Junior Blake Newberry balances a stack of Oreos on his forehead for a "Minute To Win It" challenge in the ongoing homecoming competition. Andrew Dixon | Collegian
Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 144 Issue 21 - March 4, 2021
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Off-Campus Coalition takes the lead in Spring Spirit Week By | Sofia Krusmark & Elizabeth Troutman Culture Editor & Collegian Freelancer With the Off-Campus Coalition in the lead at 280 points, Spirit Week is approaching its climax. The 17 competing teams have two remaining competitions before Mock Rock on Saturday night. WhitWatWay, last year’s homecoming winner, is in second place with 215 points. Simpson residence is in third with 190
points. OCC, which formed its coalition in the fall of 2018, took the lead after winning the trivia competition on Wednesday night. What will it take for them to win? Consistency, said senior and OCC team member Ben Weide. “We know Mock Rock is huge, but we also know that we need to be in a good position going into it and we need to continue to place in as many competitions as we can,” Weide said. “And we’re pretty confident. We have some good stuff in the pipeline.”
The photo competition will take place on Thursday and the volunteer hours will be tallied on Friday. Mock Rock will be on the football field at 7 p.m. on Saturday. There, the homecoming king and queen will be crowned and the winning team of Spirit Week will be announced. After homecoming was canceled last fall, the Alumni Association decided to host a separate alumni reunion in late May, while Spirit Week replaces the traditional homecoming week. The goal of Spirit Week is to focus
Renovations start at Dow Conference Center By | Madeline Welsh Collegian Freelancer
Renovations on the Dow Conference Center began this week, kicking off a construction project that is expected to conclude in the fall of 2021. Dow Hotel Director of Hospitality Aaron Tracey said in an email that the Dow A and B conference room, as well as conference rooms F and G, are being renovated. “A and B is very outdated and
does not match the aesthetics of Searle, Plaster, and other renovations at the Dow Center,” Tracey said. “Room G and Room F are in need of a renovation as well.” Tracey said the renovations will not affect guests staying at the Dow Hotel, and the impact on students will be minimal. Guests, students, and faculty can expect noise from the construction site during the day as the project progresses. The main consequences of
construction is a temporary loss of three conference rooms while Dow A and B and conference rooms F and G are out of commission. However, Gillespie, Searle and other spaces are still available for conferences and events. “We still do our best to host your event where possible,” Tracey said.
on school community and spirit, said junior and Student Activities Board Big Events Leader Luciya Katcher. Though not the traditional homecoming week that typically happens in the fall, the Spirit Week competitions included the annual banner competition, Mock Rock, a photo competition, and a race to complete the most volunteer hours. The biggest changes, Katcher said, include replacing the traditional wing eating competition with minute-to-win-it, a
series of minute-long challenges which took place Tuesday night, and hosting Mock Rock on the football field instead of inside the Roche Sports Complex. “Even though we've thrown Spirit Week at a weird time, in the middle of midterms with no football game, and there've been all these obstacles, the student body was willing to rise to that and still bring the spirit and bring this excitement that makes being here fun,” said sophomore and SAB team member Meg Scheske. In the past, Mock Rock judges
have factored in thematics such as lighting and confetti. Katcher said this year, the judges’ primary focus will be the dancing. “It’s more about how well you can put together the routine and wow the judges,” Katcher said. “We are trying to get the feel of a Friday night football game where we say, ‘come out and get cozy with your friends. Come out with blankets.’” For the minute-to-win-it games, the contestants were
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Scott Atlas receives the Freedom Leadership Award from Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn. Courtesy | Emily Davis
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Charger pitcher Toth throws no-hitter By | Calli Townsend Sports Editor
Junior pitcher David Toth’s no-hitter, and seven home runs by the Chargers’ lineup, set the tone for the upcoming Hillsdale College baseball season. The Chargers opened up with a four-game sweep on the road over Maryville University last weekend. “We expect to be pretty good,” head coach Eric Theisen said. “It was a fun weekend and I’m not surprised at all that that’s how it went.” The Chargers outscored their opponent 20-8 in the four-game series, proving the team’s young
talent with home runs from freshmen Jeff Landis, Aidan Brewer, Lewis Beals, and sophomore Cooper Peterson. Saturday, Feb. 27 (Game 1): Hillsdale, 5, Maryville, 2 The Chargers started off the game with two runs in the top of the first. After adding another run in the third, they had a 3-0 lead heading into the bottom of the sixth when Maryville found a spark in its offense, scoring two runs. The Chargers answered with a pair of home runs from Peterson and Landis in the seventh and eighth innings to secure the win. Senior pitcher Andrew Ver-
brugge got the win after facing 23 batters and striking out eight. Junior pitcher James Krick came in during the eighth inning to get the save, striking out three. “It felt pretty normal,” Verbrugge said. “I think the exhibitions took a little bit of the nervousness out of it with it having been the first game.” Saturday, Feb. 27 (Game 2): Hillsdale, 1, Maryville, 0 When Toth took the mound for game two against Maryville, throwing a no-hitter wasn’t on his mind.
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On Monday, Martin Petersen and Stefan Kleinhenz, who host Marty and Stef in the Morning on Radio Free Hillsdale, guest hosted the Michael Koolidge Show, which is syndicated across Illinois. Courtesy | Scot Bertram
Atlas given Freedom Leadership Award By | Haley Strack Assistant Editor Scott W. Atlas received Hillsdale College’s highest honor, the Freedom Leadership Award, at a National Leadership Seminar in Phoenix, Arizona on Feb. 18. “We’ve given it to Ronald Reagan, and we’ve given it to Margaret Thatcher, and we’ve given it to Clarence Thomas,” Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn said at the event. “That means leadership, which takes courage toward freedom, which has a generosity to everyone it touches — and I’m proud to present it to Scott Atlas.” Atlas, a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover In-
stitution, is a signer of the Great Barrington Declaration, a petition written by epidemiologists that calls for alternative strategies in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic and seeks to minimize the social and economic harm of lockdowns. His work was instrumental in the college’s decision to host its commencement ceremony in person last July. “I am, of course, highly honored to be on the list of winners,” Atlas said in his acceptance speech. “Hillsdale’s National Leadership Seminar program was founded with a specific mission: ‘To foster enlightened leadership and inform decision making for America’s third century by communicating the fundamental
principles of freedom and order on which western civilization is based.’ The pandemic has been a tragedy, no doubt, but it has exposed profound issues in America that now threaten those very principles of freedom and order that we Americans too often take for granted.” In June 2020, former President Donald Trump selected Atlas to serve on the White House Coronavirus Task Force team, where Atlas was accused of spreading misinformation and propagating lies about the pandemic. But according to Victor Davis Hanson, senior fellow at
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