Lumination Newscast – Oct. 6

This week, anchors Wade Funderburg and Jessica Burke tell you everything you need to know about  pledging and bid night, Brad McCoy’s presentation during Family Weekend, the 32nd annual Tau Phi Cowboy Show, missions fair, College of Arts and Sciences fair, and Campus Safety and Security. Also, Lumination explores students’ fall break plans; interviews Stephen Greyser, the guest speaker for Media Masters; and talks about the big athletics announcement. Lumination has all that, plus a look at entertainment, sports and weather. Please upgrade your...

Students celebrate Lipscomb’s 120th birthday

Lipscomb University’s 120th birthday was Wednesday, and students recognized the event just like they would celebrate a friend’s birthday. Lipscomb in Motion hosted the “birthday extravaganza,” which took place in Bison Square from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Students enjoyed chocolate cupcakes and free drinks. Some played “pin the beard on David Lipscomb” while others made music with brightly colored kazoos (another freebie at the party). There was music, balloons, streamers, a piñata and, of course, a birthday cake with 120 candles. In 1891, David Lipscomb and James A. Harding established Lipscomb University. According to the lipscomb.edu, both men believed Bible study was critical to the foundation of education. Since then, the school—originally called Nashville Bible School, then David Lipscomb College, and now Lipscomb University—has taught Bible classes for all full-time students. But both men wanted the university to be more than a seminary. “We aspire to stand in the front ranks of the great educational institutions of the world,” Harding stated. Today, this conviction is still evidenced in the university’s mission “to integrate Christian faith and practice with academic excellence.” To read more about the university’s history, click here or visit this page  for an in-depth look at Lipscomb’s...

Tau Phi to present 32nd annual Cowboy Show this weekend

The 32nd annual Cowboy Show, presented by Tau Phi, will be this Saturday, Oct. 1, at 7:00 p.m. in Collins Alumni Auditorium. The show is hosted and performed by members of the men’s social club and involves a few of Lipscomb’s talented female students, as well. Except for Singarama, it is Lipscomb’s largest student-led production. Carter Hamric, Tau Phi president and this year’s director, said the tradition showcases Lipscomb’s talent. “The thing about Cowboy Show is that, as an overall production it’s done right,” he said. “We bring in professionals to play along with us. It’s more than just karaoke. We audition the girls to sing ,so all of the girls are just really, really talented. Some of the guys are good, and the ones that aren’t good are really, really entertaining.” Please upgrade your browser This year’s assistant directors are Brandon Smith, Taylor Farnsworth and Lindsay Hartselle. Tau Phi alumni Andrew Glass and Andrew Smith will be hosting the show. “As a director, I love seeing people get better,” Hamric said, “and things start to come together as we get closer to the show. It’s really exciting.” In addition to Lipscomb students, Pat Flynn, Nashville singer/songwriter and producer, will return with his band to lead the show. Flynn, who has been in the music industry for over 25 years, has worked with some of country’s biggest stars. According to Hamric, since Flynn has participated in the Cowboy Show so many years, he is now considered an honorary member of Tau Phi. Hamric said Cowboy Show always impresses the audience. “I think people leave wowed at some of the...
Tokens show commemorates Civil War

Tokens show commemorates Civil War

The latest episode of Tokens, a theological variety show created by Lipscomb’s Dr. Lee Camp, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 22 at the Downtown Presbyterian Church. Lipscomb SGA announced Monday that it would sell tickets for a discounted price of $5. The show, “Singing Down the Pain: The Civil War,” includes special guests Odessa Settles, The Whites, Buddy Greene, a combined male chorus from The Nashville Choir and The Greater Nashville Community Gospel Choir, along with the Most Outstanding Horeb Mountain Boys comprising celebrated Nashville musicians Jeff Taylor, Aubrey Haynie, Pete Huttlinger, Byron House and Chris Brown. Kenneth Coca, a senior biochemistry major and cello performance minor, performed in last year’s show and is a musician again this year. “I’m not one of the big wigs,” Coca said. “I’m just doing this for my own fun and to help out a good cause.” Coca is playing cello in a quartet Thursday night with Joel Campbell, a junior music major, and two students from Belmont. He said he thinks Tokens is a good way to share the gospel message in a non-church setting. “I really believe in the message,” he said. “They’re spreading the gospel of Christ through music. I think that’s something that a community needs.” Thursday’s production serves as a commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the U.S. Civil War and will feature themes from that era including “the longing for justice and peace, the slaves’ longing for freedom and the triumph over the auction block and the parents’ grief that their sons will no longer return from war.” The show will take place at Downtown Presbyterian...

SGA set for new year, new events and new memories

Daniel Wakefield, president of the Student Government Association, sat down with Lumination to look ahead at what SGA is doing this year to improve the Lipscomb experience for each of its students. “What we want to do is look at student life, figure out how things can be better and then focus our efforts on working with the administration to communicate how things could be better,” Wakefield said. “Part of that is just listening; part of that is just being available. But the other part of that is also being a bridge between student voices and administration’s ears. “ Wakefield said that goal includes things like improving campus, bringing in guest speakers, showing documentaries and helping create great memories. “We try to listen to what students, teachers and generally anyone in the Lipscomb community thinks might add to the experience that is being a Lipscomb student,” Wakefield said. Already this semester, SGA has donated money to the SAC renovation and to installing lights at the intramural field. SGA also gave away tickets to the Hillsong concert and hosted the cornhole tournament. Wakefield said the organization plans to have a concert in the winter, and for a spring event, SGA and campus ministry have invited author Donald Miller to campus. As it did last year, SGA will sponsor Paint the Herd this semester. Paint the Herd is designed to be a fun, exciting on-campus event to keep students interested in having a good time at Lipscomb on the weekend. About 700 students attended Paint the Herd last October, in the basement of the east parking garage. During the paint rave,...