4.2.15 Hillsdale Collegian
4.2.15 Hillsdale Collegian
4.2.15 Hillsdale Collegian
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
BPU director
charged with
drunk driving
Macaela Bennett
City News Editor
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
See Charney A7
Stephen Smith:
New dean of faculty
Last week, the Hillsdale College shotgun team went to nationals for the fourth time, and
brought home its third Division
III championship from San Antonio.
Hillsdales 10-person team is
the only one in recent years to
earn back-to-back division titles,
besides Lindenwood University,
a Division I team with close to
100 shooters.
The team has attended the
NRA-sponsored national championship every year since its
2011 inception.
While many students traveled
south or visited family during
spring break, the shotgun team
remained on campus, gearing
up for the annual Association
of College Unions International
Collegiate Clay Target Championships. The tournament is a
marathon for shooters, with almost days including practice and
Morgan Delp
Editor in Chief
See Shotgun A7
INSIDE
problem after which its named.
A3
Advanced watercolor
Sam Knechts biannual waterties and joys of working in that
medium. B1
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
News........................................A1
Opinions..................................A4
City News................................A6
Sports......................................A7
Arts..........................................B1
Features....................................B3
NEWS
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
A2 2 April 2015
students.
The students seem to appreciate a variety of housing, Dean of
Women Diane Philipp said. They
like the Suites, and the varieties
of singles and doubles they can
choose. We opted for this townhouse idea and then we met with
a group of students. Weve done
that with almost everything we
build, because students usually
have very good ideas.
Current plans for these homes
include eight single bedrooms,
four bathrooms, a laundry unit,
seating unit, kitchen, living room,
dining room, and more. Six homes
will be connected, totaling 48 residents.
Theres a bit of a Central
Hall theme, nice porches, and really nice parking, Philipp said.
Theyre talking a rod-iron fence
in the front, with really nice landscaping.
Once built, the townhouse will
replace 16 beds being removed in
both Simpson and McIntyre residences, and provide additional options for students living off campus.
When you build residential,
especially when you can do higher
density, other things happen as a
Mac to be renovated,
more changes in future
Josh Paladino
Collegian Reporter
The lot next to College Baptist Church is now empty after a house was torn down to
make room for the student townhouses. (Joseph Adams/Collegian)
Storage occupation in
Knorr a problem for all
Kelsey Drapkin
Senior Reporter
new equipment, so its really going to be a state of the art kitchen for the six to eight hundred
people its going to hold. So its
very exciting, but this is kind of
the growing pains part.
Because of the space reduction, students have been strugnior Cody Jessup recounted a
recent lunch experience where
empty tables, so had to get creative.
We had to resort to using
the table where the workers who
wipe down the tables keep their
supplies, Jessup said.
According to Jessup, the two
neatly stacked the cleaning supplies in the corner and pulled
extra chairs down from the back
corner of the dining hall.
Junior Ellen Hogan said she
shares a similar frustration.
Finding a place to sit in
the dining hall has been harder
lately, Hogan said. Students
sprint across the room to snag a
online courses.
Director of Marketing Bill Gray talked about
Hillsdales promotion strategy.
The focus of the colleges online course advertising right now is the Constitution 101 course, he
said. We are also advertising other courses, such as
The Federalist Papers, on digital channels such as
social media.
Alongside traditional advertisement on conservative talk radio networks, Hillsdale has recently
attempted to publicize the online courses in a new
manner.
The college is testing advertising this course on
selected national TV networks, such as news, history, and religious networks, Gray said. The test
cable television campaign for Constitution 101 will
end in mid-April.
Hillsdale will examine the effectiveness of this
experiment and continue from there.
The course is also promoted to those who have
previously enrolled in a Hillsdale College online
course, according to Gray.
ence.
We try to offer the courses to those who are
interested in similar topics, Grays said. For example, Facebook offers the opportunity to target
ads for, say, American Heritage, to people who have
expressed a direct or indirect interest in American
history.
