The Echo: October 4, 1996

4
Inside This Issue PALNI updates 2 Leadership symposium 2 ^ "From the ugly green couch" 3 Interterm trips 3 This week in sports 4 Leadership series- Dr. Chip Jaggers, former vice president of university relations, speaks on the quali- ties necessary to be a Chris- tian leader THE ECHO Taylor University Upland, Indiana 1846*1996 October 4, 1996 National and International News Mark Fuhrman pleaded no contest to perjury Wednesday for denying at O.J. Simpson's trial that he had used racial slurs in the past decade. He was given three years' probation and fined $200. Yasser Arafat and Benjamin Netanyahu ended their Washing- ton summit in failure. Arafat and the Palestinians had wanted the Washington talks, held earlier in the week, to produce a target date for for Israel to withdraw troops from Hebron. Israel was to have withdrawn forces from 85% of the city by March and has not done so. A Peruvian plane slammed into the frigid Pacific Ocean on Wednesday. All 70 passengers and crew were believed killed. The plane was carrying four Americans. Republican gubernatorial candidate Stephen Goldsmith said Wednesday he will pull his negative campaign ads within 2 hours if he can reach an agree- ment with Frank O'Bannon, his Democratic opponent in Indiana's gubernatorial race. Campus Calendar Friday, October 4 <0- SAC Coffeehouse: "Paperman Jake" 8:15 p.m. Student Union Saturday, October 5 Social Work Craft Show •<> SAC Barney's Race 11:00 a.m. Barney's Place Wednesday, October 9 Diversity/Education Symposium 12 p.m. Heri tage Room *0> SAC Movie: "Dangerous Minds" 8:15 p.m. Recital Hall compiled by Amy Meyering Pageant to be broadcast live world wide by Deonne Beron editor and Janyre Stockinger features editor Plans are now in place for a "live" World Wide Web broadcast of the Sesquicentennial Pageant. The broadcast will make audio feed from the pageant available via computer in a manner roughly like a radio format. "What this means is that any- one from any place in the world will be able to access our Web page and listen to the pageant as it is happening. It will be just like lis- tening to a program on the radio," Angela Angelovska, webmaster and electronic publications editor. The pageant, scheduled for Oct. 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Odle Gym- nasium, can also be heard through the Internet at http:// www.tayloru.edu/homecoming. Among the activities scheduled for the pageant are processional, spe- cially commissioned music, spe- cial guests, and an address from President Kesler. Access to the broadcast will re- quire a 14.4 modem or higher, the RealAudio™ player which works with w e b browsers such as Netscape and a sound card, according Christo- p h e r Tromp, a marketing intern with Gospel Communication Network and senior at Taylor. People visiting the site can ex- pect a maximum of five minutes delay time, according to Angelovska. In terms of the time it takes for current technology to process the audio, she said, the broadcast is considered "real- time" coverage. The campus radio station, WTUR, will be helping to set up all the audio technology for the broadcast. According to Angdovska, the mi- c r o - phones at the event will pick up the sound and then transfer it to the ra- dio sta- t i o n where it will be encoded and sent on to Gospel Communication Network's RealAudio™ servers. The broadcast will then be acces- sible to alumni through a link on Taylor's home page to Gospel Communication Network (GCN). According to Tromp, GCN, lo- cated in Muskegon Mich., has over 30,000 users accessing its web pages each day. The event employs the coop- eration of a variety of technologies, and is a relatively new event in its field, according to Angelovska. "[The challenge for me is] get- ting all the details together. We've never done it. GCN has never done it. We don't know what to expect," said Angelovska. She also said she thinks that Taylor may be one of the first colleges to attempt such a broadcast over the web. "We are really excited about this venture and are praying that everything will be ready in time. We don't want this to take the place of alumni returning to campus, but we hope to open up homecoming to those who cannot return. After all, we're part of the same Taylor family," Donna Downs, director of university relations, said. Gospel Communication Network's web site is located at http://www.gospelcom.net RealAudio™'s web site can be found http://www.realaudio.com Students get chance to participate in community service by Deonne Beron editor Small groups of students will spend tomorrow morning taking part in a variety of community service projects as part of Com- munity Outreach Day. According to Jill Graper, community outreach co-director, the day is intended to allow Tay- lor students an opportunity to give back to the community around them. "It's basically an opportunity for Taylor students and faculty to lend a hand and show the town of Upland that we love them because they've given a lot to Taylor." Graper said she realizes that in the past, community opinion of students may not have been all that positive, but that's something that she hopes tomorrow's activi- ties will help reverse. "It's not huge. It's not life- changing. But I think it is chang- ing the way the community views Taylor, and I think that's very posi- tive," said Graper. Graper estimates that about 75 people are currently signed up for the project. Graper and co-director Ross Davidson wrote churches through- out Grant County asking for their ideas on areas of service. Re- sponse to the letter was not very large, and Graper attributes that to the possibility that fall hasn't re- ally set yet in people's minds. courtesy photo GIVE AND TAKE- Last year, students helped out with such tasks as raking lawns during Community Outreach Day. In previous years, Community Outreach Day has occurred later in the fall semester, allowing the presence of cooler weather to re- mind people about tasks to be ac- complished before winter. Students and faculty are still welcome to join the groups going out tomorrow. Those who have al- ready signed up for the day will receive breakfast before the day gets under way at 9 a.m.

