Blast from the past
And a glimpse into the future of GCC
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No fumbling about it Football defeats CMU
SPORTS
The Grove City College Student Newspaper
Friday, October 5, 2018
McNulty Memo
Back to ‘the bubble’ As we begin our celebration of another Homecoming weekend at GCC, I’m thankful for the opportunity to share this McNulty memo of McNulty miscellaneous musings. Why do so many alums return every year? Nearly 3,000 alumni and friends of the college will return for this year’s celebration. Year after year, our Homecoming crowds are among the largest for schools of our size. Given our location and history of unpredictable weather, it’s truly remarkable that so many of our extended community make the effort to visit campus. It strikes me that this encouraging turnout validates the key recruiting messages from the Admissions Office. We want visiting high school students to see what distinguishes GCC in the world of higher education. These important attributes include our caring and engaging community, the faculty’s highly personalized approach to teaching, our authentic Christian culture and the physical beauty of our campus. And it’s these same attributes that draw so many back to their alma mater. They know this is a special place. Even a brief visit is a reconnection to something of lasting value as visitors enjoy a reunion with others whose lives were forever changed “mid the
FEATURE
pines.” Wolverines Together. Visitors to campus may notice our enhanced branding at the PLC and the renovated tennis courts. These improvements are part of a larger initiative to build student support for our varsity athletes. Our community is enriched when students use their various and remarkable gifts to engage in music, theater, dance, art, debate and other organizations, including athletics, and when we support each other in these efforts. Sports serves as an especially fun example of what Wolverines Together is all about. Back to the Bubble. Our college is often referred to as “The Grove” or increasingly just “Grove.” “The Bubble” is another name we sometimes hear to describe a place that seems far removed and protected from the hard realities of this world. Considering that our first core value is faithfulness, there’s no disputing that by the Grace of God we’ve stayed the course in ways that may fairly be described as countercultural. After more than thirty years immersed in the “realities” of Washington, DC, I’m exceedingly thankful for this Bubble. As Brenda and I begin our fifth year on campus, we increasingly appreciate the mission of this college to equip its students with all the tools necessary for godly living. MCNULTY 5
Vol. 104, No. 6
Calm before the storm
LINDSEY SCHULENBURG
Before the nearly 3,000 alumni return to campus, many hands are busy getting ready. Workers hammer stakes into the quad, tents rise, Greek groups finish floats and organizations prepare for the flood of returning graduates.
Greeks go too far? Traditional ‘thievery’ may have crossed a line
Abigail Ross Contributing Writer Thievery among Greek groups is a longstanding tradition at Grove City College. That doesn’t mean that the College’s fraternities and sororities are breeding grounds for criminal behavior. Thievery in this case refers to Greek Unity Week pranks pulled on rival groups in which
items precious to the Greek groups – paddles and letters – are spirited away by pledges. It’s all in good fun. The stolen items are required to be returned under rules established by the Office of Student Life and Learning. But last spring, the return of some items never came, according to several fraternity and sorority members interviewed by The Collegian.
Grove City College is home to 27 various Community Living Privilege groups, 18 of them are designated as Greek groups. The others are considered housing groups. During the spring semester, the College hosts Greek Unity Week for those who received a formal bid to join the groups. During this week, certain Greek items are allowed to be
stolen, with the expectation that they will be returned. These are designated by each sorority or fraternity and include items like Greek shirts or paddles. Alfred Holliday, a member of the Nu Lambda Phi Fraternity, said, “Most of the stuff that people take is given back to the group that it was stolen from.” GREEKS 5
A mounted and majestic march Paige Fay Life Editor
Friday
All Alumni Check-In - 3:30 to 6:30 pm., HAL Atrium Homecoming Dance - 8 p.m., Breen Student Union, HAL Courtyard
Saturday
Homecoming Parade - 11 a.m., through campus, down Pine and Broad Streets GroveFest - Noon to 6 p.m., Downtown Grove City Greek Village - Noon to 3 p.m., bottom of Rainbow Bridge Float Awards and Pre-Game Show - 1:15 p.m., Thorn Field Football game vs. Westminster College - 2 p.m.,Thorn Field
Sunday
Homecoming Worship - 10 a.m., Harbison Chapel, message by Dr. D Dean Weaver
This year’s Homecoming parade will have some unexpected guests: the Pittsburgh Mounted Patrol. This is the first parade that the Patrol will have participated outside of Pittsburgh. The unit has been brought back after many years. They have been on and off since the department was started. “We are a support unit for officers on the ground and perform daily patrols in every neighborhood of the city,” said Officer Justin Susich who heads
PHOTO COURTESY OF PITTSBURGH MOUNTED PATROL
The Pittsburgh Mounted Patrol will be a highlight of this year’s Homecoming parade, adding six horses to the usual roster of floats, cars and marching bands. up the Mounted Patrol. “We also deploy for all of our major events and protests to assist in crowd control and management.”
There are four fulltime riders and five part-time riders, and six horses named Guinness, Regatta, Lord Stanley, Spirit, Can-
nonball, and Maxx. The riders ride all of the horses in order to be more adaptable, but for PATROL 4