Professional Documents
Culture Documents
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(Caleb Whitmer/Collegian)
Delta Sigma Phi fraternity lost its house more than two years ago due to a range of violations, including possession of alcohol. Now, the men of DSP are on their way to reclaiming their home. An agreement between Dean of Men Aaron Petersen and the chapter states that an accreditation score of 80 or higher will allow the college to move forward with a plan to return the house to the fraternity. The accreditation is done by the national fraternity. We want to see a strong accreditation score from them, Petersen said. We need to see that they can sustain strong effort and performance, which is something weve talked a lot about. What weve been after
Hillsdale Colleges Delta Sigma Phi fraternity may get its house back this fall. If they do, the house will be dry. Now, we are just trying to make sure that we are complying with the national and Hillsdale standards when it comes to the drinking policy, DSP chapter president senior Joe Snyder said. Having a house will just make every aspect of the fraternity better. DSP is one of four fraternities on campus that abides by different regulations regarding alcohol use. Each fraternity operates under its own individual alcohol policy, which depends on factors such as academic merit and national fraternity policy. Each policy, however, resides under the umbrella of the deans Im moving forward with office campus-wide alcohol polthem returning to the chapter icy, as listed in the student handhouse, and I am presuming a book. strong accreditation score, PeIn DSPs case, dry houses are a tersen said. There will be 10 nationwide policy for the fraternito 15 guys that Ill move into ty, which was instituted in the past the house. There are going to be several years. some restrictions and expectaOf the three current college frations, and were going to work ternity houses, only Sigma Chi has together on those details. house-alcohol privileges, although Snyder said his work with Pe- no liquor is allowed in their house. tersen was productive. The other two fraternities, Alpha The focus was on getting the Tau Omega and Delta Tau Delta, house back and setting a good once had wet houses but no longer score, he said. After the meet- do for disciplinary reasons. ing, all the officers sat down, and Dean of Men Aaron Petersen we all made a plan, and, as long said the alcohol policy in fraternias we accomplish that, then well ties depends on four factors: the get the house back. behavior of the members of the Snyder said aspects of that fraternity, the college policy, the plan include service projects, fraternitys national board, and the philanthropy events, increased local alumni association. recruitment, increased fraternity Within each house there are GPA average, and alumni en- designated officers that are elected See DSP A3 by the fraternity to maintain the
standards of the chapter. Petersen said that the main difference between residence halls and fraternity houses is the fraternities privilege to establish their own rules within the boundaries of the school and national fraternity policies. It really is an experiment in self-government, Petersen said. Through these students, the dean, and local news reports, the national fraternity is able to keep tabs on the campus chapters. Periodically, a representative will come to check in on the fraternity. Petersen said that if a singular issue of alcohol violation arises, the school and the local alumni board typically come up with the punishment. However, if the issue is reoccurring, the national fraternity may step in. It is supposed to be left to the fraternities to self-govern, Snyder said, but obviously, if there is a problem, then the college is supposed to come in. Consequences from the dean can range anywhere from temporary renunciations of alcohol privileges to the loss of the house. If the national fraternity chooses to act, consequences can include the revocation of the chapter from the campus. After its rechartering in 2009 and moving into a house in 2013, Delta Tau Delta fraternity is a dry fraternity but Chapter President junior Rossteen Salehzadeh said the fraternity is looking into petitioning the dean in order to have alcohol at requested events. The actions from the past have definitely help shaped our attitudes in the house now as to what we can and cant allow, Salehzadeh said. Alpha Tau Omega Chapter President Dan Vandegriff said he
See Alcohol A3
In an effort to convert Niedfeldt Residence back to a male dormitory for next school year, and due to the female-dominated rising junior class, the administration has allowed fewer men to move off campus and increased the girls allowance from last year. As of Feb. 28, 51 men and 106 women were newly permitted to leave campus housing, joining the 109 men and 48 women who will return to off-campus housing this fall. This equals 314 Hillsdale students that are projected to live off-campus next year. This number could change, depending on the number of admitted freshmen in the fall. The end variable is the admissions number, Dean of Women Diane Philipp said. There are usually slightly more women than men, by our projections. We have to house the freshmen, and 10 bodies make a difference. Sometimes in May we ask if students want to live off-campus, and it seems as if the office is disorganized, but really, we accepted a few more freshmen, and we need to house them. Off-campus status is determined by the number of Hillsdale College credits a student holds. The deans office, in cooperation with the registrars office, ranks students in order of most credits to least, in an effort to honor seniority. If students turn down the op-
tion to live off campus, the administration notifies the next students in line that they are granted permission. Because of this and fluctuations in admitting the freshman class of 2018, the process of notification could go on until May. Philipp said it has never been a problem for seniors to live off campus. Not all juniors and sophomores are always allowed to leave college housing, even if they were granted permission the previous year, or one of their potential housemates was granted permission. However, for college-owned houses, she said that returning residents may choose underclassmen to move in with them. The key to housing is making sure friends can stay with friends. All residence halls are different, but as long as we can keep friends together they seem to be happy, Philipp said. Niedfeldt Residence was converted from a mens dorm to a womens during the 2012-2013 school year, when the number of freshmen girls far outweighed the number of freshmen boys. The deans said they feel that men need another dorm option on campus, in addition to Galloway and Simpson Residences. Koon Residence, which houses about half as many students as Niedfeldt, will return to housing women next year. The late L.A. Red Niedfeldt and his widow, Phyllis Niedfeldt, donated the funds to build
Rebirth of Liberty & Learning Campaign 1976-1980 Raised: $230 M Goal: $470.2 M
INSIDE
Q&A Actress Mitzi Gaynor talks about love and life after her CCA presentation on the making of South Pacific. A2 Sun lamps The Health and Wellness Center is using vitamin D lamps to help combat winter depression. A3
Hillsdale College has raised $1.1 billion since it began its 40year fight against state and federal regulations. Three completed capital campaigns, led by Presidents George Roche III and Larry Arnn, have successfully endowed the security of Hillsdales academic liberty. This past October, the college launched its fourth campaign, The Rebirth of Liberty and Learning, intended to raise $472 million over the next 10 years. The first capital campaign, The Freedom Fund, was launched by the Hillsdale College Board of Trustees in 1976. Symbolized by the Victory Bell, which now sits enshrined next to Central Hall, the campaign successfully raised more than $32 million in less than four years. The purpose See Off-Campus A3 of the campaign, which was to
vid that kept Goliath government off its back, Hiner wrote. In March 1976 a letter sent by Martin Gerry, acting director of the Office for Civil Rights, informed Hillsdale College President George Roche III that students enrolled at Hillsdale College were participating in a number of government funded programs. Gerry concluded that such participation would require the colleges compliance with regulations outlined in Title IX, should they keep accepting funding. There is no question but that the regulation as it stands does cover colleges such as Hillsdale, Gerry wrote in the letter. Contrary to Gerrys opinion, Roche sought to challenge The Department of Health, Education, and Welfares accusation. Roche argued that the college did not have to comply with the specified regulations because the direct re-
See Campaigns A3
Swimmer goes to nationals Thirteen track and field athletes qualify to compete at nationals on March 14-15. A8
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Keeping the streets clean The city of Hillsdale works to keep the roads plowed for residents. B4
Read Mary Proffit Kimmel and Viktor Rozsas speeches from parents weekend. A5
News........................................A1 Opinions..................................A4 City News................................A6 Sports......................................A7 Arts..........................................B1 Features....................................B3
Q&A: State rep candidates Fifty-eighth district state representative candidates present platforms and why they deserve a vote. A6
(Carsten Stann/Collegian) (Walker Mulley/Collegian)
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NEWS
Mitzi Gaynor is an Emmy Award-winning actress-singerdancer-comedienne who starred in movies including Theres No Business Like Show Business, Anything Goes, and South Pacific for which she received a Golden Globe nomination. She launched a wildly successful stage career in 1961 and was even billed over The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1964. (They asked for her autograph) Yesterday, Gaynor descended upon Hillsdale, giving a delightful show that was more stand-upcomedy routine than CCA. She used nine accents, burst into O, Canada!, and agreed to a students marriage proposal before dismissing his offer with a glib, Youre too old for me. Compiled by Tory Cooney.
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Actress Mitzi Gaynor, star of the musical South Pacific spoke Wednesday on the making of the movie. (Carsten
Stann/Collegian)
Willoughby wins Live yellow jacket found in A.J.s salad Everett competition
Walker Mulley Collegian Freelancer Abi Wood Arts Editor eral warrants. Privacy is pivotal to the preservation of our country, she said. While she acknowledged the importance of national security, she described the NSAs way of obtaining information as the digital equivalent of tailing a suspect. We cannot neglect to secure the blessings of liberty to secure the common defense, she said. Lichtis speech took a different route. He claimed advanced technology has caused a shift from circuit-based communications to packet-based communications and a new ability to save and modify information. He argued that metadata analysis could have radically impacted the events of 9/11. While advocating prudent knowledge discovery systems, Lichti argued that these systems have real-world benefit. Alternately, Shabazz claimed in her speech that America is increasing surveillance at the cost of its citizens privacy. It is the abuse of the American people at the hands of their government, she said. The issue lies not in that the eyes are watching, but that they are doing so without our permission. When a student bought a salad from A.J.s Caf on March 1, she found a live yellow jacket inside the container. A.J.s Retail Supervisor Lisa Beasley said the yellow jacket appearance was a very unfortunate incident that we regret has happened. Kirwan said it was an odd occurrance. Due to the time of year, we are a bit baffled as to how it got into the salad, Saga Inc. General Manager Kevin Kirwan said in an email. The wasp may have come with the lettuce, but the lettuce arrives pre-washed in sealed bags, he said. We have reported the incident to our suppliers, he said. To make salads, A.J.s employees wearing gloves take lettuce from bags sealed by the supplier and place it directly into plastic takeout containers, according to A.J.s employee senior Grace Ramsey. The lettuce is marked pre-washed, ready for use by the supplier. Its just a straight transfer from the bag to the container, she said. Because the bags are roughly pillow-sized, each is not used up all at once. Employees reseal each bag by rolling the top down and wrapping the entire bag in plastic wrap. Kirwan said the lettuce used in the salad which contained the yellow jacket came in a sealed bag but that the bag did have small holes to allow for the product to give off gas. These holes are too small for a wasp to crawl through, though. The lettuce was grown in Yuma, Ariz., according to an email Kirwan received from the supplier. A.J.s handles its other salad ingredients similarly, Ramsey said. Employees fully prepare all the ingredients before they assemble the salad. The ingredients are stored in covered and dated containers until assembly. Once everything is ready, employees wearing gloves assemble the ingredients and place the salads in the takeout containers. Then they are either placed in the cafs display cooler or sold immediately. A.J.s is about good customer service. We want you to eat your food. We dont want to rip you off your five dollars for a salad, Ramsey said. If your foods inedible, please bring it back. Well work out a solution. Wed love to help you.
