In the cards - Covenant College

Transcription

In the cards - Covenant College
A rts 2 • O p in io n 3» O u t l o o k 4
The Bagpipe
V ol.
51, No. 13
W edn esd ay, Febru ary
16,2005
w w w . b a g p ip e o n l in e . c o m
Core curriculum
changes approved
B y Je n n i D e J o n g
Incoming freshmen may have
something to look forward to next
year.
A new version o f the core cur­
riculum was decided by faculty
vote on Monday, January 31. Cur­
rent students will have the choice to
graduate under the core that was in
place when they entered college, or
to graduate under a new core if
they can fulfill its requirements.
“ T he new proposal is based
on what was good in the old core,”
said Dr. C liff Foreman, chair o f the
curriculum committee. “ It’s not a
complete revamping; it’s sort o f an
adjustment.”
Courses such as Speech, Global
Trends, C H O W Art & Music, and
the Intercultural Experience have
been eliminated from the core,
though they will still be offered and
will satisfy new distribution require­
ments.
New distribution requirements
in fine arts and non-Western cul­
ture have been established, and the
humanities requirement has been
replaced with one for literature and
philosophy.
■ Certain classes will be designat­
ed with “ D,” “ S,” and “ W ” prefixes
and altered to meet the criteria for
each letter. “ D ” courses will involve
significant exposure to cultural di­
versity, while “ S” and “ W ” courses
will introduce students to speaking
and writing standards within their
discipline by requiring an oral pre­
sentation or scholarly writing in
class.
C H O W will be revamped to
maintain a better focus on the his­
tory behind the ideas it covers, and
Over 160 are dead since the games began last Monday. All it takes is one squirt, as
Marie Zeller and Bethany Carlson demonstrate.
See CORE, page 2
In the cards
Anderson’s Covenant years
Nielson and Dean o f Faculty Jeff we’re working on a little corner of
Hall decided to hire him anyway.
it right now.”
“ I can honestly say I don’t know
That work gives Anderson £
how we got here,” said Anderson. mixed reputation. Though he sin“ M y first impressions o f Covenant gle-handedly rescued the schoo
were not g ood because I stayed on during the Department o f Edu­
the Ghetto, and it was such a filthy cation financial audit last year
place. But we got past that.”
in which Covenant mishandlec
“ What did it for me was our $800,000, complaints about in­
B y L a u r a Ka u f m a n n
meeting with Nielson,” said Mrs. creased bureaucracy and micro­
Paige Anderson, “ and he said that management still prevail, particuSince he arrived at Covenant Covenant is like a canvas, a picture
one and a half years ago, Wallace that still has yet to be painted, and
See AND ERSO N , p a g e :
Anderson has not created any new
policies. But when controversial
changes surface or existing rules
are enforced, the accusing finger
points in one direction.
“ That’s just the way it is,” he
said. “ T he person in the chair gets
the blame.”
Anderson himself thought he
—Dr. Roger Lambert, in chapel Monday, February
should not have been hired as the
14th, sharing how his mind has changed about
vice president o f enrollment man­
marriage and the kind o f expectations that husbands
agement. Citing his shoddy first
and wives should have for one another.
meeting with President Nielson, he
Collected by Jenni DeJong
felt he was not right for the jo b . But
Last in a
Poker trend hits Covenant three
part
By M a x B elz
Intense gazes snap into in­
credulity as one player sweeps
the chips from the middle o f the
Zach Zacharias
Great Scots
octagonal table into his trough and
begins to stack them by color. The,
relative silence gives, and the play­
ers chat about their misreads. You
don’t have to be in the game to
feel the deception and disappoint­
ment. Between hands, Josiah R oe
and Aaron Mesh banter while oth­
ers— Isaac Wardell, John Sweet,
and Zach Zacharias— continue to
groan from major chip loss.
“ There’s no serious poker here,”
Roe said. “ There’s too much dinking around.” Mesh, Roe, Wardell
and Sweet are all recent Covenant
graduates. Zacharias is a current
student.
O ver the past two years, poker
has becom e hugely popular with
young people across America. At
See POKER, page 2
series
Faculty Quote of the W eek
“If you insist on all or nothing,
you w ill always get nothing.”
