SPRING 2 0 2 2
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Student-Athletes Learn Life Values
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Regal the Eagle: History of the Mascot
Athletics Gives Students a Game Plan for Life
WITH EAGLES
SOARING
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PRESIDENT’S LETTER
Fulfilling Our Mission Through Athletics Dear Friends of JBU,
JBU athletes carry themselves so well because they are coached and discipled by men and women committed to Christ.
On March 30, 2020, ESPN started running a commercial about the postponement of sports because of the pandemic. The final line was “Sports, we miss them, too,” and the final image showed JBU students throwing toilet paper during our historical Toilet Paper Game. (See https://on.jbu.edu/TP-espn to watch the video). I was a little worried that we would begin to receive angry letters about wasting toilet paper when there was none in the stores, but I also resonated with the commercial. Carey and I really did miss athletics, particularly JBU athletics, during the early part of the pandemic. We enjoy the adrenaline of the competition, the beauty of athletic skill, the camaraderie of the crowd and the many ways that JBU student-athletes represent the university’s Christian mission. You see it in a hand reached out to pick up an opponent. You see it in a word of encouragement on the bench. You see it in student-athletes striving for excellence with grace. You see it in the prayer before the game and in the singing of the doxology at the end of a rugby match. JBU athletes carry themselves so well because they are coached and discipled by men and women committed to Christ. In this edition of the Brown Bulletin, you will read about two of those coaches, Coach Soderquist and Coach Paulsen, and they represent our entire coaching staff. JBU coaches strive to make their teams as competitive as possible while never losing sight that they are also teaching spiritual and practical lessons that will mold their players for life. It is a joy to watch them work with their players. There was one other tagline in that ESPN commercial: “Where else can we find something that we can all believe in,” with the implied answer beings sports. At JBU, we have a very different answer to that question. We believe in a God who became man, died and rose again to bring about the reconciliation of us and our world. It is wonderful to work at a place in which that answer animates the athletics department and the campus. Sports are back, and we are grateful for it. Come out to cheer on the Golden Eagles and give thanks to God for his abundant blessings. Godspeed,
Dr. Charles W. Pollard President, John Brown University
S P R I N G 2022
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Cheer on Our Athletes When I told the team that the next issue of the Brown Bulletin was going to be about JBU athletics, they looked at me, mouths agape, wondering if I was somehow pulling a prank. It’s not that I don’t like sports – I’ll watch whatever my husband is watching, and I attend my kids’ sporting events, of course — but I’m not a sports enthusiast. I am, however, a huge fan of JBU’s athletic programs and our studentathletes. Most of us don’t realize how much dedication and perseverance goes into being a college athlete. As a sophomore, I roomed with my friend and JBU Hall of Fame swimmer Nikki Peterson, and I distinctly remember that alarm clock going off at 4 a.m. most mornings. In my book, that alone is worthy of a trophy. The time commitment and intensity of college sports are far beyond high school athletics, and the high standards of the JBU department of athletics add pressure to an already challenging time of transition. Yet, it’s a test that most of our athletes pass with flying colors. Our Golden Eagles don’t always get the attention and vast crowds of other colleges, and that’s unfortunate because they deserve it! So, if you live nearby, I encourage you to come and cheer on our extraordinary student-athletes. You can see the schedules at jbuathletics.com.
Julie Gumm Editor, Brown Bulletin
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COVER STORIES: Soaring With Eagles 18
A Game Plan for Life JBU’s “Head, Heart, Hand” education integrates as a foundation for athletes who focus on the game as well as academics, community service and their Christian faith.
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Balancing Act Student-athletes learn foundational values and skills in their sport that transfers to the classroom, community and beyond.
24 P.S. Were you a student-athlete at JBU? We’d love to hear how that experience positively impacted your life. Please send me your story at jgumm@jbu.edu.
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Regal the Eagle From paper mâché to a 2019 makeover, learn the origins of JBU’s beloved mascot.
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Discipleship Through Coaching Coach Kathleen Paulsen, Ph.D., believes coaching is the purest form of discipleship.
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Beyond the Game Coach Jeff Soderquist imparts three lessons to his players: selflessness, perseverance and discipline.
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Time Well Spent Alumni athletes reflect on the lessons they learned and carried forward into their careers.
CONTENTS
S P R I N G 2022 The Brown Bulletin is published by University Marketing & Communications for alumni and friends of JBU. jbu.edu/bulletin PRESIDENT
Dr. Chip Pollard VICE PRESIDENT FOR ADVANCEMENT
Dr. Jim Krall CHIEF MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER
Julie Gumm ’95 (B.S.), ’20 (M.S.)
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MANAGING EDITOR AND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF UNIVERSITY MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS
Jay Nickel COVER DESIGN
Kelly Saunders ’12 LAYOUT DESIGN & ILLUSTRATION
Kelly Saunders ’12
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CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Julie Gumm ’95, Grace Lindquist ’22. Olivia McCarver, William Newton ’23, Jay Nickel, Rachael Oatman ’22, Orry Phillips ’23, Cherissa Roebuck ’01, Zoe Ross ’23, Carlson Wakefield ’20
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FEATURES 8
Long Journey to JBU New computer science professors, Justus Selwyn, Ph.D., and Hepsiba Vivenkanandan, Ph.D., were hired in 2020 only to face a yearlong delay in getting from Madurai, India, to Siloam Springs.
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE 4 6 9 10 12 38 39 40
Campus News Athletics News Eagle’s Nest A JBU Running Legacy Scholarship Story: Brighton Acord Alumni News and Updates Retirements In Memoriam
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Staff Spotlight: Robyn Daugherty As a former student-athlete and coach, Robyn Daugherty ’85 brings a unique perspective to her role as director of athletics.
On the Cover Senior guard Ira Perrier, a psychology major, is from Brighton, England.
CONNECT Brown Bulletin Online: jbu.edu/bulletin JBU Facebook: facebook.com/johnbrownuniversity Instagram: instagram.com/johnbrownuniversity
CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS
Kirstyn Burwick ’24, Matthew Campbell ’23, Carter Henson ’17 (B.S.), ’19 (MBA), Katrina Reimer ’23, Nicholas Robinson, Kelly Saunders ’12 SUPPORT
Sherry Miller ’75, Sonya Price, Nicholas Robinson COPY EDITING
Andy Klungland ’97, Johanna Musgrave ’12, William Newton ’23, Rachael Oatman ’22 Submit news items, story ideas, letters and corrections to jnickel@jbu.edu or via mail to: Brown Bulletin 2000 W. University St. Siloam Springs, AR 72761 ©2022 John Brown University
Twitter: twitter.com/johnbrownuniv YouTube: youtube.com/johnbrownuniversity Give Online: jbu.edu/giveonline JBU Booster Club: jbuathletics.com/booster-club S P R I N G 2022
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Campus News Simpson Awarded Julius Hirsch Honorary Prize Kevin Simpson, Ph.D., professor of psychology, was recognized as the 2021 Julius Hirsch Honorary Prize winner by the German Football Association. Simpson, along with Michal Vaněk, Ph.D., were recognized for their 2019 memorial honoring the forced Jewish laborers who built the grandstand currently in use by the Slovak Premier League football club, MŠK Žilina and their exhibition “Football Under the Swastika: The Story of Leopold ‘Jim’ Štàstný,” held at the Museum of Jewish Culture-Slovak National Museum. Song Wins Ally Award from Black Action Collective Ted Song, chief diversity officer and associate professor of engineering, was selected as a Leading with Excellence Award honoree by the Black Action Collective. Song was recognized as the winner of the Dr. David & Pattie Williams Ally Award, for his work to uplift and build
a better future for African American and underserved communities. 06 The Togami Center for Innovation Opens The Soderquist College of Business revealed The Togami Center for Innovation to the public. The center is named for longtime JBU professor Kai Togami and his wife, Wendy Soderquist-Togami, who worked for Soderquist Leadership from 1999-2014. The space features a focus group room and spaces for students to conduct interviews with potential clients. The center, while open to all students, focuses on giving business students an area for entrepreneurship and innovation.
JBU Construction Management Seniors Place in Competition Competing in the Regional Associated Schools of Construction student competition, senior CM students developed a project proposal and presented it to judges in Dallas, Texas. JBU placed second in the heavy civil and design build divisions and third in the commercial division. Senior Malachi Smith won third place for best presenter in the heavy civil division.
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JBU Business Students Place First in Arkansas Governor’s Cup The competition featured 31 teams from 10 different universities across the state. JBU’s Team Ascend finished in first place in the Small Business division, won Best Elevator Pitch and was awarded a total of $17,000 in prize money. Team Veza placed in the top six of the High Growth and Technology division. 01
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JBU Freshman Wins Sigma Lens Corporation Contest Freshman photography major Shelby Brewer was one of four winners in the photography section of a national scholarship competition sponsored by Sigma Lens Corporation. Brewer’s photo, titled “In the Midst,” placed first in the Authenticity category of the competition. 07
Voice Students Excel at Arkansas NATS Competition Ten JBU students participated in the Arkansas Chapter National Association of Teachers of Singing competition. Eight students were finalists in their divisions, and three finished first in their respective divisions — Jordan Kendrick, Oscar Lopez and Connor Klaassen. Cody Hallmark and Rachel Ball won second, and
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Grace Hutchins, Noan Colby and Myah Collard placed third. 04 Esports Club Opens New On-Campus Space The JBU esports club opened their new on-campus space, The Shop, with a Super Smash Brothers tournament. The Shop is located in the basement of Windgate Visual Arts East and will be used by the club for practices, official club matches and tournaments. 05 Aida Ramos Named New Dean JBU hired Aida Ramos, Ph.D., as the new Dean of the College of Education and Social & Behavioral Sciences, effective July 1. Ramos has served as department chair and in all-campus administrative roles related to student success and diversity at George Fox University and at the University of Mary-Hardin Baylor where she currently serves as an associate professor in the social work, sociology and criminal justice department. Kim Hadley Promoted to Chief Operations Officer Kim Hadley, D.B.A., has been named chief operating officer of JBU, effective
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June 1. Hadley joined JBU in 1996 and served as a faculty member and academic administrator until 2009 when she was named vice president for finance and administration as well as chief financial officer. In her new role, Hadley will add responsibilities for university marketing and communications as well as admissions for the online undergraduate and graduate programs. She also oversees investments, accounting, human resources, administrative services, auxiliary operations, information technology services and the universityowned radio station, KLRC. Faculty, Staff Honored with Awards The 2022 Faculty Excellence Award was given to Curtis Cunningham, Ph.D., and Melissa Hall, Ph.D., following a nomination process by students and faculty. Cunningham, department chair of teacher education, was instrumental in JBU receiving almost $3 million in grant money to operate academies for K-12 teachers in special education, online teaching, and teaching English to students of other languages. Hall, associate professor of family and human services, receives consistently
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high student evaluations and accolades for her ability to integrate varying viewpoints and her awareness of how difficult classroom topics affect individuals. Rhonda Hostler, director of health services, was given the Faculty Appreciation Award based on nominations by faculty. As the university nurse, Hostler has had the added difficulty of managing student health amid a pandemic and keeping faculty apprised of student statuses. Marena Harmon received the Golden Eagle Excellence in Service Award created to recognize a staff member who sets a worthy personal example, gives extra effort and gives other staff and/ or students special encouragement. Harmon, who joined JBU in 2007, is the field placement/enrollment coordinator for counselor education. 02 JBU Hosts First Track Meet at Glenn W. Black Stadium JBU’s track and field program hosted the Sooner Athletic Conference Invitational the weekend of April 23 at Glenn W. Black Stadium in Siloam Springs. It was the first JBU-hosted track meet since the mid-1970s.
