The Well overflows with people and problems
If you stop by Taylor University’s gym, known as the Well, anytime after 3 p.m., you’ll notice that it is packed.
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If you stop by Taylor University’s gym, known as the Well, anytime after 3 p.m., you’ll notice that it is packed.
Next time you walk around the Kesler Student Activity Center or the Hodson Dining Commons, look up at the traffic cones in Bergwall Hall.
Welcoming various members of the business and entrepreneurship world to campus every week is Founding Fellowship, a class within the Taylor University Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE) program.
Steam rose from a ladle as Elijah Choi (’25) poured rice cakes and dumplings immersed in savory broth into to-go cups. Next to him, Gina Park covered the soup with toppings before handing it to a student.
Waving back at someone who definitely was not waving at you. Stumbling over your coffee order even though you practiced it in your head a million times before getting to the front of line. And the dreaded unzipped backpack, open for all to see on the whole walk from your dorm to Reade.
In an increasingly polarized political landscape, one issue continues to draw a dividing line between red and blue: climate change. Despite overwhelming evidence that human-caused atmospheric warming is taking place, only 53% of Americans address climate change for what it truly is—a threat to human health and the creation we are called to steward well.
As a child that grew up in Hartford City, Indiana, I would’ve never dreamed that I would get to meet people from all over the world. In various church ministry settings, I have known people from a few different counties, but it wasn’t until I started working at the Spencer Center for Global Engagement office at Taylor University that I got to experience a greater impact with people from around the globe.
A new homiletics program focused on equipping and developing pastors started at Taylor in January, spearheaded by Tim McConnell, director of the PREACH initiative at Taylor. The program meets online every other week and ends with a certificate of completion in homiletics.
Playoffs. That is the word in the back of the mind for the Taylor women’s basketball team.
Approximately 50 students, staff and faculty attended Turning Point USA (TPUSA) at Taylor’s first official club meeting, held Feb. 12 in Nussbaum 102.
Kenya is one of several countries Taylor is building relationships with through study abroad opportunities.
Two months ago, if students asked Scott Oleson, academic adviser at Taylor University and leader of Taylor’s Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) program, about the trajectory of the program, he wouldn’t have expressed the optimism he feels today.
In the Summer Olympics, the United States is golden. In Winter, they are lucky to be silver or bronze.
The Invitation Clinic, sponsored by Taylor University, has a dual purpose: training students to be caring, effective health educators and serving Grant County residents. Entirely staffed by Taylor students from a variety of majors, the program teaches patients lifestyle medicine principles to avoid or manage chronic disease.
While many head to Arizona or Florida for a relaxing break and sunshine, the Taylor baseball team had a different agenda.
As the Taylor men’s basketball regular season comes to a close, the team clinched fifth place in the Crossroads League standings, setting themselves up for a deep run in the postseason. Their record currently sits at 19-9 (11-7) on the season.
A line of eager students will soon wind down the steps to Rediger Auditorium as Taylor’s annual throwback concert, Nostalgia Night, returns.
Three music faculty members portrayed a variety of emotions through their faculty recital in Butz-Carruth Recital Hall on Feb. 22.
A musical landscape as varied and vibrant as the artists shaping it took the stage at the 2026 Grammy Awards.
Four weeks into the semester, chapel is going strong. This Spring, students, faculty, and staff are challenged to surrender to God.