage of Baker’s expertise in historical document preservation and the Library’s technological capabilities.
Posted on November 1, 2019
Posted on November 1, 2019
This past weekend, a researcher became a playwright, so that her findings could give back to the very people her research was about.
Posted on October 28, 2019
Through music, art and interviews, the Gordon Symphony Orchestra's fall concert spotlights the inspiration that students and famed composers alike experience when abroad, November 2.
Posted on October 21, 2019
Now that you’ve lived in your space for a couple of months and have had a chance to recover from midterms over Quad break, it’s time to figure out which details will make your dorm room feel a little more like home.
Posted on October 16, 2019
In Portland, Maine, last spring, a number of food production workers stopped washing their hands, and it was Abbey Mitchell’s job to find out why.
Posted on October 15, 2019
Posted on October 14, 2019
In 2017, Sam Rodriguez was the first Hispanic evangelical to deliver a prayer at a presidential inauguration. For that, many people called him a traitor.
Posted on October 11, 2019
Through three lectures, Dr. Praveen Sethupathy examined questions of science, faith and the accompanying ethical questions, ultimately asking, “What does it mean to be human?”
Posted on October 10, 2019
After performances of Theatre Arts' production of 'Antigone,' audiences were torn on whether to laugh at the play’s hilarious banter or cry because of its tragic elements of death and sorrow.