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Athletics News Women’s Soccer Wins Back-to-Back Titles Women’s soccer completed an incredible 2021 calendar season. Forced to play the fall 2020 season in the spring of 2021, followed by its normally scheduled slate of matches the following fall, the Golden Eagles won back-to-back Sooner Athletic regular season and tournament titles, compiling a 32-2-1 (.929) record and consecutive appearances in the NAIA National Championships. 01 Pearson Continues Run of Records Siloam Springs native and dual-sport student-athlete Allika Pearson continues her romp through the Golden Eagle record books with another pair of All-America finishes in the 2021-22 season. After earning a second-straight All-America finish at the NAIA National Cross Country Championships, Allika then earned her first career All-America honors at the NAIA National Indoor Track and Field Championships with a
fourth-place finish in the 5,000-meter race. She has the chance to earn the “triple crown” later this spring, when she competes in the 10,000-meter race at the NAIA National Outdoor Track and Field Championships. 02 Tennis Teams Boost Win Record Mike Campbell ‘96, head men’s and women’s tennis coach, has revived the programs after a difficult 2020-21 season. The women, who finished winless last season, own a 9-7 overall record, while the men have built an 11-6 mark as the programs prepare for the NAIA Unaffiliated Group Regional Tournament. The teams’ records this season are the best the tennis programs have produced in over two decades. 03 Mendez Named NAIA AllAmerica Second Team Junior defender Aubrey Mendez, the anchor of the Golden Eagle soccer team back line that conceded just eight goals in 20 matches (0.40 goals against average), was honored with the program’s first-ever NAIA All-America second team selection. The Chino, California, native not only earned an All-America nod for the second time in as many seasons, she
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is the first defender in JBU women’s soccer history to finish among the top three All-America teams in program history. 04 Stephens Breaks Program Scoring Record Junior forward Tarrah Stephens broke a 38-year-old women’s basketball scoring record when she shot a new record of 45 points in the Golden Eagles’ overtime win at Oklahoma Panhandle State University in February. The native of Wyandotte, Oklahoma, posted an incredible stat line, shooting 18-of-27 from the field – hitting two-thirds of her shots attempted – and converting 9-of-10 free-throw opportunities to accompany 11 rebounds. 05 Volleyball Players Earn Honors After a postseason run that nearly produced the volleyball program’s first-ever appearance in the NAIA National Championships, a pair of Golden Eagles earned superlative honors from the Sooner Athletic Conference, including Taylor Goleman’s selection for the league’s Freshman of the Year and junior Jillian Blackman as the conference’s Defensive Player of the Year. Head Coach Ken Carver has now produced two of the SAC’s four most recent top freshmen,
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and Blackman’s selection is the Golden Eagles’ first featured back-row player in the league since 2005. 06 1,000 Point Club Gains Three Three Golden Eagles joined the 1,000-point club during the 2021-22 season. Seniors Luke Harper and Rokas Grabliauskas became the 31st and 32nd newcomers to the men’s club, respectively, while Tarrah Stephens became the 19th Golden Eagle to join the women’s 1,000 club. 07 Women’s Soccer Scores Awards The Sooner Athletic Conference’s women’s soccer postseason superlatives were nearly swept by the Golden Eagles. Head Coach Kathleen Paulsen was tabbed Coach of the Year for the third time in her career, senior Caitlyn Logan earned Goalkeeper of the Year for the fourth time, Pam Seiler was named Freshman of the Year and junior Aubrey Mendez was voted as Defensive Player of the Year – headlining eight Golden Eagle selections to the 2021 All-Sooner Athletic teams.
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OCTOBER 7-8
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Long Journey to JBU BY CARLSON WAKEFIELD ’20
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fter attending a conference in Indiana in 2019, husband and wife Justus Selwyn, Ph.D., and Hepsiba Vivenkanandan, Ph.D., decided to start applying for jobs at colleges in the United States, thousands of miles from their home in Madurai, India. Selwyn had a job lined up and was ready to move his family to the U.S. when the coronavirus pandemic caused universities across the U.S. to send students home and move to remote learning. Ultimately, the job fell through, leaving Selwyn and his family with nothing but uncertainty. “We were waiting for the call in March 2020, and that’s when everything shut down,” Selwyn said. “No flights, no business, nothing, so we waited.” When the pandemic continued to escalate in June 2020, Selwyn’s family took a break from looking for jobs and waited for God’s guidance. Selwyn and Vivenkanandan almost decided to stay in India where they had family and community. “We did not know whether it was really God’s plan to take us to the U.S.,” Vivenkanandan said. “Our families were there [India], we had a great community in our church, so we thought maybe that was his plan.” But soon, Selwyn and Vivenkanandan felt God’s prompting to start applying for jobs in the U.S. “God gave us the promise from Deuteronomy 11:11-12,” Vivenkanandan said. “We didn’t know for sure that America was that place, but we believed the word of God and believed that God was insisting on us to apply again.” In November 2020, Selwyn found JBU through a Google search and sent in his application materials for the professor of computer science position. Within a week, Ted Song, Ph.D., department chair of engineering, computer science and cybersecurity, reached out for a meeting. After a week of interviewing with the engineering department, including Song and JBU President Chip Pollard, Selwyn and Vivenkanandan knew that JBU was where God wanted them to be. One thing that stood out to the couple was
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the prayer before and after each interview. “That was completely new to us, and we were so excited,” Vivenkanandan said. “In India, we don’t do prayers apart from the church, so that confirmed that we were in the right place.” Song, who had been looking for the right person to fill the computer science faculty position for a while, was thrilled when Selwyn applied. It was even more fitting that Vivenkanandan was also in the same field and could join JBU as an adjunct instructor in the computer science program. Unfortunately, COVID-19 travel restrictions made getting the family to Arkansas quite difficult. As new COVID-19 variants emerged and cases rose and fell, the visa interview and final approval process was on hold. While waiting, Selwyn and Vivenkanandan started teaching classes in the fall of 2021 via Zoom, even with the 11-hour time difference, and were in daily communication with Song and Pollard. “They supported us throughout the whole process,” Vivenkanandan said. “We were so encouraged during those down times.” It was a year before Selwyn, Vivenkanandan and their son, Handel, a high school senior, stepped foot in Arkansas. “Some days were very difficult for all of us, especially Justus and Hepsiba, but we never lost the hope that God had given us,” Song said. “After months of waiting and prayers, we celebrated God’s faithfulness when they finally arrived at the airport.” When Selwyn, Vivenkanandan and their son landed at Northwest Arkansas National Airport on Dec. 12, they felt they had finally made it to the “land of hills and valleys” that God had promised them in Deuteronomy. “God had put us on hold for something else to teach us a lesson,” Selwyn said. “But he remained in constant communication with us, and Dr. Song and Dr. Pollard were very helpful as well, and that’s why we were able to stand.”
JBU NOW
THE EAGLE’S NEST SUPPORTING THE GOLDEN EAGLES BY ORRY PHILLIPS ’23
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f you’ve attended an athletic event at JBU over the last few years, you’ve probably seen them. When an opposing player airballs a three-pointer, when an official makes a controversial call or when a Golden Eagle hits that gamewinning shot or match-clinching kill, you’ve probably heard them. The Eagle’s Nest, JBU’s de facto student pep club, is a fixture of the game day experience and a key component to a spirited and loud game day atmosphere in the Bill George Arena and Alumni Field. Nate Brown, senior finance major, served as the organizer for the Eagle’s Nest during the 2021-22 athletics season. “It is really more of a mantra or a lifestyle than an organization,” said Brown. “The Eagle’s Nest moves, shifts and changes all the time based on who is there and what sport is being played. The purpose is always the same — do everything we can as fans to help the Golden Eagles win. [We] cheer on our team, mess with the opponents or anything in between — our job is to support our athletes.” Brown said it is hard to pick a day when the Eagle’s Nest started, but it is the product of the department of athletics’ goal to increase student interest and support in Golden Eagle sporting events. “Over the past few years, JBU Director of Athletics Robyn Daugherty ’85 and JBU alumnus Coby Dolloff ’21 worked to intentionally grow support for JBU athletics and promote the Eagle’s Nest. “I’ve been helping create posts and events for about a year now, doing what I can to promote support from fellow students,” Brown said.
