Clarence and Ruth Bixler Reeser Scholarship Fund
When Clarence and Ruth Reeser sold their farm of 23 years, they were able to realize their dreams and help future Goshen College students realize theirs.
When Clarence and Ruth Reeser sold their farm of 23 years, they were able to realize their dreams and help future Goshen College students realize theirs.
Barbara and Donald Reber first travelled to Japan under the auspices of the then Mennonite Board of Missions (now known as Mennonite Mission Network) after college studies at both Hesston and Goshen Colleges and Goshen Biblical Seminary for Don.
When Charles Peachey walked into Music Theory class in the fall of 1979, it was like someone had opened a window. Here was someone who soared above freshman fright.
Dick (Richard) Oyer & Margie (Margaret Yoder) Oyer were both raised in Mennonite families on farms, Dick near Fisher IL where he was a member of East Bend Mennonite Church, and Margie near Rittman, OH where she was a member at Crown Hill Mennonite Church.
Over the years, Polly has maintained her interest in Goshen College as a member of the GC Associates (a donor group whose members contribute $1000 or more each year) and now in 1995 through the establishment of a trust that will, at her death, fund scholarships for qualifying students.
John Oswald graduated from Goshen College in 1964 with a degree in business. He pursued a career in health care, which he was passionate about.
Jon Nussbaum came to Goshen College in the fall of 1987 from the Kidron, Ohio area. A highly energetic and personable young man, he was interested in pursuing a business degree.
Lewis Naylor was born in Goshen, Ind. but grew up in Nappanee, Ind. He was encouraged as a 7th grader to join the junior high band where achieved mediocrity playing the cornet.
Anna’s fifteen grandchildren are joining together to fund a scholarship honoring Anna and her children’s legacy. Not only did she graduate from Goshen College, but her four children did as well.
Mount Hermon School in India was founded in the 19th century by the Methodist Church. It is a kindergarten through grade 12 grade boarding school.