Hillsdale College acquired a row house in Washington D.C. to house up to 20 students in the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program (WHIP). Previously, most WHIP students lived in other housing like the Heritage Foundation building across from the Kirby Center. The new house will help the interns stay connected as a community. It was recently renovated and will provide housing close to the Kirby Center.
Hillsdale College acquired a row house in Washington D.C. to house up to 20 students in the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program (WHIP). Previously, most WHIP students lived in other housing like the Heritage Foundation building across from the Kirby Center. The new house will help the interns stay connected as a community. It was recently renovated and will provide housing close to the Kirby Center.
Hillsdale College acquired a row house in Washington D.C. to house up to 20 students in the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program (WHIP). Previously, most WHIP students lived in other housing like the Heritage Foundation building across from the Kirby Center. The new house will help the interns stay connected as a community. It was recently renovated and will provide housing close to the Kirby Center.
Hillsdale College acquired a row house in Washington D.C. to house up to 20 students in the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program (WHIP). Previously, most WHIP students lived in other housing like the Heritage Foundation building across from the Kirby Center. The new house will help the interns stay connected as a community. It was recently renovated and will provide housing close to the Kirby Center.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 12
Just two years after the opening of the
Allan P. Kirby Center for Constitutional
Studies and Citizenship in Washington, D.C., Hillsdale College can now boast of a second acquisition on Capitol Hill. A donor gave the college a row house last month for use as student housing for the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program. In the past, most WHIP students lived in the Heritage Foundation building across the street from the Kirby Center, or in other self-selected housing. Program members being so far apart made it diIfcult Ior a sense oI community to form around the Kirby Center, said Program Manager and Research Associ- ate Anna Dunham. Ownership of the building will help keep Hillsdale students in contact with one another. The beauti- ful 112-year-old Victorian building was recently renovated by the previous own- ers. For a time it functioned as a bed and Early in the morning on April 9, a student attempting to turn off of Union Street onto Barber Street crashed into the main Slayton Arboretum gate. The impact crushed the gate, destroyed a portion of the bor- dering stone wall, and totaled the car. Though the car reportedly fipped aIter impact, the driver left the scene uninjured. There was extensive dam- age to the vehicle and the wall, said Chris Martini, director of campus security. The right side of the gate was torn completely off of its hinges, though the left side remained mostly undamaged. To the right of the gate, several of the fence posts buckled after the vehicle smashed a section of stone and concrete into the wall. Sophomore Linda Lizalek witnessed the crash. She saw the vehicle traveling down Union Street at about 2:10 a.m. Though the vehicle did slow down, she said, the driver did not slow enough to make the turn. The vehicle was traveling at a good clip, Martini said. Lizalek does not remember if she turned away at the point of impact or if she blocked out the memory. Either way, she has no recollection of the cars actual impact. I think it hit the curb and then fipped on its back, she Junior Lauren Grover was elected president of the 2012-13 senior class on Wednesday. I really appreciate the support and encouragement of campus, Grover said. And Im really excited to get started. The juniors voted on Tuesday and Wednesday for their senior committee. The committee is in charge of planning all senior class events, including the senior party, the senior gift, and future class reunions. Grovers vice president will be Hannah Akin. The new secretary is Marissa Philipp; the treasurer is Crystal Marshall; and the social chairwoman is Celia Rothhaas. The class ambassadors will be Eric DeMeuse and Ashley Logan. Director of Career Services Joanna Wiseley said 101 votes were cast in the election. She said that was a good representation of the approximately 250 members of this years junior class. Grover will receive the senior committee gavel from the current senior class president Dina Farhat at convocation today. Farhat is Grovers big in the Chi Omega sorority. Grover said she was very supportive during the elec- tion process. Shes helping me a lot and putting me in the right direction, Grover said. Responsibilities specifcally held by the president include having a large say in the senior commencement speaker, acting as hostess for certain college functions, and leading senior class and committee meetings. Grover, a marketing/manage- ment major, was nominated by the Chi Omega house. In addition to Greek life, she is involved with the campus Gordie Foundation, of which she is vice president. She also volunteers at the local Humane Society and is a captain on the volleyball team. Akin is an American studies and French double major. On campus she is a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, is involved with Intervarsity, and is a resident assistant at Whitley Residence. Her duties as vice president, she said, will be to act as a sup- port to Grover, organize cam- pus events with the rest of the committee, and organize senior committee meetings. She is currently the director of the Student Affairs Mentors. The senior committee meets in the student aIIairs oIfce, and she has had some frsthand experience of what goes on at meetings and the amount of work that goes into being a class oIfcer. If you think about it, anytime you try to organize a whole class of people, its a lot of work, she said. Vol. 135, Issue 23 - 12 April 2012 Michigans oldest college newspaper www.hillsdalecollegian.com B4 In News... A5 B1 A6 TWITTER.COM/ HDALECOLLEGIAN FACEBOOK.COM/ HILLSDALECOLLEGIAN Student Dancer Q&A: Ned Timmons Campus Chic See A2 In Arts... Spaces... See A4 Santorum bows out of GOP nomination race 1HZFODVVRIFHUV (Courtesy of Rick Santorum for President Facebook) Hayden Smith Collegian Freelancer Kirby acquires Capitol Hill residence Car crashes into arb Sally Nelson Web Editor Caleb Whitmer Copy Editor See A4 The Allan P. Kirby Center received a house on Capitol Hill. Up to 20 Hilldsale Col- lege WHIP interns will be able to live there. (Courtesy of the Kirby Center) A car crashed into the Slayton Arboretum early in the morning on April 9. It spun over and bent the central gate. No one was injured. (Sally Nelson/Collegian) Sarah Leitner Sports Editor Sophomore Melika Wil- loughby pointed to the TV screen in A.J.s Caf as Newt Gingrich vows to stay in race all the way to convention fashed across the bottom of the screen on Wednes- day. Gingrichs statement was prompted by the suspension of presidential candidate Rick Santorums campaign. Santorum announced his withdrawal from the race at a press conference in Gettysburg, Pa., on April 10. By gracefully leaving the stage now, he leaves open the chance for future political of- fces. It was a graceIul exit, Wil- loughby said. He showed that he was about America and the ideas he stood for not himself. Junior Brianna Walden, also a Santorum supporter, said that his willingness to step out of the race shows his genuine concern for the good of the country. I think [it] really speaks to his character that hes willing to take a path that doesnt lead to his personal glory, she said. It was honorable of him to recog- nize the higher good. Santorums announcement came on the heels of his losses in the Maryland, Washington, D.C., and Wisconsin primaries. The GOP presidential feld is now down to three candidates Gingrich, Ron Paul, and Mitt Romney. Willoughby said that by stay- ing in the race, Gingrich lacked the humility to step back and do what is best for his country. Now that Santorum has dropped out, Walden said she will support Romney but reluctantly. If Romney gets the nomina- tion, so help me, I will vote for him, but with clenched teeth, she said. Walden said she sees Romney as the best candidate to hold up against President Barack Obama. Willoughby agreed. [Romney] has the executive experience and the credentials to win and to govern effectively, she said. Romney respects [the See A2 Hillsdale students and faculty weigh in LAUREN GROVER HANNAH AKIN MARISSA PHILIPP NEWS A2 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com Evan Brune Collegian Reporter On April 3, the Princeton Review unveiled its lineup of the top 300 professors in the nation. Two professors from Hillsdale College Thomas Conner, professor of history, and Justin Jackson, associate professor of English were selected for the list. The ranking was developed by analyzing assessments from the hit site RateMyProfessor. com, as well as interviews with students. The end result was a compilation of profes- sors from across the country who students say have had a great impact on their lives. Conner said that although he was honored to be included on the list, he was dubious about the validity of the rank- ing. Frankly, Im not sure what to make of this thing. I would consider myself skeptical of the ability of any agency to determine who the Best 300 Professors might be, given how many subjective compo- nents there are in teaching, he said. But he added that his place- ment was benefcial. However doubtful I may be that I ever belonged on the list, Im still happy to be se- lected, and especially pleased that it has been possible for the college to garner some well deserved attention from this development for all the good things that are happen- ing here, Conner said. There is exceptional teaching by countless faculty members throughout every department and program of our college, and the wonderful qualities in our students make us all better at what we do. Jackson voiced similar sentiments. Ill just echo what my wife, Jena, said: Its a good thing Tom was recognized so that it adds some sort of legitimacy to your being on the list. That seems about right. Theres something obviously arbitrary about the list since so many of my colleagues who are excellent teachers, far more talented than I, arent on the list. So theres that sort of silli- ness to it. But Jackson added that Conners inclusion makes it less silly. I also know just how good Dr. Conner is as a teacher, how much he loves the students and respects them deeply, and how much that love and respect is reciprocated, he said. So his presence does, in fact, mean something to me and to my be- ing placed in the book. Provost David Whalen said that the selection of both men was well deserved, despite the skepticism that either one might have for the lineup itself. Dr. Connor noted that he had a very healthy skepticism regarding such lists, Whalen said. This skepticism is one of the reasons he belongs on any list of truly excellent profes- sors. Drs. Connor and Jackson certainly deserve this distinc- tion, and anyone who knows them knows the justice of their receiving it. The complete list can be found on the Princeton Reviews website and is also available in the 2012 edition of The Best 300 Professors.
Tables announced as senior gift -HZLVKFOXEUDWLHG Emmaline Epperson Collegian Reporter Tyler ONeil Collegian Freelancer Four new picinic tables will sit on Hillsdale Colleges quad thanks to this years senior class. The class oIfcers and col- lege administrators have agreed on four teak picnic tables and benches in the hopes they will beneft students every day. We wanted something that students would use, said Sally Klarr, senior class treasurer and co-chair of the gift committee. We looked for something that would improve the day-to-day life of students. The senior class, represented by a committee of six students and two class oIfcers, has a budget of $1,200 to donate a gift to preserve their memory at Hillsdale. The committee and the ad- ministration worked together to choose a gift that both improves and beautifes the campus. 'I think it will beneft students for a long time, Vice President for Administration Rich Pw said. The committee consisted of seniors Caroline Cheatum, Joe Viviano, Christian Mull, Katie Beyer, Abigail Mayner, and Scott Scharl. It was co-headed by Senior Class Vice President Brittany Baldwin and Treasurer Klarr. The committee met three times to brainstorm. They came up with multiple ideas, but were limited by their budget. My ideas were out of our price range. Solar panels and wind turbines cost way too much, Klarr said. Scharl, who said he was on the committee to provide goofy ideas, was also shot down. The phrase water fea- ture was thrown around, but eventually tossed out because it was too much money, he said, in reference to purchasing fountains. The committee also thought about beautifying the tunnel between Lane and Kendall, but decided that would not beneft the entire campus. Once the committee nar- rowed down its ideas, it presented them to Director of Career Services Joanna Wise- ley, the senior class moderator. Pw looked at the ideas next and made recommendations based on the colleges needs. In approving a gift, Pw said the college looks for some- thing that improves the unity and look oI campus and fts into the colleges long-term plan. Oftentimes, there are items we might want that are not pri- oritized, Pw said. They are things that might deal with want or aesthetics. The idea of picnic tables was a collaboration of ideas from both the college and the committee. The senior class budget only covered two tables. The college is subsidizing the other two tables, however, since purchasing the outdoor seating was already in their plan for the campus. Past senior gifts include the Moller Amphitheater behind the library, benches, and, last year, a magnolia tree in commemora- tion of recently deceased music professor Eric Jones. It was a really meaningful gift because they wanted to do something that, every year at a certain time, would remind them of Jones legacy, Pw said. Its not water fountains, but Scharl said he thinks picnic tables are a good idea I hope there are many nice days in the future, he said. I hope people come to enjoy the beauty that our quad has to offer.