Like nearly every other aspect of JBU athletics, the Eagle’s Nest was paused in 2020 due to COVID-19. After the men’s basketball team won their conference tournament quarterfinal matchup against Oklahoma City inside Bill George Arena on March 3, 2020, there wasn’t another packed crowd for a long time. All athletic seasons were paused and later canceled through the end of the academic year in response to COVID-19 protocols. Basketball was the first sport to return to JBU, when the men’s basketball team came back to Bill George Arena on Jan. 12, 2021. However, a shortened basketball season and the largely empty Bill George Arena due to COVID-19 restrictions undermined the burgeoning energy and fansupport of the previous season. The same was true for the volleyball and soccer seasons played later in the spring as COVID-19 restrictions remained in place. It wasn’t until the Toilet Paper Game on Oct. 29, 2021 that the stands were packed again — it was a welcome sight for the Eagle’s Nest. “The 2020-21 school year was pretty tough as we really weren’t able to attend sporting events. This year has been so different and so much better,” Brown said. Overall, Brown’s time as a student and a supporter of JBU athletics has led to many fond memories. Brown graduated in May, but he’s confident in the direction of the Eagle’s Nest. “I would say that enthusiasm for the Golden Eagles has been growing and is going to be incredible next year. The Eagle’s Nest will continue to thrive and find ways to increase student support,” Brown said. “[I’ll] always hold memories of the Eagle’s Nest in my heart. Peck ‘em, forever.” S P R I N G 2022
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A JBU Running Legacy BY CHERISSA ROEBUCK ’01
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or the past four decades, one family name has become synonymous with excellence in the JBU track and field program. The Pearsons have been setting records and winning national titles in Golden Eagle track and field since 1983. From Matt Pearson ’85, who earned John Brown University’s second-ever individual national championship in 1983, to his daughter, Allika, who became the first athlete in JBU program history to earn three All-America first team distinctions, the Pearsons have built a four-decade running legacy at JBU. When Matt Pearson came to JBU as a freshman in 1981, he was no stranger to John Brown University. His dad, Jim Pearson, was an engineering professor who would go on to teach 42 years at JBU. “I grew up as a JBU ‘faculty brat,’ so campus was home to me,” Pearson said. “As a young boy, I came to know Jesus in the basement of the cathedral when JBU still held Sunday school and church services on campus.” By the time Matt graduated from Siloam Springs High School in 1981, he had made a name for himself as a track and field star, running the 800-yard, one-mile, two-mile and twomile relay. He was the 3A state champion in the two-mile and held the state record for his time in the two-mile his senior
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year. Today, more than 40 years later, he still holds the Siloam Springs High School program record for the two-mile event. Although he had garnered some interest from larger college track programs like the University of Kansas and the University of Mississippi, Matt chose to stay close to home at JBU. In Matt’s freshman year in 1981, JBU had just reinstated their cross country and track and field teams. Matt worked hard to help build the program. By his senior year, JBU was able to field a full team in cross country and finished fifth at the National Christian College Athletic Association’s national meet. “Ed Renfrow was a great coach,” Pearson said. “He taught us about the intricacies of training and how to be wellprepared for competition. He was also a pilot, so we flew to meets in Wisconsin, Michigan and central Arkansas.” During his four years at JBU, Pearson racked up an impressive list of athletic accolades. He was a three-time NCCAA cross country All-American and two-time national champion in cross country in 1982-1984, NCCAA AllAmerican and national champion in track in 1985, and NAIA All-American between cross country in 1984. He was named JBU Athlete of the Year in both 1984 and 1985
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before graduating from JBU with his degree in building construction. In 2014, Pearson was inducted into the JBU Golden Eagle Hall of Fame. Although Matt continued his running career after college, he said that his years at JBU impacted his life outside of athletics. “My experience at JBU gave me confidence, determination, patience and a drive for achievement, all within the sphere of God’s sovereign hand,” he said. “It also fostered friendships and a sense of community that has lasted to this day, such a valuable gift to have as life intensifies.” Even as Matt pursued his architecture career, married his wife Kirsten and began to build their family, Matt stayed connected with JBU athletics. He coached the JBU cross country team from 2010-2012, which gave him a new perspective on the sport and the importance of building a team. One of Pearson’s favorite places to be is in the stands, where he and Kirsten love cheering on their children, Elliott and Allika, who have carried on the Pearson running legacy. Elliott Pearson ’20 was an all-state cross country and track and field runner for Siloam Springs High School, running primarily the twomile and one-mile events. He earned two individual state championships in his senior year of high school. He came to JBU in the fall of 2016, eager to continue his running career as a Golden Eagle. He ran his freshman season of cross country at JBU and had started the track season in the spring when a back injury cut his collegiate running career short. The news came as a huge disappointment to the JBU freshman. Even though his injuries kept him from running, Elliott continued to be a close and active member of the team throughout his years at JBU. By the time he graduated in 2020 with a graphic design degree, his coach and teammates had left an indelible mark on his life. “My entire perspective on running, and more importantly, life, has been set on a different course because of JBU’s cross country program,” Elliott said. “JBU laid the foundation for meeting my wife, for having the tools to start a business, and
for discovering and exploring the world that God has put before us.” In 2018, another Pearson donned the Golden Eagle singlet — Allika Pearson. In the last four years, she has accumulated an extensive list of athletic accolades. Allika was an all-state runner at Siloam Springs High School, where she holds the school record in the 1600-meter, before joining the Golden Eagles cross country and track and field teams. She has set JBU program records in a slew of events, including the mile, 3000-meter and the 5000-meter in indoor track, and the 1500-meter, 5000-meter and the 10,000-meter in outdoor track. Allika won back-to-back Sooner Athletic Conference individual cross country championships in 2020 and 2021. She also owns the cross country program record and eight of the program’s top fastest times ever. Allika holds two AllAmerica distinctions in cross country from 2020 and 2021. In March, she became the first JBU student-athlete to earn All-America honors in indoor track and field. In late May, she has a chance to garner a fourth All-America title which would make her one of only three athletes to do so in JBU history. Graduating with a degree in kinesiology in May and planning to attend grad school to study sports nutrition, Allika credits her teammates and head coach Scott Schochler with helping her to truly learn to love her sport and to reach her full potential as an athlete. Just like her dad and her brother, Allika firmly believes that her training as a Golden Eagle has impacted her life in ways that go far deeper than athletic competition. “I have practiced in literally all weather conditions and have pushed my body close to its physical limits. My teammates and I have gained a significant amount of grit and that’s going to get us through a lot of tough stuff,” Allika said. “As running is an endurance sport, we’re in the training for the long haul, but we endure because we are working toward a goal. Life is a long haul. It’s hard, it takes patience, it takes enjoyment of the process, it has moments where you will shine and moments when you will fall, but you do it because you have a goal … to glorify God and enjoy him forever.”
“My experience at JBU gave me confidence, determination, patience and a drive for achievement all within the sphere of God’s sovereign hand .... It also fostered friendships and a sense of community that has lasted to this day, such a valuable gift to have as life intensifies.”
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Scholarships Allow Student-Athlete to Cheerfully Jump into Nursing Program BY OLIVIA MCCARVER
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ohn Brown University checked every box on Brighton Acord’s university wish list — close to home, college cheerleading and a Christ-centered education. Now a junior, she is thriving on campus and grateful for the opportunities that have enabled her to pursue a degree in nursing and continue her cheerleading career. “[The JBU Scholarship Fund] has allowed me to be able to focus on my academics and athletics,” Acord said. “It has allowed my family to be more comfortable and to not stress about finances as much.” Like many students coming out of high school, Acord wasn’t ready to hang up her uniform and let go of the sport she loved. “I chose to join the cheer team because I cheered throughout high school and did all-star competitive cheer and was not ready to give up the sport I had done my entire life,” she said. While events like the annual Toilet Paper Game are among Acord’s favorite memories, she values practice and time with her teammates.
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“I love all of our practices. We truly have such a good team dynamic,” she said. “We have had several team bonding events outside of practices which help us grow stronger together.” Acord’s ability to balance the rigorous demands of JBU academics and her responsibilities as a student-athlete will serve her well as she prepares for her future career. She was recently accepted into JBU’s nursing program and will begin adding clinical hours to her schedule in the fall. Thanks to generous donors, this hard-working, dedicated future healthcare professional is part of a community Acord loves, where she consistently demonstrates the excellence and strong work ethic required of a Golden Eagle student-athlete. “I love the atmosphere [at JBU]. The professors truly care about you and want you to succeed, and the friends you make are so special,” she said. “Even though it is a small campus, it can feel big at times as I am constantly meeting new people.”
Giving Options JBU is abundantly blessed by the generosity of alumni, parents and friends who believe in the university’s mission and the value of Christian higher education. Every gift given to JBU makes a positive difference in the lives of students. Scholarship gifts provide access to an education that students might not otherwise be able to afford, and gifts to building projects open doors to new or renovated facilities in which to learn and create. Gifts enable the growth of programs that inspire new discoveries and inventions to improve the world around us. Your gifts help future JBU graduates become prepared to honor God and serve others. The advancement team at JBU works with alumni, parents and friends of the university to explore a variety of giving options available to help them meet their giving goals. There are nearly a dozen different ways you can give — including endowed scholarships, cash, appreciated securities, real estate, retained life estate, individual retirement accounts, donor advised funds, charitable gift annuities, charitable remainder unitrust and an estate bequest. If you’re not already working with a member of the advancement team, they would love to talk with you, hear about your giving and stewardship goals and provide options to help you steward your resources in the way you desire.
Pray for JBU Thank you for supporting JBU in prayer. It’s the most important way you can help us. Praises: We have filled the open dean role and several key faculty positions for next year. JBU received a positive preliminary report from the Higher Learning Commission on our accreditation renewal. After an initial surge in Omicron COVID-19 cases in January, we had low cases numbers this semester. Special campus events like Family Weekend and Grandparents’ Day returned. JBU hosted the Rodney Sisco Symposium for A Biblical View on Diversity, Women in Leadership and Immigration in February. Despite a snowstorm and thanks to technology, all the sessions went on as planned, were well attended and received positive feedback. Prayer Requests: Graduates — In May, 218 students graduated from JBU with their bachelor’s degrees, and 63 students earned master’s degrees. Pray that God would guide their next steps. Prospective Students — Several hundred students will attend Eagle Base Camp in June. We hope this will affirm their decision to attend JBU. Pray also for our financial aid staff and admissions counselors as they work with families and students making final plans for the fall.
Jim Krall Vice President for University Advancement jkrall@jbu.edu
Eric Greenhaw Senior Director of Development & Planned Giving egreenhaw@jbu.edu
President Pollard’s Sabbatical — The Board of Trustees granted President Pollard a sabbatical in 2020 that was delayed because of COVID-19. Finally, he and Carey will be able to take a few months off to rest and work on some projects, such as JBU’s strategic plan. Pray for God to renew them and provide wisdom. Pray for cabinet members as they lead the day-to-day operations during this time. Faculty & Staff Searches — Pray God leads the right people to JBU to fill our open staff and faculty positions.
Steve Onnen ’82 Director of Development sonnen@jbu.edu
Lanya Carson Director of the JBU Scholarship Fund lcarson@jbu.edu
Brad Edwards ’02 Director of Development bedwards@jbu.edu
JBU Scholarship Fund — Our annual scholarship fund that helps more than 500 students each year has experienced a decline in donor participation. Please pray that more people will get involved in helping our students afford JBU.
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STAFF SPOTLIGHT Robyn Daugherty ’85, director of athletics since 2006, has been on staff at JBU since 1989 when she began her 20-year tenure as head volleyball coach. From 1989-2009, Daugherty amassed over 400 victories, making her the alltime winningest coach in John Brown athletics history. Her teams captured four conference championships, including a pair of Sooner Athletic regular season crowns in 2000 and 2006, while claiming two SAC tournament titles in 2004 and 2005. She was named one of four NAIA Athletic Directors of the Year in 2018 and was awarded SAC Athletic Director of the Year in 2020.