Gray discussed the marketing plan going forward
for Hillsdale, social media and radio advertisements
will continue year-round as long as they remain effective, while as stated earlier the television promotions will be under review in mid-April.
The commercials and advertisements are effective as the new course has been well received and
the others continue to thrive.
The Federalist Papers is doing extremely well.
It has more than 25,000 enrollments to date, and the
NEWS
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
A3 2 April 2015
Micah Meadowcroft
Arts Editor
Hillsdale studies.
Dean of faculty
From A1
presence.
OPINION
2 April 2015 A4
Online: www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Editor in Chief: Morgan Delp
News Editors: Amanda Tindall | Natalie DeMacedo
City News Editor: Macaela Bennett
Opinions Editor: Jack Butler
Sports Editor: Sam Scorzo
Arts Editor: Micah Meadowcroft
Spotlight Editor: Bailey Pritchett
Design Editor: Hannah Leitner
Web Editor: Evan Carter
Photo Editor: Anders Kiledal
Circulation Manager: Phil DeVoe
Ad Managers: Rachel Fernelius | Alex Eaton | Drew Jenkins | Matt
Melchior
Assistant Editors: Sarah Albers | Andrew Egger | Nathanael
Meadowcroft | Kate Patrick | Ramona Tausz | Emma Vinton
Photographers: Joseph Adams | Sarah Borger | Joel Calvert | Elena
Creed | Anders Kiledal | Hailey Morgan | Ben Strickland | Laura Williamson |
Faculty Advisers: John J. Miller | Maria Servold
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Jenna Adamson
Special to the Collegian
VOTER ID IS
NOT RACIST
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 [email protected] before Sunday at 6 p.m.
Rachel Solomito
Student Columnist
If youve ever driven on a
Michigan road, youve no doubt
sworn under your breath at some
point as your tires bounced
across a pothole big enough to
swallow the Titanic. Or two. Or
On May 5, voters will decide
on Proposal 1, a controversial
bill that would raise Michigans
Proposal 1 is a mere 100
words in length and effects no
direct change of its own. Instead,
its design will set into motion
The Uses of a
Liberal Arts
Education
by Forester
McClatchey
A5 2 April 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Attacks from liberal media outlets are hardly the beginning of Cruzs worries, however. His
White House aspirations have a much different beast challenging his presidential bid a problem
that lies not with his policies or citizenship and is far more fundamental than any of the political
chatter that has clouded the media since his announcement. Simply put, Cruz is unelectable.
To discuss Cruzs controversial political antics or his questionable eligibility for the presidency
utter lack of respect for Republican unity does indeed make a good president (it doesnt) is beside
the point. The fact remains that he will never receive a nomination from the Republican Party, much
less its respect.
This brings us to the second stage in Cruzs fairy-tale presidential run: The general election.
Even if Cruz miraculously won the Republican nomination (which he wont), he would be absolutely massacred by media outlets during the general election.
disconnect with American voters. His ultra-conservative ideals alienate him from voters on both
sides of the aisle.
In an article by FiveThirtyEight Politics, Cruz was matched up in four national live polls against
Hillary Clinton and came in last place among all of the Republican primary candidates.
candidate preference. At best, it seems doubtful that Cruz could overcome such low predictions,
even at an early stage.
It is obvious that Cruz has no chance whatsoever of seriously competing in a general election
against Hillary Clinton. Not only for this reason, but primarily for his inability to win the Republican nomination, will Cruz be absolutely unelectable in 2016.
legendary government shutdown. He also fought to rescind the presidents execuon Obamacare or amnesty, let alone action taken against these hugely unpopular programs.
Some critics argue that these steps were too radical. Perhaps thats true. But if he is radical, at
least Cruz stands by the positions he takes. Unlike the stereotypical politician, he does not hide his
achieve it. Some call that radical. Others call it honest leadership.
