Lawrence University Sports News
Contact: Joe Vanden Acker,
Sports Information Director,
920-832-6878
For Immediate Release June
9, 2008
Lawrence's Glover
chosen as Arthur Ashe Sports Scholar
APPLETON, Wis. -- Lawrence University student-athlete Benjamin Glover
has been chosen as an Arthur Ashe Jr., Sports Scholar Award.
The award is presented by the magazine Diverse: Issues In
Higher Education, and Glover was a first-team selection in track and field.
Glover, who competes in the high jump, long jump and triple for the Lawrence
track team, also plays midfield on the Vikings' soccer team. A senior from
Accra, Ghana, Glover sports a 3.578 grade point average and is a biology and
chemistry interdisciplinary major.
"I always think of Ben as a great teammate," Director of Athletics Robert Beeman said. "He is
always at the ready to do whatever
needs to be done for his team and
his teammates to be successful. He
is the epitome of what a Lawrence University student-athlete should be. He
competes in multiple sports for Lawrence,
and he is a star in the classroom."
The Sports Scholar Award is named for Arthur Ashe, who died from AIDS-related
pneumonia in 1993 after contracting the disease from a blood transfusion
following double-bypass surgery. Before his untimely death at the age of 49,
Ashe already had an impressive academic, athletic, social and civil rights
résumé. Ashe was a pioneer in tennis, becoming the first African-American man to win the U.S. Open, the Australian Open, and Wimbledon.
Diverse established the Sports Scholar Awards to
"honor undergraduate students of color who have made achieving both
academically and athletically a winning combination." To be eligible for
the award, students have to compete
in an intercollegiate sport, maintain a cumulative 3.2 grade point average, and
be active on their campuses or in their communities.
Glover, who was one of 17 athletes named to
the first team but one of only five from NCAA Division III institutions, is an
Academic All-Midwest Conference selection in both soccer and track and field. A
Dean's List student at Lawrence, Glover recently won the college's Campus Life
Award, given to a senior in
recognition of service and leadership, and the John H. Scidmore
Memorial Award, given to a senior
man who best exemplifies the characteristics of academic diligence, service to campus groups, and interest in and loyalty to classmates.
Glover also has won the African Heritage Leadership Award and the United States
Achievement Academy Collegiate Minority Leadership Award.
Glover, who serves as secretary of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, has been
active in the Lawrence
community. He has served as a biology tutor,
worked as treasurer of the Students' War Against
Hunger and Poverty, was chair of the Lawrence Honor Council, and worked as a
volunteer for numerous projects, including those involving Habitat for Humanity
and the Salvation Army.
Charting an uncommon course in higher education for more than 160 years, Lawrence University uniquely integrates a college
of liberal arts and sciences with a conservatory
of music, both devoted exclusively to
undergraduate education. It ranks among the nation's best small, private
colleges, and was selected for inclusion in the book "Colleges That Change
Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think About
College." The development of multiple interests and community engagement
are central to the Lawrence experience, where classes or
creative and research projects tailored to
students' educational interests and life objectives are prevalent. Lawrence draws its 1,400
students from 43 states and 50 countries. Its picturesque, residential campus
is nestled on the banks of the Fox River in Appleton, Wis. For more information about Lawrence University visit www.lawrence.edu.