STAFF SPOTLIGHT
WHAT ARE SOME OF THE ROLES YOU ENJOY THE MOST AS DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS?
Special events like spirit days, the TP Game, First Friday Futbol, Hall of Fame Induction and Athletic Awards Night require a lot of detailed planning – but I enjoy the challenge and love the reward of seeing joy in our students and fans. I also love the business side of this job. I enjoy working numbers on budgets, expenses, financial aid and new program proposals. WHAT ARE SOME LIFE PRINCIPLES YOU LEARNED AS A STUDENT-ATHLETE AT JBU?
Living in a community with Christians was something I had never experienced, nor thought much about before coming here. The relationships I formed while at JBU as a student were life-giving. I grew in my faith at JBU and met so many influential people on and off campus. I saw faith being lived out daily — not just on Sunday. I learned the importance of Jesus Christ as the foundation for everything in my life (unless he builds the house, we labor in vain). Athletics teaches responsibility, loyalty, the importance of team, resiliency and hard work. WHAT PERSUADED YOU TO BECOME A VOLLEYBALL COACH, AND WHAT MADE YOU WANT TO START YOUR CAREER AT JBU?
My degree was in physical education K-12, thinking I would teach and coach at a high school. I graduated in December, and no teaching jobs were available; so I went to work at DaySpring Cards, which began a 15-year career there. I officiated in my spare time and stayed connected at JBU. When the job became open in 1989, I was able to take it on a part-time basis while keeping my full-time job at DaySpring. While it was a busy 10 years doing both jobs, I eventually chose to move full time to JBU. I learned so much at DaySpring, which prepared me for the AD role — even though at that time being an AD was not on my career path. WHAT ARE SOME VALUABLE LESSONS YOU LEARNED FROM YOUR TIME COACHING?
Culture and foundation are keys to life — whether at work or at home. I learned the importance of
building our program on Christ. It wasn’t about me or any of the players. The focus had to stay on Jesus. If that foundation was compromised, all we did would be in vain. Another important takeaway is that being a coach takes a lot of time and energy — away from friends, family and personal life. I wouldn’t trade my time for anything, but walking through those 20 years of coaching helps me better understand the struggles of the coaches I work with daily. I think it has really shaped me in servant leadership. I want to lead well, but more importantly, I want to serve well. AS A COACH, YOU EXPERIENCED A LOT OF SUCCESS. WHY LEAVE THAT FOR THE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS POSITION?
When I began the AD job in 2006, the agreement was that I could keep coaching until either myself or my boss felt I couldn’t continue doing both well. A huge blessing from the Lord came into my life in 2008 — my husband! After two seasons of volleyball and being AD, and being Mrs. Daugherty, I knew it was time to choose to focus on either volleyball or administration. Stepping away from the daily interactions with my student-athletes was very hard, but I knew it was time to focus on one position and focus on my new family. WHAT WERE SOME OF THE MOST REWARDING ASPECTS OF COACHING AT JBU?
The relationships with my student-athletes were the highlight of coaching. I loved seeing them grow and mature over their four years at JBU, and having a front-seat view to this was very rewarding and encouraging. The conversations in the van and on the bus, the international team mission trips to Central America, the highs and lows of wins and losses, and the many trips to their weddings are all special memories that I cherish. FOR MANY YEARS, THE AVERAGE GPA OF JBU STUDENT-ATHLETES HAS MATCHED THE REST OF THE STUDENT BODY. TO WHAT DO YOU ATTRIBUTE THIS SUCCESS IN THE CLASSROOM?
All these accolades go to our student-athletes. They are amazing at balancing academics and athletics. We are blessed by the hard work from all of our student-athletes. All of our coaches understand that academics is important — their annual evaluation has a section regarding academic performance. We want our studentathletes to be students first. That’s not easy to do, but our coaches keep that at the forefront of their minds as we recruit students. Read the expanded Staff Spotlight at jbu.edu/news/articles.
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A SERVANT’S HEART: Junior Deb Ramirez, Servant’s Heart Community Food Pantry manager, stocks shelves of the food pantry available to commuter students located in Walker Student Center.
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n the early 1920s, John E. Brown Sr., founder of John Brown University, placed a ban on intercollegiate sports due to injuries that occurred during a football game between the then John E. Brown College and Siloam Springs High School players. For almost 40 years, JBU students were only able to participate in club and intramural sports on campus. In April 1958, the restrictions were removed by his son and then president John E. Brown Jr.; and in November, the first intercollegiate athletics event, a basketball game, was held on campus. Brown Jr. went on to establish athletics teams across campus, founding varsity men’s basketball, track teams and cheerleading. In the 1960s, Brown Jr. added varsity programs for tennis, swimming and diving, golf, track and baseball. When the intercollegiate department of athletics was established, it helped boost school spirit and attract a more diverse student body.
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FEATURE The first women’s intercollegiate program — volleyball — was established in the 1970s and was soon followed by women’s swimming and women’s basketball in early 1972. For over 60 years now, JBU athletics have played a vital role on campus. The rich history is full of all-Americans, championships and traditions that have become popular on campus and in the surrounding community. The storied history of JBU athletics continues to this day, with 11 intercollegiate teams competing at high levels in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and the Sooner Athletic Conference (SAC) including women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s soccer, basketball, tennis, cross country, and track and field. JBU athletics has seen recent success with SAC tournament runs for men’s and women’s soccer and men’s basketball. But JBU’s mark for athletic program success is not just team win-loss records, it is the holistic development of student-athletes.
Athletic Philosophy The “Head, Heart, Hand” educational philosophy of JBU stems from Brown Sr.’s belief in developing the whole student, not simply one aspect of them. “Emphasis should be placed equally on the head, heart and hands,” Brown Sr. said. “If we neglect any of these in our teaching, the result will be an unbalanced person.” Since the early days of JBU athletics, the mission has remained consistent — to develop students as athletes and to win games, but more importantly to develop them holistically and grow their faith. Student-athletes are expected to succeed in their respective sports, perform well academically, serve local communities and honor Christ in all they do. This is the foundation upon which coaches build their programs.
Academic Commitment JBU’s athletic programs always have a goal of winning, and there are trophy cases filled with symbols of team and individual successes in multiple sports. But student development and success outside of sports are equally as important, especially to JBU Director of Athletics Robyn Daugherty ’85. A former JBU volleyball head coach, Daugherty has been the athletics director for 15 years and has made academics a core part of JBU athletics identity. Besides performing at the highest levels athletically, student-athletes have an expectation of academic excellence. To Daugherty and the coaches, it is important for recruits to
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understand the academic expectations. “We know that a student isn’t going to be successful here, and we won’t be able to keep them eligible, if they’re not here for a degree,” Daugherty said. “Our athletes understand that they’re here for a degree, and we’re going to keep them on track to graduate.” Students at JBU are required to pass a certain number of classes in order to be eligible to compete. Their GPAs are monitored by coaches, Daugherty and the faculty athletic representative, Tim Wakefield, Ph.D. “I feel really blessed to get to work with our athletes, even only in a small capacity,” Wakefield said. “I get to see how well all of our students do academically, and getting to approve them to play is always satisfying.” The department of athletics is committed to athletes’ academic success and pairing them with campus academic resources to provide any help that is needed. “We’re intentional about graduation rates and want to see them developing as people over the four years they spend here,” said Daugherty.
Community Service JBU student-athletes also find ways to serve the surrounding community. Some teams run community clinics in their respective sports, and others serve with local organizations such as the Special Olympics and Ability Tree, a local organization that offers recreational and educational support for families impacted by disability. During its offseason, the women’s basketball team runs a weekly MVP clinic with Ability Tree students over four weeks. “[The Abilty Tree students] bring our team so much joy and they’ve been a pleasure to work with,” said Maddie Altman, a graduating senior returning for a fifth year on the women’s basketball team. Kathleen Paulsen, Ph.D., head coach of the women’s soccer team, has made it a priority for her athletes to serve in the schools of Colcord, Oklahoma. “I think one of the great parts about sports is you get invested in by the community,” Paulsen said. “But I think one of the big things is where are you then pouring out? How are you impacting your community and your world?” “My favorite volunteer work we did as a team was serving at Ability Tree,” said Cooper McCombs, a senior on the men’s soccer team. “We were able to invest in kids with disabilities and play all sorts of games with them. These kids always had so much fun no matter what. I was impacted by the joy they found in the little things.”
Community service is required by the NAIA and is part of their “Champions of Character” program, but for Daugherty, it’s about more than meeting requirements. “The NAIA asks us to count service for a scorecard, and we struggle with that,” Daugherty said. “We want to serve because it’s an outreach of who we are and the people we’re trying to develop here — not because of some score.”
Faith Integration As a Christian institution, JBU integrates faith into the college experience, and athletics is no exception. For some athletes, it is a new experience to see sports and faith working so closely together. “We want to be careful that we’re being intentional,” Daugherty said. “We’re not assuming that everyone’s a believer.” Faith integration looks different on every team. For some teams, it’s one-on-one meetings where players have the freedom to ask hard questions and explore their faith. For others, it’s team Bible studies where players are able to explore their well-grounded faith. “I leave that up to the coach, because there’s a lot of different ways to achieve the desired outcome,” Daugherty said. “But it’s a big part of their evaluation at the end of year. I look at what they have done for spiritual mentoring and development of our students.” Altman has been able to participate in a Bible study every other week with her team and experience growth in their faith together. “We get to talk with Morgan Ankrom, who’s an alumna of the team,” Altman said. “She’s served on the mission field and is very passionate about Christ, so it’s a great experience to take a step back from our studies during our devotions to grow in our faith.” While JBU athletes continue to represent JBU well on the pitch, court or track, they are being developed to represent JBU in their communities, churches and workplaces long after college. “Yes, we still want to win, we definitely are competing,” Daugherty said. “But the focus on graduation rates, retention, service and spiritual development — that sets us apart.” With a commitment to academic excellence, a focus on servant leadership and a deeper faith, JBU student-athletes will also be set apart as they leave and begin careers that bring glory to God.
