Clubs spotlight talent, expression
Record-setting events and campus-wide celebrations marked a memorable year, as all clubs inside of Taylor Student Organization played their part.
Record-setting events and campus-wide celebrations marked a memorable year, as all clubs inside of Taylor Student Organization played their part.
During the week of May 2-6, Taylor held its annual fundraising event, “I Love TU Week.”
Choros, a Taylor student discussion group that is reemerging after having dwindled during the pandemic, has dedicated this semester to listening to student perspectives on their experiences with gender and sexuality on campus based on discussions guided by recent survey results collected by the group.
20 students and two faculty leaders headed to the South on a civil rights trip from April 26-29.
With the end of the 2021-22 school year soon approaching, Taylor’s Student Senate announced plans to reconstruct their organization for next year.
Russell B. Pulliam, Indianapolis Star associate editor/columnist, has recently donated $120,000 for journalism scholarships at Taylor University.
Recently, President Michael Lindsay announced a number of changes in faculty and administration, which included new hires, position changes and the creation of the Board of Visitors.
The Office of Intercultural Programs started a new group that brings together adopted students on campus.
This past April, an email to faculty announced that the traditional “Honors Chapel” would undergo changes so seniors and faculty receive greater recognition for their achievements.
The building adjacent to Upland Town Hall, located on Main Street, was torn down after it was deemed unsalvageable by the Indiana Historical Society.
From March 15 to April 15, Taylor University is celebrating Asian Heritage Month.
President Michael Lindsay’s new series entitled “President Lindsay Live,” had its first event on April 6.
Ron Sutherland, special assistant to the president, is running for re-election for the Upland Town Council.
Every year Taylor holds multiple summer programs for high schoolers to come and get a taste of college life including Summer Institute, formerly known as CRAM and Summer Honors, Academic Summer camps and Empower.
After a brief hiatus due to the pandemic, Taylor University has rejoined the Campus Race to Zero Waste, a national competition in place since 2001.
The Wonder 2022 conference is a student-created event hoping to revitalize Taylor's spiritual lives.
On March 8, Taylor’s Oxford Union Debate Society hosted a conversation discussing the ethicality behind transgender women competing in women’s sports.