Transcript of The Echo: October 4, 1996

Page 1: The Echo: October 4, 1996

Inside This Issue

PALNI updates 2 Leadership symposium 2

^ "From the ugly green couch" 3 Interterm trips 3 This week in sports 4

Leadership series-Dr. Chip Jaggers, former

vice president of university relations, speaks on the quali­ties necessary to be a Chris­tian leader

THE ECHO Taylor University Upland, Indiana

1846*1996

October 4, 1996

National and

International News

• Mark Fuhrman pleaded no contest to perjury Wednesday for denying at O.J. Simpson's trial that he had used racial slurs in the past decade. He was given three years' probation and fined $200.

• Yasser Arafat and Benjamin Netanyahu ended their Washing­ton summit in failure. Arafat and the Palestinians had wanted the Washington talks, held earlier in the week, to produce a target date for for Israel to withdraw troops from Hebron. Israel was to have withdrawn forces from 85% of the city by March and has not done so.

• A Peruvian plane slammed into the frigid Pacific Ocean on Wednesday. All 70 passengers and crew were believed killed. The plane was carrying four Americans.

• Republican gubernatorial candidate Stephen Goldsmith said Wednesday he will pull his negative campaign ads within 2 hours if he can reach an agree­ment with Frank O'Bannon, his Democratic opponent in Indiana's gubernatorial race.

Campus Calendar

Friday, October 4 <0- SAC Coffeehouse:

"Paperman Jake" 8:15 p.m. Student Union

Saturday, October 5 • Social Work Craft Show •<> SAC Barney's Race

11:00 a.m. Barney's Place

Wednesday, October 9 • Diversity/Education

Symposium 12 p.m. Heri tage Room

*0> SAC Movie: "Dangerous Minds" 8:15 p.m. Recital Hall

compiled by Amy Meyering

Pageant to be broadcast live world wide by Deonne Beron editor and Janyre Stockinger features editor

Plans are now in place for a "live" World Wide Web broadcast of the Sesquicentennial Pageant. The broadcast will make audio feed from the pageant available via computer in a manner roughly like a radio format.

"What this means is that any­one from any place in the world will be able to access our Web page and listen to the pageant as it is happening. It will be just like lis­tening to a program on the radio," Angela Angelovska, webmaster and electronic publications editor.

The pageant, scheduled for Oct. 26 at 7:30 p.m. in Odle Gym­nasium, can also be heard through the Internet at http:// www.tayloru.edu/homecoming. Among the activities scheduled for the pageant are processional, spe­cially commissioned music, spe­

cial guests, and an address from President Kesler.

Access to the broadcast will re­quire a 14.4 modem or higher, the RealAudio™ p l a y e r w h i c h works with w e b browsers such as Netscape and a sound card, according Christo-p h e r Tromp, a marketing intern with Gospel Communication Network and senior at Taylor.

People visiting the site can ex­pect a maximum of five minutes delay time, according to Angelovska. In terms of the time it takes for current technology to process the audio, she said, the broadcast is considered "real­time" coverage.

The campus radio station, WTUR, will be helping to set up all the audio technology for the broadcast. According to

Angdovska, the mi-c r o -phones at the event will pick up the s o u n d and then transfer it to the ra­dio sta-t i o n

where it will be encoded and sent on to Gospel Communication Network's RealAudio™ servers. The broadcast will then be acces­sible to alumni through a link on Taylor's home page to Gospel Communication Network (GCN).

