I am interested in the College of Wooster because I am interested in attending a college that can give me a solid liberal arts education. The College of Wooster can make me a strong, independent person with its programs. I am a active musician , and also have an interest into getting into medicine, and i believe that the college of wooster can provide me with a very valuable education. I value the College of Wooster's diversity, and also believe that the college of wooster can give me skills very
WOOSTER — Stanley Gault was remembered as a faithful husband, caring father, successful businessman, generous philanthropist, committed Christian and “lover of this community” Saturday during funeral services for the former Rubbermaid CEO at Wooster United Methodist Church. Sons Stephen and Chris Gault, longtime friend Ron Holtman, the Rev. Charles Tobias and Deborah Hoover shared memories of Stanley Gault, who died June 29 at the Cleveland Clinic. He was 90. “We come together in grief,” Tobias said
The College of Wooster is a very prestigious school that I have been looking into. Wooster may be a liberal arts college but it still offers the science courses I am interested in along with a vibrant college life that I have been looking forward to. Going to college has been a major goal in my life, not only going to college for academics but also going to college to play basketball, to gain great educational and life experience, and to become an educated adult. I believe Wooster is an amazing
(ATI) is furthering growing its services, Wooster Community Hospital Tuesday added its name to the list, breaking ground on its celebrated north-side expansion project and marking yet another major win for the city. The 90,100-square-foot, $29.7 million project at its Beall Street location will offer services like cancer treatment, ambulatory care and imagining. It’s is slated to open for business in the spring of 2018. As part of its vision statement, Wooster Community earmarked fighting cancer as
year of college I was sitting with two of the greatest friends I’d met from this school. Sitting in my quaint colonial house a moment which was similar to many others swirled around us. Us a group of young Alumni were sitting in a round table laughing and crying over memories of our mysterious congregation across the brook. With these women I began to realize what this book would be. I set out to write a tribute and collection of wisdom and lessons I had collected during my time at Wooster School
WOOSTER — Sit down with Greg and Kathy Long and you would never know the couple has been named to the Wooster Area Chamber of Commerce Wall of Fame. Greg, managing partner of the Long, Cook & Samsa accounting firm, and Kathy, president of Wooster Glass, will be honored for a lifetime of achievement at the Chamber’s annual dinner meeting Jan. 18 at GOJO Industries, however, they seemed more focused on those who never made it to the wall or who should be on the wall. “For everyone on the wall there
WOOSTER — As the tattooed body of Ray Bradbury's “The Illustrated Man,” tells the story of the narrator, so does the ink of Wooster Police Officer Josh Timko. Timko, an eight-year veteran of the U.S. Army, joined the Wooster Police Department in 2012. After working in a steel mill for a few years, Timko said he enrolled in the police academy in 2009 because he “missed the brotherhood and wanted to help people.” He worked part time for the Doylestown Police Department, Medway and College of Wooster
this week? Benfield’s interactions with the commissioners in the past came when he was associate director of the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. Since Steve Slack’s retirement, Benfield is now director of Ohio State University’s Wooster campus and wanted to schedule a formal meeting. Benfield, joined by Associate Director Rhonda Billman, BioHio Research Park President Shauna Brummet and Brian Gwin, who handles special projects for Benfield’s office, updated commissioners Jim Carmichael
On college campuses and across the world, women and men alike are subjected to sexual violence. Similarly, the perpetrator typically gets out of the conflict unscathed with no retribution for their crime. This vicious cycle of victim-blaming is detrimental to society as it promotes an idea of rape culture and furthers the stereotype that a woman must cover up if she wants to be safe. In order to combat this problem, our group has taken a visual, creative approach, proposing to create a “Wooster Clothesline”
farming techniques. In many other cultures, an education consists of attending primary school, secondary school and later attending college. No matter how the concept of education is prescribed in a given society, this fact remains true: everyone desires to have learned more when they leave this world than they did when they came in. Personally, I desire to receive a college education because I believe that by receiving such an