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The Berea Mountaineers are composed of 14 teams representing Berea College in intercollegiate athletics, including men and women's basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, and track and field. Men's sports include baseball and golf.
Athletic director Since Primary conference State Ref. Abilene Christian: Zack Lassiter: November 9, 2021 WAC: Texas [1] Air Force: Nathan Pine: January 16, 2019 MW: Colorado [2] Akron: Charles Guthrie: MAC: Ohio Alabama A&M: Paul Bryant: SWAC: Alabama Alabama: Greg Byrne: SEC: Alabama Alabama State: Jason Cable: SWAC: Alabama Albany: Mark ...
Team School City Conference Sport sponsorship Football Basketball Baseball Softball Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W Akron Zips: University of Akron: Akron: Mid-American
Baldwin Wallace University is a private college that enjoys a long and rich affiliation with the United Methodist Church. This includes faculty, alumni and staff. The college is located in the greater Cleveland, Ohio area in the United States. The college and town of Berea were founded by Methodist settlers from Connecticut.
There are two campus sites: Berea, which serves as the main campus, and Corporate College East in Warrensville Heights, Ohio. [5] The university enrolls approximately 3,300 full-time undergraduate and graduate students as of fall 2024. Baldwin Wallace's athletic teams compete as members of NCAA Division III athletics in the Ohio Athletic ...
What greets you upon entering the lobby of Berea College’s Hutchins Library is something of a living scrapbook. To your left: album covers tracing roughly five decades of music summoned by Janis ...
To the editor: As a proud Syracuse graduate and die-hard sports fan, I want to thank Ryan Day for buckling under the pressure of being the OSU football coach and losing to Michigan. As one of the ...
Founded in 1855 by the abolitionist and Augusta College graduate John Gregg Fee (1816–1901), Berea College admitted both black and white students in a fully integrated curriculum, making it the first non-segregated, coeducational college in the South and one of a handful of institutions of higher learning to admit both male and female students in the mid-19th century. [10]