According to Tromp, GCN, lo­cated in Muskegon Mich., has over 30,000 users accessing its web pages each day.

The event employs the coop­eration of a variety of technologies, and is a relatively new event in its field, according to Angelovska.

"[The challenge for me is] get­ting all the details together. We've never done it. GCN has never done it. We don't know what to expect," said Angelovska. She also said she thinks that Taylor may be one of the first colleges to attempt such a broadcast over the web.

"We are really excited about this venture and are praying that everything will be ready in time. We don't want this to take the place of alumni returning to campus, but we hope to open up homecoming to those who cannot return. After all, we're part of the same Taylor family," Donna Downs, director of university relations, said.

Gospel Communication Network's web site is located at http://www.gospelcom.net RealAudio™'s web site can be found http://www.realaudio.com

Students get chance to participate in community service

by Deonne Beron editor

Small groups of students will spend tomorrow morning taking part in a variety of community service projects as part of Com­munity Outreach Day.

According to Jill Graper, community outreach co-director, the day is intended to allow Tay­lor students an opportunity to give back to the community around them. "It's basically an opportunity for Taylor students and faculty to lend a hand and show the town of Upland that we love them because they've given a lot to Taylor."

Graper said she realizes that in the past, community opinion

of students may not have been all that positive, but that's something that she hopes tomorrow's activi­ties will help reverse.

"It's not huge. It's not life-changing. But I think it is chang­ing the way the community views Taylor, and I think that's very posi­tive," said Graper.

Graper estimates that about 75 people are currently signed up for the project.

Graper and co-director Ross Davidson wrote churches through­out Grant County asking for their ideas on areas of service. Re­sponse to the letter was not very large, and Graper attributes that to the possibility that fall hasn't re­ally set yet in people's minds.

courtesy photo

GIVE AND TAKE- Last year, students helped out with such tasks as raking lawns during Community Outreach Day.

In previous years, Community Outreach Day has occurred later in the fall semester, allowing the presence of cooler weather to re­mind people about tasks to be ac­complished before winter.

Students and faculty are still welcome to join the groups going out tomorrow. Those who have al­ready signed up for the day will receive breakfast before the day gets under way at 9 a.m.

Page 2: The Echo: October 4, 1996

The Echo ••• October 4,1996

Series teaches leadership qualities NEWS

Students discuss Hispanic issues by Rebekah Reese associate editor

The Leadership Symposium Series offers students a chance to hear speakers talk about what should be on the inside of a leader . The theme for this year's Lead­ership Symposium Series is "In­side Out." In other words, accord­ing to Cheryl Vander Ploeg, vice president of leadership services, leadership is often looked at as something of an outward thing. However, when you work to make the inside better, the outside natu­rally becomes better and one can be a better example to follow.

The speakers are to base their presentations on the theme "In­side Out" and should focus on the inner, personal qualities of leader­ship rather than the outward as­pects.

The series is stretched out over a seven-week period beginning Sept. 10 and ending Oct. 22. The sessions are held every Tuesday from 5:00 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. Upcoming speakers include: Toni Barnes, director of enrichment ser­vices; Norman Y atooma, the 1993 student body president; and Dr. Jay Kesler, president of Taylor University.

Periodicals added to PALNI holdings list by Amy Meyering campus editor

Researching for that big project just got easier, thanks to the Pri­vate Academic Library Network of Indiana (PALNI).

Starting in April and through­out the summer, Jennifer Little, librarian for public services, Laurie Wolcott, technical services librar­ian, and Marsha Becker, secretary for Zondervan Library, entered all the periodicals the library has into the PALNI system. The three at­tended training sessions in India­napolis to prepare for the task.

PALNI is a network that links 26 college libraries across the state of Indiana, including Taylor Uni­versity, Indiana Weslyan Univer­sity, and Huntington College. It allows library users to find the materials they need at any of these libraries. Those materials can be ordered through interlibrary loan if they library they are using doesn' t have them.

Until this summer, PALNI did not include periodicals in its cata­log.

"This means that when you do a subject search, like education for example, it will come up with books, videos, and now periodi­cals that you can use on the sub­ject of education. It will give the title and the date of the periodical so you can look up your subject in it," said Little.