@JBUATHLETICS
JOHN BROWN UNIVERSITY ATHLETICS S P R I N G 2022
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Balancing Act Student-Athletes Transfer Team Values to the Classroom and Beyond BY WILLIAM NEWTON ’23
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eginning with the formation of the athletics committee in 1927, JBU athletics emerged in the 1950s and has grown throughout the years. JBU initially competed in the HCCA conference and then eventually moved to the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, where the Golden Eagles competed in basketball, baseball, swimming, tennis, golf, track & field, cross country and soccer along the way. The integration of sports on a college campus produces student-athletes, a category of students who attend JBU to receive their higher education and to participate in their chosen athletic fields. During their time in their respective sports, student-athletes at JBU say they have grown to be better leaders, athletes and students, applying the discipline they learn during practices and competition to all other areas of life. In fact, over the last decade, student-athletes at JBU have carried an average GPA that is equivalent to nonstudent-athletes, as they must maintain proficient grade point averages to be eligible to play. Because of their demanding schedules, student-athletes must be strategic and efficient in how they spend the free time available to them. Given the rigorous schedules of team sports, balancing their course loads and their athletic engagements can be very challenging. “It’s almost like you’re an athlete-student not a student-athlete, because so much focus goes into practice, making sure you get enough extra shots, making sure you know the scout and the players [on the team you’re competing against],” said Ira Perrier, senior psychology major and basketball player. “It can be really hard to find that balance.” While the struggle to balance can be difficult for students, it can also positively affect how they approach their schedules. “Going to tennis practice actually helps me balance my life more because when I am able to go out on the court, be active and have fun with the guys, I am able to focus better on my schoolwork after the fact than if I had attempted to study on my school work for two hours,” said Woody Woodring, senior finance and accounting major and men’s tennis captain. Along with helping athletes grow in academics, it also provides a resource for bonding and friendship. “Coming into JBU, I was able to have my built-in friends,” said Olivia McCafferty, senior general business major and cheerleader, referring to her teammates. “If I did not have athletics, I would not have my best friends that I have now.” Noah Taylor, sophomore finance major and basketball player, says basketball allowed him to make deep connections with other students quickly. “The best advantage of being a student-athlete at JBU is the brotherhood of the team. When you first arrive on campus, you have 15 other friends that, from the start, act like brothers and are always there for you,” he said. Unlike many colleges and universities that restrict student-athletes from
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Pictured (Top to Bottom): Woody Woodring ’22, Allika Pearson ’22, Ira Perrier ’22, Olivia McCafferty ’22, Lauren Cloud ’22, Aniyah Gibbs ’24, Noah Taylor ’24, Abigail Woodring ’23
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majoring in degrees that take more time away from athletics, the department of athletics at JBU allows students to participate in their study of choice. “JBU was the only school that I was looking at that said I could do music and tennis at the same time, so that was exciting, because otherwise, I was going to have to drop tennis and only focus on music in college,” said Abigail Woodring, junior music education major and tennis player. Lauren Cloud, senior nursing major and volleyball player, had the same experience. “I chose JBU over the other schools I had offers from because the athletic department worked closely with the nursing department to ensure student-athletes could get a nursing degree,” said Cloud. “This was not common at the other schools I visited.” Along with the support of the university, many student-athletes receive mentorship from their coaches, which has had a lasting impact on their success in both their athletics and their academics. “It’s almost like you get to have a role model or a father figure that you didn’t have to go looking for,” said Perrier. For others, their coach is a symbol of leadership and challenges them to grow off the field as well. “[Coach Kathleen Paulsen] pushes me toward Christ and challenges me every day to step into a leadership role and use my voice to impact others,” said Aniyah Gibbs, sophomore kinesiology major and soccer player. “I believe the team culture she has created at JBU will be something I carry into my life even after I graduate.” Many student-athletes see their athletic performance as synonymous with their approach to academics. “The same mindset I take to a tennis match is the same mindset I take into a test, like ‘I am going to beat this person or this test,’’’ joked Woody Woodring. “Even though at a tennis match it’s like this person is actively aspiring against me. I know that my professors aren’t trying to beat me — they are trying to prepare me and equip me — but I get into this mentality that it is me versus this test, and I am going to win.” JBU athletes also credit their extensive schedules with teaching them discipline in nonacademic areas of life, carrying over into their professions, like Cloud’s future nursing career. “Being an athlete has helped me grow into a leader,” said Cloud. “I have grown more confident in being a leader, but I have also grown in my ability to see different points of views.” Allika Pearson, senior kinesiology major and crosscountry and track & field runner, said her four years as a student-athlete helped her grow academically, socially and spiritually. “To put it bluntly, if I was not an athlete, I think I would be much less joyful and more irritable. I’d have a smaller friend group, I would not perform as well in class, etc.,” said Pearson. “My team has built me up and shaped me in ways I could not have done through other means, and I’m incredibly thankful for that.” Being a student-athlete at the collegiate level is challenging and requires self-discipline and time management, and student-athletes at JBU say it’s worth the work to become better leaders, athletes and students through their experiences.
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ohn Brown University’s mascot has grown a lot since his initial hatching. Today, fans know him as Regal the Eagle, but JBU’s mascot has made a transformative journey in the last 60 years. In the fall of 1965, the JBU mascot made its first unofficial appearance. It was the result of a creative home economics student, Janet Dobbs Given ’68. “I was a big fan of our basketball team and started noticing that several of the schools that came to JBU to play a game had a mascot,” said Given. “I started thinking that we should have one too.” Because the cheerleading squad had no budget for a mascot, Given made the eagle’s head out of chicken wire and paper mâché in a dormitory kitchen with some friends. The simple costume consisted of a female eagle headpiece, paired with a plain dress. This mascot lasted only for the short period of Given’s undergraduate days at JBU, but even during that limited time, it rallied school spirit and was a part of a successful basketball season that went all the way to the playoffs in 1965. Although Given left behind the costume in hope that the mascot’s momentum would continue, no one took up the task — at least not until the Toilet Paper Game of 1991. The game marked the official debut of the mascot nearly 30 years later. Arkansas State Representative Robin Lundstrum, then instructor of health promotion and human performance, recognized JBU’s need for a mascot. She said the thought came to her out of a desire to enrich the college experience of her students. “You’d go to the games, and it was just like, wait a second — U of A (University of Arkansas) has [a mascot]. The Bulldogs,
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where I went to high school, they had a mascot … and so I wanted my JBU babies to have everything that every other school had. And why not?” said Lundstrum. Because of the steep pricing of mascot costumes in catalogs and the fact that most bird costumes resembled a chicken more than an eagle, Lundstrum worked with her mother to create the costume, designed and sewn by hand. Going by the name “Conan the Eagle,” the mascot wore a Golden Eagles basketball sweatshirt, a baseball cap and a towering, whitefeathered headpiece. It had bulging eyes and his tongue hung out of his beak. A decade later, Conan the Eagle underwent a $1,000 makeover. He cleaned up his look with a fully feathered, blue-and-white costume from head to claw with more realistic, balanced features on the headpiece. To complete the transformation, Conan was renamed “Regal the Eagle,” the name still used today. JBU has traditionally kept the student identity behind the mascot a secret. To keep the mystery alive, this story will refer to student mascots by their years of service as Regal. Regal 1998-2002, who served as the mascot all four years of his undergraduate career, experienced the physical transformation firsthand. In an issue of The Threefold Advocate, Regal 1998-2002 indicated to the writer that “the new head was heavier, harder to see out of, but strapped on, is padded and looks better than the old one.” Despite the outward transformations of the mascot over the years, Regal remains the same at heart. From the beginning, Regal has demonstrated the greatest school spirit simply by having fun and loving others. Summarizing his time as the mascot, Regal 1998-2002 said, “I loved it. I got to be right in the action, courtside.” Regal 2004-2008, shared similar sentiments. “Being Regal the Eagle … was certainly one of the things I enjoyed most about my time at JBU,” he remarked. In 2019, during JBU’s Centennial Celebration, the university unveiled a new Regal mascot. Up to this point, Regal more closely resembled a bald eagle with white feathers, but the 2019 Regal now more accurately resembles the brown feathers of a golden eagle.
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Regal 2020, who served as the mascot during his graduate studies, shared his favorite memories as the mascot. He had fun joking around with JBU President Chip Pollard, chasing students around campus with a cardboard cutout of Pollard and, most fondly, spotting Micah, a young man from Ability Tree who came to every game. “[Micah] absolutely loved Regal, and so going and being that for him or saying ‘hi’ and giving him a hug just made his week. Doing that was awesome,” said Regal 2020. Regal 2021-2022 shared how the excitement of kids was a highlight. Additionally, he described the unique privilege to be on the court, to interact with referees and to make others laugh by providing school spirit. Reigning at the top of his fall 2021 season memories, though, was the reintroduction of the traditional Toilet Paper Game after being canceled the previous season due to the pandemic. Generating laughs and enthusiasm at athletic events has always been an essential part of Regal’s role as the mascot, but he is expanding his presence to nonathletic events. “There’s a fun energy that Regal can provide,” he said, and this academic year Regal has started to bring that energy to unlikely places, like appearances at prospective student preview days, the dining hall for a pep rallies and for the Irish Studies Program promotional event, where he dressed for the occasion in an Irish kilt. The transformation of the JBU mascot runs far back into campus history and will continue to become an integral part of the JBU culture on and off the playing surface. Keep an eye out for Regal the Eagle on the horizon. You never know when or where he’ll swoop in next.