Many on the right fear that a leader like Cruz would polarize the Republican Party and lead to
another Democratic president. This fear is not without merit. It could be a gamble to nominate a
successful direction for the Republican Party. The time for moderate, electable candidates has
passed. In the last congressional election, moderates were crushed by their more conservative opposition with clear policy goals. This only goes to show how voters are tired of hearing the same
story from Republicans and Democrats alike. Voters are tired of inaction and bickering. They want
honesty, integrity, and action from their leaders. Cruz boasts the best Republican track record of just
that: Honesty, integrity, and action. Some call it radical. I think it might be the ticket to conservative
success.
Kristiana Mork is a freshman George Washington Fellow studying politics and speech.
LETS HONOR
GOOD FRIDAY
Ramona Tausz
Assistant Editor
Tomorrow, the Western Church
The lack of expansion in the computer science program is partially the result of the campus polarized
academic climate. The humanities majors are perfectly
content to dodge math courses while the average business or science student is still required to attend courses in English, history, religion and philosophy. Yet students of the humanities take for granted the work that
goes on to enable word processors, image editing, and
web page design. In a few years, no one will even be
able to explain what a disk is, or why the computer
labs are so slow (try rebooting).
dream. Many non-programmers hold the assumption
career. The truth is that programmers are trained to
pick up any language their employer presents to them.
Programming is just as much an art as designing a
building, or constructing an argument. People slave for
hours trying to design user interfaces for Microsoft and
Apple, resulting in countless updates to software used
by millions. The code behind computers, ATMs, and
be seen as a disposable accessory of the math or business departments.
If we expect students at Hillsdale to master the libon mathematics, geometry, music production, and astronomy. The ability to code is no longer just a skill
found in the basements of suburban families. Hillsdale
needs a computer science program, even just a minor,
to maintain relevance and meet the challenges of
modern life.
Joe Pappalardo is a freshman studying marketing,
journalism, and computer science.
C
ITY NEWS
Hillsdale confronts adult illiteracy
A6 2 April 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
City to
use $375k
grant
to improve
State
Street
Phil DeVoe
Circulation Manager
(Meg Prom/Collegian)
Bailey Pritchett
Spotlight Editor
A student perspective
I got to show
my son that
Mommy goes to
school too. And
if I can do it, he
can do it too.
Amy Moulton
An administrative
spective
per-
Yvonne Rogers
A legal perspective
taught.
the set.
-
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
around.
Junior Sarah Grunert hit the
tory.
Despite the lopsided score,
some matches showed stiff competition between the teams. Lossay Pierce came back 6-3 and
10-6 for the win. Additionally,
junior Sydney Delp won a close
two-set match 7-5, 6-3 at no. 2
singles. At no. 3 singles, senior
Morgan Delp won a hard-fought
three-set match 5-7, 6-2, 10-4.
Lindsay and I played some
great doubles. We were sharp
and focused and took care of
business, junior Sydney Delp.
I was not too happy with how
I played in my singles match,
but a win is a win even when it
is ugly.
Walbright said that everyone
Rachael Hille
Collegian Freelancer
Charney
Moving
From A1
SPORTS
A7 2 April 2015
forward,
Charney
BOX SCORES
Baseball
Wayne St. (Mich.): 4
Hillsdale: 13
Season Leaders
Batting Average
Bekah Kastning (.458)
Ainsley Ellison (.383)
Runs Batted In
Grunert (16)
Ellison (7)
Earned Run Average
Danielle Stiene (2.16)
Kate Ardrey (3.50)
Hillsdale: 9
Wayne St. (Mich.): 5
Hillsdale: 3
Wayne St. (Mich.): 14
Hillsdale: 3
Golf
Tennessee River Rumble
1. Lincoln Memorial (593)
2. Dalton State (602)
3. Brevard (611)
4. Washburn (617)
5. Carson-Newman (618)
6. Catawba (619)
7. Tusculum (622)
8. Hillsdale (632)
9. Walters State (635)
10. Taylor (640)
11. LMU B (641)
12t. Anderson (646)
12t. LMU C (646)
14. Findlay (657)
15. LMU D (679)
Season Leaders
Batting Average
Eric Shankin (.346)
Connor Bartlett (.317)
Runs Batted In
Bartlett (15)
Chris McDonald (13)
Earned Run Average
P.j. Cooley (2.45)
Shane Armstrong (3.26)
Softball
Hillsdale: 0
Hillsdale: 10
Shotgun
From A1
stepped up. Our kids are
such great shooters across the
in the gaps.