To further help students search­ing for material, the PALNI sys­tem allows a user to limit the search. This is done by choosing the subject, then typing the word "periodical" and then a question mark, said Little.

All back issues of periodicals that Zondervan Library currently receives are in the system. It is updated as soon as a new issue of a periodical comes in and can tell a user when the next issue is ex­pected, based on when previous issues have arrived.

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HISPANIC LIFE- Senior Caleb about their cutlure and heritage

by Andrea Anibal staff writer

Seven Taylor students partici­pated in a panel Tuesday night to discuss Hispanic issues and answer questions about their ethnic back­ground.

The panel consisted of the fol­lowing students: freshmen David Martinez and Joanna Castro, sophomores Evelyn Aponte and Joel Whitney, junior Rico Evans, and seniors Caleb Mitchell and Juan Cora. Beatrice Moreno, Olson Hall Director, served as fa­cilitator.

opics of discussion ranged from the lack of Hispanic role models to passing Hispanic heri­tage on to children. According to

photo oy /\nay Boon

Mitchell and other Hispanic students talk with students in a panel meeting held Tuesday evening in the Recital Hall.

Aponte, who is Puerto Rican but that you're a minority. If you want lives in Michigan, "Growing up in the states doesn't mean you have to separate from your heri­tage. I would have been upset with my parents if they hadn't taught me [about my back­ground]."

Most members of the panel agreed that being at college has been an eye-opening experience in regard to their minority status. According to Whitney, even though it may not be intentional, "People make a lot of uneducated comments. They just don't un­derstand the culture."

The panel also discussed the issue of Hispanics as an "invis­ible minority." "Because there are so many different colors, people don't take as much notice

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to be, [you can become] invisible," Cora said.

Toni Barnes, Director of En­richment Services, doesn't want the 28 Hispanic students on Taylor's campus to become invisible. She and the Hispanic Awareness Month Committee are organizing events such as these not only to educate the majority, but also to promote unity among the minority groups on campus.

According to Barnes, "There is a need for these students to make themselves aware of how to share this culture with others. We.ace.not. trying to create dichotomies around this campus. What we are inter­ested in is promoting group cohe­sion so that those groups can go out and share with the rest of the cam­pus."

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Editor Associate Editor Campus Editor Features Editor Sports Editor Photography Editor Advertising Managei

THE ECHO 1996-1997

Deonne Beron Rebekah Reese

Amy Meyering JanyreStockinger

Kevin Anselmo Andy Roon

Lydia Wicker Mike Brown

Laurel Gnagey Dale Jackson

Business Manager Editorial Adviser Financial Adviser

3ublished weekly since 1913 September through May, except for ixam week and school holidays. Guest tolumns and letters do not necessarily eflect the position of the editor or Taylor Jniversity. All letters, questions or :omments may be addressed to The Echo. Taylor University, 500 W. Reade !We., Upland, IN 46989-1001. Offices are located in the Rupp ommunications Center (317-998

5359). Member of the Associated ollegiate Press. The Echo is printed

>y the Fairmount News-Sun in zairmount, Ind.

Page 3: The Echo: October 4, 1996

FEATURES October 4,1996 +•+ The Echo

Interterm trips offer overseas sights by Rebekah Reese associate editor

London, Jerusalem and Athens are just some of the places students can travel to while earning credit for Taylor classes during January interterm. Literary London, the Israel and Greece Study Tour, Eu­ropean Business Study Tour, and the Oxford Studies Program.

While on the Literary London trip, students will have the oppor­tunity to understand English cul­ture in more depth. Visiting the British Museum, the many art gal­leries and concert halls, and going to London theater productions can give the student insight into an­other culture, said Dr. Beulah Baker, professor of English. Also, the students on the tour read the works of English writers and then visit the places where the writers lived and worked.

The trip focuses on London, but the travelers also make day trips. Some of the places these day trips have visited are: Stratford-upon-Avon, where Shakespeare lived; the university towns of Ox­ford and Cambridge; and Stonehenge, the stone formation

whose origins still remain a mys­tery.

Students may receive four hours of literature and cross cul­tural credits for general require­ments, and English majors and minors may count this course as a literature elective. The trip runs from Jan. 1 until Jan. 30. Contact Baker at x85329 before Oct. 15 for more details.

