Lady Flames win sixth straight
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‘I Pagliacci’ premieres
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Lynchburg, Virginia
Volume 32 | Issue 12 Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Teams serve around the globe
off to neverland
Students work overseas Quinn Foley qfoley@liberty.edu
Leah Seavers| Liberty Champion
During Christmas break, many students not only took a break from school but also from the comfort of their everyday lives to travel all over the globe. John, the director of global teams and a team leader whose last name is withheld for security purposes, said the Center for Global Engagement (CGE) sent out four teams over Christmas break on trips to Togo, the Middle East, South Asia and East Asia, with the purpose of sharing the love of Jesus. According to CGE’s website, all teams left Dec. 12, and trips varied from 12 to 14 days. John stressed the importance of global teams and the impact that they make. “During my seven years of working with CGE, I have seen God use the global teams over and over again, both in the lives of the students and team leaders, as well as in the lives of people in the various places where the teams serve,” John said. John stressed the significance of these trips for the students involved. “In my own experience with teams, I have observed God work in the lives of almost every student that has participated on a team to form Christ in them, to teach and grow them regarding his heart and plan for the world, to teach them that he is at work in even some of the most unreached corners of the world and to move them to lifeong-term ministry and help
BEGINNINGS — Professor Andrew Geffken takes a villainous turn as the Black Stache in the origin story of Peter Pan.
See GLOBAL, A6
Liberty mourns professor Sharon Hähnlen, who battled cancer for five years, remembered for service Josh Janney jjanney@liberty.edu
After years of fighting cancer, Liberty University Professor Dr. Sharon Hähnlen died Saturday, Dec. 6 at the age of 69. Sharon Hähnlen was born in Indiana and received a bachelor’s degree in modern language from Iowa State University. She was married to Rev. Dr. Lee W. Hähnlen, who was a former professor of church history and philosophy at Liberty University and a pastor at the historic Hat Creek Presbyterian Church. She came to Lynchburg in 1980 and had been with Liberty for 35 years. She taught various languages for the Department of English and Modern Languages and was an adjunct faculty member for the School of Education. Sharon Hähnlen is survived by her son Joshua Hähnlen, 38. Her husband Lee Hähnlen died three
months earlier in September at the age of 72. Her daughter Amanda Hähnlen, who was a student at Liberty University, died in 2001 as the result of a brain tumor. Joshua Hähnlen remembers his mother as one who would work her hardest to prepare her children for the future. “(My parents would) bend over backwards to make sure we had everything we needed as kids,” Joshua Hähnlen said. “We had a very Christian household to grow up in. Very, very high expectations.” Former Liberty professor and founder of the Liberty Champion Ann Wharton had known Sharon Hähnlen and her husband since the late ’70s. “(My husband) and I met for years on Saturday mornings at the Golden Corral at breakfast with them,” Wharton said. “So we just had years worth of friendship that grew, and we
became closer and closer. She cared deeply about teaching.” According to Wharton, Sharon Hähnlen loved traveling overseas, collecting items that could be used to teach, researching history and her family background and doing what she could to support her husband’s congregation. She spoke French, German and English. “She took excellent care of Lee, who was handicapped from birth,” Wharton said. “And she took on more than she should have. If someone asked her to take something on academically, she’d do it. She taught overloads. She advised student teachers. She was always willing to do one more thing. She was on all kinds of committees. She just gave and gave and gave and gave.” Her legacy at Liberty includes helping to establish the Department of English and Modern Languages, working to have
courses added, working to establish the teaching major and helping the school gain accreditation. Professor of Communication Studies Dr. Cecil Kramer largely credits Sharon Hähnlen for fighting to keep the foreign language program during the early stages of its development. “She certainly kept the foreign language program before our eyes,” Kramer said. “She saw the value and the importance of it and (over time), it continued to grow.” Wharton loved having her at the school, describing Sharon Hähnlen as blunt, but also cheerful and supportive. “She was always there,” Wharton said. “We always were friendly. I don’t really remember an angry word or disagreement. So I guess you could say we were tolerant ofeach other’s weaknesses.” Before her death in 2014, Sharon Hähnlen had previously
New Center for Apologetics and Cultural Engagement opens.
Opinion A3
Controversy arises over the lack of concern for 2,000 Nigerian deaths. A4
struggled a cancer turn rate She went treatment.
with bladder cancer, with the highest rein women, in 2009. into remission after
See HAHNLEN, A2
Sports
Feature
News Opinion
Flames Division I hockey wins 7-3 against Rochester. B1
Department of Theatre Arts preparing to produce a new radio drama. B6
Sports Feature
INSIDE THE CHAMPION
News
HAHNLEN
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