Provost Announces Partnership with Loyola University MBA Program
By Brandon Fey, News Editor On Tuesday morning, the Provost’s office sent an campus-wide email announcing a new opportunity for Gettysburg College students through a 4 + 1 early assurance partnership with Loyola University Maryland’s Sellinger School for Business and Management. Students at the college will now be able to apply to Loyola’s accelerated Emerging Leaders Master of Business Administration program with the application fee...
Eisenhower Institute Welcomes New Senior Fellow John Austin
By Brandon Fey, News Editor The Eisenhower Institute announced this August that international economic leader John Austin has joined the institute as a new senior fellow. Austin is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution whose career focused on the economic revitalization of post-industrial regions in Europe and North America. He is bringing this work to EI to further his mission of strengthening international...
The Weekly Roundup: Sept. 9 – 15
Monday, Sept. 9 9 a.m. – Noon, SCCAP Food Pantry Shift, Campus Kitchen at SCCAP 10 a.m. – 1 p.m., Open Swim, Jaeger Center Pool Noon – 1 p.m., Cycle-Spin with Amanda, Jaeger Center 143 Multipurpose Room 1 p.m. – 3:30 p.m., SCCAP Food Pantry Shift, Campus Kitchen at SCCAP 4 p.m. – 6 p.m., IM 7 v 7 Soccer, Tennis Court Field 1 4 p.m. – 6 p.m., History, Civil War Era Studies and Public History Social,...
Economic Revitalization Focus of New Eisenhower Institute Senior Fellow Talk
By Hugh Toner, Contributing Writer On Tuesday, the Eisenhower Institute hosted its first Lunch and Learn event of the year, called “Saving Democracy Through Economic Revival.” The event, led by EI Senior Fellow John Austin, focused on economic revitalization in industrial regions. Austin, the newest addition to the EI Fellows, has worked closely with the institute in the past and contributed to the design of a number of their...
Opinion: Addressing Homelessness at Our Front Doors
By Leah Nath, Staff Writer When I first returned to the Gettysburg College campus this semester, I was struck by the eerie quiet and stillness of the grounds. While I have gotten used to the gray that grows over the campus and its students returning with the end of summer and the entrance of winter, the 90 degree heat and lack of movement in the days before move-in felt far more unnatural. With eight dorm halls, six apartment...