4.2.15 Hillsdale Collegian

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Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Vol. 138 Issue 21 - 2 April 2015

www.hillsdalecollegian.com

BPU director charged with drunk driving Macaela Bennett City News Editor

Head coach Claudette Charney, coaching the women’s basketball team.

(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)

Charney retires from coaching Sam Scorzo Sports Editor Claudette Charney, head coach of the Hillsdale women’s basketball team, is retiring on April 30 after 13 seasons of leading the Chargers. Since coming to Hillsdale in 2002, Charney has built the women’s basketball program, leading three girls to All-American status, the team to three GLIAC South Division titles, and the 2009 GLIAC championship. She also capped off personal achievements during her time at Hillsdale basketball coach in the GLIAC to win more than 500 games. “Hillsdale gave me the opportunity to be myself as a coach: To care about and have a passion for

to train great players,” Charney said. “I truly believe in what the school stands for.” Though she’s spent 13 years at Hillsdale, she’s spent far more years coaching in the GLIAC, making her the conference’s longest-tenured and winningest coach. But before her successful ceptional player on the court. “She’s the most competitive person I know,” senior guard Kadie Lowery said. Her competitive edge helped her break the 2,000-point barrier during her collegiate career at Saginaw Valley State University and Grand Valley State University, a feat only one other woman in the state of Michigan has accomplished. After graduating from GVSU, Charney had plans to teach, but

she was not ready to leave the game behind. At the age of 22, she took a part-time coaching job at Muskegon Community College, where she stayed for three years while working three other jobs before she was offered the full-time head coaching position at Alma College, a Division III school. After leading the Alma team son there, Charney was offered the head coaching job at Saginaw Valley State University. At 25 years old she started building her Division II career with the Cardinals. Charney’s teams garnered 167 wins over her 10 seasons as head coach. Charney left Saginaw Valley to lead the Grand Valley State University Lakers where she was named GLIAC coach of the year in 1998.

After seven years with the Lakers, Charney received an offer to coach at Hillsdale. “When I saw what Hillsdale was about, it aligned with me perfectly,” Charney said. “Hillsdale offered an opportunity to truly have the best of both worlds — it the support a competitive Division II team needed.” Charney’s quiet intensity has shaped the women’s basketball program. “She wants to win games,” Lowery said. “But even in practice, everything, every drill, is a competition.” Junior point guard Ashlyn Landherr added that Charney was a “pretty quiet coach.” “She tended to step back and watch the overall dynamic of the

See Charney A7

Board of Public Utilities Director Rickie J. Rose, 61, was charged with one count of drunk driving yesterday and sentenced to 75 days in jail and 12 months probation. The days Rose spends in patient treatment will count toward his jail time. Acting City Manager Doug Terry, who has remained supportive of Rose since his arrest in January, said it is too soon to say whether or not the city will continue to employ Rose after he completes his sentence. “Rick is a valued employee of BPU and for years has percient manner,” Terry said after the sentencing. “However, we

do take the conduct of our employees seriously, but there are not enough details to render an opinion about the future.” Rose was arrested on Saturday, Jan. 24, after he crashed his car into a tree on Bankers Road in Reading, Michigan. According to the Hillsdale County Sheriff incident report, once police responded to the accident, they determined Rose had a blood alcohol content of .23 — almost three times the legal limit of .08, according to the Michigan State Police website. The incident marked Rose’s third time being arrested and charged with operating a veRose’s contract, the Hillsdale City Council will vote in the continue Rose’s contract.

