‘Helena’s Time’ opens at Boren Art Gallery
By Ben LeBlanc | May 21An art exhibit commemorating Taylor’s second-oldest building is now open to the public.
An art exhibit commemorating Taylor’s second-oldest building is now open to the public.
President Lindsay asked 150 upperclassmen to consider moving to apartments this fall to make room for the 697 incoming freshmen in a town hall meeting in Cornwall Auditorium on Tuesday, May 6. The auditorium was so packed two rows of students had to sit on the floor.
The Taylor administration welcomes another historically large class in fall 2025. The growth requires adjustment from students as parking shifts to the outskirts of campus.
The solution to our national crisis of polarization may be getting off X, formally known as Twitter, and casting a ballot in a local election.
The Indiana Supreme Court met to hear oral arguments in the Chapel Auditorium of Indiana Wesleyan University on Thursday, April 10. The 40-minute grilling included arguments from the prosecution and defense of a civil case. The audience was made up of approximately 850 college and high school students from around Indiana.
Until a few years ago, freshman Sadie Maples was a secularist punk with an eating disorder. Now she’s a journalism major at Taylor University.
Taylor University’s class of 1970 is offering grants of up to $1,000 to those who want to pursue ministry opportunities or conduct faith-based research on campus. The endowment agreement states that the grants — titled the Ministry Opportunities and Christian Foundation Endowment — are intended to “encourage current faculty and students to engage in ministry opportunities and to study, teach and practice the Christian faith” amid the “human philosophies and traditions” encroaching on the church.