Pfaff attested to the closeknit nature of the team.
Shooting in high school
is very much like shooting for
yourself, Pfaff said. Even
though youre on a team, its
just like a group that youre
Philip Wegmann:
Baseball
should stay
timeless
When God created the world,
he made mistakes. When God
created baseball, he made perfection.
Now though, like irreverent and ungrateful children, the
commissioner and owners have
instituted new rules for the 2015
season foolishly trying to hurry
the pace of a game designed to
exist outside of time.
But baseball doesnt need
progressive reformation. It
needs only its own immortal orthodoxy.
Of all the sports that matter,
baseball alone escapes the tyranny of the timepiece. Bound
by the two hands of the clock,
basketball conforms to quarters,
hockey obeys periods, and football submits to halves. In each,
the clock does more than just
mark the remaining moments. It
shapes the consciousness of the
players and guides the outcome
of the game.
In baseball, every inning enEach unit of play contains three
outs and every game, nine innings, but otherwise hours and
minutes have never factored
into the sport. Fat ladies, walkoff homers, and shutdown closers mark the end of the game
not obnoxious buzzers.
With his new pace-of-play
apostasy, rookie commissioner
Rob Manfred has forced a temporal construct on a holy institution. Fearful that the length
of a baseball game eclipses the
attention and imagination of the
average American, the commissioner conjured new speed-up
rules.
To hurry things, the batters
box becomes a cage, as hitters
must keep a single foot within
the chalk lines throughout their
at-bat. Then to squeeze the
game through a broadcast window, digital timers countdown
from 2:25 between innings, as if
the traditional intricacies of so
called non-game-action need
only the same time necessary to
boil a runny egg.
In the lesser sanctuaries
of Double and Triple A ball,
a more insidious heresy has
emerged: pitch clocks. These
electronic eyesores force young
pitchers to throw within twenty
seconds of touching the rubber.
They also offer a threatening
message to Major League professionals: Conform to the new
pace of play rules or submit to
the pitch-clock monstrosity.
Last year, the average baseball game lasted 3 hours and 14
minutes. Thats a ghastly sum of
time until compared with foot-
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
2 April 2015
Charger Sports
Baseball splits series
Stevan Bennett
Collegian Freelancer
The Hillsdale College baseball team experienced the brutality of March in Michigan last
weekend as the Chargers (8-16,
3-5 GLIAC) battled through
wind, rain, snow, and hail on
their way to a split of a fourgame set with the Wayne State
Warriors (9-12, 3-5 GLIAC).
The series opened on Sunday
due to cold weather on Saturday,
but the delay did nothing to cool
the Charger bats as Hillsdale ex-
Junior Tad Sobieszczanski slides into third base in a game against Wayne State
University. (Photo Courtesy of Jenny Bals)
this year.
Let us help
you enjoy your
spring break
with a free
trip inspection
before you go!
Glory To God
196 W. Carleton - 517-439-1323
Free wipers
with Valvoline
high mileage oil
change!
B1 2 April 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
(Micah Meadowcroft/Collegian)
Sam Knecht)
Sam Knecht)
Sam Knecht)
Things
March 21 April 3
Design Beyond Boundaries: David Lippert
Daughtrey Gallery
David Lippert 80, president of AutoExec, Inc., exhibits an array of
personal and commercial work ranging from photography and
illustration to product design and beyond.