Youve worked opposite a number of amazing men in your romantic comedies. Who was your favorite to work
dirty laundry. And I loved it. And that was it. From then on, that was it. He loved me. And I loved him. What was your first fight? We didnt really fight about anything. We were like one person. We were The Beans. It was only silly things like him saying, Yummy, how many times do I have to tell you? I dont want lambchops. Whats the secret to a successful marriage? Separate bathrooms. And then, finally, whats the best romantic comedy that youve seen recently? My favorite show, honestly, is Modern Family. I love the people. I think Phil is an unsung hero. I think Claire is a little bit like me. Shes so controlling. Cam and Mitchell are adorable. And that little girl, Lily, is going to be a real force. Shes so tough.
Senior Melika Willoughby won first place and $3,000 at the Edward Everett Prize in Oratory competition on March 4. Second place went to sophomore Shaun Lichti, and third place to freshman Keyona Shabazz. Lichti and Shabazz received $2,000 and $1,000, respectively. The speech prompt, Privacy and Surveillance: The Costs to Our Free Republic, encouraged students to address the NSAs recent attempts to obtain unauthorized access to the information of American citizens. The judges for the competition were College President Larry Arnn, Director of the Dow Journalism Program John J. Miller, and local management consultant Kerry Laycock. Juniors Ian Fury and Dylan Hoover were finalists in the Feb. 14 semi-finals. Sophomore Emily Runge and junior Christopher Landers tied for the place of alternate, but did not compete in the finals. Willoughbys speech argued against the invasive actions of the NSA, tying the Founding Fathers claims against the Writs of Assistance to the current injustice of the NSAs gen-
A yellow jacket was found in a students salad in A.J.s Cafe on March 1. (Courtesy of Heather Buell)
Evan Carter Collegian Freelancer The hundreds of people that come through Central Hall every day will be greeted by a new face at the switchboard reception desk. On Feb. 10, Billie Jo Harwood became the colleges new switchboard operator. The former switchboard operator, Susan Marsh, moved down a floor in Central Hall to become the new aide to the registrar. Every day brings a wide variety of phone inquiries as well as visitors and familiar faces passing through Central Hall, Marsh said. The switchboard receptionist is not only the voice of the college, but often the first person someone comes into contact with when visiting the college. No two calls are the same, and according to Harwood, deciphering the needs of each caller and directing them to the correct department is the most difficult part of the job. I can have five calls go to the registrars office and every story that they tell me is different, Harwood said. In her short time on the job, Harwood has been asked a broad range of questions, including one question about the weather in Hillsdale. Additionally, Harwood also has to deal with the varied moods of callers. Whatever the phone call is, Harwood emphasizes being cheerful and courteous. Keeping a smile on my face and in my voice is important, Harwood said. Even though that might sound funny, you can hear when the person on the other end may be a little grumpy that day, so regardless, even if I just stubbed my toe because I walked away and I ran back really fast, I have to get my smile back. While answering phone calls
Billie Jo Harwood replaced Susan Marsh as the Central Hall switchboard operator. Harwood previously worked for six months as a janitor. (Evan Carter/Collegian) is a major part of her job, Har- woman who upholds the colwood has many roles as switch- leges values, Johnson said. board receptionist. Before becoming the colSitting at her desk just inside leges switchboard receptionist, the first floor doors of Central the Jonesville native worked for Hall, Harwood interacts with the college as a custodian for six hundreds of people everyday: months. She mainly worked in directing them throughout the Moss Hall and the Dow Science building, giving directions to oth- Building, cleaning and making er places on campus or providing minor repairs. maps of Hillsdales surrounding When the college sent out area. an internal email announcing Harwood enjoys seeing so the available switchboard posimany people and recognizes a tion, Harwood expressed intergrowing number of people on est and her resume was sent to campus. Janet Marsh, executive director Faces are becoming familiar. of human resources. Harwood Names Im still working on believes that her computer skills that, Harwood said. and the associates degree she Senior Jennifer Johnson, one earned in 2008 helped her get the of Harwoods student workers, job. only had good things to say about Additionally, attendance was her boss. a big concern, and I have good Ms. Harwood is a hidden attendance, Harwood said. I jewel, and Hillsdale is lucky to would imagine that would be my have found such a hardworking one thing that stuck out.
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NEWS
A3 6 March 2014
Every Tuesday, a group of Hillsdale students meets for an hour and a half in the afternoon to go over probability problems with William Abram, assistant professor of mathematics, in preparation for the first of five actuarial exams. Actuarial science topped 2013s list of best jobs in a survey conducted by CareerCast.com. The job, which involves risk assessment and is prominent in the insurance and financial industries, has ranked among the top Junior Arena Govier studies with Assistant Professor of for the past several years, with a Mathematics William Abram. (Ben Strickland/Collegian) median salary of about $87,000 and a relatively low-stress work and that means that students who ally key to practice your speed. have the best shot are the students The testing environment was environment. For these reasons and simply that have sort of a head start and extremely sterile. Ostaszewski because they love math, junior that take probability early hobbled into his first exam on crutches, having broken his foot Arena Govier and sophomore sophomore year or before. Senior Ian Ostaszewski has weeks before. Monitors searched Nathan Wilson are pursuing actuarial science and heading up the taken the financial mathematics his crutches to make sure he club under Abrams direction. Ju- exam twice and has been study- was not smuggling test answers niors Sarah Schweizer and Evan ing independently. Because Os- in with him. All students using Chalker and sophomores Sarah taszewski is an economics major calculators on the exam also had Kreuz and Daniel Slonim attend and has more experience with their calculators memory erased. finance than math theory, he To prepare to take the probthe club. An early start in preparing is wanted to take the financial math ability exam, the students in the actuarial club will continue preferable, according to Abram, exam first. Studying involves first un- working through problems with but its not easy. Aspiring actuaries must pass five exams, each of derstanding concepts there are Abram on Tuesday afternoons. which requires on average about a lot of things about interest and As the semesters end approach300 hours of study. Most people stocks and bonds and financial es, the club will take some fullchoose to take the exam on prob- markets, Ostaszewski said, and length practice exams. Those ability first, a test that has a lower then you have to memorize tons who want to take the test in May, pass rate than the California bar and tons of equations. Id say, to like Wilson, will also start devotexam, one of the most difficult pass the exam, you probably have ing time outside of the club to to memorize several hundred. study. bar exams in the country. Ostaszewski said he underesYou need intensive blocks of Probability is not an elementary topic, Abram said. You timated the importance of time study time, Abram said. Beyond the club, Abram is gohave to at least have taken cal- his first time around. You have about five min- ing to offer a one-credit course in culus III or linear algebra before you can even take probability, utes per question, which is pretty the fall on preparing for the actuquick, Ostaszewski said. Its re- arial exams.
Hillsdales speech team saw some surprising results at the Michigan Intercollegiate Speech Leagues state championship this past weekend. The team failed to put finalists in several events in which Hillsdale students have usually succeeded. Our really strong suits persuasion, after dinner speaking, and impromptu weren't represented, and then traditionally what weve not been as strong in, we had a strong showing in, said Matthew Warner, the teams coach and assistant director of forensics and debate. Junior Anna Wunderlich, a novice on the team, made it to finals in prose interpretation for
ing and working, he said. She didnt give up. Freshman Erin Graham took sixth in poetry interpretation, also winning top novice. The previous weekend, Graham had won first in poetry at another tournament. Junior Ian Fury won third place in extemporaneous. Wunderlich also won top novice in extemporaneous, and freshman Keyona Shabazz won top novice in impromptu. Because this tournament was one of the most difficult so far, Warner said he was thrilled at the novices success, despite being surprised that nobody made it to finals in persuasion, impromptu, or after dinner speaking. Did we do as well as we expected? Not really. Are we really happy with how we did? Yes, he said. lege experience. It was very clear she cared strongly about us. The deans encourage all students to see for themselves the list of ranked students, which is available in the deans office. We have to fill beds on campus, Phillip said. The college needs to be able to have the means to keep the buildings running smoothly and maintain them. Im responsible for filling beds.
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Niedfelt in 1990. Dean of Men Aaron Petersen said it is important to them that Niedfeldt be a mens dormitory. Both deans said that Phyllis Niedfeldt was very understanding about the schools housing imbalance; however, the administration wants to honor the couples original wishes.
