Freeman film captures story of local immigrant
Goshen College's FiveCore Media spent time in Freeman, South Dakota gathering footage and materials for a full-length film about three Anabaptist Germans-from-Russia groups that settled Freeman.
Goshen College's FiveCore Media spent time in Freeman, South Dakota gathering footage and materials for a full-length film about three Anabaptist Germans-from-Russia groups that settled Freeman.
For the eighth consecutive year, Goshen College’s radio station, 91.1 FM The Globe, has been nominated as a finalist for “Best College Radio Station in the Nation” by the Intercollegiate Broadcasting Systems (IBS). Having won twice (2011 and 2013), WGCS was the first station in the country to claim the title more than once.
Six film students joined the 12 biology students for the annual three-week Marine Biology course in Layton, Florida on Long Key.
WNIT visits with 91.1 The Globe (WGCS) to talk with students and staff about the station's success.
When the sweet sound of the radio exits the speakers and hits your ears, you often do not think about what it took to get it there.
The Goshen College Communication Department continues to enjoy a winning season in national competitions this year, receiving top national honors this month with five Telly Awards. This is the most Telly Awards Goshen College as ever won.
Goshen College was crowned Indiana Television School of the Year in the 2017 Indiana Association of School Broadcasters’ (IASB) college competition. This is the fifth time in the last eight years the college has earned that title.
Twenty-one Goshen College students received awards and The Record finished second in the “Newspaper of the Year” competition among Indiana colleges at the Indiana Collegiate Press Association’s annual convention in Indianapolis on April 8.
Goshen College students, professors and alumni were involved at every level, behind the scenes, coordinating events and showcasing their own work at the River Bend Film Festival in Goshen.
Last summer Dalton Shetler '16 received a “life-changing call,” as Shetler describes it, a ticket to being embedded as a broadcaster with a big-time college basketball program.