On Tuesday morning, Dean of Women Diane Philipp rati- fed the by-laws Ior Hillsdale Chavarah, the new Jewish orga- nization on campus. After three months, the group is fnally oIfcial. Last semester, Freshmen Ayla Meyer, the president, and Kelsey Drapkin, the secretary, envisioned a Jewish organiza- tion on campus. When I came to Hillsdale, the Judaism aspect was my big- gest concern, Drapkin said. Nevertheless, she chose Hillsdale for its principles pursuing truth and defending liberty. 'I fgured I could work out the religious stuff. Meyer and Drapkin had planned a modest setting in which Jews could come together and just celebrate. When other people began to emerge, Meyer said, we realized we could make this an oIfcial organization. When I came to Hillsdale, it only took about two weeks before I began missing my fam- ilys Jewish traditional Shab- bat dinners, sophomore Ben Hindle, the vice president. So, I thought Why cant I do that here? While the group exists to promote Judaism, it is open to Christians who want to get involved. I am Christian, but my dads family is all Jewish, Newman said. I really identify with Hillsdale Chavarah. We have a lot in common, and they totally accept me. The group has been active since the end of January, with the frst Shabbat dinner on February 17. Hindle said that it took so long because its something very new for Hillsdale Col- lege. He added that Dr. Arnn wanted to make sure we get this right the frst time, and to make sure the by-laws are as correct as possible. Chaplain Beckwith, he ex- plained, and the entire admin- istration at Hillsdale has been extremely supportive, and they have pushed us and encour- aged us in all the best possible ways. Profs named among top 300 in country Conner, Jackson on Princeton Reviews list said. She said she does remember hearing the wreck and said it was loud enough to draw out students from nearby dorms, such as Benzing Residence and the Suites. The car ended up just within the arboretum gate after the wreck. The gate stopped him pretty well, Lizalek said. Vice President of Admin- istration Rich Pw said the driver was lucky that the mortar from the wall was old enough to give way. At this point, the college does not know the cost of the damage to the gate and wall. The repair will be exten- sive. We dont know what the cost will be, Martini said. Estimates are pending. Pw said that repairing the stone wall will be the most expensive part since the college may have to replace the stone footer, which is three to four feet deep, in addition to hiring a stone mason to re-mortar the visible section of the wall. Its not a lick and stick solu- tion, he said. The Hillsdale City Police are investigating the crash but declined to comment until they fnish the investigation. ! ARB From A1 Constitution] and believes it should perform an integral role in government today. Professor of Political Econ- omy Gary Wolfram, a Romney supporter and the former leader of his Michigan Economic Advisory Group, said he has expected Romney to win the Republican nomination as long ago as February. I have worked with Gov- ernor Romney in the past, and I know that he is a believer in a limited federal government and understands that the market system is the key to economic prosperity for all, he said. Now with Santorum no longer in the race, Wolfram said Romney can turn his focus toward Obama. Romney can focus on the economic diIfculties that the nation is in as a result of the policies of the Obama Admin- istration, he said. [Romney needs to| defne the election issue as the economy, ex- plain why the massive federal government interference has resulted in uncertainties that kept unemployment very high, and explain why Iederal defcits of the magnitude we have had over the last fve years are bad for the economy. Willoughby said she had been a fan of Santorum since before Santorum was a thing. She was one of the students who lobbied for the former senator to attend the Hillsdale Constitutional Symposium that was later cancelled. She even organized and led a group of Hillsdale College students to campaign for Santorum in Wisconsin before its April 3 primary elections earlier this semester. I really felt like everything had come down to that one state, she said. Former Massachusetts gover- nor Romney defeated Santorum in Wisconsin 44.1 percent to Santorums 36.9 percent. Wil- loughby said this deIeat verifed to her that Santorum would probably step out of the race, but said Santorum impacted the political discussion in an extremely positive way. My reaction was disap- pointment that Santorum was out, but the fght is still on, she said. And the ideas that he brought to the forefront of this race are now part of the dialogue. Walden said she also sup- ported Santorum even before many people knew his name. Walden met him in Washington, D.C. I was really impressed by Rick Santorum, the man, she said. My initial thought was that he doesnt have that presi- dential air, but I loved him for his policies. He was so genuine and so real. Walden was the Hillsdale College contact for the Santo- rum campaign while the college was trying to put together the Constitutional symposium. Gingrich, Romney, Paul, and Santorum were all invited. Walden said both Gingrich and Romney said they would come if Santorum agreed to go. But even after Santorum said he would make the trip to Hills- dale, Gingrich and Romney still did not commit, prompting the Santorum campaign to pull out as well. Walden said though she was disappointed, she did not blame Santorum. I really blame Romney more than him, though I was sad that the Santorum campaign didnt work with us and pulled out without communicating, she said. Even with that grudge against Romney, Walden said she will turn her support towards his campaign now that Santorum is out. ! SANTORUM From A1 CONVOCATION UPDATE Professor of History Paul Rahe won the Emily Daughtery Award for Teaching Excellence today at Hillsdale Colleges Spring Convocation. Rahe was nominated and voted on by students to qualify for the academic distinction. The all-campus grade point average was also published at the spring ceremony. This fall, the all-school GPA was 3.153, just higher than the all-mens average, but lower than the womens average, of 3.243. The GPA is the lowest all-school average since the Fall of 2008, according to statistics obtained IURPWKHUHJLVWUDUVRIFH Kappa Kappa Gamma won the sorority scholarship cup with a GPA of 3.305, and Delta Tau Delta on the fraternities side, with 3.393. It is the second semester in a row that the sorority had earned the distinction, after Pi Beta Phi maintained the lead for three semesters. Professor of Physics Kenneth Hayes gave the keynote address titled Imagining the Liberal Arts without the Sciences at the cer- emony, which traditionally marks the countdown to graduation. Seniors proceeded in and out of the event wearing their caps and gowns. Marieke van der Vaart NEWS A3 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com BRANCH RICKEY John Chuck Chalberg held his audience captive as he brought Branch Rickey, the man who brought Jackie Robinson into the major leagues, to life in an impersonation performance last night. Rickey is one of six characters Chalberg impersonates in his perfor- mances. Chalbergs performance last night was aptly timed, as today marks the 65th anniversary of Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in major league baseball on April 12, 1947. In each performance, Chalberg said he tries to impact his audience. With Chesterton, I want people to buy into his ideas, he said. In Rickeys case, thats not as true. This ones more a story of his effort to desegregate baseball. If there is a message, it resonates with Hillsdale. He acted as an individual to do what he thought was right. He was also a hardcore Republican. He thought segregation of baseball a nutty thing and he moved on his own without waiting for the government to tell him what to do. Rickey did not view himself as a crusader, though. Chalberg said he tries to show Rickey as a business- PDQZKRZDQWHGWRPDNHDSURW while still doing the right thing. Chalberg started performing as Rickey in the late 90s and has performed about 50 times as Rickey since. +HUVWVWDUWHGLPSHUVRQDWLQJ KLVWRULFDOJXUHVE\DFFLGHQWKHVDLG One semester, Normandale Com- munity College scheduled Chalbergs history class to meet in the theater classroom. Chalberg slowly added 10 to 15 miniature performances as different historical characters from U.S. history to his lectures. Chalberg said he continues to work on and perfect all of his characters. While he is not sure he will add another character to his performance repertoire, he did say he is toying with the idea of adding Calvin Coolidge. I love getting questions at the end, Chalberg said. Its when I QGRXWLI,SURYRNHGDQ\WKLQJLQ anybody. Plus, its fun to think on my feet in character. Emily Johnston Q&A Ned Timmons: Life with the FBI and working undercover Ned Timmons graduated from Hillsdale College in 1970. He served for nine years on an FBI SWAT team in Detroit, inhltrated motorcycle gangs, helped bring down infamous Panamanian dic- tator Manuel Noriega, and posed as a mercenary gunboatman in one of the largest drug busts in U.S. History. He currently runs L.S.S. consulting, a corporate security company.
How did you get from Hills- dale to the FBI? Id always been interested in getting to the FBI, but theres not a proven path to getting there. When I was at Hillsdale the Vietnam War was still going on. There was a lottery system and I was already past the lottery number. So I knew the second I graduated I was going into the military. Just about everybody in my training group went to Vietnam, but they took 12 of us and sent us to South Korea, assigned to the criminal investigating detach- ment of the army. When I got out of the army, I went to work for the Highland Park Police in northern Detroit. I did nine years of SWAT, patrol, and regular police work and then fnished my masters at MSU. I was actually working on a Ph.D. when I got accepted into the FBI. In the FBI I started working on fugitives and bank robberies and developed some high end sources that I captured as fugi- tives. That led us into motor- cycle gang investigations. The bureau became very interested in motorcycle gang investigations because they began to realize in the early 80s that the bikers were doing all the dirty work for traditional, organized crime.
What were some of the more intense investigations you were involved with? We found a group closely aligned with Manuel Noriega, dictator of Panama. The prob- lem was that Noriega was the CIAs source into Castro, and the Castro was aligned with the Rus- sians. So the CIA did not want its source to go down, because he was the main source of informa- tion on what Russia was trying to do in Cuba and what was going on in Russia. The CIA was very unhappy with our project. I guess Ill just leave it at that. You can imagine that the two big agencies butt heads. The potential for the CIA to want to sabotage the whole operation was a concern every minute. Not only did you have to worry about the bad guys, but you had to worry about the CIA too. Were you undercover? I was never undercover in Panama, but I was undercover in the Cayman Islands. We cooper- ated in Cayman for over a year, and the whole investigation took fve years. I became a confdant of one of the main guys, and would move money and oversee daily functions and security con- cerns. There was so much money that we burned through six money counting machines. The motors wouldnt withstand the volume of cash we were mov- ing through them. We went to a system of weighing the money. We would weigh 50 pounds of hundreds.
What was your undercover identity? They believed I came out Saudi Arabia and that I trained people on how to use high- powered gunboats, for the Arabs. I had a mercenary-type back- ground, and they liked that a lot.
What was it like to become one of the bad guys? Id been operating two to three years with motorcycle gangs, and I think you have to become an actor and watch for people within the organization that might resent you coming in.
Was there temptation? We had some green berets that were corrupt, gone to the dark side, and former military that had gone with the smug- glers. If you wanted to go to the dark side, you could obviously become a very wealthy individ- ual. But [in my mind] that was never an option.
Did you face any situations that were life or death? There was a time when the main power group in Cayman came to me and said, Theres an agent on the island and he looks just like you. Then, I was at the hotel and all the sudden I saw an agent out of Detroit who was on his honeymoon. He showed up with his wife. The risk was that hed come and say something. It could have been a disaster. We couldnt call the police, because we didnt trust the police. But I was able to give him a signal. Luckily his wife was gorgeous, and they were paying more atten- tion to the wife in the bikini then to him. I was able to catch his eye and give him a signal to keep his mouth shut. We dodged a bullet there. Anytime youre out with a bunch of drug smugglers who are making millions, and youre out all night, and youre out on boats and airplanes, theres a pretty high risk of a problem arising.
What got you through those situations? I think that when youre in police work, and you do SWAT, and you have a military back- ground, you always believe that youre bullet proof. You always believe that nothing is going to happen to you, and that you can get yourself out of any situation. I think in those situations you always have to have in the back of your mind a plan of what you would do and how you would overcome a situation and evade it.
+RZGR\RXLQOWUDWHD motorcycle gang? As an FBI agent you would never become a made member of an organization. You have to pick something that they need, and you have to remain on the outer fringes. We provided transportation airplanes and trucks to move the motorcycle gangs drugs. We made them believe we could provide various chemicals for the production of methamphetamines. They needed to come to you. You dont want to go to them. I would always remain aloof from the drugs by just saying, Im a businessman; I dont partake in that; but thank you very much.
Is there one group of people you never want to see again? The smallest person can pull a trigger and end your life real quick. The Colombians are very dangerous. Obviously the mo- torcycle gangs are dangerous. So are smugglers. There is a danger level from anybody. Anytime youre chasing a bank robber or murder fugitive, youve got to assess the situation, have a plan, and count on your team.
,VLWGLIFXOWWRJREDFNDQG forth between your career and your family life? My wife claims that she had to retrain me. She claims to have done so successfully. Reprogram me or whatever her words are. Things are pretty calm now.