For years, Phyllis Niedfeldt would host the men for a dinner and a brunch, and inspect the condition of the dorm upon visits. She talked to us, gave us stories about her life, encouraged us, and talked about her husband and why they started the dorm, said three-year Niedfeldt resident Greg Barry 12. She came through and inspected the dorm, which was interesting. It was cool seeing the interest she took in us. She wanted us to be doing well and be having a good colsaid Sigma Chi fraternity is now allowed to have alcohol back within the house, despite some problems earlier in the semester. My experience is that the leadership within the fraternities is willing and able to partner with my office to resolve problems, Petersen said. However, many times, the prevention of and consequences for irresponsible drinking are handled within the fraternity by the elected student leadership rather than the administration boards of the fraternity. We educate both actives and new members about the alcohol policy. That way, there is no confusion, Vandegriff said in an email. In the event someone would break the drinking policy, we have our own internal disciplinary system to deal with it and would fully comply with the deans office. Wendt said the fraternity has plans to improve its campus presence. Nobody wants this to happen again, he said. We have a negative connotation here at Hillsdale, and we want to change that. We want to do more philanthropy events. We want to expand our recruitment to non-football players, and we definitely want to get our accreditation score as high as we can get it. Petersen said the effort put forth by the men of DSP these last two years has been earnest. Its encouraging to me, he said. They genuinely want to Phil Crane, William F. Buckley Jr., Russell Kirk, and Secretary of the Treasury William Simon. Many congressional representatives outspokenly supported the colleges efforts. Colorado Congressman James P. Johnson publicly rallied for the colleges campaign to remain independent. I appreciate the dilemma you face, Johnson said. It is refreshing to find an institution whose dedication to independence is so resolute that it is willing to forego the tempting lure of federal assistance. In order for the college to perpetuate its independence, it needed to secure an endowment for student financial aid and other projects. Director of Financial Aid Rich Moeggenberg explained that in 1986, the college officially stopped accepting federal gift assistance. It was at that time that we started replacing federal aid, Moeggenberg said. Instead, we started funding the independence grant program for the first time. In 1986, Hillsdale officially instituted several new programs to assist with student financial aid. Endowed scholarships, budgeted scholarships, institutional loans, independence grants, and loans replaced other previous federallyfunded options. In 1985 the college dedicated more than $2.5 million in academic financial awards to students. 30 years later, the college annually funds $22.5 million in student financial awards. According to a press release from the Council for Aid to Education, Hillsdale College ranked ninth in academic institutions for the most money raised per student annually: $41,506. This increase in available funds is a direct result of three successful capital campaigns and a fourth currently in progress:
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in the day can interrupt the sleep cycle. The lamps can be bought for less than $150 on sites like Amazon, but should be purThe Health and Wellness Cenchased at 10,000 lux wattage, ter is taking new measures to the recommended therapeutic combat Michigan winter blues. dosage. Lamps under 10,000 lux The center recently purchased have been shown not to alleviate a sun lamp as a therapy for the SAD symptoms as effectively. treatment of Seasonal Affective Drews said there is no cost Disorder, which affects students to use the lamps, and the health during the short, dark days center has wi-fi and of the winter months. coffee for students Brock Lutz, director while they get their of health services, said daily dose of vitamin via email that the sympD. Students can do toms of SAD are basihomework, use eleccally the symptoms of detronics or use relaxpression hopelessness, ation software while fatigue, physiological in front of the lamps. lethargy, sleeping a lot, There is a sheet in the difficulty focusing but health center where they manifest at certain students can sign up times of the year, usually to use the lamp after fall or winter, and remit a brief orientation. in spring . Lutz said that alSAD is a type of dethough light therapy pression that results is the most common from a change in envitreatment for winronmental light, shorter ter depression, other and darker days, and not measures can be takenough vitamin D. Many en to fight SAD. SAD patients are women, Talking to somebut it can also affect men. one about these Research has shown that symptoms is imporlight therapy is an effec-The Health and Wellness Center purchased tant to make sure it sun lamps to help students combat symptoms tive way to replenish vitaisnt a more serious min D and alleviate suchof Seasonal Affective Disorder. (Ben Strickland/ type of depression and Collegian) symptoms, Lutz said. to learn to deal with So, our thought is: if for the health center or even for life when it gets challenging (as light therapy can alleviate some some of the dorms. it usually will), Lutz said. of these symptoms, then lets There may be students who Lutz also said exercising daily make it available, Lutz said. suffer from SAD because the for 45 minutes and maintaining a Nurse Carol Drews said that sun disappears a lot around here healthy diet are key components vitamin D is essential for the sometimes and for whom light of combating SAD. body. It can relieve stress, reset therapy would be an effective Most people would benefit the sleep cycle if used early in treatment, Lutz said. from vitamin D in the winter, the morning, and keep down corHe recommends the person Drews said. This is a way to tisol levels, which contributes to sit in front of the lamp for 20 trick our bodies. This is the nonweight gain. She said vitamin D to 30 minutes every day, prefer- medicinal way to get rid of winter releases the feel good chemical ably during the morning hours, blahs. Its just good medicine. serotonin in the brain. because soaking up the rays later Emma Vinton Collegian Reporter
cannot account for all the details of the actions that made ATO a dry house a couple years ago, but he said the hard work of the current fraternity to regain its privileges is notable. That was a different time, and a different chapter than we have now, Vandegriff said in an email. What I can tell you is that, by completing a list of goals given to us by the dean, which included the winning our first True Merit Award from ATO National Fraternity in our chapters history last summer, we were able to gain the privilege of throwing parties in our annex. Dean of Men Aaron Petersen
In addition to educating members, the fraternities also set down consequences for behavior that breaks their policies. For example, Salehzadeh said DTD has an established, threestep process of dealing with alcohol mismanagement. At the first and second offense, a fraternity member might receive community service, the revocation of certain privileges, and the completion of the Delts talk about alcohol program, a national program. The last offense results in the loss of all membership privileges and, as a last resort, expulsion from the fraternity. Our alcohol policy is something that we want to be upfront about, because we do take it very seriously, Salehzadeh said. We are just working with what we have been given. do better. From what Ive seen, theyre going to have a stronger score than theyve ever had. Wendt said the fraternity plans to continue improving. Were moving forward to try to change that culture thats been haunting us, he said. Snyder agreed. My class was the last class to live in the house, Snyder said. These young guys dont know what it was like to live there. I know theyve seen all the work weve done. Weve set a good foundation over these last two years. The Freedom Fund (1976-1980), Freedom Quest 90 (1987-1996 ), The Founders Campaign (20012012), and Rebirth of Liberty and Learning (2013-2018) Based on numbers acquired from the department of Institutional Advancement, The Collegian calculated that the four capital campaigns have raised and endowed more than $1 billion in buildings, faculty chairs, and financial aid. Despite the colleges current endowment, valued at $386 million, additional funds are continually being fundraised. It has been a process and it has taken time to get the endowment to that point, Moeggenberg said. In the year 2014 we are still not at a point where we have endowed funds to fully fund what is necessary. The never-ending campaign The story of Hillsdales fight for independence is unique among academic institutions. The increase in private support is a testament to the compelling story of Hillsdales independence. Imprimis, the colleges publication, has increased its number of subscriptions from 1,000 in 1972, to 2.7 million in 2014. Over the past 40 years, the college has continued to protect the colleges independence through numerous capital campaigns. Roche and the Board of Trustees believed that the fate of the college should not be affected by the strength of the government, but the colleges value of liberty. The benefits to Hillsdale College will be far-reaching. In the years ahead, many students and a great deal of funding will come from those who have now been introduced to the college, Roche said. Even more important, the enhancement of our own academic reputation which this provided will be a great help for the college and for all those who hold Hillsdale College degrees.
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gagement. Were just trying to accomplish everything that weve set, he said. According to Wendt, part of the problem that resulted in the loss of the house was the existing culture at the time. There was an attitude in the house that was more relaxed, he said. Nobody was very respectful of the property. We felt entitled, and thats really changed.
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CORREcTIONs
Spotlight In the article,The house that Reynolds built: 140 years later,
the writer inaccurately reported the year of a fire that destroyed much of the college. The correct
cipient of funds was not the college but the students. Acknowledging that HEW would maintain a different opinion, Roche and the Board of Trustees sought a new strategy. If the expansions of federal authority under Title IX are now to use such individual funding as a means of assaulting the independence of Hillsdale College as a whole, we reserve the right to reevaluate the programs involved, Roche wrote in a letter to HEW. Recognizing the tough battle ahead, the Board of Trustees reevaluated the source of student financial aid. In 1976, it launched a three-year campaign, the Freedom Fund, which planned to raise $29 million as an endowment to replace the expected loss of government aid previously given to enrolled students. Endowing a future of independence Roche understood that in order to resist federal encroachments and secure the colleges independence, a sufficient amount of financial and private support would need to be raised. Such a task would require a campaign strategy that would endow the colleges future with secure financial independence and the ability to weather unexpected contingencies. Were going to tell this story loud and clear in the widest forum on the assumption that we are in the right, and that the more people who know we are in the right, the better, Roche said in a speech to college parents in October 1975. Before launching the Freedom Fund, the college sent 40,000 letters to sympathizers and supporters in an attempt to tell its story. Their story gained momentum, receiving national attention from dignitaries such as Congressman
OPINION
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Editor in Chief: Caleb Whitmer News Editor: Evan Brune City News Editor: Taylor Knopf Opinions Editor: Sally Nelson Sports Editor: Morgan Delp Arts Editor: Abigail Wood Spotlight Editor: Casey Harper Web Editor: Alex Anderson Washington Editor: Sam Scorzo Circulation Manager: Daniel Slonim Ad Managers: Matt Melchior | Isaac Spence | Rachel Fernelius Assistant Editors: Macaela Bennett | Jack Butler | Hannah Leitner | Chris McCaffery | Micah Meadowcroft | Bailey Pritchett | Teddy Sawyer | Morgan Sweeney | Amanda Tindall Photographers: Anders Kiledal | Shaun Lichti | Gianna Marchese | Ben Block | Carsten Stann | Ben Strickland Faculty Advisers: John J. Miller | Maria Servold The editors welcome Letters to the Editor but reserve the right to edit submissions for clarity, length, and style. Letters should be 450 words or less and include your name and number. Send submissions to snelson1@hillsdale.edu before Sunday at 6 p.m.