Dr. Alan Winquist, professor of history, and Dr. Robert Pitts, pro­fessor of Biblical studies, are lead­ing the trip to Israel and Greece. Students will be able to visit many of the historic sites mentioned in the Bible: Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nazareth and the Sea of Galilee in Israel; Athens, Thessaloniki, Phillipi, and Corinth in Greece.

Jerusalem and Athens are where the bedrock of western civi­lization was laid, according to Winquist. Jerusalem is where many of our religious roots lie, and from Athens comes the rational, individualist aspect of western cul­ture.

Students can take the trip for credits in history, Biblical litera­ture, and cross cultural credit. The trip begins on Jan. 1 and ends on

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On the European Business Study Tour, students will visit the countries of Switzerland, Ger­many, France, Belgium, Holland, and England. The goal of the trip is to study the European Union and the many cultural and economic factors that are a part of it.

The class will look at the his­tory of Europe and how difficult it is for the European Union to come together, said Christopher Bennett, associate professor of business and organizer of the trip.

In each country, there are two main questions the group will be asking: what's the same here as compared to the United States, and what's different? "We always ask speakers what problems they have with Americans," said Bennett.

Some of the places the group will visit while in Europe are the Greater Europe Mission, the Dachau concentration camp, and business-related areas such as Mercedes Benz and the Bank of England.

The trip is offered with four credit hours as either a general edu­cation cross cultural credit, a busi­ness elective, or an international business cross cultural credit. Stu­dents will be in Europe from Jan. 3 until Jan. 29. If anyone is still interested in going on the trip, call Bennett at x85137 as soon as pos­sible, because there are very few openings left.

Also offered during interterm is the Oxford Study Program. Tay­lor students have the opportunity to study at Oxford University in England for four weeks. At Ox­ford, students receive personal tu­tor sessions with a don (professor) at Oxford. At this time, all the positions in the Oxford trip are full.

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It was Thursday night (or Fri-iay morning depending on your riew), did you know where your Echo staff was? If you are any-hing like me (no wise cracks jlease), until I became an official •nember of The Echo staff I had no dea what it took to actually put out i paper. So, come with me and jxperience a Thursday night with The Echo staff.

Dateline: 6 p.m. Sept. 26

It started as i quiet evening n The Echo of­fice. Our third ssue, finally a Four pager, was well on its way.

My fellow >taff members md I happily scanned the scads of articles tinned to the 'to be read" joard.

Having just eturned from iinner, we were ill content in sitting calmly around he table in our little cubicle.

Dateline: 8 p.m. Sept. 26 Suddenly the bright yellow As­

sociated Press (AP) style guide [the self-entitled journalist's Bible—I'm serious, check the fifth ;dition) appeared against the fluo­rescent lights as it flew through the lir. "Check this Amy," I said. 'You keep forgetting that people's itles are supposed to be small case."

We scour the AP Style Guide ooking for verbs to replace "said" hat are in proper AP. Finding lone, we move on.

Flashes of brilliance bounce off he cream tiled walls. "Wait that's ust the return of dinner," Andy aid. "No I think that it was just the lying flash of a broken light bulb," Deonne said. But, whatever it is, The Echo staff is on a roll.

Dateline: 10 p.m. Sept. 26 The main room becomes quiet

is the team slaves in the adjoining Macintosh lab. Every few mo-nents a scream rips the air as frus-ration breaks the happy Echo Tonds.

Deonne and I fall quiet as we stared at the Radius two page Dis-jlay monitor in shock. "What hap­pened?" "It crashed.. .again."

And the layout guard changes. Its Deonne's turn to plead with the computer, begging it to perform correctly.

Dateline: 12 a.m. Sept. 27 You are now entering The Echo

Zone. "oooOOOOAAH!" Our fear-

ess leader, Deonne, sounds her parbaric (yet muppet-like) yawp pver the rooftop of the printer.

I don the keyboard wrist pad on

Ugly Green

by Janyre Stockinger

my head a.k.a. The Flying Nun. And the rest of the team hover:

with worried overtones as our eye: glaze.

Terry Gugger, a campus safety officer, pops his head around the comer (a momentary but consis­tent pseudo member of The Echc staff). "I'm locking up the build ing. A re you going to be here wher

I unlock the doors agair like las week?"

