Hillsdale Collegian, Jan. 20, 2022

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Women's Swimming:

Alpaca Farm: offers farm experience and local goods See B6

undeated in dual meets this season See A10 Courtesy | Anthony Lupi

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

MI Redirecting: splits county into two state senate districts See A6

Courtesy | Kent Lowry

Vol. 145 Issue 15 - January 20, 2022

| Michigan Independent Citizen Redirecting Comission

www.hillsdalecollegian.com

Senior class 'cements legacy' with permanent pavilion gift A computer rendition of the pavilion from the east. Courtesy | Hillsdale College

By Ben Wilson Editor-in-chief

Seniors have chosen their way to be remembered by future classes — by giving shelter. Members of the Legacy Board announced last Thursday that the 2022 senior class gift will be a permanent pavilion in the grassy area between the Paul House and the parking lot of the Mu Alpha fraternity, a space typically used for Student Activities Board events such as the Welcome Party in August and

More than a hundred students to attend March for Life By Logan Washburn City News Editor Hillsdale College for Life will bring more than 100 students to the national March for Life in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 21. “Our country was founded on the principle that all men are created with unalienable rights: ‘life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,’” Hillsdale College for Life president and senior Hannah Stinnett said. “The first among these rights is life.” Beginning in 1974, the year after Roe v Wade legalized abortion, the March for Life is the largest annual pro-life march. Church groups, students, politicians, and activists from across the country descend on the nation's capital to march, pray, and rally for the repeal of Roe v. Wade. Around 110 Hillsdale students will attend, according to Stinnett, along with students from the pro-life group Protect Life Michigan. Two buses will leave campus on Jan. 20, bound for D.C. Upon arrival, Hillsdale students will stay overnight at the Kirby Center, march on Jan. 21, and then return to campus the morning of Jan. 22. Students will pay $70 each to attend, Stinnett said. “This is around half the cost that it takes to charter the buses,” she said. The remaining cost is covered by Right to Life Michigan, HCFL fundraising efforts, and the Student Federation, according to Stinnett. On Nov. 18, the federation allotted $7,020 for the March for Life, according to Student Federation Vice President and junior Anthony Iatropoulos. The March for Life is typically one of the body’s main spending items, Iatropoulos said.

“There was absolutely strong support,” he said. “The Student Federation recommended raising the price per individual, so we just had to take that into consideration.” The March for Life attracts high-profile speakers including former President Donald Trump, media personality Ben Shapiro and House Minority Leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy, who have all addressed rally-goers in the past. This year's rally will also feature religious leaders Catholic Priest Fr. Mike Schmitz and His Eminence Archbishop Elpidophoros of America. It will also include New Jersey Rep. Chris Smith, Louisiana Rep. Juila Letlow, actor Kirk Cameron and musician Matthew West. Sophomore John Ritchey said he has attended every annual March for Life since he was in sixth grade. “It’s a great witness to speak up for the unborn,” he said. “Not only that, but to be with so many people who may not agree with you about everything else– religion, whatever– they all unite against this common thing,” Ritchey said. “It’s really beautiful.” Stinnett said students have a “moral imperative” to protect humans at all stages of life, including the unborn. “The biological humanity and philosophical equality of the unborn demands the action of those who believe in liberty and justice for all,” Stinnett said. “We march because we cannot remain silent or inactive while our country condones the killing of innocents.” Stinnett called abortion “the largest genocide known to man.” “600,000 abortions are

See March A2

Centralhallapalooza in April. Deemed the Pavilion Project, the heated structure will include a conference room, kitchen, and bathrooms under a 3,900-square-foot asphalt roof. An outdoor patio with a bar and fireplace will be surrounded by irrigated, leveled grass for activities and intramurals. “Each year the senior class gift offers each graduating class the opportunity to make their first tangible and meaningful contribution,” Assistant Director of Alumni Relations Braden VanDyke said. “The

Alumni Office is honored to help steward and continue this partnership we call college from undergraduate life to post-graduate life through the senior class gift project.” The project is estimated to cost around $600,000, according to VanDyke. A portion of the cost, around $20,000, will be covered through 75 memberships of the 1844 Society, an organization through which students and alumni can donate to various campus initiatives. “The senior class gift is contingent upon 75 se-

niors contributing to the gift through memberships to the 1844 Society,” Legacy Board member, 1844 Society president, and senior Brandt Siegfried said. “It’s the easiest way to leave a lasting impact at Hillsdale, and I’m excited to work with the rest of the Legacy Board to accomplish this goal.” The rest of the bill will be covered through donations, with naming opportunities available for large gifts, according to VanDyke.

See Senior Gift A2

World War II remembered "United We Win" by Alexander Liberman (1943) featured in the “Fighting on the Homefront: Propaganda Posters of World War II," which opened on Jan. 14. Josh Newhook | Collegian

Hillsdale College art gallery features new exhibit. See B1.

Hillsdale College welcomes record number of transfer students By Michaela Estruth Collegian Reporter This spring semester, Hillsdale College welcomed a record number of new students, 23 in all. Sixteen of these students are transfers from around the country and across the ocean, including Ireland and Italy. Applications for the spring 2022 semester increased by 46% compared to the spring semester of 2021, said Zach-

ary Miller, senior director of admissions. The number of admitted students depends on available housing for the spring semester, he said. “We’ve seen more and more interest in Hillsdale over the last few years, and for many different reasons,” Miller said. Miller attributes the rise in interest to the college’s rare and unique qualities. “I think by and large, students are seeing that there are

fewer schools across the country like Hillsdale, specifically in the principles for which we stand and the offering of a classical liberal arts education focused on the pursuit of truth,” he said. “That’s become evident even more in the last couple of years.” Geert Ensing, a transfer student from Tuscany, Italy, enrolled at Hillsdale in January. It was his first time entering the United States. For the past year and a half, Ensing has studied

Ludwig Von Mises’ economic thought, leading him to Hillsdale to study economics “I had been looking for a place where I could study Austrian economics, and more specifically the works of Mises and Hayek,” Ensing said. “When I found out that Mises donated his library here, I had to check out the college. The economics curriculum at the college really intrigued me, and Hillsdale was one of the few colleges where I felt I

could study Austrian economic thought.” Ensing said he found the application process to be enjoyable and inviting. “I felt that the Hillsdale application process was very easy and comprehensive,” Ensing said. “Everyone I was in touch with or talked to was super helpful and friendly, and all the processes involved were simple and efficient.” He said he enjoys both the Hillsdale atmosphere and the

academic challenge. “I have found life here on campus, in the small time I have been here, really vibrant and lively. Safe to say, it never feels boring,” he said. “I feel that the workload at the college can be quite intense and challenging, but the academic rigor is one of the main reasons I signed up for the college, and I enjoy the challenge.”

See Transfers A2


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