Well, here it is. The week before Spring break. That light at the end of a dark, cold, and snowy tunnel grows ever closer. It will, we hope, bring respite from a semester of unceasing obligations. Yet between it and us, an onslaught of midterms, exams, homework assignments, and other academic obligations threatens ominously unwelcome yet common attachments any pre-break week. Consequently, many students see this light not
My sophomore year woke me up. Oddly, it had none of the stigma associated with my riotous freshman year. By all appearances, I was thoroughly reformed. I had a second chance to succeed. This was balm to my recently disenchanted soul, primarily because, in performing badly my freshman year, I had failed to hold up a fairly substantial family legacy at Hillsdale College. My father and mother both attended this school. I dont remember a time when Central Hall didnt shimmer out at me on the letterhead of one of innumerable college Ian Andrews publications. It was an icon Student Columnist of higher education in my home, though my parents never expected me to trace their footsteps. My father was a true renaissance man, winning the concerto competition, founding Intervarsity Christian Fellowship on Hillsdales campus, double majoring in economics and Christian studies, and, most notably, graduating with a 4.0. He met my mother his freshman year. They began dating towards the end of their second semester, and married 3 days after graduation. Theirs was the perfect college experience, full of accomplishments and honors, in addition to legendary friendships and a beautiful love story. I left freshman year deeply confused by the drastic difference between my college experience and theirs, and entered sophomore year ready to pursue their college legacy as earnestly as I had renounced it the previous year. While during my freshman year the college held me to a higher standard than I could meet, sowing humility in my wild oats, it filled a different role my sophomore year. It offered me to myself by laying so wide a range of study at my feet that I was forced to choose what I truly wanted to learn. Unfortunately for me, this required that I know myself well enough to focus my efforts, which I certainly did not. And I was scared. What if I missed college just because I was a moron? How was I to know I was working hard enough, or involved in the right mixture of things to come away with a glowing experience to tell my own children about? It was arrogance that led me to assume Id succeed on talent alone freshman year; it was fear that drove me to do literally everything my sophomore year. Success, after all, had been defined for me already. My impressive father had set the bar. And now that I had realized not only that I would have to work hard, but that I wanted the benefits that hard work could achieve, I retreated towards the nearest exterior standard of right accomplishment. If I did it all, just like my father had, there was no way I could miss out on his college experience. I decided promptly to become a double English and Music major with a Philosophy minor, to join a worship team affiliated with the Intervarsity ministry, and take all of the professors that my parents had talked about when I was young. I attacked the core classes in as short a time as I possibly could to make up for the previous years failures. None of these things contributed the sort of security I wanted. Instead, stressed out and stretched thin, I was unable to devote myself thoroughly to any of these many commitments. The pendulum had swung backwards, from negligence into over-commitment, and I was miserable. Enter phase two of my education. In the face of this overabundance of good things, I had to find out who I, not my father, was. I began to discover what I liked to do, where I wanted to spend my time, and what, precisely, Ians interests actually were. Though terrifying, developing my own vision for my personal growth also offered me an unfamiliar comfort in affirming my individual identity. I began to discover what my parents had before me. I realized that the breadth and depth of available knowledge effectively defined the parameters of my being by showing me its limits. To know oneself in such a fashion relieves the pressure to know everything. I left sophomore year content to offer myself to a few disciplines, rather than laboring futilely to possess them all.
students by explaining the colleges grading policy through letters of recommendation. Yet even with stellar test scores, many applications are rejected before such letters are even opened, automatically discarded because they did not meet the GPA threshold. As I speak to other seniors, I catch a refrain: I know I can impress in an interview, but I dont know if my grades are good enough to get one. This is the trouble with the colleges current approach to grades. We can pretend that the scale can be shifted and that institutions and employers will recognize the value of a Hillsdale education, but many will only look at the numbers. In short, the trouble with the Jackson C is that once it goes onto my transcript, the only name on it is mine. I cant claim to know the answer to this problem. If I were to discover that all of my professors this term gave me As solely because I wrote this column, I would be disappointed, because I would know that I hadnt earned them. Still, the college should consider what its goals are. If it intends to help foster a renaissance of conservative thinking in higher education, it should not hamstring its students with an archaic grading policy that prevents them from exploring certain careers. The decision is not mine to make though. Ill stick to sending out applications, while questing after unicorns and the elusive Jackson A. Ill tell you which one I find first.
by Forester McClatchtey
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
A5 6 March 2014
me, Western civilization is always on the precipice of destruction. The ship is always sinking, and we always have to bail her out. The liberal arts serve this practical purpose: to produce good citizens who think about the common good above their personal interest. Our education in truth, beauty, and goodness is far from useless; rather, it profits the world a great deal since we are sent out to share what we have learned. Plato depicted the well-ordered soul as a well-ordered state. We affirm that a well-ordered state is made up of well-ordered souls. The liberal arts are in another sense useless and gratuitous. They teach the student to wonder in silence. There are moments of study that consist of pure delight with no mercenary advantage. Lear also speaks of this in Act Five when he says to Cordelia, so well live / And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh / At gilded butterflies / And take upon us the mystery of things, As if we were Gods spies. That is what I have learned at Hillsdale: to take upon myself the mystery of things. We have been given, in the words of Edmund Burke, the unbought grace of life, a special privilege which we did not merit. Dr. Whalen will make you self-conscious and nervous for still being in school at the age of 22. He always asks his students, Are you really okay? What sort of creature has to spend a quarter of its lifetime learning how to be itself? The answer, of course, is a human. We take an immense amount of cultivation and training to realize what it means to be human. I have learned so much from my literature courses about what pertains to human flourishing. Hamlet teaches us about hasty errors in judgment, Dante about the speechless wonder of heaven, and Augustine about the restlessness of the human heart until it rests in God. The capacity to marvel at truth and beauty is by far the greatest gift I have gleaned from my time here. I am so grateful for a student body of such ambition and vitality, a music department of such richness and beauty, a faculty of such kindness and brilliance, and an administration of such tireless dedication. My heart is full of gratitude to this community and indebtedness to its blessings. In the end, my advice to you is simple: Exercise, sleep, eat your vegetables, and trust your elders, be they Cicero or your mother. Thank you.
how scientific discoveries were made in the past and, consequently, how they ought to be pursued in the future. It is essential to study the humanities along with science. For if we as scientists agree that there is any truth to be found in literature, philosophy, or theology, it is then necessary to properly understand the interrelation of these truths with our own field. Truth is clouded at best, and distorted at worst, when it is compartmentalized and isolated. I think most universities science programs do exactly this. The science faculty and facilities here are excellent, and I am gratefully indebted to them. But what sets us apart as Hillsdale science majors is this environment in which we study. Weve all heard the well-worn clich about Hillsdale: Its the people. And yet it is around because it is true, affirmed repeatedly with each new class of freshmen. This place attracts some of the kindest and most intelligent people that we will ever meet. Our campus is absurdly, disproportionately musical. Some of my dearest memories have been made playing cello or singing in our various ensembles. The friendships that we make here are kindled in an intense atmosphere. We make them as we struggle together in the academic project we set out to do. People say that our four years in college tend to be the most formative in our lives. I rejoice in the fact that I have been able to spend those years in this community. Now as I myself have been doing today, we at Hillsdale tend to speak very loftily about our aims. We allude to our colleges noble mission. We aim to wrestle with questions of the human condition. We set out to claim our historical and intellectual heritage. Many times, Ive been discouraged at Hillsdale. Ive sat back and realized that no, I could not give an airtight defense of what the good is. I am occasionally embarrassingly wrong about historical events. My list of books to read grows ever longer, and I make little progress. The more that I learn, the more I am aware of how little I really know. A friend of mine who graduated recently helped me to think about this discouragement in the right perspective. He said that studying at Hillsdale is not about getting all the answers. Indeed, that is patently impossible. Rather, our time here is an introduction. We now know what kind of questions to even ask. The moments of wonder that Dr. Whalen spoke of are not over. Properly tended to, they will continue for the rest of our lives. Id like to part with a few lines from the end of T.S. Eliots Four Quartets. They speak to me especially as I prepare to leave Hillsdale and reflect on my time here: We shall not cease from exploration / And the end of all our exploring / Will be to arrive where we started / And know the place for the first time. Thank you.
Winter in Hillsdale can be summed up with one word: trudging. Other things happen students study and relax and eat and sleep but trudging pervades everything else. So why dont the side doors of the Grewcock Student Union unlock? Every day at 10 p.m., the doors of the union are locked, and the only way into the building is through the front entrance. Anyone coming from Chris McCaffery the library or east lawn is out of Assistant Editor luck. Those card readers dont work. It seems to me the height of cruelty. Each door has a card
reader a reader that once worked! and no sign indicates that, after 10 p.m., the inviting-looking red light, waiting to receive a student ID, is as useful as the brick that surrounds it. Any student unused to late nights up the hill (they exist) sees the light and knows the drill. An ID is offered, and received with a beep. But the door remains locked. Try again, it must have been a glitch. And again, maybe you werent fast enough. Nothing. This drama plays out constantly, and no recourse exists but to trudge more up the
steps. Those doors dont work either, but you can try as they laugh at you. Into the snow you go, where pilgrims before you have already carved a path to the front door. I cant think of any good reason that these card readers dont work. I assume its ignorance, and I call upon those responsible to fix these doors! Theres no great moral hazard and no need to storm the presidents office. This is a small thing, but the small things make a difference. Were stressed, were tired, and were trudging. Make our nights go a tiny bit smoother.
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1) Smaller government and local control. 2) It comes down to legislative experience. Im the only candidate whos held elected office. Ive served three terms as county commissioner. Ive done two-and-a-half decades of policy work in Lansing. And Ive testified on more than 27 bills in subcommittees of the Michigan Legislature.
BRAD BENZING
1) Be an ear of the people and a voice of reason. Restore the constitutional principles our founding fathers established. Limit the power of the government over its own people. 2) I am genuinely honest and put my faith in the people to have the wisdom to discern which candidate they believe will exhibit real leadership while protecting their God-given rights. Every individual in the legislature exerts some measure of influence, mine would be a force for good. All you have to do is want to be a part of it.
STEPHEN BEssON
1) Job creation and retention and what can be done for farmers and agriculture, fixing the roads this year and here on out, and funding our schools. 2) Im a good representative of the people. Im a small businessman whos worked through the ups and downs of the economy and worked with a lot of big business communications. Ill listen to the needs and concerns of everyone, understand and be accountable to the people.
TIM HAbERL
1) Common-sense solutions for things that Republicans and Democrats can agree on, like reforming car insurance as no-fault laws in our state have raised the price and even priced some people out of range. 2) I have a breadth of work experience, community service, and education that would allow me to move into the workflow in Lansing, be in committees, and be very effective right out of the gate, putting forward the interests of the district and working with other representatives to get things done.
ERIC LEUTHEUsER
1) I see the state and the nation leaving conservative values, and I want to stand for what I believe our district represents: the right to life, from conception to natural death; the rights to bear arms, in the state and federal constitutions; and the definition of marriage. 2) Im an average guy. I can relate with most constituents. Ive been in the throes of trying to make ends meet every time I get a paycheck. Ill bring a common-sense approach to problems of our state and nation.
