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Professor Katie Blyberg teaches a marketing class.
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Professor Katie Blyberg teaches a marketing class.
Nick and Molly Pastermack are Taylor’s entrepreneurs in residence.
After 31 years, the Town Council held its final meeting in the Upland Town Hall on Oct. 7.
Taylor University emphasizes the integration of faith and academic excellence. Photo provided by Taylor University
Taylor University is learning to balance rising tuition costs with accessibility as national costs of education rise.
Theatre students perform “The Glass Menagerie.”
Samuel Morris Hall residents perform for the 2024 Halloween open house
Taylor’s men’s and women’s tennis teams have been successful since the program’s rebirth.
Through four games, Taylor is averaging 48 points per game while allowing 29.5 points per game. (Photo provided by Taylor Athletics)
Ellie Frey is second in the NAIA and leads the Crossroads League in kills with 330, and fifth in the NAIA in kills per set with 4.58. (Photo provided by Taylor Athletics)
Eliza Luttrell netted her first hat trick of the season in a 9-1 win over Cornerstone. (Photo provided by Taylor Athletics)
Rawlings became the rock for the Trojans defense in her junior season, starting in all 17 games with a .826 save percentage in conference. (Photo provided by Taylor Athletics)
Students paint pumpkins at the Taylor Fall Fest
Visitors enjoy a bite from cultures across the world
Pastor Dan Blosser teaches a sermon at UCC.
The recipient of the Joseph P. Blades award will be declared by Taylor’s PREACH program this October.
Detour signs redirect traffic as construction continues.
Local crafts, lively music and the sweet scent of autumn treats will fill the streets of Upland on Oct. 17 as the town hosts its fifth Fall Festival.
Gunpei Yokoi worked for Nintendo for thirty-one years, leaving the company in 1996. He was known as the creator of the Game Boy, the first handheld console, which had terrible, black-and-white 8-bit graphics, but you could hold it in your hand. (Can you imagine? A powerful electronic device so small it could fit in your pocket?!) His design philosophy was “lateral thinking with withered technology.” Rather than competing directly with other, more expensive hardware, Nintendo tried to do new things that brought new value to dated hardware.