Collage’s Collage A look into the Broad Street hub
PHOTOSPREAD
The
@Collegian_GCC @gcc.collegian The Collegian: The GCC Newspaper Friday, November 6, 2020
Bring back the Articles A student’s case for confederacy PERSPECTIVES
Happy Hallmark!
Getting ahead on the Christmas spirit
ENTERTAINMENT
Collegian The Award-Winning Grove City College Student Newspaper
Vol. 106, No. 9
Waiting on a winner Students anxious as ballot counting continues Collegian Staff
As the 2020 election results continue to stream in, it was unclear at press time whether Republican incumbent Donald Trump will remain in the Oval Office or whether Democratic challenger Joe Biden will become the 46th president. As the race becomes tighter and tighter, it looks like
the presidency hinges on the votes in swing states such as Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. Due to an increase in absentee ballots, many key battleground states cannot call the election yet. To win, a candidate needs to gain 270 electoral votes. A Collegian poll of Grove City students last week showed that 66.94 percent
voted for Trump over 18.55 percent for Biden. “Despite national polls, it’s not impossible Trump wins. Certainly he’ll lose the popular vote, but there are multiple winning scenarios for Trump,” senior Cole Stinebiser said. Students gathered in the Breen Student Union on Tuesday night to watch one of four different livestreams
covering the latest election results. The Election Night Watch Party was hosted by the college’s Institute for Faith and Freedom and the American Enterprise Institute Executive Council. Freshmen Aaron Phillips and Alexis Kilmartin, who both attended the event, remained positive and hopeful regarding Trump’s potential victory.
Meanwhile, senior John Kalajian and sophomore Josef Mueller were nervous and unsure about how the election would turn out. “It seems like all means of predictability have been thrown out the window. This is the same thing that happened in 2016,” Kalajian said. Although Biden was leading in polls, Kalajian beELECTION 5
New class to broaden horizons
Falling into winter?
Ashley Ostrowski Copy Editor
WES KINNEY
Grove City experienced its first snow of the season Sunday, only to be followed by warm days later in the week and over the weekend.
Admissions admits changes
David Zimmermann News Editor
Although COVID-19 has forced most colleges and universities to cancel on-campus tours this fall, Grove City College’s Admissions Office has adapted its visit options to meet the needs of prospective students. Currently, visitors are offered opportunities to tour campus, meet with an admissions counselor and faculty member, observe a class and eat lunch in one of the dining halls. Other visit options such as chapel visits, overnight visits and group visits are no longer available as they are deemed higher risk. Assistant Director of Admissions Events & Visits Lynise Massella said, “The safety and welfare of current students is always top of mind for the admissions team as we work to showcase our campus in the safest ways possible during the pandemic.” To date, no positive cases have been traced back to a prospective student visitor, according to Massella. Tours require the prospective student and two guests to wear masks and to prac-
PAIGE FAY
Senior Student Ambassador and Receptionist Jesse Belitz talks to prospective students in the Admissions Office. The department has made many adjustments to accomodate COVID-19 restrictions. tice proper social distancing guidelines. Senior Jesse Belitz, one of the student tour guides at the college, said that campus tours are offered more frequently now because of the one-family capacity per tour. “Going on tour with one family has been well-received as a chance to gain an even
better glimpse of the school while personally addressing each prospective student’s questions, needs and desires in their future college,” he said. Another tour guide junior Camryn Lewis said that families are grateful for the opportunity to still visit the campus in-person as op-
posed to online. “Many people have commented to me about how Grove City is the only college on their list currently doing on-campus tours,” she said. Tour guide and junior Rachel Weaver added, “Families who visit are typically ADMISSIONS 5
In wake of important discussions about race in the United States, Dr. Gina Blackburn ’94 and Dr. Cedric Lewis are co-teaching a new course called Cultural Diversity and Advocacy next spring. The idea came to Blackburn last summer as she reflected on racial diversity and teaching the subject at the college. “We lack professors of color, and we should have classes on campus that are about what’s going on with race relations taught by a person of color,” Blackburn said. She thought of Lewis to coteach the course. Blackburn said the class will be run as an open dialogue where students can ask questions and learn from Lewis’ and others’ experiences. Lewis, who has a background in law, said, “I want to talk about this from a human perspective. We can read books and we can read accounts and we can see news stories; but if we’ve got a person that we can connect it to, it seems to have a greater impact. When things don’t impact our everyday lives, it’s easier to dismiss it.” “So, I want to talk about the things that I’ve experienced, and family members of mine have experienced and people I know and put a face on this so that we understand that this is not a theory learning situation,” he continued. “This is reality that people go through every day.” The course will discuss race regarding the workplace, church, education and the justice system. Though the course is housed in the Education Department, Blackburn and Lewis emphasize the class is to students of all majors and paths of life. “It’s going to talk about experiencing diversity in the workplace, whatever your workplace is. We want all majors, so we can have a nice broad discussion from different perspectives,” Blackburn NEW CLASS 8