HAL NOTTINGHAM
1) I believe that Hillsdale and Branch counties need to shore up employment opportunities here so that next time a recession hits, were not hit so hard. I also want to do more for education, business, agriculture, and the Constitution. 2) Im the most experienced with statewide legislation. Im also interested in a wide variety of issues and carry deep Christian morals and ethics. -Compiled by Jack Butler
ROCHELLE RAY
Hillsdale City Attorney Lew Loren recently announced the city is not authorized to sell streets, thus limiting the potential solutions for road funding. In my opinion, the city has the authority to vacate and close streets, but no authority to sell them or the land over which they traverse, Loren said in a letter to City Manager Linda Brown. The Michigan Constitution allows for cities to regulate streets, so Hillsdale could close a street in order to avoid paying for its upkeep and repair, but it cannot sell it. Within the authority granted by the constitution, statute, and charter is the authority to vacate streets, Loren said in his opinion, but the citys authority to vacate streets and to otherwise exercise reasonable control over them does not extend to or include the right to sell them. Loren said cities are not legally able to sell streets because they are held in the public trust. The essence of all that is that they dont acquire any title interest that they can convey by deed, Loren said. After the Hillsdale City Council compiled a list of 24 potential road-funding solutions, Brown asked for Loren and his partner, Kevin Shirk, to determine whether or not several of the options are legal. Using the Michigan Constitution, state statutes, and the citys charter, Loren and Shirk are examining questionable items on the list, including selling streets, selling Hillsdales Board of Public Utilities, and Payments in Lieu of Taxes for nonprofits. As the attorneys continue to finish reviewing the questionable options, they will send Brown and the council their opinions, but other solutions are still being researched. One option may be state funding. State Sen. Bruce Caswell attended the councils March 3 meeting to talk about several topics, including street funding. Last year, Caswell asked for one project proposal from each of the four county road commissions in his district and submitted them for funding consideration to the Michigan Department of Transportation. In December 2013, MDOT paid $115 million for transportation projects using the Roads and Risks Reserve Fund. MDOT funded 103 local and state projects. While Branch county received $1.5 million to replace a bridge, Hillsdale received none. Some of the $115 million hasnt been spent yet, and Caswell said some it may be given to Hillsdale and other counties that didnt receive funding. In Gov. Rick Snyders 2015 budget proposal, approximately $250 million more will be dedicated for road funding, but Caswell said that will only cover about 20 percent of Michigans $1.2 billion need. Brown admitted her frustration with the process. Even if Hillsdale receives state money, it will most likely contain restrictions about how it can be spent. Our small, urban background kicks us in the backside every time, because it puts a lot of restrictions on the money, Brown said. In addition, the city of Hillsdale was never asked to submit a project to be considered for this funding. While the county road commissions project was considered, Brown said the city was never asked. Even if the road commissions project had been accepted, it wouldnt have helped the city.
Time seems to stop in Volume One Books, located in downtown Hillsdale. It feels as though everything were held suspended, as though just maybe this bookstore were a world unto itself; as though Lady History herself could walk in and feel perfectly at home. Cross the threshold. The change is palpable, the environment suddenly calm. Perhaps it is
Car
Your continued development as a human being is govimportant for a social and political center to exist for people to come together, to talk, do research. But not all bookstores are created equal, and Wunsch has something very particular in mind for Volume One. Indeed, Volume One Books is not the bookstores only legal title. Its alternative moniker DBA in legal jargon is the Book, Art, and Spiritual Center of Hillsdale, or BASCH. The only other word I would add is political, Wunsch said, after a moments consideration. Politics has always been a significant factor in Wunschs life. Even in Hillsdale, he continues to seek reform. Volume One Books hosts a weekly political forum, and Wunsch is active in the common law grand jury movement in Hillsdale. Every Tuesday night, we have
erned by what you read, as well as by the people you talk to, the people you care for, the people who care for you.
the fancied, low hum of hundreds of voices; the murmured words of authors, hanging on the air like cigarette smoke; or perhaps it is the dignified, peaceable decay of thousands of pages. Richard Wunsch, the owner of Volume One, is seated comfortably at a round, wooden table. His wavy, white hair is the only aspect that might belie a life spent roving. It refuses to be held captive within a knit cap. Wunsch has been in Hillsdale County for more than 30 years. He graduated from a Grosse Pointe high school in 1958 before beginning college at Princeton University, only to marry and transfer to Wayne State in Detroit. I got a degree in Near Eastern history, he laughs, which qualified me to drive a cab. Drive a cab he did, for 52 years. From Detroit, it was on to teaching in Chicago, until he left in the spring of 1971 to do construction work in Ann Arbor. After Ann Arbor, Wunsch came to Hillsdale. He finally found home on a farm in Hillsdale County and spent 10 years there. Civil rights stuff, anti-war stuff, then it was back to the land, Wunsch said of his life spent in political activism. But it was when I was on the farm that I finally understood some things about who I was and where I was going. I had a place. I settled in. Spending a decade anchored to one spot does something for you. When I planted trees, raised hogs, it was easier for me to understand the cycle of earth and of life. Settling down in Hillsdale was as much a matter of geographical as emotional orientation. Part of it is the calmness which comes to you with maturical opposition. My first political activity was against the Joe McCarthy hearings in 1953, Wunsch said. I wrote a letter to the editor. It was published, but my father was a Grosse Pointe physician. He told me, Youve got the same last name as me, boy. Youd better be careful with this political stuff. The bookstore, in keeping with Wunschs political philosophy, is ultimately intended to benefit the people who frequent it and the town in which it is embedded. It seeks to welcome all with open arms and affect growth through the ties of community. Your continued development as a human being is governed by what you read, Wunsch said, as well as by the people you talk to, the people you care for, the people who care for you.
(Ben Strickland/Collegian)
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
SPORTS
Mens Basketball
A7 6 March 2014
BOX SCORES
ished her volleyball career in the fall, and will attend University of Michigan for dental school starting this summer. Lenhart already has a workout plan in place and has already competed in an adult league volleyball tournament. Ill have a month plus (from when I graduate to the start of dental school), so I want to train for a half marathon, and continue that into school, Lenhart said. Im joining a yoga and bar studio in Ann Arbor. Lauren Grover 13 and Brogan Wells 12 play in a volleyball league in Ann Arbor, so Im going to join their team. Mott and Copmeyer have both stayed active in their teams offseason workouts this semester. Mott has volunteered his time as a student-coach until he graduates, and Copmeyer will act as an assistant coach this fall as she completes her student teaching at Williams Elementary School in Jonesville, Mich. Mott assists the football coaches in afternoon and morning conditioning, and will help out during spring ball practices as needed. The prospect of coaching is especially exciting for Copmeyer, whose younger sister will be a freshman player in the fall. In the meantime, Kopmeyers goal is to shed the bulk and become long and lean. Im a fan of a good elliptical.
Womens Basketball Hillsdale College: 60 Wayne State: 75 Hillsdale College: 66 Findlay: 78 Season Leaders: Total Points: Megan Fogt (549) Madison Berry (192) 3-Pointers: Kelsey Cromer (35) Kadie Lowery (33) Offensive Rebounds: Fogt (128) Angela Bisaro (56) Defensive Rebounds: Fogt (307) Bisaro (89) Assists: Ashlyn Landherr (78) Bisaro (70) Free Throws: Fogt (132) Berry (65) Blocks: Fogt (67) Bisaro (30)
Hillsdale College: 47 Findlay: 67 Hillsdale College: 86 Findlay: 67 Season Leaders: Total Points: Tim Dezelski (617) Kyle Cooper (325) 3-Pointers: Anthony Manno (53) Brandon Pritzl (48) Offensive Rebounds: Dezelski (75) Cooper (39) Defensive Rebounds: Dezelski (184) Pritzl (111) Assists: Dezelski (107) Pritzl (94) Free Throws: Dezelski (106) Pritzl (80) Blocks: Dezelski (40) Cooper (30)
{From A8
BASKETbALL
Left: Senior Brandon Pritzl shoots a basket during Wednesday nights contest against the University of Findlay Oilers. Pritzl, along with senior Tim Dezelski and sophomore Kyle Cooper, scored 10 points each. The Chargers finished the season 18-9.
(Photo Courtesy of Jim Drews)
nal game of his illustrious Hillsdale career, scored 10 points and grabbed eight rebounds while sophomore Kyle Cooper and fellow senior Brandon Pritzl also contributed 10 points apiece. The Chargers also committed 14 turnovers to Findlays seven, leading to 17 Findlay points. The loss drops Hillsdale to 0-7 all-time against Findlay in postseason play, the last two of which had been in the GLIAC championship game. The Chargers finish the season with an 18-9 overall record, in which eight of their nine losses came on the road. We did a great job protecting our court, McCauley said. The Chargers went 12-1 at home for the season, a fantastic mark. The Chargers will lose six seniors going into next season, but wont be lowering their expectations. Hillsdale has made the GLIAC tournament in all seven years that head coach John Tharp has led the Chargers, and will look to keep that streak alive next season.