Are we safer now than we were 30 years ago? Every era has its crisis. You go back to the Cuban missile cri- sis. That could have been the be- ginning of the end of the world. Today Iran and these rogue coun- tries are like motorcycle gangs. Theyre uncontrollable. You dont know what theyre going to do. Theyve got massive weap- ons. North Korea and Iran are a concern every minute. There is always going to be trauma and turmoil and problems out there that are concerning to all of us. Compiled by Phil Morgan (Courtesy of Ned Timmons) www.hillsdalecollegian.com NEWS A4 12 April 2012 ! KATES TAKE KATE OLSON Looking ahead to true leisure Dear fellow seniors, Well here we are. Its April of our senior year, which means its time for sappy, sentimental reminiscing over all the fun weve had over the past four short years. Or perhaps its the perfect time to completely panic about the fact that you have no idea what youre going to do on May 13th. Or maybe youre lamenting the fact that you failed in your quest to fnd that special someone beIore graduation. Ring by spring, MRS degree, blah blah blah... The stress never ends. But what we should really be excited about, what we should actually be focusing all of our attention on, is something else. There is a lovely, heavenly, magical day approaching. It may not be the same day for all of us, but I believe well all experience the same strange, unfamiliar feeling: blind relief. A day soon approaches when we will turn in our very last paper or fnish our very last exam, whichever comes last. That day, rather than ending our lovely days of contemplation and intense study, begins our liIe oI leisure. True leisure. We`ll fnd time to read the books on our gigantic reading lists that weve compiled over the last few years that we never had time to read. We can have proper sleep schedules, and Saturday will be days of relaxation rather than frantic catch up days. And most importantly, well have plenty of time to spend with our families and friends. And who knows, maybe well miss Saga more than we think we will, especially sitting at big round tables surrounded by our friends. So be excited for our last month. And iI you don`t have a fance yet, well, dont lose hope! Keep trying. Drawing on the several-hundred-year- old tradition of portraiture, professional artist Richard Whitney visited Hillsdale College campus this past week to share his knowledge with art students and art- ists from the community. Whitney is the oIfcial artist oI the GOP presidential candidate Mitt Rom- ney, and he spent a week on campus teaching students about portrait painting andthe history of his genre. I am totally honored to be here, local artist Beth Voulgaris, a member of the Jackson Civic Art Association said. Its such an intimate situation. And to have an artist of such prestige, I am just fabbergasted. For the past week, Whitney has taught Professor of Art Samuel Knechts portraiture class as well as a seminar for art students, in which all those attend- ing used the same model and received personal direction and attention from Whitney to improve their technique. Portraiture was just natural to him, he said. I always drew heads, always. Even as a small child I always drew heads, he said. In high school I drew caricatures of all 65 teachers. Other things did not come as easily. My teacher, Mr. Gammel, said I had a gift for portraiture and it was some- thing I should consider as a career, and I am so thankful that he did. Whitney noted the importance of teaching in the artistic world, so as to pass on traditions, techniques, and knowledge to the next generation. After more than 20 years of teaching, Whitney said it makes a huge differ- ence in the art world, for without formal teaching of skills, they are lost. Hillsdale College is extremely for- tunate to have an artist of Sam Knechts caliber, he said. 'He`s a terrifc artist and teacher and students here have no idea how lucky they are. He himself can trace his teachings back through the years, and in his pre- sentation, he demonstrated the lineage he carries and is passing down to his own students. They are extremely fortunate to have classically-trained artists, especially as this is one out of about twelve good- quality programs [in the United States]. Whitney focused especially on the masters and their specifc teachings dur- ing his lecture. He examined their use of the same precision to maintain the tradi- tion. He noted particularly the shading of the fgures, and the use oI precision and imprecision to guide the audience to the most important aspects of the painting. I would just say his lecture really presented his best as an artist and his content really reverberates since hes ac- tually practicing it, senior art major Nell OLeary said. It was a great reminder of all the masters and he hit all the impor- tant ones. As a professional artist, Whitney was also able to share insight into the professional world of artists and how he supports his family using his portraiture skills. I am represented by most of the major portrait galleries in the country, something like 15 or so that share my work with those who are interested, he said. I get almost half of my commis- sions on my own, which means I dont have to pay a gallery commission. Varying from portraits of children and families to posthumous remembrances, Whitney has painted a wide variety of high profle people. Mitt Romney has given me more publicity than anyone else Ive ever painted, he said. Someone like Mitt Romney saw me through a tour, and Mitt Romney was impressed enough by what he saw to say to his assistant to fnd that artist, and he didnt even bother to look into any others. My commissions come half reputation and half dealer. Most prominent among his goals, however, is the continuation of the classi- cal tradition. I have noticed in the last 10 years a huge interest in the revival of classi- cal painting world wide, he said. Im trying to promote the continuation of the classical tradition which is essentially separate from modern art. Ive written a book on the principles of painting that have been passed down and used by thousands of artists. Romneys portrait artist visits campus Teddy Sawyer Collegian Reporter Artist Richard Whitney demonstrates painting in a portraiture class this week. Whitney is the official portrait artist for GOP candidate Mitt Romney. (Elena Salvatore/Collegian) Philipp is also a Kappa, and in addition to that, she is involved with the Hillsdale reading GOAL program and is the public rela- tions chairman for the Student Activities Board. Her job as secretary will be taking notes at senior committee meetings, managing publicity for senior class sponsored events, and developing agendas for all class and committee meetings. She will also be hostess at the senior dinners. Im really excited to serve and be a liaison between the entire senior class, Philipp said. This is a great group of people. Marshall, as treasurer, is in charge of the class gift and every- thing that goes with it, including fguring out what the giIt will be and fundraising any additional money for it that isnt provided through student fees. Party planning, the prominent one being the senior tailgate party, is up to Rothhaas as social chairman. She will also be in charge of senior T-shirts. Finally, DeMeuse and Logan will serve as the communication point between the college and the 2012-13 class after graduation. Grover, as well as the other class oIfcers, already has a busy schedule, and was initially nervous about juggling more responsibility next year. But she said Farhat assured her she could do it, and she welcomes the chal- lenge. ! OFFICERS From A1 It has been a little more than two months since Ben Holscher put his friendly volunteering competition into place at Gal- loway Hall. The dorm residents aim to hit a minimum of 324 volunteer hours per foor beIore April 27. There has yet to be a foor that has met the 324-hour mark, but Holscher said 'third foor and Iourth foor are well on their way. Third foor currently holds frst place with 268.3 hours, while Iourth foor holds second with 230 hours. The winning team will be re- warded with an all-expense-paid trip to Six Flags in Chicago. In order to be eligible for the amusement park excursion, each team member must log a mini- mum of four hours. But for some thats just a bonus. My motivation is the service, not necessarily Six Flags, said freshman Atoni Germano, from the third foor. Outside oI Gal- loway projects, Germano is often found every Wednesday and Friday volunteering at the Mary Randall Preschool. This past weekend, Germano and other members of Galloway went into town to assist Hills- dale residents with tasks ranging from sweeping porches to weed whacking in what they hope to make a weekly project. My group worked on two houses together, he said. We were raking leaves, pruning trees, mowing lawns. The lady gave us milk and cookies during our break. She had us working. Germano is also a member of the Respect Everything About Life and Love team, which is currently aiming for GOAL status. The team travels to local middle schools and high schools to speak to students about the value of chastity, dating relation- ships, and modesty. Freshman Korbin Kiblinger, also a resident oI third foor, has also been key to carrying the team. I started volunteering the second week of school, he said. I came to Hillsdale and heard students had a reputation for volunteering. I knew I needed to take advantage of that. In addition to volunteering with the REALL team and teach- ing music fundamentals at the Hillsdale Academy, Kiblinger also puts in time at the Salvation Army at least once a week. Both men said consistency and variety strengthen the ef- fectiveness of the Galloway volunteer competition. Were not all doing the same stuff, Kiblinger said. Its good because we have some people who are working with kids and others who are doing hard labor in the community. I dont think its going to end when the com- petition is over. Although Iourth foor is trailing close behind, Kiblinger thinks that third foor will run the victory lap. 'G4 defnitely pulled it out, he said. We werent even think- ing about them. But I think well win it in the end. The teams have a little more than two weeks beIore fnal hours are tallied. Teams volunteer in Galloway competition Bailey Pritchett Collegian Reporter breakfast. After that, the rooms were being rented out before we acquired it. The house, which is near the Kirby Center, has four separate apartments and can hold between 12 and 20 WHIP students at a time. The living rooms for each apart- ment are quite large, Dunham said. There are also full kitchens. Hillsdale students were update about the new house. Sophomore Nick Allen plans on applying for WHIP this summer. I think its a smart move by the college, said sophomore Nick Allen, who plans on applying for WHIP this summer. It further as- sists the future of its students, which is in Hillsdales long-term interest. Students previously in WHIP expressed their support for the acqui- sition. Living at the Heritage Founda- tion kept us from spending a lot of time at the Kirby Center, said junior John Brooks. It seems to me that the addition of this building will go further in making the Kirby Center into a small campus. As early as this summer, WHIP students will be enjoying the wire- less internet, air conditioning, new washers and dryers, and full furnish- ings featured in the building. Rent will be $850 per month. There are several functions we hold at the Kirby Center for students, Dunham said. It will be easier for them to attend when they are so close. The house is close to Union Station and famous buildings like the Supreme Court, Library of Congress, and historic St. Josephs Church. Nearly 30 Hillsdale students will be participating in the WHIP program this summer. The WHIP program is still accepting applica- tions for the summer and fall. ! KIRBY From A1 (Courtesy of the Kirby Center) Jack Butler Collegian Freelancer Police investigate murder in Calhoun County Every year, the end of May fnds Hillsdale College empty oI the majority oI its students, and, consequently, the busi- ness they give to restaurants and entertainment havens in the surrounding area. However, rather than being a quiet time oI year Ior local businesses, the summer is the peak oI their productivity. Rick Price, owner oI the White Oaks GolI Club in Hill- sdale, Mich., said the majority oI his business comes Irom vacationers who own cottages along the lakes around Hills- dale County. These vacationers come Irom big cities like To- ledo, Ohio, and Detroit, Mich., to get a small-town breath oI air. Price said that business has thrived at his golI course this year because oI the warm weather that hit so early in the year. 'I`ve never opened as early as I did, Price said. He opened the frst week oI March, at least a month beIore his golI course usually sees its frst customer. Price said golIers are more likely to golI the whole summer iI they get started early in the spring. 'II the people get out early in the year and start golfng they continue golfng all sum- mer long, he said. 'Last year it was so cold and nasty that people seemed to kind oI Iorget about golfng. That is why, despite some furries in early April, it is worthwhile Ior the White Oakes GolI Club to open in response to the beautiIul weather. The Vanity Car Wash and Ice Cream, a year-around car wash and seasonal ice cream shop run by Hillsdale resident Cory Burke, is in a diIIerent position. Burke said the ice cream shop still benefts Irom the lake-com- ers, but business with the car wash dies down considerably in the summer because people care much more about cleaning road salt oII their vehicle than bugs and such. Burke said much oI his busi- ness comes Irom the various perIormances and horse shows that take place at the Hillsdale County Iairgrounds throughout the summer. The shows include such events as a week-long fd- dling convention with as many as 150 fddlers perIorming. This convention attracts a lot oI people, and, Burke said, those people need ice cream aIter a long day in the heat. Burke just opened his ice cream shop on April 5, not in early March when the weather seemed conducive to such establishments. 'It made me cringe, he said. 'I wished I had opened. But when I saw snowfakes today it reminded me that it wasn`t that big oI a deal. We would have had a lot oI business at the be- ginning but then it would have been really slow. It all evens out in the end. Jill Nichols, co-owner oI Jilly Beans coIIee shop, said she is in a unique position in that the majority oI her business comes Irom Hillsdale College students during the school year. 'The students are a big part, she said. 'But then again, when they leave, the lake people come. She added that summer-spe- cifc events like the Hillsdale Farmer`s market, beginning in May across the street Irom Jilly Beans, draws a lot oI morning traIfc to buy coIIee and other breakIast items during their downtown walk-about. Hillsdale doesn`t quiet down aIter students vacate the college campus on the contrary, the summer is when the action begins Ior the city. At the Hillsdale City Council meeting on April 2, the council voted 8-0 to authorize the mayor and city clerk`s signatures on a contract with the Michigan Department oI Transportation, which will begin the reconstruc- tion oI State Street. The estimated cost oI the project is $753,200, and the estimated cost to the city oI Hillsdale will be $378,200. Councilor Mary WolIram said that the council had originally been told that street reconstruction would cost about a million dollars a mile. At $753,200 Ior a little under a mile, that estimate is not that Iar oII. 'We`ve been given this idea oI a million dollars a mile` to fx the streets and really recon- struct them the way they need to be reconstructed, she said. 'And it`s actually Iairly close to a million dollars a mile. So it really is that expensive. The council discussed how the city could beneft economi- cally Irom the reconstruction, how the street will be rerouted, and the grant the city will receive to proceed with the project. Although the construction is being done on local streets, councilman Brian Watkins said the project is not necessarily under the control oI the city. 'On a project like this, the state handles it, Watkins said. 'We don`t have any input. Because oI this, he said, the local companies cannot pick up the bids Ior the project. WolIram said that even though the local contractors are not necessarily doing the con- struction, the construction can still boost the local economy, iI only minimally. 