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Discipleship Through Coaching Glorifying God in College Soccer BY RACHAEL OATMAN ’22
“Am I using my gifts and talents to glorify God?” This is the question Kathleen Paulsen, Ph.D., John Brown University’s women’s soccer head coach, asked herself before realizing her calling to coaching and teaching. Paulsen was in pursuit of a God-honoring position. Initially, she was on track to become a physician’s assistant, but she realized that her gifts were better suited for a discipleship setting. “I believe coaching is the purest form of discipleship. You handpick a group of 24 girls, and you walk through four years of life with them. You look at how Jesus modeled his life – he picked 12 men and did three years with them. I really believe that’s our calling in life,” Paulsen said. This realization led Paulsen to where she is today, coaching her ninth season of JBU women’s soccer and teaching exercise physiology. Paulsen accepted the position as JBU’s women’s soccer head coach in February 2013. Her experience as an NCAA Division I player with the Arkansas Razorbacks, her time post-graduation with the Arkansas Comets of the Women’s Premier Soccer League and her overall diligence and Christcentered character made her an ideal candidate for the position. A native of Littleton, Colorado, Paulsen moved to Arkansas to study pre-med biology at the University of Arkansas and to play soccer with the Razorbacks from 2006-2010. There, she excelled academically and athletically. Paulsen earned Southeastern Conference and UA academic honor roll accolades and played in all 77 UA games as a midfielder, starting 59 times. A sharp scholar and accomplished athlete, Paulsen naturally demonstrates JBU’s “Head, Heart, Hand” educational philosophy which attracted her most to JBU. “When I came to my interview [at JBU] and started explaining my dream for coaching — the idea of discipleship
and faith involved with athletics — I started to realize, I actually think JBU is a place where I could do this,” said Paulsen. “I could live this dream and vision out in the way I would desire, whether that’s going on mission trips or having Bible studies, whatever it might be.” Paulsen incorporates her past experiences as an athlete into her coaching and teaching. For her, it’s all about the why, both in the classroom and on the field. “Especially in athletics, you’ve been told to do things your entire life, but you don’t know why,” Paulsen said. “When you can learn the why behind what it means, what it does, why you’re doing it and how your body is responding, you become a lot more passionate about what you’re doing.” Paulson also leverages her education to optimize her coaching strategies. In spring 2020, Paulsen earned her doctorate in health, sport and exercise science. Her dissertation covered sports performance with the use of heart monitors and GPS, which Paulsen mentioned is helpful in knowing when to rest players. Committed to coaching, teaching and learning, Paulsen said the most challenging part of it all is living a balanced life. By recognizing this, Paulsen can give her players a healthy perspective on life, encouraging them not only in their athletics but in their social and spiritual lives as well. “At the end of the day, I don’t think soccer is the biggest deal in the world,” Paulsen said. “I wonder who people are when they walk out of the program more than what they accomplished here. Have they had moments throughout their time at John Brown where they have known and experienced God in a way that has shaped them for their life? That’s my prayer, my hope.” As for the future of the soccer program, Paulsen maintains the same vision she had coming into the program — “that our program continues to shape incredible women that walk out of here.” “I’m competitive, too,” Paulsen added when describing her goals for the soccer program. “I’d love to win a national championship. That’s always the aim, especially as a coach, but, if you can’t do it well, I don’t want to do it. I only want to do it the right way.” And the right way is exactly how the Golden Eagles seem to be headed in recent years. In 2020, they finished with the best winning percentage in program history with a 14-0-1 record (.967) and recorded the most wins in a single NAIA National Championships run in program history. The 2021 season produced a second-straight undefeated SAC regularseason title and SAC tournament title, and the Golden Eagles reached 18 wins for the third time under Paulsen’s tenure, qualifying for their fourth consecutive NAIA National Championships appearance.
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A Coach’s True Calling Goes
Beyond the Game BY ZOE ROSS ’23
Squeaking, screeching sneakers echo in the gymnasium as feet shuffle hurriedly across the wood floor. Hands try to block a pass, sneak in and grab the ball. The black-striped orange ball is everything, booming alongside the sneaker shrieks. The royal blue jerseys of JBU’s women’s basketball team fly across the court with strategy and purpose. Off to the side stands their leader – Coach Jeff Soderquist ’93. Since the second grade, Soderquist knew teaching was part of his calling, and in high school it became clear sports would be part of that calling in some capacity. He graduated from JBU intending to get a job teaching business at a high school along with a coaching position. However, God opened different doors, allowing him to work at JBU right away. Flash forward 25 years, and Soderquist, the winningest coach in JBU women’s basketball program history, has taken the team to the NAIA national tournament five times and officiated three of his players’ weddings. God slowly revealed to Soderquist his true calling through this journey, a calling that was beyond the game. When he took the position as head coach for women’s basketball, Soderquist figured it was a good way to build credibility to later coach men’s basketball. He saw the assignment as a
stepping stone, not somewhere he intended to stay. However, once he started, Soderquist reevaluated his purpose and plans. “One of the things I had to figure out was why I got into coaching? Was it just about the wins and losses or about impacting lives? And about year six, I realized it’s not just about winning and losing,” he said. Soderquist admits to being a competitive person, but if coaching had only been about winning and losing, he said he probably would have left — losing is hard. But even more significant than winning games is watching people grow. “I don’t think there’s a bigger four-year maturity span than an 18-to-22-year-old, and I get to be a part of that every day,” he said. “Even professors can’t say that they’re with [their students] every day. You’ve left mom and dad but you’re not in the real world, you’re in this transition. And so that’s where God has really … changed me. That it’s about impacting lives, right there.” The transitional college years can be an incredibly vulnerable place, full of trials, broken hearts and often physical and emotional exhaustion. Student-athletes add the challenge of their team commitments to an already heavy load.
“I think what a lot of people on campus don’t know is being a student-athlete is hard,” Soderquist said. “You sacrifice a lot of other time you have. Learning how to balance that, all the stuff we put on them in the basketball program and keeping up with their academics, all those things.” He witnesses his players’ struggles, accomplishments and growth through many ups and downs. Soderquist has the unique ability to gently impact them with his instruction, insight and fatherly care. Maddie Altman, a graduate student basketball player, is grateful for her relationship with Coach Soderquist, a key mentor in her life. “My time here at JBU would not be the same without Coach Soderquist,” she said. “He has impacted my life both on and off the court by caring not only about my basketball performance but also my development as a person and, even more so, my walk with Christ.” Soderquist has three key lessons he shares with his players: selflessness, perseverance and discipline. He defines discipline as “doing what has to be done, when it has to be done, to the best of your ability, every time.” “I try to preach this is not just about basketball. You can do this in every aspect of your life. I think it can lead to being very successful,” Soderquist explained. Soderquist believes through discipline and perseverance, one can go far in life, but it isn’t a godly life without selflessness. “I think anything that has to do with a team where you put the team above yourself — I think that’s biblical,” he said. “In Rick Warren’s book ‘The Purpose Driven Life,’ the first sentence says ‘It’s not about you,’ and that’s really team sports. It’s not about you; it’s about the team succeeding.” “Another thing I never thought I’d do is officiate three of my players’ weddings,” Soderquist said with a bright smile. “I remember Chelsea was the first one. She asked me, and I was like, ‘Uh … well, Chelsea, I don’t know.’ I found out I could become ordained. It’s a little easier today than it was in the past. It kind of started to snowball. Then Brooke asked me, then Ashley. That was quite an honor to do that. I don’t take that lightly.” Soderquist said he is right where God needs him to be, impacting his players through one of the most complex transitions in their life. College is full of struggles and growth, but Soderquist says it “teaches you that you can’t rely on yourself but rely on God.” “I’ve had chances to go back to the men’s side, but as I’ve gotten deeper into it, I feel like this has been my calling,” Soderquist said. The young women Soderquist has recruited to JBU in the last 25 years have been forever impacted by their coach. In between the shooting drills, sprinting exercises, scrimmages and competitions, they are growing their faith, discipline and perseverance thanks to God’s calling in Soderquist’s life.
FEATURE
Friendly Competition The Joy of Intramural and Club Sports BY GRACE LINDQUIST ’22
As students transition into college, their participation in athletics changes. Competition for spots on intercollegiate teams is extremely high, and some high school athletes decide they would rather have more time and energy to dedicate to other extracurricular opportunities. Fortunately at JBU, students have a lot of opportunities to participate in club sports or intramurals. JBU is home to five club sports that compete against other college club teams: ultimate frisbee, rugby, shooting sports, baseball, and the newest addition in 2021, esports, a coed club sport with 13 players. Club athletes experience many of the same aspects of being a part of a university sport as varsity athletes – including leadership positions, competition, the dedication of their time, and most impactfully, being a part of a team environment. Seth Eben, senior electrical engineering major, is one of the co-founders and the captain of the club baseball team, the JBU Talons. Eben nearly attended another Christian university to play baseball but ultimately decided he wanted to be at JBU more than he wanted to play baseball at the intercollegiate level. Eben played other club sports during his freshman year, but he recognized interest in others in starting a baseball team at JBU. In the summer of 2019, Eben and Jack Stockton ’21 wrote the constitution, recruited athletes and petitioned the university for club approval. Unfortunately, the Friday before the team’s first game was when JBU sent students home due to COVID-19, so the Talons didn’t get to play any games that spring. Finally, a year later, they joined the National Club Baseball Association and had their first home games in March 2021 where over 100 people attended to watch their home opener. Later in the season, they went on to win against the University of Arkansas and Missouri University of Science and Technology.
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The baseball team practices twice a week through the year, with their hours ramping up during their spring season. “We usually play a game on Friday and two games on Saturday, and that’s the most time commitment because it will be about eight hours of playing baseball,” Eben said. Their home series against Missouri S&T was Eben’s favorite team memory so far. The team bonded as they tarped the field in the rain and moved the games back to the evening, ultimately wrapping up at 11:30 p.m. They won that game in an epic walk-off hit by Stockton. “I have learned a lot about patience and about different styles of leadership and ways to approach each player,” Eben said. “Commitment levels of players can wane and grow depending on seasons, and club sports might not be the most important thing in people’s lives sometimes. But for me, this team is one of my biggest commitments. I love playing with this team, and I love playing baseball; so it’s about learning when to be patient and understanding and learning when to push them.” Loraine Ferrin, junior digital cinema major, is a dedicated member of the women’s ultimate frisbee team, also known as “Savage Skies.” The club team is one of the reasons she decided to attend JBU. During a tournament in the fall 2021 semester, the Savage Skies won five out of six games, despite a low number of members. “I’ve never seen a group of girls give it all on the field and still have a great attitude,” she said. “It was hot. We were tired, but I think for the first time, I learned not only what it’s like to have a team but to love that team.” Ferrin said at the first practice, everyone was so welcoming and friendly. She could see that everyone cared for and loved one another, on and off the field. “It’s such genuine love that makes you work so hard every single practice and tournament because you see how hard
everyone else is working,” Ferrin said. “But it’s also a love that makes you care for one another physically, emotionally and spiritually. This might sound cheesy, but it truly is not just a team; it’s a family.” This season, the women’s team has seen some low numbers, but they were able to join the men’s team and continue to compete in tournaments. “They [the men’s team] have been so awesome and welcoming to us. It’s definitely been a little challenging, because most of us were so used to playing against girls, but everyone has been so good about working together,” Ferrin said. “We all help each other, give each other tips and keep each other accountable. It’s amazing to see how well we work together, and while there’s still a lot we need to figure out, I’m so confident that with time, we’ll get there.” On April 2, “Iron Skies,” the combined name of the men’s and women’s ultimate teams, went undefeated at the Dust Bowl Tournament in Tulsa, Oklahoma. “For this to be our second tournament playing all together and to win the whole thing is so impressive,” Ferrin said. “I’m
so extremely proud of everyone for giving it their best but also so thankful that God is giving us the physical and mental strength to play so well.” Joe Oliver, junior outdoor leadership and entrepreneurship double-major, is the men’s rugby captain. He joined the rugby team nearly as soon as he arrived on campus his freshman year after hearing about how the team felt like a brotherhood. The team’s goal is to bring men together to honor the Lord through playing rugby — an aspiration that has been passed down through the years. He said some of his highlights have been spending time as a team off the field, having cookouts together and being intentional about getting to know each other. “On the field this spring, we beat the University of Arkansas. It was exciting that all of our starters were healthy and were able to compete and win against an elite team,” he said. Oliver has learned two big lessons by being on and leading the team. “Once you are there, you have to be fully there. Rugby is not a sport you can put 60% in, because you will get injured,”
“It was hot. We were tired, but I think for the first time, I learned not only what it’s like to have a team but to love that team.”
