Campus, Arches, Students

What We鈥檙e Talking About on Campus

Sports Stars

Women's basketball game

Puget Sound sports teams had a great winter and spring, including the women鈥檚 basketball team, which won the Northwest Conference championship and advanced to the NCAA tournament for the first time in 15 years. The Loggers beat Carroll University in the first round, then saw their season end with a second-round loss to the University of Wisconsin鈥揝tout. Final record: 20-9. Guard Katie Minnehan 鈥24 had a team-high 15 points in the win over Carroll. 

The women鈥檚 crew team won the Northwest Conference Rowing Championship on Vancouver Lake鈥攖heir first conference title since 2015. The Loggers were one of eight teams selected to compete in DIII nationals, scheduled for May 31鈥揓une 1. 

Jackie Lewis 鈥24 of women鈥檚 track owned the 400- meter dash for her entire Puget Sound career. In April she won her fourth straight NWC conference championship in that event. 

In men鈥檚 track, first-year competitor Alex Rhodes 鈥27 took first in both the 200 meter and 400 meter at the conference championships. Rhodes also won the silver medal nationally in the 400 at the NCAA Division III indoor meet, becoming the first Puget Sound men鈥檚 sprinter to earn Division III All-America status.

 

Author Yaa Gyasi and local artist Jabari Owens-Bailey

A Special Dialogue

Yaa Gyasi鈥檚 acclaimed 2016 novel Homegoing has played a role in several classes in African American Studies at Puget Sound, including AFAM 310: The African Diaspora Experience, in which students prepare for a study tour to Ghana. Homegoing earned the American Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle鈥檚 John Leonard Award for Best First Book, and the PEN/ Hemingway Award for a first book of fiction, among other honors. 

So it was perhaps no surprise that Gyasi鈥檚 March visit to campus sold out quickly. Gyasi and artist Jabari Owens-Bailey spoke to a full house in Schneebeck Hall plus others who tuned in for a livestream. Owens-Bailey is on staff at Tacoma鈥檚 Museum of Glass and curated a current exhibition at the museum, A Two-Way Mirror: Double Consciousness in Contemporary Glass by Black Artists. Gyasi and Owens-Bailey talked about themes that appear in both the book and the exhibition, including the concept of 鈥渄ouble consciousness鈥 and the African diaspora. 

Bringing Gyasi to campus was a combined effort involving the African American Studies program, the Race & Pedagogy Institute, the Museum of Glass, and the Pierce County Libraries. A Two-Way Mirror continues at the Museum of Glass until Oct. 27.

 

A Love Letter to Drag

A performance at the Puget Sound Drag Show

The Puget Sound Drag Show鈥攁 25-year-old tradition that was sidelined during the COVID-19 pandemic鈥攎ade a return in February with 鈥淎 Love Letter to Drag,鈥 a collection of performances in Upper Marshall Hall. Hosted by Seattle-based drag queen Aleksa Manila, the event featured music, dance, comedy, and stories from local drag performers, including two student drag artists. The show was sponsored by the student-run Gender & Sexuality Alliance, which recently reconstituted after a pandemic hiatus. Before the show, GSA also hosted a seminar with another regional drag queen, Poison Waters, who talked about her three-decade performing career as well as her experience growing up as a person of color in the LGBTQIA+ community. Proceeds from the drag show went to the LGBTQIA+ Leadership Scholarship for students.

 

A Better Baseball Field

A pitcher throws the ball

The Loggers are hoping for a new synthetic infield by 2025.
The baseball team鈥檚 24-year-old field may get an upgrade next year, funds permitting: The grass infield will be replaced by a synthetic one that is easier to maintain and will make it usable year-round. 

While the majority of Major League Baseball teams play on grass fields, many collegiate teams鈥攅specially in rain-prone regions鈥攑lay on artificial turf. Puget Sound is one of only two schools in the Pacific Northwest Conference to have a grass infield, according to Logger coach Jeff Halstead 鈥00, MAT鈥03. The current field suffers from water drainage problems, redirecting the focus of coaches and student-athletes away from training and competition to care for the field. 

A new synthetic infield will allow the team to practice outdoors throughout the academic year and will reduce or eliminate the number of games that have to be rescheduled because the field is unplayable, Halstead says. According to Amy Hackett, athletic director, it鈥檚 an investment in the championship culture that Puget Sound is working to build. 

The upgrade will also make possible other uses of the field and partnerships with leagues and semi-pro teams. 

The estimated cost of the project is $1.2 million. The Ben B. Cheney Foundation committed $300,000 to launch the effort and to inspire support from alumni, parents, and community members. Currently, more than half of the $1.2 million total has been raised. (For more information or to donate, go to pugetsound.edu/turf.) 

The Cheney Foundation has been supportive of the university for more than four decades, contributing to campus projects including the Susie L. Wilson Welcome Center, the Athletics & Aquatics Center and other athletics facility upgrades, Weyerhaeuser Hall, and the Science Center, as well as to student scholarships. --Tina Hay

 

PacRim Partners

President Crawford and Vice Presidents Matt Boyce and Victor Martin visit with PacRim students and faculty during a visit to Chang Mai, Thailand.

While a group of Puget Sound students took part in the 2024 PacRim trip this past winter and spring, a trio of university administrators headed to Asia as well, to forge connections with local universities and meet Loggers living in the region. President Isiaah Crawford and two vice presidents鈥擵ictor Martin (university relations) and Matthew Boyce (enrollment) met with schools and universities in Chiang Mai, Thailand, and Fuzhou, China, and explored partnership opportunities for student and faculty exchange programs. They also had dinner in Chiang Mai with this year鈥檚 PacRim students and faculty. Crawford and Martin attended an alumni gathering in Tokyo hosted by Tadahiro Kawada 鈥85, while Boyce made additional visits in Taiwan.