Below: Members of the mens Charger basketball team celebrate on the bench during the Chargers victory aginst Findlay last Thursday, Feb. 27. The Chargers beat the Oilers at home, but went on to lose to the second-ranked GLIAC team in Ohio on Wednesday, March 5. (Ben
Strickland/Collegian)
El Cerrito
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
HILLSDALE FALLS TO Track and field to send 13 FINDLAY IN GLIAC TOURNEY athletes to nationals
Nathanael Meadowcroft Collegian Freelancer
Charger Sports
ter the Chargers thrilling victory. The Chargers had plenty of momentum going into their rematch with Findlay in the first round of the GLIAC tournament, but werent able to get goThe regular season could not have finished any ing early. Findlay sprinted out to a quick 6-0 lead in less better for the Hillsdale College mens basketball than three minutes and grew their lead to a margin team. Unfortunately, of 19 points with 3:53 the postseason did not remaining in the first go nearly as well. half. The Chargers reBefore falling to the sponded with a quick 23rd-ranked Oilers of 8-0 run to cut the deficit University of Findlay to 31-20, but the Oillast night in the quarers scored the last four terfinal round of the points of the half to stop GLIAC tournament 47any momentum the 67, the Chargers routed Chargers were buildthe Oilers by 19 points ing. in an 86-67 victory on Hillsdale hurt themFeb. 27, turning a oneselves with poor first point game at the half half shooting, making into a one-sided blowjust six of their 21 atout at the buzzer. tempts from the field. It was our last home The Chargers also game, senior Tim missed all five of their Dezelski said. Im just 3-point attempts before really proud of all these intermission. guys, all these seniors. Half time did not Dezelski, in his final offer any respite for game in front of Charthe Chargers. Findlay ger nation, put in yet started the second half another great all-around on a 7-0 run to balloon performance with 23 their lead to 42-20, and points, nine rebounds, Hillsdale wasnt able and five assists. Fellow to cut the lead down to senior Brandon Pritzl less than 16 the rest of scored a career-high the way. 27 points in the final Senior Tim Dezelski drives by a Findlay deThe Chargers made fender in Wednesday nights loss to the Oilers. home game of his caa season-low 15 field reer, leading to his first (Photo Courtesy of Jim Drews) goals, leading to their career GLIAC player of lowest scoring output, the week honor. Im proud that we finished this way, assistant and were outrebounded 40-30. Dezelski, in the ficoach Brian McCauley said of the victory. It was an emotional contest, capped when senior See Basketball, A7 Anthony Manno knelt down to kiss center court af-
6 March 2014
Junior Joshua Mirth wins the 5000-meter race at GLIACs. Teddy Sawyer Assistant Editor The results from this weekends GLIAC conference home meet are in, and 13 Hillsdale athletes have qualified for the NCAA Division II Indoor National Championships on March 14-15. The mens team will send seven, and the womens squad six. The womens team is currently ranked 13th among the nations Division II teams. Continuing its success from the last several meets, especially in the distance and relay events, the womens track team took 4th place and the mens team took 6th in the GLIAC conference meet. The meet this week went really well, junior Heather Lantis said. We placed 4th, which is much better than we did last year, and the GLIAC is known across the country to be really competitive, so it was great that we did so well against other really competitive schools. For the womens team, sophomore Emily Oren took 1st place in the mile run, clocking an NCAA provisional time with a last-minute surge and pass that launched her to qualifying for nationals. Similarly, junior Amy Kerst took 1st in the 800-meter run, setting a new Margot V. Biermann Center record and qualifying her for nationals. Freshman Allison Duber won 2nd place in the 400-meter dash in an extremely close topthree finish. For the second year in a row, the womens 4x400 took the conference championship. Duber, along with freshman Danielle Gagne and sophomores Emily Guy and Corinne Zehner, also set a new Biermann record. I think this year was definitely more successful. We scored a lot more points as a team and a lot more people ended up on the podium, that is, places one through three, senior Chelsea Kilgore said. A few years ago we had maybe one person on the podium. This year we have multiple people winning the races. For the mens team, junior Joshua Mirth took his second GLIAC championship this year in the 5000-meter run, and placed 5th in the 3000-meter shortly afterward. Senior Maurice Jones took 6th in the 200-meter dash, and the 4x400 meter relay
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
The Hillsdale College womens basketball team ended its season on Wednesday, March 5 to Wayne State University. Wayne State, the number one seed in the GLIAC tournament, defeated the Chargers 75-60. The game was close in the beginning, with Hillsdale ahead 16-15 with 11 minutes left in the first half, but then Wayne State gained momentum and scored 28 points to the Chargers 10 in the last 10 minutes of the half, to take the lead 43-26. Wayne State continued its strong lead, ahead by 28 points at one point, and the Chargers were only able to narrow the lead to 15 points by the end of the game. Were the underdogs, sophomore Sarah Theut said of Hillsdales eighth place ranking in the tournament. Junior Megan Fogt ended her season with 25 points and 14 rebounds in the game. Fogt, with six Player of the Week awards this season, is a contender for GLIAC Player of the Year. She had even better numbers in Hillsdales last home game of the season against Findlay University, with 29 points and 21 rebounds. She made her last 14 shots in a row, a new school record, and only missed her first shot, shooting 14-15 for the night. Despite Fogts performance, Hillsdale lost the game 78-66. The Chargers struggled with 24 turnovers, which sophomore Kelsey Cromer said contributed to the loss. Cromer explained that every game will have turnovers where the other team gets to bring the ball in from out-of-bounds, but Hillsdale was giving the ball away to Findlay. Heres the ball; go score a layup, Cromer said. Theut said Hillsdale lacked energy. She said Findlay freshman Karli Bonar was able to hit five 3-pointers, but Hillsdale could only respond with 2-point shots. We allowed Findlay to do what they wanted, head coach Claudette Charney said, and they dictated the flow of the game. Hillsdale was able to come back from a 41-32 deficit at halftime to be down 53-52 with 8:28 left in the game, but Charney said Findlay was able to regain the momentum and keep their lead.
Despite the last two losses, the Chargers improved tremendously from last year, when they did not even qualify for the tournament. We have done so much better since last year, Cromer said. She explained that the teams roster was essentially the same as last seasons. Having only lost one senior, the improvement was easy to see. Theut said with injuries, different players on the team had the opportunity to play more than they might have. Im really proud of our team for sticking through a long season, Cromer said.
Junior Megan Fogt attempts to nudge out a Malone defender during a game earlier this season. (Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
team, composed of freshman Ty Etchemendy, seniors Matthew Raffin, Jared Van Dyke, and Jones, placed 5th, and will continue on to the national championships. Etchemendy also placed 3rd in the triple jump, and senior John Banovetz took 5th in the shot put with a personal recordbreaking toss. He will also be going to the championships. In addition to those mentioned above, womens team members freshmen Alex Whitford, Jessica Hurley, and sophomores Kate Royer and Kristina Galat, and senior Elliot Murphy on the mens team, will represent Hillsdale College at nationals. The teams also noted the impact of the home meet and the supporting crowd for the teams successes. Its so amazing having such a huge, supporting crowd, Kilgore said. Every time I came around a corner there was a roar of support, and every time I began to lag I could hear people around who were depending on me and I would speed right back up.
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take in the grandness of it, Holleman said. "The musicians will be mentally, physically, and emotionally drained at the end," Holleman said. "It's a large undertaking." The orchestra this year is larger than ever, Holleman said, allowing him to choose a work as large as the Brahms' symphony. Senior Ellen Georges, who plays the French horn, said that being in the back of the orchestra made it challenging to stay engaged, but Holleman had the sections face each other in some rehearsals to help them blend. "It was kind of weird, but it helped our listening," Georges said. The concert will also feature two of the other concerto competition winners, with senior LaRae Ferguson on the violin for a Mozart concerto and senior Jacob Martin on the oboe for a concerto by Bohuslav Martin. "It's been a long time if ever that a woodwind won the competition," Holleman said. "It's unique that he was chosen." The concert is sold out, but Holleman said if students do not have tickets, they should still show up and be patient. "There's no guarantees, but we tend to seat everyone, he said. Ziegler said she has heard parts of the orchestra's other pieces, but not the whole concert. "I am really looking forward to hearing the whole thing," Ziegler said. "Professor Holleman Upper left: Professor of Music James Holleman directs the college orchestra. Upper has chosen challenging music that is pushing them. right: senior Deb Howe plays violin. Lower left: senior Victor Rozsa plays cello at reThey get better every time I hear them." hearsal. Lower right: junior Anna Schumacher plays flute. (Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
post-Soviet Russia, there are now two kinds of film. There are those who make film for the international art house circuit: their language is international. There is another kind that makes popular movies for Russian audiences. Those movies are more polished; they look more like Hollywood. In addition to the development of more distinctive cinema aesthetics, national culture has had an opportunity to express itself through film. A lot of really important topics [in Polish film] go back to World War II, Naumann said. What we lose track of is that these nations behind the Iron Curtain had their own dramas. From the Western perspective, all of the pressure was being applied from the outside. At the same time, there was a lot of pressure from the inside. Two of the films, one Russian and one Polish, already showed. The remaining two will be after Spring Break. For more information, contact either Brandon or Naumann.
(Ben Strickland/Collegian)
The Professional Artist Series newest exhibit, From the Studio and Beyond, features Hillsdale Professor of Art Sam Knechts recent paintings of landscapes and more. His landscapes portray places like Monhegan Island, in Maine, and the Leelanaw Region of the Northern Lower Peninsula, located just west of Traverse City, Mich., and the Tacquamenon Falls, also located in Michigan. At Monhegan, he painted alongside last semesters visiting artist, Judith Carducci.
He uses both watercolor and oil. Knecht said the break from classes he had while on sabbatical last semester gave him time to travel, paint, and, near the end of the semester, assemble the exhibit. The exhibit opened in the Sage Center for the Arts Daughtrey Gallery March 2 and will continue through April 5. Look for more on Knechts exhibit in the March 20 issue of The Collegian. -Abigail Wood
Let us help you enjoy your spring break with a free trip inspection before you go!
Glory To God
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ARTS
wimpy, moralistic, and kind of creepy the last guy you would pick for a game of kickball. But Son of God actually endears his character to you, the way a movie should. Jesus is quiet and sincere with a knowing smile that draws you in. When the nails are driven into his hands, hes not just a religious leader, hes the character youve come to know. Novelist Cormac McCarthy once said Where all is known, no narrative is possible. Son of God has struggled to create a compelling narrative when everyone in the Western world already knows how the story ends. The films portrayal of the messiahs years of ministry feels a bit like Jesus Greatests Hits than a cohesive narrative. First were healing paralytics. Oh! Now were walking on water! Ooooh, Another iconic miracle. Now were feeding the 5,000. However, the second half of the movie takes on a more cohesive narrative. From the Last Supper on, the pacing becomes smoother and conversations more natural. It is easier to connect with characters when Burnett leaves behind the films episodic quality and takes the time to carefully unfold the more important moments of Jesus death and resurrection. Creating a lucrative movie compiled mostly out of a television show repackaging while breathing life into the silverscreen conception of Jesus was certainly a success. Needless to say, their cup runneth over. Teddy Sawyer Assistant Editor Senior and student director Katherine Denton held auditions this week for the world premiere of a new edition of the play Woyzeck, written by Georg Bchner in the 1830s. She is casting a new version of the German play, selecting roles for the apparently schizophrenic Woyzeck, his wife, doctor, commanding officer and others with the help of students and Hillsdale faculty. Not only will the translation and presentation be a world premiere, but much of the music, set, and choreography is largely original to the show. The play is set in a carnival, the only consistent scene across the manuscripts of the play. The original play was incomplete upon the death of the author and exists in multiple confusing, fragmentary forms that various directors and playwrights have reorganized and interpreted in many different ways. Denton chose to create an original translation of the play for her senior project rather than bending to the creative vision of another editor. I picked the show last spring, and Ive been working on it since May, Denton said. Ive read several translations, but a lot of them are really editorial, focusing on the translators view. So I read and read and read and I looked at what I liked and disliked, then I went to George [Angell, professor of theatre] and to talk to him about it, and he said, Well, it looks like you need to do a translation. After that, Denton approached fellow senior Anna Potrafke, who is from Germany, and asked her if she could work with her on the translation. Since then, they produced in collaboration a literal translation of the play. They polished this translation with outside assistance from Assistant Professor of German Fred Yaniga. She [Denton] wanted to do her own adaption of the order and meaning of the play, so we approached how to do it on our own, Potrafke said.
