Career Development Center hosts youth ministry fair

Have you ever thought of becoming a youth minister? Want to see how you might fit into this role for a summer? You are just the person that many churches are looking for to serve as a summer youth minister! If you have a passion for young adults, a love for Christ and the desire to serve, you should sign up to interview with various churches at the Youth Ministry Fair next Tuesday December 7th from 1:30-4:00. Churches also have job postings on Lipscomb’s Experience eRecruiting website. A successful candidate should have a resume and the Career Development Center is here to help with that– just stop by to schedule an appointment today! The Youth Ministry Fair is open to all majors. If you have any questions or need a password for Experience, stop by Career Development today in the lower level of the student...
Former towel boy, now minor leaguer, Caleb Joseph shows how Bisons athletics can change young lives

Former towel boy, now minor leaguer, Caleb Joseph shows how Bisons athletics can change young lives

Caleb Joseph started off as a towel boy for Lipscomb’s basketball games.  Then he played for Lipscomb’s baseball team.  Today, he is playing in minor league baseball, and it’s all due to the influence of his idols – Lipscomb athletes. Joseph had family who attended Lipscomb University, and was involved in Lipscomb athletics from a young age.  Even though a Jr. Bisons Club did not officially exist until 2009, Lipscomb has been getting kids involved with athletics since 1978. Joseph was part of that effort, and remembers looking up to athletes. “When you’re a kid, they seem so much older, they have that mega-star quality,” Joseph said. “You want to grow up and be just like them.” Joseph was drafted in 2008, his junior year in college at Lipscomb University, by the Baltimore Orioles.  He played last summer for the club’s AA  Bowie (Maryland)  Baysox and then began catching for the Scottsdale Scorpions in the Arizona fall league. Joseph said while he was playing catcher for the Bisons, there were many bat boys – mostly ages 5 and 6 – who spent time with players on the field.  He remembers a pair of twins who loved being bat boys so much they stayed on for the whole season. Joseph said Lipscomb athletics contributed greatly to who he is today. “I remember him when he was just a little towel boy,” Andy Lane, executive director of the National Bison Club at Lipscomb, said.  “Now he’s all grown up – we really feel like next year he may be in the big leagues.” Lane remembers Caleb Joseph as a youngster, but knows that kids...
Lipscomb sophomore delivers letters of love to Uganda’s diplaced children

Lipscomb sophomore delivers letters of love to Uganda’s diplaced children

Tory Wolf, a sophomore social work major, just returned from delivering letters of Christian encouragement and love to Ugandan kids. The Brentwood native previously visited Africa twice, going to Rwanda, Ghana, and Uganda. This time she went toting the letters written by members of her Lipscomb social club. Heather Hall, sophomore elementary education major from Louisville, Ky., and service coordinator for PKS, said Wolf’s enthusiasm inspired the project. “Tory Wolf thought it would be a great idea if fellow Christians wrote letters to the kids there,” Hall said. “We all decided that that was a wonderful idea – spreading God’s love, even if it’s as simple as drawing a picture and writing a short note.” Wolf is devoted to this type of mission work. “This is my passion,” Wolf said. “Since there are a million displaced people, there is a huge need.  This is my plea to the Lipscomb community – that people would be willing to reach out and help in any way they...

Evaluate your professors, win cash and prizes

Ever wanted to talk back to your professor, and be rewarded for doing it? Well your chance is now. Once again it is time for Lipscomb students to complete course evaluations for this fall semester. Associate Provost of Academic Administration and Strategic Initiatives Dr. Susan Galbreath believes the evaluations are important so that students’ opinions of teachers can be heard. “We want to be able to reward and acknowledge faculty who are doing a great job, and students can tell us that,” Galbreath said. Each semester there are opportunities for students to evaluate the courses in which they are registered in for that term. The annual evaluations are useful for faculty members to understand what’s working and what’s not working according to students. “A student evaluation is one way for us to get a picture as to what goes on in the classroom,” Galbreath said. For the first time last semester students were rewarded for completing all course evaluations with various prizes, and this semester SGA sponsors and faculty members would like to continue this contest. “As a part of the online course evaluations every semester we have a grand prize winner, and last year it was a Garmin GPS system,” Galbreath said. “This semester it is an iPod shuffle, which will go to one student who completes all their course evaluations for the semester.” The grand prize is sponsored through the online course evaluation, and the individual is randomly chosen from the company that provides the gift. Faculty and SGA sponsors would like to congratulate all winners from last semester, especially grand prize winners Shelby Finn and Owen...