2
N EW S/A R TS
W e d n e s d a y , F ebru ary 1 6 ,2 0 0 5
Pianist brings
international training,
reputation to UTC
Taiwanese
woman studied in
Germany and Los
Angeles, speaks
four languages
B y H e id i H e r b e r ic h
In a dim recital hall here in
Chattanooga, a young Taiwanese
woman is at the piano. She plays
a difficult passage with boldness
and- accuracy, her petite frame
rising o ff the bench as she puts all
o f her weight into the keys. Her
friends from the Asian-American
community fill the front rows o f the
audience. Some have brought their
young children, hoping to inspire
them to similar achievement. None
are family, but they are enormously
proud, and they have prepared
Poker
flowers and a reception in her
honor.
Sin-Hsing Tsai, the new director
o f piano studies at the University
o f Tennessee at Chattanooga, is
a stellar performer. She began
winning competitions as a young
student, and she has studied under
renowned pianists and performed
around the world. Though still
young, she has already earned
a Ph.D. and is fluent in four
languages. She is, by all accounts,
extraordinary. Yet Tsai does not
think o f herself that way. In her
smiling and gracious way, she
credits the circumstances in her life
for bringing her to this place.
She was born in Taiwan, and
began playing piano at age five.
All four kids in her family took
lessons, never questioning why they
must do so. Even more remarkably,
they never had to be pushed to
practice. “ It was just part o f the
routine,” Tsai says. Classical music
was well respected by her parents
and the culture. Playing the piano
From coast to coast, high school
and college students alike have
taken to playing poker, thanks in
part to ESPN. T he sports network
POKER, from page 1
has been televising poker for about
any moment, 70,000 people are the last ten years with mild suc­
playing poker online. Four networks cess, but the recent development
now regularly televise poker, fueling o f the “pocket cam” and other
the recent craze. It’s caught on at tricky camera work make watch­
ing poker on T V more interest­
Covenant too.
“ It’s such a mentally challenging ing. During last fall’s World Series
game,” said Zacharias, a senior from o f Poker, ESPN used 22 cameras
Arizona who lives o ff campus and to capture the event. Pocket cams
has been playing for about a year. showed viewers each player’s hand.
Unlike craps or blackjack, which are That information, when combined
games o f chance, poker is a game o f with the expression and composure
o f each player on display, gives the
strategy.
“You have to have a good per­ television viewer an unusually inti­
spective o f yourself,” Zacharias said. mate viewpoint on the inner work­
“ You use that perspective to do the ings o f the game.
Online playing has enabled
exact opposite.”
By recognizing his physical weak­ people to practice and improve. At
nesses, Zacharias knows how to avoid Duke University, the student gov­
ernment and academic clubs spon­
giving himself away.
“ I get a thrill o ff figuring other sor poker tournaments.
While there are hundreds o f
people out instead o f getting a thrill
variations
o f poker, Zacharias and
o ff money,” he said.
his
friends
play Texas H old ‘Em
Players can detect the strength
o f their opponents’ hands through most o f the time. Poker brings to­
their opponents’ demeanor, breath­ gether all kinds— old bearded men,
ing, and gestures. T he psychologi­ celebrities, college students, and
cal side o f poker is something that cowboys.
M any amateur players insist it
other games, like basketball, do not
isn’t about the money. “ It’s not like
provide.
T h e Bagpipe
Core Changes
CORE, from page i
course.
T he new core may still change
before the college sees it instituted
in an academic bulletin. “ Intercultural Experience or Speech could
be put back in, for example, and if
that occurs, the committee might
recommend to the faculty that
those classes replace parts o f the
core, like “ S” or “D ” classes,” said
Foreman. Allowances have been
made within the proposal for other
changes as well.
T he second part o f the curricu­
lum committee’s proposal, which
would institute a new core oversight
committee to develop and evaluate
the core curriculum year-round, is
still being discussed.
was a symbol o f success, a mark o f
Taiwan’s rising middle class, and it
was thought to inculcate discipline.
So Tsai played because her parents
wanted her to. She did not bother
to ask whether music was her
passion.