Our an swer is des­perate stare: and groans We bettei not be.

Only one of our teair members i: still intact Andy, the photogra pher, whc has hidder out in hi: darkroom skips in tc

the room only to be lashed to the Power PC and ordered to create graphics.

We will survive, but we are stil hours away from our cooling bed: at home.

Dateline: 2 a.m. Sept 27 The waxer (a machine tha

spews paraffin wax on layout pa per so we can paste the pieces ol the paper together) is actual ly work ing this week. The printer refusec to print only once and the com puter only crashed three times.

Things are going smoothly. Amy and Rebekah man the rul­

ers, wax pencils and other para­phernalia to crop the photograph: (marking how big the picture need: to be and the cut lines). Mean while, Kevin laughs maliciously as he pulls out a sheet of RubylitI (a ruby colored plastic sheet user to hold the spot for the photo graphs before our printer placei them). He slices off a piece of the plastic and wax pastes it to the paper.

Dateline: 2:45 a.m. Sept 27 As the team stumbles out the

North back door of the Rupp Com munication Arts building (singinf to the tune of the Hallelujah cho rus) , Amy suddenly burs ts out in< mix of laughter and tears, "At Ieasi we will be in before last week': 6:30 a.m." Wealljoinin,happy tc be leaving our tiny little prisor cell.

Dateline: 3 p.m. Sept 27 The Echo staff, desperately try

ing to stay awake after 8 and 9 a.m classes, piles into the office. A1 naps are put on hold for the edito rial board meeting. The beginning of the Oct. 4 paper.

Page 4: The Echo: October 4, 1996

4 The Echo October 4,1996 SPORTS

Trojans trounced Team shut out by Walsh 34-0 by Kevin Anselmo sports editor

Walsh University dominated Taylor on both sides of the ball which led to their 34-0 shutout performance. Walsh had 450 total yards of offense while Taylor had only 167.

The game got off to an auspi­cious start for the Trojans. On Walsh's first possession of the game, sophomore quarterback Matt Jenson connected on 56 yard touchdown. On the Trojans' first offensive possession of the game, junior quarterback Scott Robinson threw an interception. This led to another Walsh touchdown as Jenson connected on a 18 yard touchdown reception.

Jenson continued to pick apart the Trojan defense in the second quarter by connecting on a 67 yard touchdown. Walsh's sophomore running back, Damont Skanes,

rushed for 60 yards in the first half alone.

Offensively, it was a difficult dayfortheTrojans. Leadingrusher Galen Zimmerman ran for only 10 yards on 7 carries. Robinson ended the day 9-21 with just 79 passing yards and 3 interceptions, 2 of which led to Walsh touchdowns.

Freshman quarterback Jonathan Jenkins was the lone bright spot offensively fortheTrojans. Jenkins saw some time in the third quarter and played the entire fourth quar­ter. He was 4-9 for 50 yards: He also was Taylor's leading rusher on the afternoon by running 5 times for 15 yards.

Jenkins finally gave the Trojan fans something to cheer for when he led a drive that started at the Taylor 20 yard line and took them deep into Walsh territory. Jenkins' main target throughout the drive was junior wide receiver Ben Suriano, who finished the day with

photo by Andy Roon BOMBS AWAY: Freshman sensation Jonathan Jenkins electrifyed the Trojan offense. Here, he is mnnina for Dart of his team leadina 15 rushina yards. He also showed off his cannon arm.

6 receptions for 61 yards. The674 spectators on hand rose

to their feet on a fourth down play trying to encourage the Trojans to score for the first time in the after­noon. Jenkins, was denied of a first down on a run and Walsh preserved the shut out.

The defense was led by senior Andy Ankeny who recorded two interceptions. He led the team with 12 tackles, 7 which were solo tackles. Sophomore linebacker Ryan Mitchell and junior Pete Demoresteach recorded 7 tackles. Demorest also recorded an inter­

ception. The Trojans will look to re­

bound from Saturday'sembarrass-ing loss when they visit Olivet Nazarene on Saturday. Taylor de­feated Olivet Nazarene in last year, 13-3.

More than Steele: freshmen provide spark for volleyball by Kevin Anseimo Sports editor

VOLLEYBALL The Lady Trojans had a busy

week that featured a strong show­ing at the Trinity Christian Tour­nament and regular season victo­ries over Huntington, Franklin, and Goshen.

