News

  • Weather delays Edgewood College softball team spring break trip
    Posted in: News, Sports

    By Santi Elbow   The Edgewood College softball team only played six of their 10 scheduled games at the Tucson Invitational Games over spring break in March.   Mackenzie Hoffman, a freshman on the team, said originally they were supposed to play 10 games. “Our break got cut a little short due to some weather conditions, so we ended up only […]

  • LGBTQ+ panelists call for student and administrative action
    Posted in: News

    By Annika Lundgren  LGBTQ+ students at Edgewood College say fellow students and the administration need to improve their efforts to make the campus genuinely inclusive.   On April 2, Sadie Cordova, a senior at Edgewood College, organized a panel of LGBTQ+ students who spoke about their experiences on campus.   Cordova said that she wanted “to create a space […]

  • Freedom Rides course takes fourth trip to recognize civil rights struggles
    Posted in: News

    By Alyssa Allemand  Edgewood History Professor Andy Witt and students in the course “Freedom Rides: The Civil Rights and Black Power Years” took a trip April 5-8 to visit various people and locations related to the civil rights movement.  The group, made up of Witt and his five students, visited Detroit, Mich., Marion, Ind., Chicago, Ill., and Milwaukee. The students […]

  • Siena Apartments to allow pets in the fall: but no snakes
    Posted in: News

    By Jonathon Lund  As part of a pilot program, Edgewood College will allow pets to live in Siena Apartments next fall in hopes of attracting more upper-classmen to live on campus.  The shift in policy by Edgewood College comes after residence life surveys told the administration that students wanted to have pets.  Pets that are allowed include cats, […]

  • ASA stands against ‘Miss Saigon’ trip, Office of Student Inclusion and Involvement cancels
    Posted in: News

    By Ari Ebert-Standard  Edgewood’s Office of Student Inclusion and Involvement (OSII) cancelled its trip to see the Overture’s production of “Miss Saigon” on April 6.   “Miss Saigon” has been protested on a global scale due to yellowface (its portrayal of East Asians,) romanticizing the Vietnam War, and perpetuating stereotypes about Asian women.  Jenny Kim, the president of Edgewood’s Asian […]

  • Edgewood offers faculty members separation packages to account for decline in enrollment
    Posted in: News

    By Jena Emmert Following a national trend, Edgewood College has begun downsizing, offering voluntary separation packages to full-time faculty members without replacing them.  Michael Guns, Edgewood’s vice president of business and finance, said 38 faculty members were eligible for the voluntary separation packages and six have accepted.  Edgewood’s goal is to reduce staff by 20 to 24 full-time […]

  • Hatheway retires, his legacy remains
    Posted in: News

    By Jacob Gomoll  At 70, Jay Hatheway, professor and former chair of the History Department at Edgewood College, will retire after this semester. He has taught at Edgewood for 29 years.  Hatheway is undergoing phased retirement, which gives him three classes per academic year beginning fall 2019. This phased retirement will take “a couple years,” he […]

  • Pioneer of Edgewood psychology department retires, leaving with faith in the future
    Posted in: News

    By Jonathon Lund  When Professor Joan Schilling first came to Edgewood College, she did not know what to expect.   Schilling, who had gone to a Catholic college in the 1960s, expected a traditional conservative college. However, when she walked onto campus dressed conservatively in 90-degree heat, she was met by Sister Mariam Yaeger dressed in a pantsuit and with makeup.  The atmosphere and feeling of the campus were a complete surprise […]

  • Larmer leaves Communication Studies after 18 years
    Posted in: News

    By Mia Gage  Applying what is learned in the classroom to real life situations is important to many students. Larry Larmer, senior adjunct lecturer in the Communication Studies Department at Edgewood College, is retiring after 18 years of bringing his life experience to the classroom and connecting his lessons to real life scenarios.  Larmer retired from UW-Extension in 2001 and was hired as a communications lecturer at Edgewood College the […]

  • Kelm falls into computers by accident
    Posted in: News

    By Kali Azzara  Kathleen Kelm, associate professor of Computing and Information Sciences at Edgewood College, has a passion for teaching and learning.  While Kelm currently teaches computer sciences, she did not start out in that field.  She got her degree in history and linguistics, but she fell into computer technology. “I did not pick computers, trust me,” said Kelm.   When she was first looking for employment after college, she ended up in accounting and worked with someone in computer software. From […]

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