In the third grade, Tsai was
identified as showing strong musical
See M AESTRO , page 4
I’m thinking, ‘If I don’t win this,
I won’t be able to pay my rent,” ’
Zacharias said. Zacharias and his
friends usually play every weekend,
with games sometimes lasting for
six hours. Each time they play, each
player puts 1 10 into the pot. A lot
o f people spend more than that
each weekend on eating out or see­
Current Core Curriculum
Biblical Basis
6
Christian Doctrine I, II
New Testament
O ld Testament
3
3
Tools for Learning
English Composition
Foreign Language
M icrocom puter Applications
3
Speech
Natural Creation
Laboratory Science
2
Mathematics
4
8
3
4
Cultural Contexts
C H O W Art and Music
Christ and Culture Seminar
T he Christian M ind
Contemporary Global History
Cultural Heritage o f the West I, II
Global Trends for the 21 st Century
Humanities Elective
2
1
2
3
Intercultural Experience
Social Science Elective
Physical Education
Physical Education 151, 152
1
3
6
3
3
3
New Core Curriculum
Foundations o f Christian Scholarship
Basic Literacies
Intro to Christian Scholarship - Christian M ind
Communication - English Composition
Mathematics
Foreign Language
Physical Education
Microcom puter Applications (Or exemption)
Biblical and Theological Foundations
New Testament
Old Testament
Doctrine I, II
Cultural Engagement
Western Culture - C H O W I, II
Historical Awareness - Contemporary Global History
Non-Western Culture (Global Trends, Intercultural, etc.)
Christ and Culture Seminar
2
3
4
8
3
2
3
3
6
6
3
3
1
Exploratory Stewardship o f Opportunities
ing a film.
“ It’s a love o f the game, not
greed,” said Zacharias.
The reason Zacharias says he
and his friends use money is to keep
the game serious.
Fine Arts Elective (Studio, Theory, History, Performance)
Natural (Lab) Science
Social Science Elective
Literature and Philosophy Elective
AN D ER SO N , from page 1
D - In a Diverse World
W - By Writing
S - By Speaking
3
4
3
3
Prepared to Serve
larly among faculty and alumni.
Anderson insists that extra regu­
lation is essential for the school’s
well-being.
“ Part o f the audit revealed lack
o f control and accountability,” he
said. “Accountability is just good
business practice and extremely
biblical. It sends me that people
don’t realize that.”
Some students blamed Ander­
son for the controversial housing
policies last year, in which upper­
classmen were threatened with be­
ing supplanted by incoming fresh-
men in the dormitories. But he
actually had little to do with it.
“ I was not involved at all un­
til the eleventh hour,” he said. “ I
trusted Scott Raym ond and his
team. It seems to be okay now.”
The recent resignations o f Dean
o f Students Scott Raym ond and
men’s soccer coach Brian Cross­
man implied dissension among
the upper echelons regarding aca­
demic, athletic, and disciplinary
philosophy. All the particulars o f
these events were not publicized,
1-3
1-3
1-3
but opinions vary throughout the
community.
“ H e’s been really good with
this transition from Raym ond,”
said Director o f Student Life Jason
W ood. “ He started coming to stu­
dent development staff meetings,
and he’s been reading up on books
about residence life, the same stuff
we’ve been studying.”
According to English Professor
Cliff Foreman, the effect has been
See ANDERSON, page
3
N EW S/O P IN IO N
T h e Ba g p ip e
A N D ERSO N , from page i
negative. “ I don’t know enough
about each situation to be emphat­
ic, but judging from the number o f
resignations we’ve witnessed, the
style o f leadership used by Enroll­
ment Management seems to have
been far from collegial,” he said.
“And that has hurt the school more
than it has helped it.”
Foreman’s assessment is not
necessarily indicative o f the facul­
ty’s view o f Anderson, but Cross­
man’s resignation stirred up activ­
ity among the professors.
“ T he faculty steering comm it­
tee has asked the status committee
to explore the circumstances sur­
rounding the resignation o f Pro­
fessor Crossman as men’s soccer
coach,” said Faculty Moderator
Stephen Kaufmann.
Letters to the
editor are
welcome:
Send them by email to
[email protected], with
“Letter to the Editor” in the
subject line.
Or send letters to:
The Bagpipe
Box 14 5,14 0 4 9 Scenic HighwayLookout Mountain, GA
30750.
. Make letters topical and keep
them under 200 words.
• Letters may be editedfo r clarity
and length.
• Letters should be signed with
fu ll name, class standing, and
declared major, i f applicable.
The Bagpipe
E s t a b l is h e d in
1955
A d a m B el z
Editor in Chief
La u r a K a u f m a n n
Associate Editor
ANNA KAUFMANN
News Desk
News
JENNI DEfONG
TAMI MONTGOMERY
Faith & Reason
Arts
VINCENT HOWARD
Outlook
RYAN VROEGINDEWEY
Layout
EVAN DONOVAN
Layout
ADAM PORCELLA
Photo
BRAE HOWARD
Copy Desk
HEIDI KAUFMANN
C l if f F o r e m a n
Faculty Advisor
This is a Covenant College student publication
The views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect
those of the College nor the student body.
