year : 2024 192 results

Arts in Action: The Testimony of Art Exhibitions 

By Katlynn Rossignol The 220 Gallery sits outside the DeVries theater and displays a rotating variety of visiting and student works. Yet it’s a rare occurrence when the displays are announced beyond the theater’s entrance. The 220 Gallery is an unadvertised space online, being only briefly passed through on facility video tours and is completely excluded from the Art and Design Facility listings.  So why do artists display their work in the gallery space, and do art exhibitions ...

Why Should the Moviegoer Care about the Weaponization of Nostalgia?

By Ben Konuch Imagine that once upon a time, you wanted to go to the movie theater and see a new release. That year, a new film about a deadly tornado sweeping across the country was one of the biggest releases of the summer. The previous summer, a new “Indiana Jones” came to theaters with mixed acclaim and two years before it, Tom Cruise dazzled in “Top Gun.”  But this year that you’re imagining isn’t in the ‘80s or '90s, it's just 2024. In this year, like most ...

Against the Odds: The Road from Cedarville to the Minor Leagues

By Emily Tuttle As a 5-foot, 6 inch high schooler in Georgia, Payton Eeles worried he would not have any offers to play collegiate baseball. Like any kid, he dreamed of playing in the MLB, but his undersized stature hindered him.  Hundreds of miles away in New York, Tanner Gillis was cut from his high school baseball team as a freshman and then again as a junior. Defeated, Gillis wondered if he should even continue playing baseball. Like Eeles, he aspired to be in the major leagues, ...

Cedarville students’ mixed feelings on the election

By Ashleigh Clark It does not take a degree to realize that politics are divisive. Social media ads get hijacked by political slogans and news media broadcast every sound bite. Tension rises between friends and family as well. Elections bring the messiness of American politics to the forefront.  With the 2024 presidential election nearing, the opinions of young people are even more important. According to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, ...

King’s Kids seeks to serve and support refugee children in the Dayton area

By Julia Swain Four days. That is how long a group of young girls had been in the U.S. before crossing paths with King’s Kids–a ministry dedicated to serving refugee children in the Dayton area since its founding in 2012.  With the girls not speaking any English, the students volunteering that night were not sure how they would get through to the girls.  Then, something beautiful happened. The girls’ sisters and friends, who spoke both Swahili and English, began to ...

What makes a favorite movie?

Serine Serine Warner’s favorite films are those that embrace themes of chosen family. She loves “Kung Fu Panda 2” for its emphasis on family not being defined by blood and “Cheaper by the Dozen” for its representation of families that aren’t picture perfect but have each other’s backs no matter what. “Chaos is part of the family,” Warner said. “Chaos does not mean dysfunctional, it just means a bunch of different personalities who are choosing to love each personali...

Emma Neff’s road to Cedarville; from Malaysia to Ohio

By Maggie Fipps Sports are obnoxiously loud. Shoes squeaking on the hardwood, referees blowing their whistles and fans screaming at said referees. For Emma Neff, a junior guard for Cedarville’s women’s basketball team, all those sounds were muted, like watching the basketball game with the volume turned down.  “I don’t think I knew I couldn’t hear that well, I just didn't hear the things, if that makes sense,” Neff said. “So like the birds, I just didn't hear ...

Students and faculty view their small majors with a fresh perspective

By Avonlea Brown Cedarville University Theatre students gathered together at 10 a.m. on Saturday, August 24. They received an email the previous day from Professor Stacey Stratton asking them to meet for an important announcement. Anticipating the worst, the tension in the room climbed until Stratton walked in and delivered the news: The Theatre major was being condensed – the number of classes would go from 16 to 13 and an open professor position would be removed – and the April show ...

100 Years of Yellow Jackets

By Bella Agnello James Phipps ‘68 Sometimes the works of the Lord are not easy to see until long after they have occurred.  Phipps graduated from Cedarville University in 1968. Shortly after he graduated with a degree in English and Speech, he joined Cedarville University faculty the following fall semester and served as chair of the Communications department for 36 years. He led efforts to grow the department while also teaching classes on journalism, broadcasting and storyt...

A frigid Christmas at the White’s house 

By Josh Schroeder In the biting cold outside of Steven’s Student Center, a group of students boarded a warm Cedarville van that would take them to President of Cedarville University Dr. Thomas White’s house. They were attending an event that has become a Cedarville Christmas tradition called Christmas at the White House.  This year, the frigid weather forced some changes, but Christmas at the White House has remained as festive as ever. When students arrived, they entered ...