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Oliver said. “Second, when you’re in a game, you are always fighting for your brother next to you, which encourages responsibility, and you know that the person next to you has your back.” Fiona Stoll, junior nursing major, loved her time on the women’s rugby team, as it centered itself around Christ which she said made practice so much more enjoyable. She said the team took time to get to know each other and build friendships that last in a safe environment to make mistakes and learn new skills while also having a lot of fun. “I learned not only a lot about rugby itself but also how to be a better team player,” she said. “I learned how to be happy for people when they are doing well and how to be there for people when they were having a difficult time. I learned that it takes every member of the team to win and that we need to encourage and build each other up in order to succeed.” Stoll said since it was a club sport, new members would join at random with experience ranging from newbie to pro. This meant the team needed to be patient with one another as they learned how to perform the skills and flow as a team, which, she reports, was a very humbling experience. Stoll had the opportunity to go to two matches where she said they were intense and even dangerous at times, but that’s the beauty of the sport. “There was never any anger or hatred toward the other teams, just a real fear that you might break a bone that day,” Stoll said. “Both sides would celebrate together after the games which really emphasized the community aspect of the sport. Sadly, we lost both matches, but we learned a lot and have since become better players.”
Women’s rugby debuted in fall 2015 and has won decisive victories, including a Mid-America Rugby Football Union DII Regional Championship and a deep run in the national playoffs in 2019. With COVID-19 restrictions, interest dwindled for a time; and the team hasn’t competed since 2020, but there is a growing movement to bring it back. Makayla Woods, senior mathematics major, joined the shooting club during her freshman year after a lifelong interest in shooting firearms. Coming into college, she had never participated in an organized game of trap or skeet, so she enjoyed the games and learned a lot about teamwork and the importance of trusting and relying on other people. Woods helps run the team and says she couldn’t do so successfully without the help of their faculty sponsor Mark Terrill and club Vice President Patrick Simpson, a junior mechanical engineering major. The Shooting Sports club was established in 2015 after a few construction management students wanted to help other students learn more about gun safety and operation. Safety is a top priority for the team, along with skill-building. Regular practices are two hours long on Fridays, but a leadership position requires more of a time commitment, including planning, buying supplies and scheduling. “Now, members of the team compete against each other in games of skeet, trap and timed pistol shooting among other things,” Woods said. “Every Friday, we go out to New Life Ranch and have practice and compete against each other to sharpen our skills. For me, it’s fairly easy to make time for the team because it’s something that I am passionate about. Intramurals also provide a popular outlet for students,
and even faculty, to be active and compete with friends and roommates. The sports are organized into smaller seasons, typically a few weeks long and often set up as leagues, with the final matchup drawing a crowd of students. The leaders of intramurals believe there is something for everyone, including the ability for students to name their own team and win bragging rights. This year’s intramural sports included basketball, coed volleyball, soccer, pickleball, coed dodgeball, flag football, indoor soccer, sand volleyball, coed softball and spikeball. Annalysa Watts, junior psychology major, has always loved volleyball and has been playing intramural volleyball and sand volleyball since she set foot on campus as a freshman. She said she loves the competition and the camaraderie, as it emphasizes team work but at the same time, highlights individual skills. “As a team, we challenge each other and encourage one another. It also serves as a stress reliever for me from the physical exercise aspect — it increases the production of endorphins which results normally in a positive mood,” Watts said. “It’s fun to push yourself and improve performance. It’s also just a fun activity to play with your friends and spend time together outside or inside. That’s where I have met a lot of my friends.” Watts believes that students value intramurals so much because it gives them an opportunity to play a sport they normally wouldn’t out of fear of being judged for their performance. Students also get the chance to be a part of a team, meet new people and be active. Hannah Holden, junior marketing and management major,
decided to become one of the coordinators for intramurals during COVID-19 when many campus activities were restricted. According to Holden, intramurals bring people together to create memories and meet new people through various sports. She said sports have always brought a lot of joy into her life, and she wanted to create that same feeling for the students at JBU. “We introduced the Presidential Pickleball Invitational into the intramural program, hosting it on the outdoor tennis courts to accommodate COVID-19 restrictions,” Holden said. “This new addition had a large turnout of both students and faculty, and it was such a fun experience being able to bring people together in the midst of a season where that was nearly impossible.” When asked why so many JBU students play intramurals year after year, Holden said intramurals are a fun way for students to spend time with their friends and participate in the sports that they enjoy, whether they played in high school or not. Whether it’s club sports or intramurals, these activities are important facets of student life at JBU. These sports bring students together to foster community, get active, build skills and honor God through it all.
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MIKE CAMPBELL ’95 (RIGHT)
TIME WELL SPENT: HOW ATHLETICS PREPARED ALUMNI FOR CAREERS BY WILLIAM NEWTON ’23
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any JBU alumni carried the discipline and experiences they acquired as a college athlete into their respective careers following graduation, whether in an athletic-related career or a position entirely separate from sports. Although every sport differs, the lessons learned – mentally, physically and spiritually – affected how alumni tackled challenges as students and now as professionals. Mike Campbell ’95, JBU head tennis coach and former JBU tennis player, has planted himself in several different areas that are connected to his time as a student-athlete. He runs a nonprofit working in leadership and discipleship strategy for individuals, churches and ministries around the country. He also works with a number of churches as a teaching pastor while coaching tennis part time at JBU. His different interests are all centered around pouring into people. Campbell’s time as a student significantly impacted his career path once he became engulfed in the spiritual life found at the core of JBU. “I gave my life to Christ while I was at JBU, and that definitely prepared me for a life in ministry, which is not something I ever really expected,” Campbell said. “[During] my time at JBU, I met my wife, and JBU was one of the first times that people believed in me from a ministry and
service aspect.” Campbell said JBU allowed him to serve as the chaplain’s assistant, lead his major’s club, serve as the president of his senior class and be a part of athletics as an all-conference athlete. “After beginning a relationship with Jesus, those last two years were catalysts to my professional career, which started in the business marketplace and ended up in the church setting and now has me doing a little bit of all of the above,” he said. Clark Sheehy ’98, head basketball coach at Southwest Baptist University and former JBU basketball player and head coach, said his time at JBU had a much greater influence on him than he ever would have realized. “I originally went to school with the idea that I would be in public relations or communications, and then being in athletics at the college level just really made me want to go into coaching and influence some of the players that we have the same way I was influenced,” Sheehy said. As he transitioned from high school to college basketball, Sheehy became a part of a community of truly skilled athletes. He said in high school it can be easy to think of oneself as the best player on the team, but at the collegiate level, everybody is on the same heightened level of athletic
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ability. This realization influenced him to work harder. Sheehy said he went from playing every minute in high school to not playing as much in the college games, forcing him to adapt to the bigger, faster and stronger pace of his new role as a JBU teammate. “I’ve never not started a game, and now I’m not starting. So it was very, very valuable for me to learn,” Sheehy said. “I need to take the things the coaches ask me to do and do those the best that I can, even if it’s not what I have done before. The ability to have enough character and resolve to play that well is one of the foundations of teamwork.” These skills also influenced his career as a college basketball coach, as he now shares this same mindset with his players. “Now as a coach, I am always trying to talk to our guys about the same things,” Sheehy said. “I am increasing their level that they are coming to, and now they understand this is what the team needs them to do. They need to do it with an awesome attitude and a great love for their teammates around them.
“I get to share my faith ... and I get to integrate it with everything I do – which is a real benefit of where I am and where I have been – especially being in the soccer program at JBU and seeing how faith integrates with sports.” By doing that, they learn that you will have more fun and will enjoy the journey so much more because you are pouring yourself into other people.” Sara Asbeck ’18, head soccer coach at St. Dominic Savio Catholic High School in Austin, Texas, and former JBU soccer player, knew coaching was in her future when she coached a soccer camp at JBU as a student. Right after graduation, Asbeck became the girls’ soccer coach at a high school, which led her to coaching at a private soccer academy until she found her current position at St. Dominic Savio teaching U.S. history and coaching soccer. Coming from a small high school, Asbeck fit right in with the tight-knit JBU community which attracted her to attend the university. “I loved JBU,” said Asbeck. “Really, the soccer program, Soccer Coach Kathleen Paulsen and the ideals that [the soccer program] stood for are what really drew me in.”
