RICHMOND, Ind. - The Bluffton University men hit the road to face off against the Earlham College Quakers on Wednesday, Jan. 24. After a solid first half, the Beavers struggled to knock shots down in the second stanza as they fell to the Quakers, 76-63, to drop to 8-10 (5-6 HCAC) on the season.
"The Bluffton We Never Knew," a photo history book covering Bluffton's first half century, 1861 to 1911, will be on sale in several Bluffton businesses on Thursday. The 106-page book includes over 70 photos with descriptions. The book sells for $19.95 plus tax. The Bluffton Icon created the book. Watch for more details coming.
There's plenty of activities in February at Bluffton Public Library. Here's the schedule:
The Winter Book Games reading program for children, teens, and adults continues in February and March. Pick up a Winter Book Games Bingo card at the library or download and print it from our website. Then, read five or more books during the months of January through March to receive a bingo and a completion prize. At this time, you may also enter a drawing to win a larger prize. Fill your entire bingo board for a chance at a second prize entry.
Fourteen Bluffton University students will report on their 2017 cross-cultural experiences during two Forums on Tuesday, Feb. 6, in Yoder Recital Hall.
At 11 a.m., eight students who lived in Guatemala and studied at CASAS (Central American Study and Service), a program affiliated with the Guatemalan Mennonite Church, will present. During this experience, students took classes and lived with a host family in Guatemala City for the first half of the semester and finished the experience completing a five week volunteer field experience in various locations across the country.
Dr. Martina Cucchiara, associate professor of history at Bluffton University, will present the Colloquium, "Saving the Nation: War, Sex and Pious Women in Catholic Magazines for Girls and Women in Germany from 1885 to 1920,” at 4 p.m. on Feb. 2 in Stutzman Lecture Hall.
According to Cucchiara, during World War I, women’s increased mobility, employment and autonomy in the absence of men gave rise to widespread anxieties about the supposed sexual and moral transgressions of German girls and women.