14049 Scenic Highway • Lookout Mountain, GA 30750
Dean o f Humanities Paul M or­
ton declined to comm ent when
asked about the faculty’s relation­
ship with Anderson.
Anderson steadily defends his
side o f the story. He insists that the
money saved by regulating athletic
scholarships, a practice disagree­
able to Crossman, would benefit
the school in the long run. “ There’s
a misconception that we have en­
dowed scholarships,” he said. “ I
would love to work at an institu­
tion that had a lot o f money, but
we just don’t have it.” H e pointed
out that the faculty received a 1.5
percent pay raise last year because
o f increased control.
Because o f such controversies,
some alumni have threatened to
stop donating money to the school,
citing a loss o f institutional m em o­
ry, among other things. Anderson is
not worried.
“ T he facts would show that we
have just as many people saying
they’re going to give again because
w e’re getting back to what Cov­
enant used to be like,” he said. “ I
think the push is to go back to the
firm, sure foundation o f this school,
rather than the other direction.”
There is no doubt that both
enrollment and admissions have
improved since Anderson’s arrival.
Last fall Covenant received its larg­
est entering class at 308 students.
Liz Crusey, a Regional Director
o f Admissions, credits Anderson
with the transition to the Banner
system and more attention to detail
with prospective students. “ Now 95
percent o f visitors tour the campus
with regional directors from their
particular region,” she said.
Anderson is worried more
about retention than admissions,
however. Last year the retention
rate in the freshman class was the
lowest ever at 70 percent.
One policy he hopes to change
is the rule against coed dancing. He
wants to free students to dance any­
where except on the dorms, with
minimal supervision.
As the “ person who sits in the
chair,” though, these changes have
not com e without mistakes that
Anderson readily admits.
“ I have handled a lot o f things
badly,” he said. “ I’m too intuitive.
At meetings, I’ll think we have a
consensus and everyone agrees, but
later I realize that they don’t under­
stand it because I’m bad at explain­
ing things.”
“ T he people that have ever
worked for him closely just love
him,” Mrs. Anderson said. “ But he
seems to be an agent o f bringing
about change. That’s the way G od
uses him.”
W e d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 1 6 ,2 0 0 5
3
Letters to the Editor
In defense of
Dr. King and
a humbler
historiography
I am puzzled by Iwan Baamann’s article, “ Dr. King’s C on ­
version?” in the February 2 issue.
His report about King arose from
a recent chapel talk by Charles
Marsh, professor at UVA and au­
thor o f several books on faith in the
civil rights movement o f the 1950s
and 1960s. It wasn’t clear whether
Baamann had read or was basing
his report on anything further by or
about King.
T he report, in sum, encourages
readers to cultivate doubts about
the authenticity o f Martin Luther
King, Jr.’s Christian faith.
First, I’m not sure if I am sup­
posed to read the article as a piece
o f actual journalistic investiga­
tion or as an editorial. I can only
hope the latter, in which case the
Bagpipe staff should take care to
label it “ commentary” or “ opin­
ion.” If the former, then I have
serious questions about how we go
about “ reporting” news. Further,
I’m simply depressed by the state
o f campus discourse on social and
moral issues.
Is the genuineness o f King’s
conversion really the only ques­
tion this community can muster
in response to Marsh’s books and
lectures? And why is it a relevant
or primary concern for us today?
Baamann never says. But one may
justly wonder if his article fits some­
where in the long and tired heri­
tage o f white, southern, Protestant
efforts to discredit the mission o f
the civil rights movement by rais­
ing doubts about the credibility o f
its leaders and supporters. In other
words, perhaps we should conclude
that if King was sub-Christian in
his own life, then we needn’t con­
cern ourselves with his larger mes­
sage.
Second, I am bewildered that
Baamann takes it for granted that
reading and judging the status
o f another person’s salvation is a
plausibly legitimate aspiration for
the Christian. Wasn’t it this very
Pharisaical attitude that Jesus cau­
tioned against in his Sermon on the
Mount?