Half Moon with Ed Crouch Concert
Broad Street Underground
55 N. Broad Street
Half Moon and Ed Crouch bring down the Broad Street Undergrounds
9p.m. $5 Entry.
April 7 - April 10
Senior Art Exhibit #2
Daughtrey Gallery
Graduating art majors present their capstone exhibits in partial
ARTS
2 April 2015 B2
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
IN FOCUS
(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)
Andrew
Kern
Confronting
life: art is not a
sedative
This is a place where art, apwe cant turn back time. As I was proached properly, can come
going away to college, I remem- through in an unexpected way.
ber thinking, So that was high We often tend to label artists who
school. And then, turning twen- talk about pain as angsty. But
ty: So those were the teenage some problems do not go away
years. Sometimes it hits me that until theyre addressed.
those are years Im never getArt is no sedative. Rather, art
ting back. By no means do I miss is valuable precisely because it
them, but I also know that I didnt reveals the way things really are.
make of them what I might have. It tells us the things we dont want
Weeks before coming to to hear, which are sometimes exHillsdale, I watched the movie actly the things we need to hear
Boyhood
most: things to
and I saw exexperience and
actly what I deGreat art uses our own be transformed
scribed above
We abuse
pain to help us see what and by.
play out. The
art when we
movie deliv- where we are. After it brings approach
it
ers an image us into the reality of our situ- as an opiof growing up
a blinder
ation, it gives us the power ate,
by following
which enables
a boy named to improve by showing what us to ignore
Mason and his we must accept before we our problems.
family
over
Art is useless
can heal.
the course of
that helps us
twelve years.
pretend life is
His
mother
okay when it
drives his life
isnt.
as she travels through relationGreat art uses our own pain to
ships and homes. As a kid I hated help us see what and where we
the feeling that I wasnt in control are. After it brings us into the reof my destiny, and I hated it for ality of our situation, it gives us
the power to improve by showing what we must accept before
this is it. She looks back over we can heal. Even more, art
her life and cries, saying, I just can show us that there are other
thought there would be more.
things to be found in life than
She said it so well. While am- what we have experienced by
biguous, her choice of the word embodying a hope that is more
more was simple and relatable. than naive fantasy.
When were young, we hold the
notion that life always offers ful- Mason has passed into this place.
places. Its the thought that the
life we crave is at the end of the
next path. But eventually we go
down enough roads either to realourselves a slave to our desire. So
hits us? Often we try and bury
the knowledge of it or run from
it, even if we dont admit thats
what were doing.
Yet the darkness we hide from
is immovable. There is no undoing what has been done. And
when you come to suffering in
life there are only two options.
You can pretend the cave isnt in
front of you and make your home
in the doorway, or you can go inside and come out the other end.
quality because lets be honest the manner in which Kendrick hyped this album threatened
edness. In an interview with
Rolling Stone he declared (without irony): This album will be
taught in college courses someday. I genuinely believe that.
Even Lamars rival Drake predicted this album would be the
last great concept album of
hip-hop.
I have to admit, I remained
listen until about three quarters of
the way through King Kunta,
when the beat dropped away and
left in its wake a deep and anonymous voice. By the time you
hear the next pop, it intoned,
the funk shall be within you.
Pop. A swaying female chorus
what else the funk. Kendrick was gone, vanished behind
His absence for the rest of the
song didnt matter. By then he
had me.
Forester McClatchey is a
junior from Atlanta, Georgia.
He is double majoring in art
and English. He is a painter
and a rapper.
Dutton Kearney
Assistant Professor of English
John Miller
Gary Wolfram
Collin Barnes
Spotlight
B3 2 April 2015
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
tion, he said.
Both students and professors
use the SEM, which is kept in the
biology department, for research
purposes. Galginaitis will help
to teach proper techniques to the
next student to use the microscope
for a project.