Asbeck is grateful that she now can teach soccer in a Christian setting. Since she teaches at a Catholic high school, Asbeck is able to combine her Christian faith with her coaching expertise, for which she credits JBU. “I get to share my faith with these students, and I get to integrate it with everything I do – which is a real benefit of where I am and where I have been – especially being in the soccer program at JBU and seeing how faith integrates with sports,” Asbeck said. JBU gave Asbeck a new perspective on teamwork. She said her teams before JBU didn’t make it a priority. She now looks forward to teaching those aspects of teamwork to her players at St. Dominic Savio. Similarly, Simeon Hinsey ’02, former JBU basketball player, credits much of his success to his experiences at JBU, helping him relate to the students he teaches and the athletes he now coaches. Prior to his current role as a teacher and basketball coach in the Springdale Public Schools, Hinsey served as sports information director and intramural director at JBU from 2006-2012 and then began working for the University of Arkansas women’s basketball program. After a time, Hinsey felt called to leave his position at the U of A to found the iYes Foundation with the mission of investing in the lives of young people in Northwest Arkansas and the Bahamas through education and sports. “I learned a lot more about the other side of being a student-athlete. I now understand all the things the coaches were trying to teach me and why it was so important. Being able to have those conversations with student-athletes in my league allowed me to reflect on my time as an athlete and say ‘I know exactly what you’re going through.’” Hinsey said. The teamwork learned as a JBU student-athlete also transfers to alumni working in nonathletic careers. Chelsea Miller ’12, second-grade teacher at Linda Childers Knapp Elementary School in Springdale, Arkansas, and former JBU basketball player, has a love for teaching that grew organically. Her mother was an English teacher which inspired her decision to pursue teaching, but she also grew up in a sports-loving family, which led her to playing basketball at JBU. Miller was offered full scholarships from several different universities but the athletic and academic benefits JBU had to offer won her commitment. “JBU has an excellent education program with supportive and encouraging professors. Being a student-athlete while in the education program taught me time management skills and prioritizing one’s education,” Miller said. “Knowing the quality education that JBU provides, I would’ve considered attending [the university] even if I had not been offered an athletic scholarship.” Miller credits the education program and its roster of
professors for her development into a teacher. Her internship as a student-teacher was a huge milestone, as she was able to apply all that she had learned from both the athletic department and the education department toward students in a real classroom. The relationship with her former team runs deep. Miller and her teammates have rotated through each other’s weddings and continue to stay in contact. She said the community found in a team doesn’t just exist on the court; it continues for years beyond graduation and makes being a student-athlete worth the commitment. Stephen Bos ’93, senior vice president of e-commerce at DaySpring Cards and former JBU soccer player, has continued his ties with JBU. It’s where he met his wife, Holly, and two of his children, daughter Annika Bos Pollard ’19 and son Jack ’22, played soccer. As a student, Bos was active on campus, playing soccer and rugby and participating in Students in Free Enterprise, now known as Enactus. “These experiences in particular — of working together — prepared me for my professional life, in church, in ministry work and other things where this idea of collaboration and coordination and service to one another applied,” Bos said. “These principles are foundational to how JBU approached the education and athletics process, and I am especially grateful for that. The process of learning how to learn and how to work together made me more prepared for life. I can see the success and collaboration skills in JBU students that we hire at DaySpring.” Besides cheering on his kids, including daughter Rin who plays soccer for Siloam Springs High School, Bos is still heavily involved with soccer in the community. He has coached several soccer teams of various age groups, working alongside others to nurture and build upon the soccer culture in Siloam Springs. One specific partnership was between JBU/Siloam Springs Futbol Club and the City of Siloam Springs to build the futsal court on the JBU campus in 2017 that continue to benefit the soccer-playing community in Siloam Springs. “One of the things that I really work hard at is trying to make opportunities [for people], specifically for young men in the local community who wouldn’t have the opportunity to play higher-level club soccer.” he said. “Former players and the Siloam Springs Fútbol club have helped allow boys to play. Some even went on to play collegiately through that program. More importantly, they were able to grow relationships and friendships.” No matter if it’s a postgraduation career in athletics or one outside of the sports industry, the time spent as a studentathlete at JBU develops valuable skills that are relevant long after the student leaves the playing surface.
CLARK SHEEHY ’98
SARA ASBECK ’18
SIMEON HINSEY ’02
CHELSEA MILLER ’12
STEPHEN BOS ’93 (CENTER)
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ALUMNI
Alumni Updates Jeff LeMaster ’05 was named chief of communications for the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage and Tourism. 01 Karis Trippe ’22 received the Distinguished Doctoral Fellowship from the University of Arkansas — the highest fellowship a doctoral student can receive at the U of A — in addition to scholarships from the college of engineering, covering all her tuition. 02 Libby Pratte ’21 is working for Uganda Christian University within the Uganda studies program. In addition she is part of a women’s rugby club team where she trains with some of East Africa’s finest players and coaches. 03 Nan Emery Anderson ’49 and Wil Anderson ’50 will celebrate their 75th anniversary on June 14. For 38 years of their marriage, the Andersons served as missionaries in Venezuela. They currently reside in Dubuque, Iowa, where they can be close to their nine grandsons and 11 great-grandchildren. 04
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Larissa Jordan ’07 graduated with her doctorate in speech & hearing science from the University of Iowa in December 2021. 05
Stephanie Howell ’93 is currently an advanced practice registered nurse through her accreditation from Maryville University. She attended Oklahoma State University for her RN and Southwestern Oklahoma State University for her Bachelor of Science in nursing. Amelia Dobbs Beall ’13 is executive vice president of operations at Lionheart Children’s Academy, a nonprofit, Christian organization based in Dallas-Fort Worth that is committed to excellence in early childhood education. 06 Caleb Grimm and his band members in Anthem Lights released a new, animated series on PureFlix called “A Show About Anthem Lights.” 07 Be featured in the Brown Bulletin! Submit your professional and family news to jbu.edu/alumni/magazine/news/.
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MILESTONES
Retirements JEAN N IE ABBOTT—22 YEARS
jeannie abbott
Jeannie Abbott has been at JBU since December 2000. Charles Peer and Dave Andrus hired her when the art department was on the third floor of the Cathedral with 30 students. Since that time, the department has grown with eight full-time faculty and 180 students. She has loved her interaction with the faculty and students and especially enjoyed organizing and going on European Art Tours. Her primary task has been to organize notoriously right-brained artists. Jeannie and her husband Steve have no plans to leave Northwest Arkansas as two of their sons and grandkids live in the area. They both love to travel and are looking forward to future ministry that the Lord will provide.
DIC K ELLIS—29 YEARS
dick ellis
Dick Ellis came to JBU in 1993 to start an adult degree completion program, which he named “The Advance Program.” In 2004, he became the dean of graduate and professional studies and later the dean of The Graduate School. He was the project director for the Title III grant that created JBU’s undergraduate online degree programs, which eventually became JBU Online. He completed his service to JBU as the dean of the college of education and social and behavioral sciences. In all his roles, Dick found joy in assisting others to be successful “on the front lines” while he worked behind the scenes. Dick and his wife Carol look forward to retirement in Northwest Arkansas, enjoying time with their grandchildren and attending student performances at the BPAC whenever possible.
JAN ET FERGUSON —41 YEARS
janet ferguson
Janet Ferguson started working in the library in August 1981 as a library clerk. A year or so after she started, she also became a part-time student. After a few years, her title changed to periodical coordinator. After she graduated from JBU, she was promoted to administrative database/ technical coordinator, then to library operation coordinator, the title she now carries into retirement. She also served as interim library director two different times – once in the fall semester of 2019 and then the full year of 2020-2021. After working 41 years, Janet said it is time to start new adventures. She wants to do a little more camping, some travel and spend more time with family. She is currently caring for her parents, so her retirement will allow her to be able to spend extra time with them and listen to stories of their lives to pass on to Janet’s nine grandchildren.
KAI TOGAM I—7 YEARS
kai togami
Kai Togami joined JBU in June 2015 as a professor of international business and the department head for graduate business programs after investing 25+ years in organization effectiveness and design for ServiceMaster, Neumann Homes and Walmart. In June 2017, he became the Sam Walton Fellow for JBU Enactus while continuing to teach. In his role as a Fellow, he served as advisor for Enactus and enjoyed seeing students collaborate to apply learning to sustainably benefit others. Kai’s students describe him as supportive, encouraging, patient, enthusiastic, wise, fun and always smiling. With kids and grandkids in Northwest Arkansas, Kai and his wife, Wendy, plan to stay in the area and stay connected to Siloam and JBU in particular.
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MILESTONES
In Memoriam Eugene Mark Alloway ’81, age 68, died Jan.14. (Business) 01 David Berthold ’82, age 61, died Jan. 10. (Electrical Engineering)
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Mark Brookhart ’77, age 67, died Feb. 6. (Psychology) 02
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William Herbert Burnside, age 88, died March 25. (Professor Emeritus) 03 Gladys Calloway ’53, age 92, died Dec 20. (Bible and Religious Education) 04 Beverly Anne Darling Collins ’57, age 87, died Nov. 25. (Radio Production) 05
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Christopher Coulter ’92, age 53, died Jan. 26. (Journalism) 06
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Edward Cowan ’07, age 62, died Feb. 13. (Ministry) 07 Dorothy Wasson Dick ’54, age 89, died Feb. 7. (Biblical Studies) 08 Miriam Stoll Feaster ’65, age 78, died Jan. 25. (Elementary Education) 09
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Richard Galli ’63, age 82, died Oct. 24. (Electrical Engineering) Duane Ghere ’73, age 76, died Feb. 4. (Building Construction and Design)
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Thomas “Tom” Hatfield ’12, age 58, died Dec. 11. (Organizational Mgmt.) 10 Charles “Bill” Helfrick ’71, age 74, died Feb. 14. (Business Administration). 11 Jerome “Skip” Hernandez ’72, age 74, died March 13. (Elementary Education). 12
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Larry Hines ’65, age 80, died Jan. 31. (Physical Education and Health) 13
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Liberty Hodges ’99, age 45, died Dec. 13. (Journalism and Bus. Admin.) 14 Robert Holden ’02, age 66, died Jan. 10. (Marriage and Family Therapy) Kay Williams Jackson ’99, age 78, died Nov. 14. (Psychology)
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Harry Ohlson ’69, age 75, died Feb. 2. (Biology)
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Angie Paulsen Phillips ’97, age 49, died Oct. 19. (Organizational Mgmt.) 15 William “Bill” Phillips ’73, age 75, died Feb. 1. (Mathematics Education) Mary Jane “Janie” Wheeler Read ’73, died Oct. 19. (Elementary Education)
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Dan Redmon ’79, age 64, died Jan. 28. (Broadcasting) Robert Rockwood ’56, age 87, died Nov. 12. (Radio Engineering)
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Carlos “Charlie” Rodriguez ’47, age 94, died Nov. 12. (Bldg. Construction Tech.) Emile Rousseau ’76, age 74, died Feb. 13. (Social Studies) Mary Angeline Williams Rowland ’44, age 99, died Oct. 25. (Music) 16
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Terri Smith Stricker ’74, age 72, died Dec. 10. (English)
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Dale Swiatek ’63, age 82, died Feb. 3. (Radio Production) Nellie Ball Taylor ’46, died Jan. 26. (Biblical Studies) Charles David Turley ’56, age 87, died Feb. 22. (Bible and Religious Education)
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Jackie Waldron ’79, age 64, died Jan. 27. (Physical Education and Health) Jim Walters, age 84, died Jan. 12. (Professor Emeritus) 17
17
Barry Washington ’79, age 64, died Oct. 19. (Physical Education and Health) Norma Jean Feemster Waterhouse ’54, age 92, died Nov. 3. 18 Randy Wolf ’57, age 87, died Jan. 8. (Aeronautical Engineering)
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Keith Worshman ’02, age 58, died Feb. 14. (Organizational Mgmt.) To read online obituaries, go to jbu.edu/bulletin/obits
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BROWN BULLETIN
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