Ironically, the criteria Jesus pro­
vides for evaluating discipleship
should cause most o f us to shudder,
especially if our lives are compared
to that o f King’s. “ By their fruit
you will recognize them” (Matt
7:16). “ Blessed are those who are
persecuted because o f righteous­
ness, for theirs is the kingdom o f
heaven. Blessed are you when peo­
ple insult you, persecute you and
falsely say all kinds o f evil against
you because o f me” (Matt 5:10-11).
“ I tell you the truth, whatever you
did not do for one o f the least o f
these, you did not do for me” (Matt
25:45).
A nd finally, I would challenge
Baamann’s claim that judging the
authenticity o f a believer’s con­
version represents a valid task o f
Christian historiography.
In his “ History o f Christianity
in the United States and Canada,’'
the renowned evangelical historian
Mark Noll evaluates the individuals
and groups in his text by employing
what he calls “ a charitable benefit
o f the doubt.” In other words, “ if
historical figures and groups call
themselves ‘Christian,’ they should
be treated that way in a textbook
history o f Christianity.” In this,
Noll does not mean to affirm blind­
ly the beliefs and practices o f all
persons who call themselves Chris­
tians, nor to diminish the right o f
church traditions to exercise “ qual­
ity control.” “ But on the question
o f who counts as a ‘real Christian,” ’
he writes, “ a historian may be ex­
cused for exercising a judgment o f
for me to feel sheepish about call­
ing King a Christian believer. And
even if I did feel sheepish, I don’t
believe I have the ability or the au­
thority to begin writing people out
o f the Kingdom.
I pray that, in the face o f his­
tory’s complexities, our community
might bear the marks o f charity
and humility rather than judgment,
and that G od ’s spirit might tilt our
hearts toward repentance rather
than self-assurance.
Jay D. G re e n
A s s o c ia t e P r o f e s s o r o f
H is t o r y
Wally articles
focus is off
First, I think it’s great that our
school newspaper is our source o f
history as well as current events.
Also, I like W'ally, he’s a quality guy.
However, what might be more ad­
vantageous, not to mention more
interesting, would be to look into
the effect he’s having on the school:
from' both his and others’ view.
I’m sure intentions are noble,
but whether he is carrying out Dr.
Nielson’s plans to make Covenant a
Christian “ Ivy League par” school
or has his own plans, I’d like to start
the conversation by submitting that
his effect has been negative. At
charity.”
In the case o f King, I would the time Dr. Nielson came, we re­
argue, an unusually large dose o f ally needed someone like Wally
charity isn’t really necessary. O ne to take control, chop some heads,
does not have to sift through K ing’s etc. However, that crisis seems to
writings, speeches, and public acts have been resolved and the time for
for long to discover a man who emergency powers is over. But staff
spoke the words and displayed the still have reason to fear for their jobs
character o f a Christian disciple. and everyone is in danger o f ultra­
Against grave, barbaric, systemic micromanagement (not to mention
practices o f racial segregation and loss o f personal fulfillment).
I don’t have space to cite all the
violence, King spoke o f mercy, jus­
tice, and non-violence, and he did examples, but most people who per­
so in the name o f Jesus Christ and sonally know faculty or staff know
in affirming obedience to the Old what I’m talking about. Also, many
recent alumni who loved Covenant
and New Testament Scriptures.
while
they were here and keep up
H e was far from perfect. Tales
o f his graduate school plagiarism with current events have vowed to
and marital infidelity are well-doc­ stop (as in they were) giving money
umented, scandalous, and deeply to the school.
distressing. And his theology prob­
ably did not match up very neatly
with the Westminster Confession
o f Faith. But these are not enough
C a r l C a d w e ll
C la s s o f
‘05
4
W e d n e s d a y , F e b r u a r y 1 6 ,2 0 0 5
M AESTRO , from page i
talent and, as a result, enrolled in
a special school. But in the fifth
grade, the family uprooted and
moved to Argentina. Tsai entered
a Catholic girl’s school and soon
knew the language better than
her parents. However, there was
still some cultural confusion. She
A R TS /O U TLO O K /S P O R TS
favorite piano teacher. There, she
received a master’s degree in piano
performance. Her passion for
music was now full-grown, and she
headed o ff to California to study
for her Doctorate o f Musical Arts
under the famous Daniel Pollack.
Never mind that it would require
learning another language. Pollack,
almost seventy, was to influence
by Heidi Berberich
Sin-Hsing Tsai
entered what she thought was “ fifth
year piano” and came out, at age
sixteen, with a bachelor’s degree in
music education. She had not yet
graduated from high school. But
at eighteen, Tsai began teaching
music to students a year younger
than her.