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IN FOCUS
BAILEY PRITCHETT
With over 27 million subscribers in the United States alone and an impressive algorithm that determines user behavior, Netflix created a show that was destined for success before the first season was even released. Although the mathematical inspiration behind House of Cards ensured the shows success, it has also changed the craft of television writing. A piece in The New York Times found that the Netflix algorithm detected three components that led to the creation of the online series. David Fincher, the director of House of Cards, was also the director of The Social Network, a film well-reviewed according to the algorithm. Kevin Spacey and the British version of House of Cards also revealed remarkable interest among viewers. Netflix had everything it needed to create a successful television show: a director, lead actor, and concept with proven popular appeal. House of Cards coasted its way to the award for 2013 Best Television Series at the Golden Globes. The show is smart and entertaining. The addiction of the show stems from the characters obsession with power that guides their every move. The cold, calculating nature of the shows characters reflects the same scientific background of the shows creation. The algorithm that provided the idea for House of Cards removes the warmth found in less calculating shows like Aaron Sorkins The West Wing. Sorkin created the true best political drama on television. His characters and rich dialogue on The West Wing remain unmatched. A fearless president with strong ties to his alma mater, a cheeky press secretary with roots in show business, and a loyal chief of staff who calls the president his best friend are a few of the most loved personalities on television. In his critical analysis of President Bartlet, Yair Rosenburg criticized the fictional powers of the presidents personality in a famous scene from the shows sixth season where the charis-
3 Apartments located at 34 N. Howell St. (above Davids Dolce Vita,) 36 A N. Howell St., (above Roger Locey Jeweler) & 36 B N. Howell St. (above Palace Caf) across from the County Courthouse , downtown Hillsdale Contact David or Debra Kamen: 517-287-5578
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B3 6 March 2014
In November of 1943, there were only 30 male students at Hillsdale College. The rest had been called to arms eight months before. World War II had taken its toll. Although none of the nationals on campus have had any of their brother chapters close up for the duration [of the war] many Greek letter organizations throughout the country have locked their doors until Hitler and Hirohito are put out of the way, The Collegian reported. On Nov. 11, concerned citizens of Hillsdale county travelled to Sunnycrest, the white house on the corner of Hillsdale and Fayette streets, hoping to gain a better understanding of the world situation. Hillsdales Counsel on International Relations was formed inside the white mansion that afternoon to educate society toward securing a just and lasting peace at the wars end. In 1944, College President Jospeh Mauck bought the house from former College President John Windsor. Windsor built the house himself more than 40 years prior. After Maucks purchase, he dubbed the house Sunnycrest. The Mauck family owned the home for the next 47 years. Mauck served as president of the college until 1922. Willfred Otto Mauck, the college president from 1933 to 1942, lived at Sunnycrest until Broadlawn was completed late in 1933. Despite the gloom of the Great Depression, the Maucks entertained at Sunnycrest for many college functions, including annual senior class breakfasts. College songs were sung, including the senior song, The Collegian reported in 1922. Members then drew each others place cards, on which they wrote a prophecy. The prophecies were placed in a jar which will be opened at some future reunion of the class. In September 1939, defective wiring caused a fire that damaged the houses garage, automobiles, and 75 percent of the house and its furnishings. Before Hillsdale College men were drafted in March of 1943, fraternities on campus were already planning post-war reconstruction. Big plans for a new house are only awaiting the lifting of wartime restrictions, and will probably be carried out shortly after the war ends, The Collegian reported in February of that year. The national fraternity will revoke no charters due to a draft-caused man shortage. Sure enough, when the Mauck family left Sunnycrest in 1950, Alpha Tau Omega alumni bought Sunnycrest for use of the chapter on campus. During August of that year, the house was furnished to accommodate thirty men. It was ready for occupancy by the chapter actives when the college opened this fall, thanks to the fact that no major alterations were required to convert the building to fraternity use, The Collegian reported in 1950. Thanks also to the hard work put into the project by a group of ATO alumni wives who did the thousand and one things necessary to make the house a home. Prior to Sunnycrest, ATO actives lived in the Griffith house at the corner of Union Street and East Fayette Street after purchasing the house in 1915. After leaving the Griffith house, ATO actives lived in Herron Hall, which was later demolished to make way for Koon Residence. President Ransom Dunn, a founder of the college, originally lived in Herron Hall. The fall pledge class of 1966 presented the chapter with a large maltese cross, bearing the design of the badge of ATO. The cross was placed on the front of the house where it remained until 2011 after it was removed for maintenance. Current actives hope to return it soon. We still have it, said sophomore Ryan Ahrens, who currently lives in the house. Its just worn down and needs to be sanded and repainted. Our hope is to redo it soon and get it back up there. After hosting countless fraternity events, Sunnycrest suffered wear
(Top) Griffith house (Left to right) sketch of current ATO house, Herron Residence, current ATO house. (photos courtesy of Linda Moore) over the years. By Homecoming in 2000, ATO alumni Paul Schlatter 72 and Kim Beck 75 saw how badly the house had deteriorated and decided to take action. The ATO Alumni Board met in January of 2001, and decided to completely restore the house. When I was a student in the mid-70s, said the late David Harmon 75 in 2001, the ATO house had a real home-like feel. Its not that way anymore. The board knew we needed to restore it at least to the level of 25 years ago. A week after graduation in 2001, a group of ATO alumni arrived at Sunnycrest for a summer of renovation. We had 30 or 40 alumni there, getting it down to the bare bones, Tony Gwilt 90 said. We came in on a Friday night and worked all day Saturday. The restoration featured rebuilt balconies, a new roof, new hardwood floors, new mattresses, porch rails, wallpapering, carpeting, reconstruction of staircase railing, new furniture, landscaping, fresh interior and exterior paint. An annex was also built for fraternity social functions. The houses facelift cost approximately $400,000. When I was treasurer in 88, the ATO House received some money from the Roger Phillip Ryans estate, Gwilt said. One check was for about $60 thousand. Another was for over $100 thousand. So we had the money sitting in the account. With the restoration came new rules for the ATO actives, including strict enforcement of the fraternitys no drinking policy in the house. Actives saw the new rules as reasonable to help maintain the house and its standards. It needed to have a complete overhaul, Gwilt said. It was one of the things we needed to improve recruitment interest and our image on campus. Today, 15 ATO actives live in Sunnycrest. Its home base for everyone, Ahrens said.
ATO GALLERY
Hundreds of Hillsdale College students left in 1861 to fight in the American Civil War. Many came home wounded. Some never came home at all. This series chronicles the experiences of several of those students who left their families and their college to fight for a greater cause. Special thanks to Linda Moore, Arlan Gilbert, and Kraig McNutt for their knowledge and assistance.
f o s e o r e H Hillsdale
Evan Brune News Editor
{ From B4
clear sidewalks bordering city properties and sections of the bike path within city limits, said City Forester Gary Stachowicz, who drives the tractor. Sometimes one-ton dump trucks plow sections of the bike path as well. Stachowicz said the tractor, a pretty good little machine, has four-wheel drive and a heated cabin. He uses a brush, snowblower, or plow attachment, depending on the amount of snow. He said its not a terribly tough job, but it requires concentration. I havent had any major mishaps so I must have done something right, but you definitely have to be on your game. With trucks and a tractor, the DPS crews work to keep Hillsdale running, despite the winter weather. I do enjoy it, but it is trying and stressful at times, Payne said. Especially the way winters going. But he agreed with Engle about something that brightens it. Engle had said his favorite part of the job comes when people express their appreciation for DPS work. Its niceits really gratifying to have a thumbs up, Payne said.
SNOW
A thick cloud of smoke hung over his head as he lay in front of the Confederate trenches. The concussive thud of musket fire hit his face. Asher LaFleur looked down at his shattered leg and watched as the blood drained from his wound. Luce! Luce, I am bleeding to death! I am bleeding to death! he cried, barely heard above the roar of cannons and muskets. Out of the smoke ran a boy in blue. As the figure came closer, he recognized the face of his old college friend, Moses Luce. Luce stooped down, glancing at his comrades shattered leg. LaFleur, I have come for you! he shouted. LaFleur begged his friend to save himself. I shall not leave you! Luce replied. Crawl upon my back, and I will carry you! Musket balls zipped past their heads as Luce lifted his wounded friend up. Amid the fire, he ran back across the Union line, stopping at a small house behind the battle. There, the two college boys stopped. The war ended for LaFleur on that cloudy May day at Spotsylvania. He had served his country throughout 16 separate engagements, been left to die on the field at Gettysburg, and now, a Confederate cannon had taken his leg. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Asher LaFleur was a 20-yearold Hillsdale College student. Two months after the Confederate guns opened up on Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, he, along with many of his college brothers, joined the ranks of the 4th Michigan Volunteer Infantry. By the beginning of July, LaFleur had fought through nine separate battles. His toughest test yet came on the second day at Gettysburg. The men of the 4th Michigan were asked to clear a field in front of Little Round Top. This field would become infamously known as The Wheatfield. One soldier, Pvt. James Houghton, described his experience in his journal. Soon, the order came, he wrote. In less than two minutes, our Regiment was passing out across the wheatfield directly in front of the rebels. It was here that the crash came. A storm of lead swept through our ranks like hail. Many of our noble boys fell to the ground, never to rise to their feet again. In the charge, LaFleur was shot through the stomach while his commanding officer, Colonel Harrison Jeffords, became the highest-ranking officer to be killed by a bayonet in the Civil War. All told, 165 men from the 4th Michigan fell at The Wheatfield. LaFleur was dragged from the field by Confederate soldiers, where he lay for several weeks. He was eventually taken to a Union hospital in Harrisburg, Penn., where he was cared for by a nurse named Ann Valentine. There was this one poor fellow by the name of Asher B. LaFleur who was wounded through the bowels, and the nourishment that he took to sustain life passed out at the wound, she recollected over 25 years later.