Junior Emily Oren was named GLIAC and D-II national women’s track athlete of the week. (Anders Kiledal/Collegian)

Shotgun team wins fourth national championship Morgan Sweeney Senior Reporter

Courtesy of External Affairs

Stephen Smith: New dean of faculty

Last week, the Hillsdale College shotgun team went to nationals for the fourth time, and brought home its third Division III championship from San Antonio. Hillsdale’s 10-person team is the only one in recent years to earn back-to-back division titles, besides Lindenwood University, a Division I team with close to 100 shooters. The team has attended the NRA-sponsored national championship every year since its 2011 inception. While many students traveled south or visited family during spring break, the shotgun team remained on campus, gearing up for the annual Association of College Unions International Collegiate Clay Target Championships. The tournament is a marathon for shooters, with almost days including practice and

Morgan Delp Editor in Chief

Effective this summer, Professor of English Stephen Smith will serve as Dean of Faculty, replacing Professor of Chemistry Mark Nussbaum, who has held the position for three years. Smith will serve for at least two years. “I’m honored to be chosen, and I hope to learn from the great previous deans,” Smith said. “I’m succeeding Mark Nussbaum, and I hope to continue the tradition of good chemistry.” Provost David Whalen an-

nounced Smith’s appointment via an all-school email last Thursday, March 26, the day after Smith accepted the position. The email detailed Smith’s credentials, which include a bachelor’s degree from the University of Notre Dame, and a Ph.D. in literature and philosophic studies from the University of Dallas, with an emphasis on Thomas More and William Shakespeare. Whalen was involved in the search and hiring of Smith in 2001. Besides Smith’s credentials as a beloved professor and accomplished scholar, his personal and leadership skills make him an ideal candidate, Whalen said.

Tuesday started with the

5-stand competition, which lasted the duration of the tourcluded all of the other events that comprise the sport: international trap and skeet, sporting clays, American skeet, and Sunday’s event, American trap.

were Hillsdale students, sophomores Kie Kababik and Clay Moniot. Kababik and Moniot went into a second shoot-off with a student from Lindenwood. Moniot hit all 15 targets, Kababik dropped one, and the

we were behind another team by targets,” senior Joe Kain said. “By Thursday, it was really clear that we had to start shooting better, so it just got more and more intense until it was over.” One of the most incredible feats of the week occurred on Sunday, the last day of the championships. dents shot in that day’s American trap event. Thirteen of them hit 100 of 100 targets: a perfect round. Those 13 were pulled into a shootoff. Of the 13, three shot another perfect round of 25 targets. Two of those

emplary performances made Hillsdale the Division III American Trap Champion. Hillsdale also won the international trap and sporting clay events and placed second in American and international skeet. Carl said he was most impressed by the team’s mental toughness and u n i t y, which pushed each member

third with 13.

shooter progresses from beginner to more than technical skill,

becomes the most essential quality for success. “Our shooters relied on their foundation, their mental process. It really came together for us in a beautiful way,” coach Mike Carl said. “They just relied on their fundamentals and the strength of their mental game. And it won us the nationals.” Though Hillsdale’s team shows great skill each year, its ed. The team did not perform at of the tournament. Kain and Carl say it was the strength of the team as a whole that enabled them to pull off the victory. In order to win, Hillsdale’s nine shooters (one did not participate) had to put up three top scores per event. “Each of our shooters has their own specialty,” Carl said. “On some days, people whose strongest event was up — they didn’t necessarily perform — but we had other people that

See Shotgun A7

Courtesy of Joseph Kain

INSIDE problem after which it’s named. A3 Advanced watercolor Sam Knecht’s biannual waterties and joys of working in that medium. B1

Senators seek to legislate American heritage Michigan senators sponsor bills to reform education, teach American heritage. A6

Baseball splits series Chargers sweep Sunday’s doubleheader against Wayne State before dropping both games of Monday’s twin bill. A8

Michigan Pot Hole

(Courtesy of Sam Knecht)

Hillsdale and the Pentagon Student helps design memorial stained-glass window for Pentagon. B4

(Anders Kiledal/Collegian)

News........................................A1 Opinions..................................A4 City News................................A6 Sports......................................A7 Arts..........................................B1 Features....................................B3

Can Ted Cruz win? Students debate whether Ted Cruz could actually win the presidency in 2016. A5

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