At the Trinity Christian Tour­nament last weekend, the Lady Trojans were defeated in their first game by Colombia. Columbia, ranked second in the NAIA, won in three straight games. During that game, junior All American Natalie Steele hyperextended her right thumb and did not play the rest of the tournament.

The Lady Trojans lost the next game to Trinity Christian, and then responded with victories over Judson and Olivet Nazarene the following day.

With the loss of Steele for the weekend, other players stepped up. Freshman Erin Lastoria had a strong tournament by leading the team in kills in all four games. She recorded 59 kills throughout the tournament.

Fellow freshman Brittany Huyser recorded 14 and 16 kills in the two Taylor victories. Sopho­more Heather Pickerell finished the weekend with 141 assists throughout the four games.

The Lady Trojans defeated Huntington in four games. Steele had 18 kills and 12 digs while Lastoria chipped in with 16 kills and 14 digs. Sophomore Laurie Dunkerton had a solid all around game by totaling 10 digs, eight kills, and three blocks.

The Lady Trojans finished the week with victories over Franklin and Goshen to improve to an 18-4 record. They continue their busy part of the schedule this weekend when they go to the LaGrange Tournament.

MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY In the Earlham Invitational this

past weekend, the men's cross country team, finished in third place.

Sophomores Anthony Ronah and Paul Ritchie paced the team by finishing in 17th and 19th place. Ronah finished with a time of 27:52, while Ritchie came in a second later at 27:53.

The team will run in the Notre Dame Invitational on Friday.

WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY Freshman Jody Thompson led

the Lady Trojans to a third place finish at the Earlham Invitational. Thompson finished in third place overall with a time of 20:08.

Junior Kristen Horn placed 16th with a time of 20:55, while senior HeatherEllisoncamein 19th place

at 21:01. Saturday, the Lady Trojans

will run in the Goshen Invita­tional.

MEN'S TENNIS The men's tennis team re­

mains undefeated with a record of 11-0 with the Mid-Central Conference (MCC) Tournament just a week away.

At the Intercollegiate Tennis Championship (ITA) Tourna­ment, an individual tournament, senior Chris Petzold and junior Shawn Flanary each advanced to the third rounds before losing.

The Trojans beat Franklin by the score of 8-1 on Tuesday. Petzold, Flanary, senior Tim Smith and freshmen Craig Evans and Trent Jackson all won in straight sets in their singles matches. TheTrojansswepttheir doubles matches.

The Trojans played at Grace yesterday and won 5-4. They will close out their regular season with a home game against CedarvilleCollege on Saturday.

WOMEN'S TENNIS The women's tennis team de­

feated Bethel and Goshen this

week, but suffered a loss to India­napolis on Tuesday. They now have a record of 6-2.

The Lady Trojans will close out their season at IUPUI before the MCC tournament takes place.

MEN'S SOCCER The Trojans won the Trinity

Christian Tournament this past weekend with two victories.

In the first game, Taylor over­came a 1 -0 halftime deficit to pre­vail 3-2. Freshman Bryan Flora, junior J. R. Kerr and sophomore Chad Dale each recorded goals. Junior Chad Helms and senior Steve Saddington each tallied an assist.

The Trojans then defeated the host school, Trinity Christian, by winning 1-0.

Senior goalie Justin Peterson recorded the shutout by denying nine shots. The Trojans lone score came from sophomore Dan Rhodes who scored on a pass from Helms.

Dale was named the tourna­ment MVP while Rhodes, Flora,

and sophomore Ryan Eernisse were all named to the All Tournament Team.

The Trojans closed out their strong week with a 1-0 victory over Huntington. The Trojan inte­rior defense allowed only one shot on goal throughout the entire game. Rhodes' unassisted goal was the difference in the gamq.

The Trojans take their 8-2-1 record on the road as they play four away games in a row.

WOMEN'S SOCCER The Lady Trojans recorded their

first shut out ever with a 2-0 win over Bethel.

Freshman B rie Van Conant and sophomore Jennifer Fisher each scored goals. Freshman goalie Susan Vandersluis recorded six saves.

The Lady Trojans were then shut out by Indianapolis on Wednesday, 1-0. Vandersluis had 22 saves in the game.

The Lady Trojans look to im­prove on their 2-5 record when they visit Franklin on Saturday.

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