'These workers come in and use city businesses Ior lunch, perhaps to stay overnight, she said. 'There is still some spin- oII Ior economic development that way. Director oI Public Services Keith Richard said State Street will be rerouted but will still be accessible to residents. 'They will provide access to the driveways, he said. There will be local traIfc only. Although there is not a set timetable on the time oI con- struction, Richards said it will be fnished by the time school starts up again in the Iall. The city will receive a small urban grant to help pay Ior reconstruction costs. The city received similar grants in 2006 and 2008. In 2010, the small ur- ban grant was discontinued Ior East Fayette Street, so the city kicked in the extra money to fn- ish the part oI the street between Union and Oak Streets. The Iollowing is a list oI calls compiled and reported by the Hillsdale County SheriII`s Depart- ment. Hillsdale City Police April 4 A 69-year-old Quincy man was arrested on suspicion oI operat- ing a vehicle while intoxicated and carrying a concealed weapon while intoxicated. A $3,000 bond was posted. Michigan State Police April 8 An 18-year-old Hillsdale man was arrested on suspicion oI possess- ing marijuana. A $500 bond was posted. An 18-year-old Jonesville man was arrested on suspicion oI incit- ing a riot and attempting to escape Irom a juvenile home. No bond was allowed. April 7 A 39-year-old PittsIord man was arrested on suspicion oI manu- Iacturing marijuana, obstruction oI evidence, maintaining a drug house, the possession oI marijua- na, simple assault, and malicious destruction oI property. No bond was allowed. Hillsdale County Sheriffs Department April 9 A 21-year-old Manchester man was arrested on suspicion oI mali- cious destruction oI property. No bond was allowed. The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to one larceny, two civil disputes, Iour car-deer accidents, one harassing communication, one suspicious situation, one breaking and enter- ing call, and two animal control oIfcer actions. April 8 The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to three civil disputes, two suspicious situ- ations, and one larceny. April 7 The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to Iour civil disputes, three suspicious situations, and one car-deer ac- cident. April 6 A 59-year-old North Adams man was arrested on suspicion oI domestic assault and battery. A $1,000 bond was posted. A 24-year-old Litchfeld woman was arrested on a Ielony warrant Ior the possession oI methamphet- amine, operating a meth lab, and obstructing justice. A $135,000 bond was not posted. The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to one civil dispute, three suspicious situations, one domestic violence call, one sex-oIIender registration violation, and one littering call. April 5 The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to one stolen vehicle call, one harassing communication, one civil dispute, and one suspicious situation. April 4 The Hillsdale County SheriII`s Department responded to two domestic assaults, one larceny, one malicious destruction oI property, two suspicious situations, three civil disputes, two animal control oIfcer actions, one threat, and two car-deer accidents. Compiled by Sarah Leitner CITY NEWS A5 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com Police Blotter Sarah Leitner Sports Editor Abi Wood Copy Editor Council progresses on State Street repairs Business grows as students leave city Chris Martini thinks Hillsdale College students live in a bubble. 'Campus is perceived as a bubble, said Martini, director oI campus security and emergency management. 'Students think that things can`t happen here. Martini said this notion is rooted, to some degree, in reality. 'There`s certainly a diIIerent perception on campus . . . the level oI criminal activity is lower. Furthermore, Martini said, there has been no signifcant 'spillover oI crime Irom Hillsdale proper to the campus in his time as director. The area surrounding Hills- dale`s campus is not an unusually crime-ridden area, as a statisti- cal report called a CAP Index indicates. In Iact, the crime rate Ior Hills- dale is lower than typical, accord- ing to statistical analysis provided by Martini. The CAP Index shows the risk oI crime at a given location, with scores on a scale Irom 0 to 2000, 100 being average. The Hillsdale College campus CAP Index is 69, indicating lower risk than average. Even so, Martini endeavors to prevent crime Irom spreading to the college. Among other things, he cooperates with local authori- ties. 'We are in regular communica- tion with city, county, and state police. We coordinate iI there is an issue in the communi- ty that may have an impact on campus, or an issue on campus that may have an impact on the com- munity. We have a great working relationship. SheriII Stan Burchardt oI the Hillsdale County SheriII`s Depart- ment agrees. 'We have worked with |Hill- sdale College| security people, mostly on prevention issues. We`ve done drills with the permis- sion oI the college administration`s approval Ior things like active shooters and terrorists. Concerning the degree oI crime in Hillsdale, Burchardt said it`s probably 'not any better or worse than in surrounding counties, qualiIying that such a judgment is hard to make without statistical inIormation. 'It really depends on the crime. We have less homicide, but more theIt, and a serious drug problem. Statistics provided on the Michigan State Police website bear out Burchardt`s claims. According to data Ior Hills- dale in 2010, the most recent year available, there were 378 incidents oI crimes against property, such as theIt and Iorced entry, 83 viola- tions oI controlled substance, Iour narcotic equipment violations, and no incidences oI murder or manslaughter, negligent or non- negligent. Crime risk in area lower than national average Joshua Ryan Martin, 20, and Kevin David Hass,21, pleaded guilty to armed robbery charges on March 26 and are Iacing fve to 20 years oI jail time. Martin and Hass, residents oI Cement City and Jerome, Mich. respectively, admitted to robbing Buddy`s Mini-Mart in Jerome in April 2011. Hillsdale County Circuit Court Prosecu- tor Neal Brady said they also admitted to numerous accounts oI breaking and entering to both businesses and homes in Hillsdale County. 'It was open and shut, Brady said. 'They admitted to what they did. There was video Irom the store, they ft the description, |and| the stolen property was Iound in a storage unit as well as the guns they had used in the armed robbery. Martin and Hass were taken into custody almost a year ago when they were discovered on security tapes. It took almost a year to sentence the pair due to requests Ior psychological com- petency tests and a new lawyer hired by Martin, Brady said. A competency test is perIormed by a third party and determines whether or not the accused is capable oI standing trial. 'We waited at least three months beIore we the Iorensics examination had determined them to be competent, Brady said. 'They were clever. They knew what they were doing. Brady agreed to drop the other minor charges Iacing Martin and Hass iI they pled guilty to the armed robbery and paid restitutions Ior the other stolen property. Although armed robbery is not an everyday occurrence in Hillsdale County, Brady said it happens more oIten than people might think. 'Well |armed robbery| is reported every time it happens. Does it happen oIten? I would say maybe once every two years, Brady said. 'Buddy`s Mini-Mart in Jerome has been robbed a couple times now. Armed robbery suspects plead guilty, face jail time A man was murdered in Cal- houn County this month. The body oI Larry Denniston, 63, was Iound on April 1 in a wooded area oI Branch County, according to Capt. Max Saxton oI the Calhoun County SheriII`s Department. Lauren O`Melay, 68, was arrested the Iollowing day. Ac- cording to an oIfcial Irom the Calhoun County District Court, he is charged with open murder and a frearm weapons Ielony. The Battle Creek Enquirer reported that Denniston was shot as many as six times, including several shots in the back. Denniston`s body was dis- covered near Ely Road by a man riding his Iour-wheeler through the woods on that Sunday. Saxton said the man contacted Branch County SheriII`s Depart- ment, who discovered clues on Denniston that lead them to stores in the Marshall area. The Calhoun County Sher- iII`s Department then became involved in the investigation. Saxton said they discovered evidence leading to O`Melay, who was then contacted and asked to come in Ior question- ing. He complied and, aIter a several-hour-long interview, conIessed to the murder. Saxton said the homicide took place on Denniston`s prop- erty in a feld oII 20 Mile Road at Michigan Avenue in Marengo Township. Denniston and O`Melay owned property adjacent to one another, and The Enquirer re- ported that investigators alleged that a property dispute was the motivating Iactor in the shoot- ing. On April 4, a second man, Douglas Shepherd, 50, was ar- rested and charged with conspir- acy aIter the Iact in involvement with Denniston`s murder. Saxton said Shepherd assisted O`Melay in trying to hide the crime. O`Melay was arraigned the same day Shepherd was arrested and a preliminary hearing is set Ior today at the Calhoun County District Court. Roxanne Turnbull Arts Editor Caleb Whitmer Copy Editor 0 20 40 60 80 100 Hillsdale Crime Risk National Average O h, the glorious days of child- hood! How sweet it was to muck about in the creek, clutching at crawdads. How proud to convey them home in galvanized pails flched Irom the garage. How bracing to rend your feet on spitted felds oI stubble as you best the boys in a footrace. And how divine to dock one in the eye when he in- sists he let you win because youre just a girl. Alas, those days are long gone, and not just for those of us who gave up grubbing in the lawn for stilettos and desk jobs, but for thousands of American children ef- fectively under house arrest. According to The Chesapeake Bay Foundation, a conservationist not-Ior-proft, American children currently spend less than four min- utes per day in unstructured outdoor play, an all-time low in human his- tory. And their health and wellbeing suffer because of it. Spending time outdoors at a young age prevents and cures a m- lange of physical and mental health ailments ranging from nearsighted- ness and social incompetence to ADHD and obesity Americas number one health problem that inficts 12.5 million American chil- dren, incurs $150 billion in annual medical costs, and spurs on our $50 billion diet industry (CDC). Thats more than the GDP of Aruba or the cost of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Children are not to blame for watching well over 5,000 hours oI television before entering kinder- garten. Infants only want iPhones to gum, toddlers crave to beat them vigorously against the foor, and older children are still subject to the ubiquitous Because I said so. So, why arent parents telling their children to go outside and run about like the little savages they are? The reason that they give is simple: paranoia. On Cafemom.com, a popu- lar parenting website, dozens of mothers responded to the question When is a child old enough to play outside alone? unleashing a wave of judgment and borderline hyste- ria Irom selI-identifed 'helicopter moms. Maybe in backyard if you have 6 ft privacy fence. If it was the front yard then you should always be out with them because its dangerous! In the front of the house- 11-12 maybe, and then NEVER alone, at least 2 together . . . I never let mine out alone younger than that. Never . . . mine are not allowed outside without a parent until they are around 13. By then they are not outside anyways. What is there to be so afraid of? Cafemoms suggest kidnappers, speeding cars, and being judged by their neighbors (oh my!) However, these claims are largely unjustifed or utterly selI- Iulflling. According to the FBI, less than one percent of missing children cases was involuntary (aka kidnappings), and that includes the overwhelming number abducted by family members and close acquain- tances. Lollipop-wielding perverts snatch remarkably few children from their front yards. The government`s oIfcial guide- lines suggest that the minimum age for leaving a child alone for short periods of time only and absolutely never overnight is 12. Children should also be 15, at the youngest, before they can be trusted to look after a younger brother or sister. These are the minimum ages, stresses the state. Not every child is ready then. They Iurther defne 'ready as able to understand cause and ef- fect, make independent decisions, and evaluate situations. So, accord- ing to the government, until a child is through puberty, they should not be expected to understand that plunging headfrst into traIfc could result in a severe case of death. The assumption of a childs inability to sort things for himself directly leads to excessive coddling that prevents him from ever acquir- ing the skills needed to do so in the future. When left to their own devices, children develop a peculiar society of their own, modeled on that which surrounds them, but self-generated and self- regulated. They learn cre- ative problem solving, confict reso- lution, negotiation, self-reliance, teamwork, resourcefulness, how to accept defeat, and how to graciously handle a victory. And thats not the mention the calories theyll burn, the vitamin D theyll process, the muscles theyll stretch, the blood theyll pump, the immunities theyll build, and the healthy foundation theyll have, both mentally and physically, for the rest of their lives. A few punches may be thrown. A few tears may be shed. All of your Tupperware may be flled with gleefully acquired crawdads once the galvanized buckets run out. When left alone with their environ- ment, children learn something that can never be acquired from steril- ized scraps of complicated electron- ics: How to be a part of this world theyll inherit. And if they skin a knee, simply pass on the advice that has devel- oped childrens immunities for thousands of years: rub some dirt in it and keep going. S upreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer emphati- cally 'promised he had not read the 2,700-page health care bill and would not read it during proceedings. Although Breyer was appointed by Bill Clinton, experts assure the media that Breyer can, in fact, read. The 2,700-page monstrosity is enough to stop a bullet or, better yet, suffocate a Beverly Hills Chihua- hua in less time than it takes to sludge through the frst page. II spread out, it would easily cover the oval oIfce three times over. Then, Frankenstein could meet his creation. Its alive! Its wow, this thing is big. Has any- one read this? Biden! Come look at this thing It seems that the bill is too long, too complex, and too complicated. If the supreme lawyers of the land think the bill too diIfcult to decipher, how could lesser gods like insurance companies counsels or low level Ieds possibly fgure it out? Obamas grandiose language makes the unfortu- nate listener think the president must have reached across the aisle so many times that he will soon have carpel tunnel. There is no attempt at bipartisanship, however, when the bill is so large that the other side has no time to read it. There is no attempt at the virtu- ous proliferation of workable legislation when regula- tion involving mammograms, birth control, insurance reform, and individual mandates are not separately worked on to reach a viable compromise. Democrats utter indifference to legislative integrity and the powerful enmity towards purpose- ful bipartisanship was more obvious, though far less entertaining, than a jaded baby momma on the Jerry Springer Show clawing at the eyes of a good-for- nothing man who aint worked in three years. Any congressman who found a problem with birth control language or the individual mandate soon faced propaganda consequences of Obamical proportions. Senator Hey, wait a minute suddenly hates the poor, refusing to agree out of a seemingly inces- sant white conservative hate volcano simultaneously simmering in his black soul and the frozen Alaskan planes of Sarah Palins backyard. He was even seen that morning kicking elderly patients and black children out of hospitals while rocketing HIV-tipped syringes at them like ninja stars. Democratic smearing