Tsai decided that she should
continue in music, since it had
com e quite easily to her. At 19,
she headed o ff to Germany to
follow in the footsteps o f her
her. But Tsai has also done several
solo performances. She puts a great
deal o f preparation into these, from
six to eight hours o f practicing a
day. She will perform a Grieg Piano
Concerto on March 31 at 7:30 pm
in U T C ’s Roland Hayes Concert
Hall; admission is free.
H ow has Tsai’s exposure to
so many different languages and
Tsai profoundly, both musically
and personally.
Tsai came on the faculty o f
U T C in 2002. She currently teaches
fifteen students and a course in
piano ensemble. Most importantly
for the Chattanooga community,
Tsai has brought a remarkable
stream o f performances through
the U T C faculty concert series. She
has brought in renowned foreign
performers such as cellist Boris
Andrianov o f Russia, to play with
cultures enriched her approach to
music? She says that she has learned
discipline from Asia, passion
and spontaneity from Argentina,
accuracy and correct interpretation
from Germany, and freedom and
diversity from the United States.
She is thankful for the community
support and artistic freedom that
she has here in Chattanooga. But in
her case, Chattanooga is certainly
on the receiving end.
T h e B a g p ip e
My 2 Cents
Jo sh D e s c h
(testing, testing, one, two)
Hello, folks! G ood to see ev­
erybody again.
A recent headline in Ananova:
“A Slovak man trapped in his car
under an avalanche freed himself
by drinking 60 bottles o f beer and
urinating on the snow to melt it.”
It’s nice to know that human inge­
nuity is as high as ever, isn’t it?
The N C A A has asked the Uni­
versity o f North Carolina at Pem­
broke, a school that was founded
specifically for the purpose o f
educating American Indians, to
change its name from the Braves
to something more politically cor­
rect. Is this political correctness
madness or what? Why don’t
we just ask Notre Dame to drop
the name Fighting Irish because
it offends the Irish Republican
Army?
According to the studies o f a
psychologist at the University o f
Wales, Jan. 24 is the most depress­
ing day o f the year. What a great
contribution to mankind, huh?
This guy probably has friends
who are trying to figure out a
cure for Alzheimer’s, and here he
is in the pub, telling people he’s
trying to figure out the best day to
gorge yourself on ice-cream and
chocolate.
In other news, D on King has
filed a $2.5 billion lawsuit against
ESPN for defamation, which re­
ally makes a lot o f sense, because
who knows more about what it
means to defame someone than
the biggest boxing promoter in
the world. I f I’m on the jury, I’m
thinking, “ This guy has defamed
so many people, if he’s saying
he’s been defamed, he’s probably
right.”
I f you thought California
was wacko before, wait until you
read this. T he city o f Berkeley
has recendy started a program o f
deep freezing abandoned shop­
ping carts and other belongings
o f homeless people for up to 90
days in a huge refrigerated con ­
tainer, because o f a state law that
requires the storage o f lost goods.
The program costs thousands o f
dollars annually, and is paid for
by tax-payer dollars. Moreover,
homeless people rarely retrieve
items, and shopping carts are al­
most always stolen items, not lost
items, a fact o f which Berkeley
city officials are well aware.
All o f this to say, when you
think about what’s going on
in Berkeley, having the star o f
Conan the Barbarian as gover­
nor o f California doesn’t seem
that strange after all.
You’ve been a great audience.
I’m done, and remember: kids
eat for free on Tuesdays.
Grizzle takes
over as interim
coach
by
A d am B elz
Sheldon Grizzle will run prac­
tices for the men’s soccer team for
the next three weeks.
He is taking over for Brian
Crossman, who two weeks ago af­
ter 21 years as coach. Grizzle, who
works full-time in the financial aid
office, is a soccur alumnus who as
a senior started on Crossman’s Sec­
ond national tournament team in
2002 .
Director o f Athletics Roy
Heintz has received over 20 appli­
cations for the position vacated by
Crossman. Heintz hopes to have a
coach in place by the end o f spring
break, so that there can be some
continuity from spring practice to
the fall season.
A search committee o f 8 , in­
cluding Heintz, rising senior Jona­
than Wilson, and severalothers will
sift through the applications to de­
cide who the coach will be.