P O S T S
Thesis: Christian Media Framing of Gay Marriage
This mixed methods study explores Christian media’s framing of gay marriage from 2010 to 2015, looking at a sample of articles on Christianity Today’s website before and after gay marriage became legal.
Former BGA biology teacher and football coach honored with memorial statue
It was April 29, 1945, when approximately 32,000 prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp walked free after 12 years of imprisonment in a Holocaust camp.
Kara Froula ‘00 serves as spring 2024 Entrepreneur in Residence
When Kara Froula ’00 was a student at BGA, she found mentorship and an ability to think more deeply.
Platos win 85th Tug
“Don’t stop! Keep going!”
These were the words repeated to each Plato by Upper School English teacher Sam Wade ’12 as they exited the bus to make the trek down to the Harpeth River for the 85th annual Tug.
Luke Williams Gives Back with BGA Experiential Education Grant
It was in his Lower School science class that Luke Williams ’23 discovered his passion and career choice – engineering and robotics.
Senior Kendall Grimes & Leah Handelsman: Mentorship secures $1,000 prize at poetry nationals
BGA senior Kendall Grimes '22 and BGA English teacher and department chair Leah Handelsman sit together at a table on a normal Wednesday afternoon, discussing the nuances of words in a shorthand language that can only come from years of working together.
10-year-old super speller makes gallant effort in Regional Spelling Bee
Kael Miranda went into the Regional Spelling Bee on Tuesday night as the kid to beat.
Rock Bridge pastor to retire after finding her place as a gay woman in a Christian church
Maureen Dickmann always had a heart for ministry.
CoMo Derby Dames return to Columbia
Off the track, they're moms, students and middle-aged women, but when the roller skates hit the floor, they're superheroes.
LGBT Catholics tell their stories in Philadelphia play
The set is simple; nine people sit in chairs across the stage. One by one, they come forward and speak.
Police move homeless off Philadelphia streets before Pope's visit
As crowds move into the city for Pope Francis’ large public Mass on Sunday (Sept. 27), the homeless are heading out — part of a high-security lockdown forcing people off the streets.
A year later, African refugee is ordained at First Baptist Church
When Nene Rwenyaguza came to the U.S., he thought his ministering days might be over, but they were just beginning.
Singer-songwriter Sheryl Crow looks back at her years at MU
Sheryl Crow, a nine-time Grammy winner who has sold more than 35 million albums around the world, graduated from MU in 1984. She talked to Alex Jacobi for the Columbia Missourian on Sept. 30.