of legitimate opposition not only displays their bogus bipartisanship. They unknowingly parade their unconditional love for more government regulation. Big governments insatiable lust for red tape is not a new topic amongst conserva- tives. An hour of Limbaugh will leave you thinking the libs probably call phone-sex hotlines to talk about regulation Ohhhh, baby, show me that permit. More specifcally to today`s events, the health care bill is the Messianic legislation of the left. Gollums 'my precious accurately refects Democrat`s obses- sion with the health care bill for as long as Barack Obama has been meeting up for beers at TGI Fridays with Saul Alinsky and Bill Ayers. In a speech delivered 9 March 2010, twelve days before the House passed the health-care legislation, then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said, But we have to pass the bill so that you can fnd out what is in it. Which makes about as much sense as cutting off someones head to see if they are dead, though there might be a provision for that in the bill. Who knows? Nobody. Thats who. Unverifed reports indicated that Elvish and Klin- gon sections of the bill were inserted to treat their ana- tomical distinctions (naturally) as well as a concise, 300-page sexual history oI Britney Spears. The ridiculous nature of this legislation invites scorn, but comparing it to a gem of past legislation in- vites sadness. The Northwest Ordinance, for example, was adopted in 1787. In two pages, the bill prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territories, provided an orderly plan for the admittance of states into the union there, demanded republican constitutions of state gov- ernments, set the precedent for liberty for all men, and guaranteed rule of law and the rights of Americans to settlers in the colonies. Two pages vs. 27,000. I sup- pose stealing liberties is a verbose business. The ridiculous length, vague complexities, and the explosive growth of government this bill empha- size the magnitude of the courts decision, and add a hopeless tinge to Buzz` catchphrase, 'To infnity, and beyond? H ave you ever been sued by your dog? So maybe your cat is not trying to kill you, but is she trying to sue you for all you have? These questions may lose their outlandish nature soon as animal rights defenders progress in their pursuit of animal standing, the ability for an animal to sue in court. Do not laugh. This is real. In 2010, Switzerland voted on a law that would have appointed animals free lawyers for cases of abuse. This law was smartly reject- ed by 71 percent oI Swiss voters. My question is simple: what was the other 29 percent oI the population thinking? The law put Iorth was 160 pages of regulations to protect animals, not only outlawing of cruelty and abuse simultaneously simultane- ously worthy goals in my view but also restrictions as precise as the water temperature in which domes- tic frogs must reside. But the absurd movement of animal standing does not end there. In early February of this year people Ior the Ethical Treatment oI Animals (PETA) attempted to sue SeaWorld on behalf of the killer whales on the grounds of their enslavement, citing the Thirteenth Amendments rejection of slavery and involuntary servitude and the fact that this Amendment does not mention humans. The Amendment is as follows: 'Section 1. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly con- victed, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction. Section 2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. PETA`s eIIort to Iree the liberal- ly-fed killer whales that are slaves kept in generously sized, well main- tained tanks is a valiant venture in the colossus that is the attempt to vastly expand the rights of animals. However, iI PETA planned to free the whales with a master plan basing their defense in a document that begins with, We the People, they apparently need to fre their lawyer. Tilikum, Katina, Corky, Kasatka, and Ulises, fve orcas et al. v. SeaWorld concluded with a ruling from District Court judge Jeffrey T. Miller that basically confrmed what we all knew: humans, not animals, are covered by the Constitution. This case was seen as another PETA publicity stunt, got a Iew na- tional giggles, and did not succeed in dissuading people from visiting the killer whales of SeaWorld. This Iailure, along with the fop in Switzerland and other cases of the like, is not a deterrent to the animal standing movement that ultimately seeks to abolish any industry that uses animal testing and plans to eventually eradicate the domestication of animals. In this fght, it would take only one judge with sights on his name in history books ruling in favor of the move- ment to create a domino-fall straight to being arrested Ior owning a fsh. In an interview with the New York Times, lawyer and president of the Nonhuman Rights Project Ste- ven M. Wise warned that in 2013, cases will be taken to court that will use the latest science to help per- suade state court judges that such creatures as whales and chimpan- zees should be accorded common law personhood and rights. As science advances, there may be something to Wises claim. More and more frequently, you can fnd reports about dolphins using language to communicate or chimpanzees able to solve advanced puzzles. There is no doubt that ani- mals may be smarter than humans have believed. But seeking personhood for something nonhuman is an abso- lute contradiction oI the defnition for person; according to Merriam Webster, 'person is defned, frst and foremost, as human. It can also not be ignored that many of these pro-animal stand- ing advocates are also pro-choice. Some animal-standers even view infanticide as a legitimate practice and do not view a fetus as a human. Seems a little backwards to me. If you do not even consider a human to be human, how can you argue for the personhood of animals? Animal cruelty is wrong and inhumane. This fact cannot be denied. And though an animal is unquestionably a higher entity than a pencil or rock, I cannot see why my cat should be represented by a lawyer for any injustices she feels I have done to her. But maybe soon, granted PETA and other groups like it pushing for animal standing win in the end, she will be able to sue me for all of my livelihood because of that one night I got home late and did not feed her until almost midnight rather than her regular 8:30 pm meal. A s a member of the class oI 1985, I am disgusted at the title of the program described in an e-mail I received the other day: Obamacares As- sault on Religious Liberty. I used to think the notion of Hillsdales independence was noble and saw it as an alternative to education programs that had an agenda other than teaching. This singular e- mail has made me totally rethink that concept. What I used to think was a liberal arts education had been exposed to be nothing more than indoctrination. You know, I always kind of knew that was what was happening, but since it never really reached the level of being offensive I never really gave it much thought. I counted myself fortunate to have spent time at Hillsdale, and also fortunate to have pursued two more degrees at other institutions. The balance of being exposed to many ideas and theories has made me a more open-minded and understanding person, not a closed minded ideologue. Sadly, our society has been hijacked by ideologues from both sides of the political spectrum. Our country has been frozen by the lack of a spirit of compromise by its leaders and citizens. You only contribute to that poor behavior by using such language in teaching our youth. The very notion that you label the legislation Obamacare displays a lack of consideration and respect for those leaders with whom you dont agree: surely not a good lesson for our countrys youth. Secondly, that you say that the legislation is itself an assault on religious liberty is such a sim- plistic criticism of such a complex issue that one should be ashamed it came from an institution of higher learning. I agree there are unintended consequences of the legislation that may cause con- ficts with some people`s religious views, but to label the legislation in that manner makes one think it was the sponsors intention to do so and is childish and not constructive. It also shows a lack of respect for those of differing religious beliefs, or the very fact that some do not choose to be religious, which is a right as much guaranteed in our constitution as the right to practice Catholicism, Islam, or the Jewish faith. Perhaps changing the tile to Is Obamacare an Assault on Reli- gious Liberty would have framed the conversation as a debate on the topic (not withstanding my distaste for the term Obamacare) instead of a lecture. That would be a more appropriate act for an institution proud of the liberal arts tradition. I recently had a conversation with a member of the faculty of Wesleyan University who couldnt be further opposite from the views of Hillsdale. He happened to be appalled that Justice Scalia was speaking on campus. I tried to explain that it was better for the students to learn by being exposed to both sides of an argument to teach them to think for themselves and make their own decisions based upon a free exchange of ideas. That is the hallmark of an education. As an educational institution you owe it to our youth to teach them not indoctrinate them. Yes, you can have a viewpoint, but it should be balanced and not based on hyperbole or hysteria. It should present the very idea that there are differences of opinion, and that those differences should be respected and the people that have them as well. I think it is about time for those of us with moderate viewpoints to stand up to the antics of the extremists in our society. I would appreciate being eliminated from your mailing lists for Imprimis and for e-mails such as the one mentioned above. OPINION 12 April 2012 A6 www.hillsdalecollegian.com THE COLLEGIAN WEEKLY THE OPINION OF THE COLLEGIAN EDITORIAL STAFF 33 E. College St. Hillsdale, MI 49242 Newsroom: (517) 607-2897 Advertising: (517) 607-2684 Online: www.hillsdalecollegian.com Editor in Chief: Marieke van der Vaart News Editor: Patrick Timmis City News Editor: Betsy Woodruff Opinions Editor: T. Elliot Gaiser Sports Editor: Sarah Leitner Features Editor: Shannon Odell Arts Editor: Roxanne Turnbull Design Editor: Bonnie Cofer Design Assistant: Aaron Mortier Web Editor: Sally Nelson Ad Manager: Will Wegert Circulation Manager: Emmaline Epperson Copy Editors: Tory Cooney | Morgan Sweeney Caleb Whitmer | Abigail Wood Staff Reporters: Emily Johnston Phillip Morgan | Teddy Sawyer | Sarah Anne Voyles Photographers: Joe Buth | Elena Salvatore Shannon Odell | Caleb Whitmer Joelle Lucus | Sally Nelson Faculty Advisers: John J. Miller | Maria Servold The editors welcome Letters to the Editor but reserve the right to edit all submissions for clarity, length and style. Letters should be less 350 words or less and include your name and phone number. Please send submissions to [email protected] before Sunday at 6 p.m. J ohn Derbyshire was fred Irom National Review on Saturday, April 7, aIter he wrote a column that was blatantly racist. We agree that he deserved to be fred. In his column in Takis Magazine entitled The Talk: Nonblack Version, Derbyshire outlined a list of principles to guide his kids about interactions with African-Americans. Some of his less egregious suggestions include not attending events that will draw large black crowds or living in an area run by black politicians. His racial profling only got more offensive. It was a major shock to us as an editorial staff. We interacted with Derbyshire when he visited Hillsdale College March 5 to 7. He was nothing but polite and soft-spoken, if a little socially awkward. His talks on mathematics and conservative pessimism were well-received. He shared stories of his life in Asia, including his courtship and marriage to his Chinese wife. So it was alarming to read his derogatory column. It revealed base and inhumane beliefs held by a man we befriended and trusted, a man whose journalistic legacy inspired us. But that is not our only disappointment. Derbyshire missed an opportunity to write something truly constructive and important. He could have highlighted the double standard of politically correct language that masks actual racial profling. He could have addressed the way we conceal a real need for reconciliation under bureaucratic quotas. He could have pointed out the truth our college recognized in 1844, that intellect and character are not dependent on color or creed. But he didnt. He undermined the very argument he was demonstrating that racism happens despite political correctness in the crude and almost malicious way he wrote his piece. He should have known how offensive this was. He ruined his otherwise successful career. As a journalist, father, and human being, he should have known better. We were disappointed to learn the Derbyshire is a man with a serious blind spot. We hope the next generation of conservative writers take note. We certainly have. RUB SOME DIRT ON IT Tory Cooney Copy Editor Casey Harper Special to the Collegian Kelsy Drapkin Special to the Collegian Dr. William R. Pollack Special to the Collegian INCENTIVIZING SUICIDE: WHO WOULD KNOW? SO SUE ME, DOG HILLSDALE IS TOO CONSERVATIVE were cut short by injuries. I messed up some disks in my back, and I had short achilles tendons, so the doctors didnt want me to do com- petitive gymnastics anymore, Caldwell said. Though she could no longer compete in gymnastics at the level that she had hoped, Caldwell quickly turned towards track as a competi- tive outlet after watching her brothers junior high school meets. I decided I would run, Caldwell said. After breaking records in the 100, 200, 400 [meter dashes] and the 4x100, 4x200, and 4x400 [relays], I thought, Hey this is fun. Im good at this. As Caldwell adjusted to track and feld, and just two weeks into her high school track season, she was ap- proached by her teams pole vault coach. He felt that Caldwells gymnastics experi- ence would translate perfectly into pole vaulting. The similarity between gymnastics and pole vaulting is that you have to be very aware of your body and where its at in the air, Caldwell said. What attracts me the most to pole vaulting is that its scary like gymnastics. Like gymnas- tics, pole vaulting is a sport that not a lot of people can do. Yet Caldwell does it and does it well. Seven years of hard work have put her in the national spotlight, though there have been hardships along the way. Due to a stress-fractured shin, Caldwell had to train especially hard in order to com- pete at nationals. When Kayla was injured, we worked on many things that were parts of her event that would make the whole thing much better when they were put back together, said Jeff Forino, head mens track coach. As the former assistant coach of both the mens and womens track teams, Forino worked with Caldwell on vari- ous strengthening movements that were instrumental in pre- paring her for national conten- tion. Forino credited Caldwells work ethic and composure as key components to her success during the indoor season. Kayla is a fantastic athlete all around, he said. When she is having a really positive attitude toward anything that she does, she is almost unstop- pable. Senior teammate Chelsea Wackernagel and fellow pole vaulter said Caldwells positive attitude has been a big beneft to her other teammates. Kayla is extremely pas- sionate about what she does, Wackernagel said. She loves track, and her passion for it can be contagious. This winning mentality comes from Caldwells desire to be the best. Even in the midst of injury and intense physical therapy, she had her sights set on that No. 1 spot. The night before nationals I wrote down that I wanted to jump a 13 feet 5 inches, even though I hadnt even jumped passed 13 feet, Caldwell said. It was a stretch, but I was try- ing to believe it. Second place is certainly nothing to scoff at, and though Caldwell is proud of her per- formance, she said she is not satisfed. 'I was happy at frst, but then I was disappointed because I wanted to beat my best, Caldwell said. After qualifying for outdoor nationals last week, she has even higher expectations for herself. 