(Courtesy of Mossey Library) Asher Lafluer (left) with an unidentified man. Despite this severe wound, LaFleur eventually recovered and rejoined his unit at the beginning of August. He continued to fight until his wound at Spotsylvania. After Luces rescue, LaFleur was taken to a field hospital, where he underwent an emergency amputation. He was later transferred to St. Marys Hospital in Washington, D.C. By the time he arrived, gangrene had set in on his wound, and he was forced to undergo a second procedure. The operation was very severe. The hardest that I have passed through yet, Asher wrote to his future wife. It took them eight hours, and I was under chloroform only about two hours. The rest of the time, I suffered pain that no mortal tongue can describe. I felt like saying, What is there in this world for us to live for? Despite this eight-hour procedure, LaFleur had to endure a third amputation before the wound fully healed. Despite the loss of his leg, LaFleur desperately wanted to contribute to the war effort, and wrote to his wife about his wife on April 12, 1865. I wrote to the President Himself for an order to go to the front. Should he send it, I must go, he wrote. The president never received the letter. He was assassinated at Fords Theater three days later by John Wilkes Booth. The Soldiers Father is dead, LaFleur wrote to his wife a week later. The Father of freedom is slain in the Capitol of a free nation. My God, is this possible? Honest Abraham is no more. Would to God it had been otherwise, but, alas, he has gone. Let the martyred hero sleep. He has done a noble work. After the war, LaFleur returned to Hillsdale, where he served as mayor. He presided over the dedication of the Alpha Kappa Phi monument 30 years after the end of the war. The monument now stands between the classroom buildings of Lane and Kendall. It was my fortune to go out with and stand by some of these very boys in that conflict, he said. I saw them in camp, on the march, and on the dread field of battle. I saw them fight, I saw them die, and I want to say here now, with all these memories rushing in upon me, that a nobler, braver, truer band of patriots never fought for their country than these very college boys of ours.
{ From B4
DEBATE
control. Thats what makes it great, but thats also what makes it frustrating, Doggett said. I could understand what he was saying. Despite all the work involved, and despite the inevitable frustrations, its worth it. If you disagree, we can debate it sometime.
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SPOTLIGHT
B4 6 March 2014
he said. The lead driver plows the middle while his partner follows, clearing the snow along the curb. For instance, if there are four inches of snow on the road, the rear driver ends up pushing an eightinch pile heaped up by his partner. Bildner, plowing snow along the curb of a local street, stops at an intersection. Seeing the coast is clear, he hits the accelerator. No movement. Without momentum, even Bildners towering singleaxle dump truck cannot push the pile hes accumulated. He backs up, builds momentum, and normalcy resumes. The plow again masters the snow, which flies smoothly off to the right, a thick surf reflected in the trucks tall sideview mirrors. Bildner and the other drivers must manage their salt as well as the snow. They occasionally stop to tilt the truck beds, sliding the salt toward the tailgate spreaders. The salt comes out underneath the tailgate. There it falls onto a rotating plate which scatters it behind the truck. This is but one of the many considerations drivers face. Another consideration: they must watch for pedestrians, especially children playing in snowbanks. The trucks are huge, with two exterior steps up to the cabin door. You grab one handle to mount the steps and then another to get into the cabin itself. During warmer months the fleet is used for other tasks, such as sidewalk maintenance and brush removal. In addition to the road fleet, DPS uses a tractor to
Doug Bildner, a city of Hillsdale mechanic, plows snow in a single-axle dump truck fitted with a plow during his regular day shift. (Walker Mulley/Collegian) children. But even thats not a great inconvenience. Payne said he and his crew keep extra equipment, such as heavy clothes and shovels, in their cabins. You gotta pretty much be prepared for anything and everything, he said. The department uses a complex system of prioritization and route planning to do the job efficiently. Four trucks running abreast plow the trunkline, Payne said. the staggered plows cover half the road so it only takes one pass out and one pass back. DPS drivers handle the rest of hte roads in pairs,
CAMPUSCHIC
Who or what inspires your style? Rachel Heider, William Persson, and the Joco. Describe your fashion sense in five words or less. More money, more problems. What is your favorite item of clothing? I have a pair of socks with the German flag on them, #german. What is your most embarrassing item of clothing? Dont tell anyone, but I still own a pair of sweatpants with Aeropostale plastered down the side. What is your biggest fashion pet peeve? When people dont observe Minty Mondays or Black Fridays.
Photos and Compilation by Laura Williamson
College in New Ulm, Minn., but decided in his senior year to study German. He spent 2005-2012 securing a masters and doctorate in German Studies from Michigan State. For the last of those three Due to a favorable response from Hillsdale Col- years, he lived in Europe and traveled between Berleges German students and faculty, Visiting Assis- lin and Poznan, a small Polish town, while working tant Professor of German Stephen Naumanns one- on his dissertation. year appointment was extended to a three-year stay Sophomore Magdalena Olson has taken Nauat Hillsdale. mann for upper He totally fits level German in, senior Kodiak classes. Dschida, president I really like of the Delta Phi Naumann beAlpha German cause hes very Honorary said. familiar with You can find him the actual places at every single and has studied German event. a lot in Berlin, Naumann was she said. Its originally hired kind of like to fill a temporary hes just taken teaching position us along on his while Eberhard trips there. I feel Geyer, chairman very familiar and professor of with Berlin and German, was on like I know it alsabbatical last se- Stephen Naumann, assistant professor of German most as well as mester. Geyer and instructs an upper level German course. (Carsten he - hes shared Fred Yaniga, as- Stann/Collegian) that with us, his sistant professor of passion. German, recomNaumann is active not only in Delta Phi Alpha mended the prolonging of Naumanns stay at Hill- and the German Program, but also on campus. He sdale. has organized events such as all-campus showing Naumann hopes to stay on at Hillsdale after his of the film Luther and a book discussion group three-year contract is up. for students of all disciplines on Miriam Winters This is the place where I want to be able to teach Trains. and continue to serve and have a career, working I think part of being on the faculty of a liberwith the students and fellow faculty, he said. al-arts college is joining students of other faculty According to Yaniga, Naumann works tirelessly and asking questions across disciplines, Naumann and pays close attention to students. Yaniga said the said. I think thats a tribute to what we do here and word that best describes Naumann is grossherzig, who we are. or generous. He believed his hiring as the third German proHe comes in early in the morning and hes often fessor in the program reveals the growing success. here until late in the evening, Yaniga said. Hes I think thats a wonderful statement that the incredibly generous with his office hours, and his programs doing very well, and has done very well office hours are very busy. Hes an incredibly warm for quite a while, he said. Its being rewarded and open and willing colleague. with the chance to have three faculty members to Naumann originally completed his undergradu- offer more things to students, and were all excited, ate degree in pre-seminary studies at Martin Luther were thrilled about moving forward together. Ramona Tausz Collegian Reporter
A WEEKEND IN DEBATE
Daniel Slonim Collegian Reporter
If you can beat the same opponent in three different debates, you will own that persons soul. Or such is the story that circulates among college debaters. I was informed of this fact after I decided to sign up for a debate tournament at Bowling Green State University and compete with the rest of Hillsdales team. Fortunately, I would have a more experienced partner to help me protect my soul. I was off to a decently good start, as I already knew the basic rules from friends who debated in high school and from my brother Jonathan, who was on the team for two years. The Hillsdale College debate team competes in two forms of debate. The first is Lincoln-Douglas, or LD, in which members compete as individuals. This year they are debating education reform. The second kind of debate is called Parliamentary, or Parli, in which you have a partner. There is a separate resolution for each debate available 15 minutes before the round starts. Though Hillsdales debaters usually focus on LD, this tournament was primarily Parli, so I was paired up with freshman Graham Deese. Debate Coach Matthew Doggett and I agreed that I should try a practice round before going to the tournament cold. Deese and I would debate against Doggett and sophomore Kevin Ambrose. The subject was school vouchers. I was amazed at everyones ability to come up with so many arguments so quickly, and, what seemed even harder, to keep track of them all. After the round, everyone assured me that novice Parli at BGSU would be easier. Just one warning: dont lose to Grove City College, Doggett told me. Though Grove City and Hillsdale have a lot in common as colleges, their debate teams are like Ohio States and Michigans football teams. At 6 a.m. on Saturday, Feb. 22, I climbed into the van with the speech team to ride to the tournament. I watched Matthew Warner, coach of the speech team, joking around with the guys in the front of the van while those in the back reviewed the speeches they would give in just a few hours. Shortly after 8 a.m., it is time for my first debate
round. I walked into the room with all the other debaters, and we were given the resolution: The United States Economy is a big boat with a small leak. In 15 minutes, each pair would go off to a different room to argue about the same resolution. For now, our whole team talked together about strategies we could adopt. I looked up definitions of key words like leak just in case. We beat a novice team from Notre Dame University. Once we made it to the semifinal round, Deese and I found ourselves facing a Grove City team we had already beaten. We were told the resolution, then fifteen minutes later, we walked into the room where we would have our final debate. Forty minutes later, we left the room, allowing the judges to deliberate. After dinner at Buffalo Wild Wings with the whole team, we arrive in time to hear the results announced at the award ceremony. Deese and I had lost the final round, winning second overall. Not bad for a first day debating. But sadly, the team that beat us was also from Grove City. We then got to hear the results from the forensics tournament. Freshman Erin Graham won first place in Poetry Interpretation. Junior Ian Fury won first in Impromptu and third in Extemporaneous. Junior Brandon Butz took second in Impromptu and Longform Impromptu, and won third in After Dinner Speaking. Freshman Chris Landers won fourth in Persuasion, and Junior Andrew Montgomery won fourth in Extemporaneous. Members agreed that you cannot be successful in debate and heavily involved in other activities on campus. Between the tournaments and research there just isnt time to do much more. What makes it worth it? Doggett said when things go badly, when poor resolutions are chosen, when judges dont take notes or dont understand the rules, the challenge is part of the fun. There is an immense satisfaction in having enough debate expertise to articulate why a resolution is poorly written. Theres a lot that you can prepare for and then theres a lot in this activity thats totally out of
See DEBATE, B3
See SNOW, B3