Alumna Katie Sowers ’09 will make coaching history at the Super Bowl
Katie Sowers ’09, an offensive assistant coach with the San Francisco 49ers, will be the first female and first openly-gay person to coach in a Super Bowl.
On International Women’s Day, we celebrate the great work Goshen College alumni, students and faculty are doing in the world!
Katie Sowers ’09, an offensive assistant coach with the San Francisco 49ers, will be the first female and first openly-gay person to coach in a Super Bowl.
Brittle Paper‘s African Literary Person of the Year, now in its fifth year, recognizes individuals who work behind the scenes to hold up the African literary establishment in the given year. The 2019 Honor goes to Ellah Wakatama Allfrey '88.
Aurora Flores, a first-year nursing major from Goshen, recently earned a $10,000 scholarship from the award-winning Mexican pop band Maná, in collaboration with the Univision Foundation and the Selva Negra Foundation.
Charlotta Weaver '99, director of operations for oncology at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, has been named a top 10 hospitalist by ACP Hospitalist.
Goshen College Professor of Music Solomia Soroka is using a faculty renewal grant to find never-before-recorded American sonatas of the 19th- and early 20th-centuries.
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Lisa Koop of the National Immigrant Justice Center about new courtroom facilities in Texas at the U.S.-Mexico border that are processing asylum claims via teleconference.
Much has changed for Rachel Ries in the two decades since she attended Goshen College, including her hairstyle.
Angie and Dan Bastian weren't trying to disrupt an industry or build a massive company – they just wanted to put aside some money for their kids' college fund.
Jan Bender Shetler, professor of history and director of international education at GC recently published "Claiming Civic Virtue: Gender Network Memory in the Mara Region, Tanzania" (University of Wisconsin Press, July 2019), looking at the history of the Mara Region through the stories of women.
Rachel Ann Zehr ’60 lived her life with a passion for education. This passion stemmed from an upbringing in which education and service were cornerstones.