'I`m going to get frst, she said. If a race does not have hills, a view, a course longer than 26.2 miles, or some form of epic challenge, it is not a race for As- sociate Professor of Economics Charles Steele. His taste for ultramarathons developed in 1983 the year he was supposed to run his frst marathon. After the marathon was cancelled, Steele could not let his hard work and training go to waste. He read that if a runner was in shape to fnish a marathon, running in an ultra- marathon is not much different. So he ran his frst ultramarathon and fnished with only the expe- rience of running ten mile road races under his belt. Since then, Steele has com- peted in 32 ultramarathons and four marathons. You train for an ultra like you train for a marathon, Steele said. The long run is most important. I occasionally do a really long run, which for me is 15 to 20 miles. But never run 50 miles before the actual race. Pace, Steele said, is one of the most essential elements to successfully running an ultra- marathon. My fastest 10 miles are the last 10 miles, Steele said. By the end, if you feel that you can go further, then youve properly paced yourself. Race day to Steele is just like any other training day. His mentality is to run like he does during training. For Steele, training consists of runs varying in distance and company. Ive run with [Professor of Political Economy] Gary Wolfram and a few students, he said. Ill train with friends, but it helps to train by yourself because youll do a long run yourself on the day of the race. Steele is currently training for three upcoming ultramara- thons, all of which take place in Montana: The Elk Horn 50 mile, the Old Gabe in Bozeman, and the Le Grizz, which Steele has run 11 times. I once told Larry Arnn that they could hire me, but Id be gone every second Saturday in October, Steele said. This year, Steele invited his History of Economic Thought students to join him on a run. Three accompanied him. Among them was senior Jack Hummel, an economics major. We ran nine miles, Hum- mel said. His dog, Chaos, came on the run with us. During the run, the group discussed miscellaneous subjects, from Steeles favorite ancient artillery weapon the atlatl, a throwing spear of sorts to economic paper topics. Although he typically runs 50-mile or 50k ultramarathons, Steele said he has run a 100- mile ultramarathon and would like to run one again in the near future. A 100-mile ultra is different than the shorter ones physically and mentally, Steele said. If he were to run the 100 mile ultra marathon of his choice, it would be the Hardrock 100 Endurance run in Colorado. Its considered the toughest 100-miler. You never go below 9,000 or 10,000 feet and hit a 14,000 foot elevation, Steele said. If humans can cover it on foot, someone will try to make an ultramarathon of it. Steeles other dream ultra marathon would be the Barkley Marathon 100-miler in Tennes- see, which is also considered one of the hardest ultramara- thons. It was designed to be impossible to fnish, although people have fnished the race, he said. Of the 900 people who have attempted the Barkley Marathon since the race began in 1986, 13 have fnished. According to Steele, these endurance events offer more than a mere endorphin kick. He said his participation in ultra marathons has taught him to have a strong mentality, in and out of the Montana wilderness. 'The key to fnishing is R.F.M. relentless forward motion, Steele said. I was in a tough Ph.D. program. I saw people fnish and people who dropped out. Some of the people who dropped out were sometimes the smartest. But the people who kept going, those are the people who stayed. Rather than entering ultra- marathons to win, he enters them because they are fun and gripping, due not only to the sheer accomplishment of running great distances in the wilderness, but because he relishes the opportunity to run alongside a supportive group of people, regardless if they are in front, staying with the pack, or holding up the rear. Ultimately you run to sur- vive to fnish, he said. SPORTS A7 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com The Hillsdale College base- ball team suffered two losses to Grand Valley State University but split a doubleheader against the University of Findlay this past weekend. Grand Valley beat Hillsdale 4-0 and 12-1 on Tuesday. The Chargers struggled against the GVSU Lakers pitching in the frst game and only junior right felder Mike Vanchieri had a hit. We saw their two best pitchers. One of them is the best pitchers in the league, said head coach Paul Noce. That didnt help. The second game also ended with a loss for the Chargers, though the men got six hits total. Freshman shortstop Nolan Breymaier had two hits and one run batted in. Weve been playing pretty well all year, but today was just a bad day overall, Noce said. Not only did the men face the No. 20 team in the nation, they also dealt with snow and injuries. Sophomores leIt felder Adam Ladzinski, frst baseman Matt Pochmara, pitcher Dan Pochmara and freshman second baseman Vinny Delicata are all injured. On Easter weekend, Hills- dale split a doubleheader against the Findlay. The pitching was good this past weekend, Noce said. We had some timely hitting. We had kids step up and get some big hits. The weekend started with a 3-0 loss. The Oilers shut out the Chargers largely because Hill- sdale could not get more than the two hits from Delicata and Ireshman center felder Sean Bennett. We have to pick up the ball a little bit better. We have to start getting some ugly hits, Vanchieri said. And maybe get a brush of luck. In the second game, Hills- dale came from behind to beat Findlay 5-3. The seventh inning started with the Oilers holding a 3-2 lead over the Chargers. After three runs and a save by senior pitcher Kris Morris, Hill- sdale pulled off the win. Delicata, with a pinch-hit single out to right feld, started a succession of hits. When junior third baseman Scott Lantis singled and advanced to second on the throw, Delicata scored. Hillsdale racked up two more runs after a single from senior catcher Chris Stephens, a sacri- fce fy Irom Bennet and a single from Vanchieri. Morris saved the game in the bottom of the seventh by allow- ing only one hit and pitching a strikeout. Hes pretty effective. Its tough for a team to see one solid pitcher for a whole game and then see a different one for the last three outs, Vanchieri said. Saturday opened with a second Charger victory 3-1. Freshman pitcher Colin Casey handicapped Findlay by pitch- ing six innings with only one run and three hits. In the frst inning, Vanchieri hit a two-run single that led to runs by both Stephens and Blanchard. Senior Pat OHearn scored in the second after he was walked and then advanced to third on a sacrifce bunt. He got the run after junior Brad Hayden singled. For the second time that weekend, Morris got the save with a hitless seventh inning. Kris has the new role as the closer, Vanchieri said. Stephens and Blanchard each had a hit and a run scored, while Vanchieri lead the Chargers with three hits and two runs batted in. The Chargers narrowly lost the fnal game oI the series, 2-1. Lantis scored the only run. This weekend, Hillsdale will host a four game series against Northwood University. Its going to feel pretty good to have a home weekend series, Vanchieri said. Weve been road warriors this season. Sally Nelson Web Editor Baseball ends weekend 1-3 Senior captain Gabe Bunek runs over an opponent in a game last fall. The Chargers face Grand Valley State University at Allendale, Mich., on Saturday and lost the game 50-17. Despite the loss, several players gained valuable experience playing new positions. Freshmen Dakota Michael and Matteo Moran scored the first tries of their careers. The team is training in preparation for their upcoming Ruck City tournament in Detroit this weekend. (Courtesy of Gabe Bunek) Associate Professor of Economics Charles Steele starts out on the Le Grizz 50-mile ultramarathon. Steele began training after a marathon he entered in was cancelled. (Courtesy of Charles Steele) Bailey Pritchett Collegian Freelancer STEELE LOOKS TO COMPETE IN 33RD ULTRAMARATHON RUGBY FALLS TO GVSU 50-17 the Hillsdale College Invita- tional. Mirochna said that it would be a great opportunity for them to have a home meet other than the Gina Relays. Towne said that the oppor- tunity for the invitational came up when they were planning this seasons schedule. He also said that the decision came be- cause Hillsdale has such a great outdoor facility and everyone thought that it would be best to have another meet on it other than the Gina Relays. This will be a smaller meet with high quality teams. Everyone is excited to move forward, Bernadi said. With all the good people on our team we are able to hold our own, just like all the other teams here at Hillsdale. We are not only going against big Division II schools but also Division I. ! TRACK From A8 ! CALDWELL From A8 Junior Kayla Caldwell sprints down the runway at an indoor meet earlier this year. (Courtesy of Kayla Caldwell) Clearing a height of 13 feet 1 inch, junior Kayla Caldwell fnished second in the nation at the NCAA Divi- sion II Women`s Indoor Track and Field Championships this March and she did it all with a Iractured shin. But Caldwell is no stranger to injury. BeIore she was a track and feld star, Caldwell was a promis- ing gymnast. She started her gymnastics career at the age oI fve, rigorously trained Ior at least Iour hours every day. By the time she was seven, she began competing regular- ly. During the summer beIore eighth grade, Caldwell was invited to train at a gym in Cincinnati, Ohio, where she would be prepared to poten- tially compete in the Olympic games. Tragically, Kayla`s dreams oI Olympic glory The Hillsdale College soIt- ball team split a doubleheader with Saginaw State University on Tuesday. AIter losing the frst game 7-3, the Chargers bounced back with a 1-0 win, bringing their GLIAC record to 10-8. 'We were able to come back and rekindle that fame and got a win out oI that second game, junior shortstop Kate Hoop said. The Saginaw Cardinals had a strong third and Iourth inning in the frst game. They had fve oI their runs in the third and the other two in the Iourth. 'For the most part, |Sagi- naw Valley] earned what they got, head coach Joe Abraham said. 'Saginaw hit the ball really well in the frst game. They just outhit us. In the fIth inning, with ju- nior pitcher Brittany Hulett and junior second baseman Miriam McKay on base, Hoop homered to right center Ior the Chargers` only three runs oI the game. 'She had walked two girls beIore me, so I went up there and knew she wasn`t going to want to walk a third person, Hoop said. 'I was just ready to lock and load on it, and she threw it right down the middle oI the plate. Hulett came in during the fIth inning and held Saginaw Valley to only one hit and no runs the rest oI the game, but it still was not enough to make up the defcit. In the second game, back- to-back doubles Irom senior pitcher Laura Homan and junior center felder Taylor Schulty secured the win Ior the Chargers with the only run oI the game. Homan did not allow any runs and only three hits. 'I think the thing with our team this year is that we just never give up, Schulty said. 'We just keep going at it. Over the weekend, the Chargers managed to take one game Irom the Ferris State University Bulldogs, but lost the series 3-1. 'We`re getting good pitch- ing and playing pretty good deIense, Abraham said. 'We just have to fnd more oIIense. Hoop said the fnal game oI the series on Saturday really stuck out in her mind. Though the previous three games had been losses, the Chargers turned it around and won the Iourth and fnal game 2-1. The Chargers were the frst team to score in the third in- ning oI the game. With senior leIt felder Allison Hetrick on frst base, Hoop grounded out to third base to get her team- mate on second. Senior third baseman Jessica Guertin came to the plate and hit a double, driving Hetrick home. The Bulldogs responded with a run in the top oI the Iourth inning, but Chargers` sophomore catcher Mary Depner responded with an RBI, hitting in Homan. Both Guertin and Homan hit 2-Ior-3 in the game. But the play that Hoop said secured the game Ior the Char- gers was deIensive. In the seventh inning, with a runner on base, Ferris` short- stop came up to bat. A run would have meant a tied game. But the Ferris player hit a liner and Hetrick made a diving catch, getting the third out and securing the win. 'That was an epic game, Hoop said. 'It was one oI those moments you`re never going to Iorget. In the frst game oI the weekend, Ferris took control oI the game in the third in- ning, getting hit aIter hit. The Chargers could not recover and lost 9-1. 'I think hitting is defnitely contagious, and when you get people whose bats are hot, it`s a domino eIIect Irom there, Hoop said. In the second game oI the day, Ferris had a big Iourth in- ning with Iour runs. A homerun by one oI the Bulldogs con- tributed three oI the Iour runs. The Chargers managed to put up one run but were once again deIeated 7-1. Ferris` pitcher threw a no- hitter in the third game, and the Bulldogs shut out the Chargers 4-0. The Chargers will Iace Ashland University, Lake Erie College, and Ohio Dominican University at home on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. ! JESSICA GUERTIN This week, The Collegian sat down with Jessica Guertin, a se- nior history major who plays third base for the Hillsdale College softball team. We asked her about her love of the sport, why she chose Hillsdale, and where she will go next. How long have you been playing softball? I`ve been playing since I was three. I`m 21, so that`s about 18 years. I had an older brother and he was really into baseball. So oI course I had to do everything that he did. I started playing baseball just to play with him and then I really loved it and kept playing. I`ve literally never not played it. I can`t remember a time I didn`t play it. What do think of as your best moment as an athlete? As an athlete you have a lot oI moments you`re proud oI. Probably my sophomore year in general when I made All-Amer- ican. I remember the summer aIter my sophomore year; when I Iound out I was really excited. That`s kind oI what every athlete hopes to achieve in college to reach that status. So that was a real proud moment Ior me Ior sure. :KDWZDVWKHPRVWGLIFXOWPRPHQW" I can`t pinpoint one specifc moment. My junior year was really diIfcult to balance academics and school. A lot oI things have been tough, but everything that has been tough has been a good kind oI tough. :K\GLG\RXSLFN+LOOVGDOH" I was home schooled beIore I came here, so I knew I needed the smaller atmosphere the more personal atmosphere oI a school like Hillsdale. I still really like what Hillsdale stands Ior. I like the one-on-one relationship you can have with proIessors. I know it might sound weird to some people, but I actually like how small Hillsdale is, and I like that it`s secluded. Where will you go next? I`m still waiting to hear back Irom a Iew job opportunities. But I think I`m going to stay here in Michigan. I have a lot oI Iriends in the Detroit area. Right now, I`m in the interview pro- cess Ior a managerial position with Target. I`m hoping to be an international buyer Ior them. I`d like to travel to other countries and convince people to sell their products through Target. I`m really Iocusing on Target right now. I used to live overseas, so I`m very passionate about travel- ing and studying other cultures. I would love to be able to live overseas. I lived in South Korea and Japan. My dad`s a retired air Iorce pilot. He moved there and we Iollowed it was a really great experience. :KDWKDVEHHQ\RXUIDYRULWHFODVVRUSURIHVVRUKHUH" Dr. Birzer hands down. I had him Ior Western Heritage. I just Iell in love with him. I Iell in love with the class. I Iell in love with history. I can`t even pinpoint a specifc class. I`ve taken two oI his upper level classes. He taught me so much about loving history and education. Being a student-athlete has been the most challenging and ex- citing thing here, though. It`s kind oI kicked me when I`ve been down, but I loved it and it pushed me to grow. Compiled by T. Elliot Gaiser The Hillsdale College men and women`s track team fnished fIth at the Miami Uni- versity Invitational in OxIord, Ohio. 