The microscope also requires
technical upkeep, some of which
is performed by off-campus experts.
Theres a lot of maintenance
that goes into it, but we hire in
look at it when things arent working like they are supposed to, he
said. In general, its just making
sure that the vacuum is sealed inside before actually turning on the
microscope.
Another high-powered microscope, the atomic force microscope, is kept in the physics
using the SEM to get clear pic- department. Used for research
tures.
in multiple disciplines, the AFM
You cant really see it using provides detailed information
A lot of our
equipment that we
have is the same
type youd see at a
big Division I
research university.
Sophomore Joshua Ramette uses the Atomic Force micro- ofthe samples exterior. A color
scope for his independent study. (MadeleineJepsen/Collegian) gradient on the image represents
the distances of various points on
a typical optic microscope, the the surface, with darker parts indiabout the surface of a sample.
Sophomore Joshua Ramette AFM produces extremely accu- cating a lower height, and lighter
works with the AFM microscope rate data about the exterior of the parts indicating a higher height.
as a part of an independent study sample.
We can say Oh, how high is
An atomic force microscope the sample at exactly this point?
for his physics major. Ramette,
who has become somewhat of provides a topographical map of and we can get an actual number
an expert on the topic, will pres- a sample surface, Ramette said. for that, whereas in an optical
ent his methodology in a talk on When you insert a sample, it runs microscope, you cant just look
a small probe across the surface
April 9.
Rather than providing a photo- of the sample, and collects height nanometers high right there, Ragraphic image of the sample like data, essentially how high the sur- mette said.
Q&A
janine livernois
Josh Paladino
Collegian Reporter
184 pieces circle the design of the window, commemorating those who died in the Pentagon attack. (Photo Courtesy of David Roberts)
window
From B4
said.
Top military personnel were
in attendance in the ceremony,
as well as Secretary Rumsfeld,
Vice President Richard Cheney,
and Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert. After accepting a
the Pentagon during the attacks
on behalf of the Department of
Defense, Rumsfeld spoke on the
chess
Were you involved in any Christian ministry before
opening your home to hurting
From B4
naments, he thinks that for now,
its all about students of any level
coming out to have fun.
Ive played since I was little,
but I mostly just like to tinker
around, Smith said. Im not
very good, but I like strategy
games.
The above rate is based on one student per bedroom. If students wish to add an
extra roommate by sharing a bedroom the extra student would be less. The house
is equipped with a washer and dryer.
What I was praying for is that God would make my farmhouse into a transition home. I was contacting other
agencies, thinking if I could join them, then they could
purchase my home and renovate it to meet their needs.
I would just live there and not have to work outside of
(current CEO of Life Challenge), that he was running
residential recovery homes. So I got ahold of him, and
B4 2 April 2015
Spotlight
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Students conduct
giraffe research
Hannah Leitner
Design Editor
Sophomore Chess Club Vice President Linnett Mbogo evaluates her opponents moves.
(Sarah Borger/Collegian)
Jessie Fox
Collegian Reporter
boards atop the union tables last
Wednesday afternoon. When he
saw them, senior Os Nakayamas
face lit up and he exclaimed, We
have chess boards its a start.
See Chess, B3
Carolina. Dennis company donated the piece to the U.S. Army, and
created a design template where
On the day of the two-year each chaplain had the chance to
anniversary I stood right in the place a piece on the the window
window where the plane had hit,
junior David Roberts recalled.
On the day of the
Instead, I was looking at the
stained glass window we placed two-year anniversary I
in the chapel that week.
David and his father Dennis
stood right in the
Roberts designed and placed all
in the Pentagons memorial chapel
to honor the victims of the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks.
The main window behind the
altar was designed in 2002 by 400
United States Army chaplains and
chaplain assistants lead by Dennis team at a conference in South
See Window, B3
CAMPUSCHIC