'As we move Iorward to an elite program we will be able to continue competing against those |Div. I| programs, women`s head coach Andrew Towne said. Senior Amanda Putt also had the opportunity over the week- end to compete against other elite athletes at the StanIord Invitational in Palo Alto, CaliI., where she automatically quali- fed Ior the outdoor national track meet in the 1,600-meter run and provisionally qualifed in the 800-meter run. Her teammates in Ohio, meanwhile, had six athletes provisionally qualiIy Ior nationals, as well as several personal records. The men`s team fnished with a total oI 77 points. Fresh- man Joshua Mirth fnished sec- ond in the 10,000-meter run in 31:58.16. Senior JeII Wysong fnished Iourth in the 3,000-me- ter steeplechase in 9:30.81 and Ireshman Matthew Perkins fnished sixth in the 1500-meter run in 3:52.58. Another top fnish Ior the men`s team was senior SteIan Bernardi`s Iourth place thrown in the javelin. Bernardi set a season best record at 54.27 meters. 'I still have a lot oI work to do, Bernadi said. 'My sea- son goal is to break the school record this year since it is my last year. Sophomore John Banovetz scored points in all three oI his events and set a personal record in the discus throw at 50.05 meters, provisionally qualiIying Ior the NCAA national meet. Senior Nate English also provisionally qualifed in the shot put with a throw oI 16.63 meters and fnished fIth at the meet. The women`s team scored 49.5 points this weekend. Ju- nior Kayla Caldwell fnish frst in the pole vault Ior the second week in a row. Teammate senior Chelsea Wackernagel fnished just behind Caldwell in third place with a jump oI 3.69 meters. Both provisionally qualifed Ior the national meet. Sophomore Shannon Neby provisionally qualifed Ior the NCAA national meet in the hammer throw at 50.57 meters. Senior Jen ShaIIer also provisionally qualifed Ior the national meet in the 800-meter run at 2:11.36. And the women`s 4x400- meter relay run fnished in seventh at 3:55.56. 'It is really exciting to see how everyone is doing, assis- tant coach Amanda Mirochna said 'They are doing great Ior where they are and are just about in the right spot Ior this time in the season. Putt went to the StanIord Invite this weekend instead oI the meet in Ohio. Towne said that trips to StanIord or Boston are to be looked at as a reward Ior becoming elite athletes and are a great recruiting tool because it shows Iuture athletes that they have that opportunity at Hillsdale. 'It was a great experience to race at StanIord against some oI the nation`s Iastest runners, Putt said. 'The race was pretty intense; we were all in a tight pack Ior most oI it, and I ended up near the back Ior the frst halI, but I was able to move up pretty well near the end. Putt automatically quali- fed Ior the national meet in the 1500-meter run at 4:24.84 and broke the school record by about 5 seconds. She also provisionally qualifed in the 800-meter run at 2:12.37. Mirochna said that she did a great job especially Ior having an injury. 'She went into races very confdently, Mirochna said. 'She didn`t let anything phase her, and at this kind oI meet with proIessional runners, she did great. This coming weekend the team will compete at home in Sarah Anne Voyles Collegian Reporter Sports 12 April 2012 Q & A Soball narrowly splits doubleheader with SVSU Sarah Leitner Sports Editor (Caleb Whitmer/Collegian) Richard Thompson Collegian Freelancer Caldwell looks to improve on indoor season 0HQZRPHQWUDFNWHDPVQLVKIWKDW0LDPL Junior Kayla Caldwell vaults over the bar at an indoor track meet. Caldwell placed second at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field National Meet and looks to improve this outdoor season. (Courtesy of Sam Bender) ! See Track, A7 ! See Caldwell, A7 B1 12 April, 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com Freshman Maran McLeod is one of the new talents in the Hillsdale College Tower Danc- ers. The Tower Dancers will perform April 13, 14, and 15 . (Sally Nelson/Collegian) Rising talent Maran McLeod Some people sing or pray to express their unfathomable love for God. Freshman Maran McLeod dances. [Dance] draws me toward God, she said. McLeod grew up in a strong Christian home in Los Angeles, Calif. with two brothers and both parents. As a young child, McLeod created small plays with her brothers and performed them for her parents. She said it was her love of the stage and need to perform that drew her to dance. For people who love to dance, its something you have the desire to do, McLeod said. At the age of 7, she started taking classes at the Burbank School of Ballet. McLeod became a part of the Burbank Youth Ballet Company when she was 15 years old and began teaching ballet classes to younger students. Her parents were both very involved with her dance career. Her mom helped with costumes, and her dad helped to write dialogue for the ballets her school would perform. I think they [my parents] are glad that I dance, McLeod said. They have always been encouraging but helped me be careful about how much time I put into it. McLeod focused her train- ing mostly on classical ballet while in CaliIornia and was frst introduced to modern dance by Visiting Assistant Professor of Dance Corrine Imberski when she joined the Hillsdale Colleges Tower Dancers. Its been nice to introduce her to my particular modern dance vocabulary, Imberski said. Shes very hardworking. We love that as teachers. Shes very humble about her dance skills. Being in the frst year oI col- lege can be stressful for many freshmen. They are homesick and do not know many people. Maran said she was blessed to meet senior Aubrie Marks, who acted at her mentor in the Tower Dancers and also as spiritual support. I love Aubrie because she has been so willing to reach out to me, McLeod said. Shes been a great support in my faith. Shes always positive, and she al- ways leaves me with a sense that everything is going to be OK. Marks said she also had a mentor in the Tower Dancers when she was a freshman. My freshman year there was a senior in the Tower Dancers, Vita Reivydas (08), who was wonderful to me and brought me into the group, Marks said. I hope in some ways I have been that for Maran. McLeod will be performing in three numbers in next week- ends Tower Dancers concert: Imberskis Rhapsody in Blue and Retrace Ecartr and a number choreographed by junior Marianna Ernst. Marks will also perform in Retrace Ecartr, and Ernsts piece as well as a ballet number choreographed by Lecturer in Theater Department Holly Hobbes. Because she has all that bal- let training, she was a perIect ft for [Rhapsody], Imberski said. Imberski also said she really admired the way McLeod was comfortable playing a character. 'I frst see her vitality and a certain amount of innocence to- ward the world, Imberski said, a strong technical base, and a nice fuidity. This sense of innocence was necessary in Rhapsody in Blue, Imberski said. Marks also admires the way McLeod can be a character in a dance number. She has a lot of character, and she knows how to take on the character of the dance, Marks said. Shes such a joy and delight in dance. She brings back a spark of life for me. She also has wonderful technique, but shes more than a technical dancer. McLeod also considers her- self as more than just a technical dancer. Dance is a passion for her, but she also enjoys playing the piano and singing. I think my skill set is broader than just dance, McLeod said. College is a unique time where I can develop these skills. I cant imagine my life without music. McLeod is deliberating between a major in American studies or history. She attended a private Christian school and was homeschooled for a few years as well. She said her experience with classical education drew her both to Hillsdale and also to the interdisciplinary nature of the American studies major, which incorporates literature, history, and philosophy courses. McLeod said she may not pursue the dance minor at Hills- dale, but appreciates that is it an available option to her. McLeod loves dance because it acts as a release from daily stress. 'I think it |dance| is def- nitely a release from the stress of school work and a means of bonding with other students, McLeod said. Its a means of expressing my love for God. Its a unique combination of music and movement. Its not just moving on the treadmill, its an art form. Im just so grateful to God that He gave me this as an outlet.
[email protected] Roxanne Turnbull Arts Editor She brings back a spark of life for me. She also has wonder- ful technique, but shes more than a technical dancer.
senior Aubrie Marks Tower Dancers in concert Women in purple dresses dance around a lone door in the center of the stage. Dancers toss picture frames in a hilarious sat- ire of the 18th century. Students glide and jump across the stage in an expression of movement and art. The Tower Dancers began rehearsals in October for their ninth annual performance. 18 dancers will perIorm fve diIIer- ent pieces, ranging from seven to 30 minutes. This year marks the Tower Dancers largest com- pany since its formation. Some years we have a theme. This year, all fve works are independent, said Assistant Professor of Dance Corinne Imberski. The pieces are all in modern styles, but some are infuenced by ballet, junior Dan Thelen said. All of the choreographers are infuenced by other dance forms, Imberski said. Youll see some ballet movements. Each piece is choreographed by a faculty member or student. Imberski herself choreographed two pieces for this performance. Imberski`s frst piece, choreographed to Rhapsody in Blue by George Gershwin, showcased Ior the frst time in February when it accompanied the jazz faculty concert. The dancers will perform it again this weekend. The dance professor entitled her second piece Retrace Ecarter. The word ecarter means tossed open or thrown aside in French, is a ballet form, and is also the word re- trace written backwards. The whole piece is about the pathways of the synapses in your brain, she said. Imberski wants to depict the pathways of life, from simply retracing steps in daily life to charting greater pathways. The routine lasts for 30 minutes and is accompanied by a video designed by Instructor of Art Bryan Springer. The video features geom- etry with lines and circles. The shapes represent the pathways of life, Imberski said. Dance lecturer Holly Hobbs choreographed a routine she named Picture This! The dance comically looks at 18th century portraiture, using period dress and picture frames. Juniors Marianna Ernst and Dan Thelen each choreographed a piece for the upcoming performance. Thelen said that, in order to showcase a piece, students needed to have gone through at least one section of the choreography class. Then, students must bring part of a routine to Imberski who offers suggestions. Along with three other danc- ers, Thelen will perform the eight minute routine he choreo- graphed. He named the dance Ricollegare, which is the Ital- ian word for reconnect. It tells a story about how people interact with others throughout their lives and how those relationships grow or fall apart, he said. In Ernsts seven-minute rou- tine, Spell It Out, dancers go back and forth through a prop door that represents a major decision. Its about trying to go through a door and going back and forth until.... she trailed off. The dancers perform on Fri- day at 8 p.m., Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. The event is not ticketed and is therefore frst come, frst serve.
[email protected] Sally Nelson Web Editor ARTS Ballroom dance club revamps style On Sunday afternoons, a growing number of Hillsdale College students put away their Heritage readers and English papers, pull out their dance shoes, and let loose at the Ballroom Dance Club. The club is a two-hour instructional period taught by one of Hillsdales own, junior Gabriel Duttlinger. He teaches two different dance styles per class. So far the club has worked through the fox trot, cha cha, and salsa. This semester they are learning the waltz, rumba, and samba. As president of the club, Duttlinger is par- ticularly talented in the Latin dances, and his favorite dance is the cha cha. Some of the club members even compare Duttlingers Cuban hip motion to that of musician Shakira. You really have to be a man to shake your hips like that, said club Vice President sopho- more Erin Mundahl. Taylor Knopf Collegian Freelancer ! See B2 The Tower Dancers will perform for three nights. This number, Rhapsody in Blue, is one of five different pieces that will be performed. Live musicians accompany Rhapsody in Blue. (Sally Nelson/Collegian) Watercolors to the left, oils to the right, portraits behind and a wall of computer graphics straight ahead. Each senior art show exhibits the best works of the seniors that year, and each show has a separate repertoire that makes it individual and beautiful. 'The fve oI us girls are very similar and have similar styles, but all of us have excelled in different media and different ways, senior Anna Saewert said. I think there is a lot of coherence there. The upcoming art show, exhibiting the work of seniors Becca Brill, Bonnie Cofer, Nata- lie Kerner, Anna Saewert and Laura Wegmann, opens on April 15 with a reception on April 20. The show will display a mix of classically inspired art, which is the focus of Hillsdale Col- leges art department, as well as a selection of photography and a large section devoted to graphic design. The Hillsdale art department really celebrates the classical inspirations of art and we really Iocus on fne art, Wegmann said. But Bonnie has taken all those things she learned and in- corporated them into this newer genre. The kinds of pieces Im putting in the show are kind of different from the other artists. I am putting a couple of draw- ings and two or three paint- ings, but mostly graphic design pieces, Cofer said. Most of the pieces Im putting in the show are pieces Ive done outside of class. The variety makes the show, Brill said. Especially with the media variety in the upcoming show, the artists may be using unorthodox approaches to show their work. Im thinking of getting a bunch of T-shirts and hanging them from the ceiling, creating a sort of mobile arrangement, she said. One primary aspect of the show is picking which pieces should be in the show. Its the best stuff Ive done in all four years so its kind of a big deal, Kerner said. Its which ones were most success- ful in capturing the essence of the person. Im getting really excited, Saewert said. Itll be even more exciting when I get all of my pictures framed to see them all come together. The show is a culmination of years of hard work. Im going to be so relieved when I walk into the Daughtrey Art Gallery, that Ive walked into so many times, and be able to see all my work from fresh- man year up to this semester, Wegmann said. [email protected] ARTS 12 April 2012 B2 www.hillsdalecollegian.com ! IN FOCUS LESLIE REYES Social dancing and the animal-like appetite Touch, pressure, and a swaying oI the hips defnes the popular dances of the 21st century, contributing to a mentality of reckless indulgence. On Hillsdale Colleges campus, these mating rituals reveal the degradation of social dance to an erotically public and unapologetic action. Parties have shed their romantic mysteries of the past and instead made blatantly obvious the animal-like appetites that pine Ior instant gratifcation. Coinciding with the legalization and improvement of contraceptives throughout the 20th century, the de- velopment of alluring dances through each decade led to the sensual trend that stil taints the dance foors today. Margaret Sanger Iounded the frst American Birth Control League in 1921, which later became Planned Parenthood. The Roaring 20s began the outburst of lewd revelry as dance broke away from its traditional roots. The rebellion continued as teens oI the 1950s defed the swing traditions through dance and rock-and-roll music. The pill, announced as an oral contraceptive in the 50s, underwent legal battles regarding advertisement. In 1972, all women, including the unmarried, were allowed to receive contraceptives by the ruling of the Supreme Court, and by 1990 the FDA established that the pill was safe as well as effective. As the Charleston evolved into grinding, a simple sway of two bodies interweaving with one another began to be socially acceptable. Todays dancing is a mere release from the tensions that writhe within people of our century. Dancing at social events, which degrades the true form of dance, has progressed as contraceptive technology and legalization did, adding to the elated crowds` belieI oI no ramifcation. Basically, I do not want to see what should be left Ior the bedroom on the dance foor. I want to be able to move comfortably among a crowd as opposed to awkwardly ramming into people who are essentially... doing it.
[email protected] Teddy Sawyer Collegian Reporter Music festivals create community The music industry has changed. Just ask Professor of Political Economy Gary Wolfram, a man who came of age in the Berkley music scene, surrounded by bands like The Who, Van Morrison and Grateful Dead. At that time concerts drove the record sales, Wolfram said. Lower ticket prices encouraged concert go- ers to purchase the bands albums once they were at the show. Wolfram noted the shift from album revenue to concert revenue. Today you give away the album, but you pay for the ticket, he said. The festival is the best deal. Wolfram describes music festivals as smorgasbords compared to nice dinners. He prefers focusing on one band and skipping the fes- tival scene. His son Wyatt, however, works in the music industry and is a loyal at- tendee. Is the energy right? Is the lineup right? These are keys questions to ask. If your answer is Yes, Production Manager and Lighting Designer Mi- chael Beyer says Go. Over the years, Beyer has attended dozens of festivals including Wakarusa, Roth- bury, Electric Forest, All Good, and numerous smaller Midwestern festivals. He prefers the small festi- val, where the music is the focus and friends are easy to make. You get more of a com- munity and family feel at the smaller ones, Beyer said. He has purposefully avoided Bonaroo in Man- chester, Tenn. He called it the Wal-Mart of music festivals. When searching out the right lineup, Beyer keeps his ear to the ground all year. He treats lineup season when festival promoters announce headliners like some people treat deer- hunting season. He hears about festivals through news boards, tour announcements and by word-of-mouth. Beyer recommends look- ing for festivals that cater to a community and attract a good crowd. This summer hes bought tickets to All Good in Thorn- ville, Ohio for its jam vibe. The lineup includes Allman Brothers Band, Phil Lesh and Friends, and the Flaming Lips. For the past four sum- mers, senior Diana Eberhart attended Blissfest, a small eclectic festival in the woods of northern Michigan. The festival in Good- heart, Mich. is about 40 minutes from her home- town, Petoskey, Mich. Eberhart speaks about Bliss with a fondness. Like Beyer, Eberhart appre- ciates the grass-roots feel of the festival. At Blissfest you can camp all weekend, Eber- hart said. It makes for an awesome experience. Unlike Lollapalooza in Chicago, which she attended in the summer of 2010, she always goes to Blissfest with numerous friends and family. Plus, after days staying up late dancing, Eberhart and her friends can make the short drive over to Sturgeon Bay for beautiful scenery and lake baths. Because more people are able to afford it, she said, you can enjoy the festival with a big group of friends. [email protected] Phil Morgan Senior Reporter Final senior show varies media Senior Bonnie Cofer is one of five women showing artwork at the last of the senior art exhibits. She is shown here in front of a collage of her works. (Joe Buth/Collegian) Duttlinger really stresses the music in the ballroom dance club. I think that one thing that keeps our generation away from dancing is they think it is boring or something you only do at weddings, Duttlinger said. I try to keep it lively by using music from the radio stations top 40 hits. He wants to use music that already inspires students to dance and to show them the ballroom steps that accom- pany that music. Duttlinger`s frst cha cha was to the popular song Low by T-pain and Flo Rider. He said he was amazed anyone could ballroom dance to that kind of music. Gabes taste in music helps you Ieel fexible about dance and gives you options, said Mundahl. With about 20 consistent members, the students are beginning to acquire some real dancing skills. I have been very impressed with the progress they are making, said Duttlinger. The progress is very vis- ible, and I dont think they realize how good they are doing. Dancing is a hard thing to get, and it takes discipline and dedication. Sophomore and club Vice President Andrew Pappas agreed and said the club is a great place for newcomers to learn to dance. However, he said he would like to see a more open dance forum in the future. Both Duttlinger and Pappas agreed that a long-term group class is strange in the world of dance because there are more experienced dancers and a constant fow oI beginners. ThereIore, it is hard to cater to everyones level of expertise. While the club has plenty of female members, it lacks male leads. 'It mystifes me as to why more guys are not involved, Duttlinger said. It seems like a no-brainer to me. You are able to be up-close, dancing with these ladies. Pappas gave props to the men that do show up for the club. Its scary for the guys to open dance, he said. You are thrown onto the foor and the beat is going and you need to have something to do. Lecturer in Music Douglas Spangler teaches two levels of social dance each semester. Students can take the course for one credit and get extra practice at the Ballroom Dance Club. I promote involvement in the club by requiring my students to attend a few club meetings each semester, Spangler said. The club is a wonder- ful outlet for my social dance students because they can continue dancing out- side class, and it gives them a chance to practice. Although Spangler prefers an old- fashioned style of music, he appreci- ates the fare Duttlinger brings to the dance scene at Hillsdale. Spangler said he could tell Duttlinger was a serious dance student as soon as he arrived on campus. He came with not one pair of dance shoes, but two! Spangler said. Duttlinger frst started dancing during the required physical educa- tion ballroom dance class at his private Christian high school. However, Dut- tlinger enjoyed the class and said, In the marines, we call it mandatory fun. Duttlingers time in the Marine Corps actually led him into his dancing career. In 2010, after four years of ac- tive duty, Duttlinger had some time off and a little money which allowed him to take ballroom dance classes out of a studio in Dayton, Ohio. He dedicated extensive time and energy to the art through group lessons, private lessons, and going out dancing with friends. A few years ago, I brought a couple of my dancing friends to the annual Marine Corps ball and we tore it up, he said. ! BALLROOM From B1 A small crowd gathers around a stage at Blissfest, a music festival in Goodheart, Mich. (Courtesy of Diana Eberhart) Final art show ranges in media from graphic design, photography, oil, and watercolor S he sits on an exercise ball in her oIfce surrounded by Pilates sticks, weights, and mats. Behind her are Iramed certif- cates showing her various exercise instruction certifcations. Dressed in a tracksuit and a smile, the woman is Alesia 'Aerobics Aumock, who loves her job because she loves her students. Aumock is a ftness instructor and physical education lecturer. Since 1984, she has taught both community and student classes, covering a vari- ety oI diIIerent athletic areas. Her certifcations include: Group Fitness Instruction, Cardio Kick Box, Step Rebok, Weight Training Special- ist and Personal Fitness Trainer. She has taught classes in indoor cycling, cardio kickboxing, mat science, and multi-ftness training, to name a Iew. Aumock began her work as a ftness instructor at various health clubs. She was, however, happy to quit this line oI work and begin at the college in 1989 when former athletic director Jack McAvoy oIIered her the opportunity to pioneer a new ftness program. She began her job at the college as an assistant to George Roche IV in the physiology lab. When he went to work at the University oI Michigan, she would teach his classes. In the physiology department, she helped students take blood samples and fnd cholesterol counts. This stopped when the government Ior- bade these practices. Beginning in January 1990, Au- mock began to teach P.E. classes. At the time, Dr. Alice Hullhorst was the P.E. chair. 'She hired me to come in and teach an aerobics dance course. Hull- horst would lecture, and aIterward I would instruct the class, she said. The Iollowing semester Aumock taught the frst class. Since then, it has been one oI the most popular classes, she said. In 1997 Aumock was asked to work with the football team to improve their aerobics in addition to teaching other Hillsdale students. Soon, almost every other sports team wanted private classes and she soon earned the nickname 'Superwoman among the athletes. One oI her Iormer students, who was also on the basketball team, participated in Survivor: AIrica. Aumock saved one oI the videos Irom his class, which Ieatures him doing aerobic dance. Another aspect oI Aumock`s posi- tion is teaching community ftness classes. She Ieatures the same classes as Ior students, but at times conve- nient Ior community members. She is also currently developing a Marine Fitness program, tailored Ior veterans but also available to commu- nity members and students. 'With everyone coming back Irom Iraq, they need to have help keeping up with their ftness, she said. Aumock enjoys the overlap be- tween the community and the college in her ftness classes. 'The most Iun is when I have a college-aged students in a class, as well as a community member who is 84. She did everything the college age students did, Aumock said. One of her favorite memories is when her aerobics dance class came dressed completely in white. 'I called it Chariots oI Fire` at- tire, she said, laughing. Aumock has noticed two major changes in the athletics program in the last 25 years. One oI the main diI- ferences is that there has been a large decrease in the number oI students taking classes, she said. The problem is the time of the year, a crunch Ior time, and an in- crease in intramural participation, she said. 'II I show you a picture Irom 1990, this place has 40 or more students in it. The attire oI students has changed quite a bit in the years since Aumock frst begin teaching. In the beginning we all wore leotards like Jane Fonda, she said. 'Now it`s workout shirts and leg- gings. Aumock looks Iorward to the completion oI the Tennis and Track building. She hopes to expand the program and allow more time Ior students in the dance studio. [email protected] Alesia Aumock has weathered the many changes in Hillsdales fitness instruction ! GREEK EVENTS From B4 SPACES B3 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com In Their Eyes Emmaline Epperson Collegian Reporter
(Courtesy of Alesia Aumock) oI the bad connotations sur- rounding the name 'Irat. 'II they are willing to listen to us that long |to explain they want to host a Iormal|, usually they are happy to have us and invite us to come back, he said. All the decorations at the country club will be set up by the time the Delts and their dates arrive. When Moeller visited the room the Iormal will be held in, he discovered a purple lace Iabric hung over the room Irom a chandelier. He thought it looked pretty good, so he asked the country club`s man- agement who did the decora- tions, called the company, and set up a contract Ior them to do the same thing Ior the Delt Iormal aIter asking Ior and receiving 'a signifcant price reduction. The bulk oI spring Iormal is paid Ior by the revenue Irom ticket purchases. Money drawn Irom the social events budget is used to subsidize each Ira- ternity member`s ticket. Without the subsidy, the dance would have cost about $47 a couple, but aIter the price dropped to $40 Moeller`s target amount and the historical cost Ior Delt formal tickets. Delts drive themselves to Iormal, rather than use a bus- ing service. 'They cost a lot oI money, Moeller said. Sigma Chi So as to not worry about any scheduling conficts, the Sigma Chi Iormal won`t be held until aIter the semester ends. On May 10, the Sigma Chis and their dates will travel to the Atheneum Suite Hotel in Detroit, Mich., in the part, DeLapp assured The Colle- gian, 'that isn`t Ialling apart. After his plans with the Thomas Edison Inn Iell through, DeLapp Irantically began searching for a replace- ment venue. He called 'like crazy to venues all over Detroit beIore fnally deciding on the Atheneum. DeLapp discovered the same thing Moeller did: a lot oI hotels don`t like dealing with fraternities. He began saying he was representing a Iraternity Irom a small Chris- tian school to try and soIten the impact 'Iraternity made on the imaginations of the venue managers he was talking to. Even so, DeLapp said he had to put down a $1,000 deposit on the Atheneum room he rented. A lot oI the students attend- ing the Sig Chi Iormal end up staying the night in the area oI the venue. DeLapp said what separates his Iraternity`s formal from the others is it is a much more individual event. Rather than returning to Hillsdale, the Iormal party will leave the Atheneum and dis- perse into the city oI Detroit. 'There are a lot oI restau- rants, bars, and casinos in the area so it could potentially be a lot oI Iun Ior people, DeLapp said. 'As long as they don`t wander down the wrong alley. The Pi Beta Phi`s held their Iormal on March 31, while the Chi Omega`s will have theirs on April 27.
[email protected] (Shannon Odell/Collegian) (Courtesy of Jill Frasier) SPACES B4 12 April 2012 www.hillsdalecollegian.com DESIGNING THE PARTY Caleb Whitmer Copy Editor Greek social chairs work out the details of Greek Week and formals Compiled by Rachel Hofer; photographs by Mel Caton I like taking classic pieces and mixing them up. I dont follow fashion trends very closely. Greek date parties and formals require hours of planning and organizing before the event, often unseen by guests at the events, and they are some of the most unique and creative parties. (Top) Kappa Kappa Gamma had a carousel at their formal venue. (Bottom) Delta Tau Delta held a grape-stomping date party in the fall of 2011. (Top: Courtesy of Jill Frasier; Bottom: Shannon Odell/Collegian) Emma Langston Freshman Politics Major Orlando, Florida Style: Classically Eclectic Outt: Dress and Head- band-Anthropologie, Sweater and Belt- J. Crew Icons: Audrey Hepburn with an Emma twist I used to be such a tomboy. CAMPUS CHI C There is something about dressing nicely and it having an effect on your attitude. Two weeks before spring break, junior Matt DeLapp, social chair of Sigma Chi fra- ternity, received an email from the Thomas Edison Inn. The new owners of the inn said they recently purchased the building and would not, in fact, be hosting the Sigma Chi spring formal on May 10, despite the verbal agreement DeLapp had made with the previous owners a few weeks prior. Its been pretty crazy, said DeLapp, who has spent the last few weeks scrambling to fnd a new venue Ior his fraternitys formal. Such is the life of a Greek social chair in the spring. Every sorority and two of the four fraternities hold formals in the second semes- ter of every school year. Each Greek houses social chair is in charge of everything involved with organizing the swanky dinner parties. They do every- thing from choosing the venue to making sure every students allergies dont prevent them from surviving dinner all the while struggling to keep the whole thing under budget. Kappa Kappa Gamma Sophomore Katie Frates is Kappa Kappa Gammas social chairwoman. She said she started planning Kappas spring formal, to be held this Saturday in the Belvedere Room at The Toledo Club in Toledo, Ohio, back in Decem- ber. [The spring formal] is defnitely the biggest event I host, she said, and I would like to think the funnest of the year. Food for the formal is pro- vided by the Toledo Club. To save money, each guest will be eating the same dish chicken picatta with two sides and a salad chosen by Frates. In order to make sure she wasnt providing party at- tendees with something they couldnt eat, Frates had to make sure the party guests werent allergic to the dishes she chose. But if they were, she worked with the person to provide a meal they could eat. AIter Frates fgured out the venue where formal would be, she had to fgure out how to get formal to the venue. Kappa will provide buses for the 171 students attending formal. Frates said she found that food and busing account for about 90 percent of her budget for spring formal. I was shocked, she said. The busing company was willing to negotiate down on the quote theyd given Frates and while she said the amount saved wasnt large, she need the mney for decorations. Usually they want your business, she said. They are not going to turn you away. In addition to decora- tions, the last 10 percent of her budget will be spent on chaperones, security, a disc jockey, gifts for seniors, and, if there is enough left over, party favors. Frates assessed the Bel- vedere Room and decided it looked nice enough that the Kappas didnt have to deco- rate it too much. Instead, she focused on centerpieces for the tables. The formals theme is Fire and Ice. We wanted to pick a theme that was really simple and cheap, Frates said, but that we could also bedazzle a little bit. Alcohol will be served at Kappas formal. Rent-a-cops will be there in case, as she put it, the people who are 21 get a little rowdy. Delta Tau Delta Delta Tau Deltas spring formal will be held this Friday, the day before Kappas, at the Lenawee Country Club in Adrian, Mich. Social chair of the Delts, sophomore Jonathan Moeller, began planning for- mal about two months ago. Scheduling a date, he said, was one of the trickiest parts of the party planning process because he had to coordinate not only with the fraternity members, but with the venue, the sororities, events on cam- pus, and parents weekend. No matter what you do, someone will be unhappy, Moeller said, but you gotta just put your foot down and roll with it. Like Frates, Moeller`s frst order oI business was fnding a suitable venue. He said he was looking for a place with class, but also a place where the price was right. Costs aside, fnding a venue willing to host a fraternity for- mal can be a problem in it self, Moeller said, simply because ! See GREEK, B3