Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 144 Issue 2 - September 3, 2020
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No student COVID cases, college reports While Michican colleges close, Hillsdale stays the course with precautions in place
By | Sofia Krusmark Culture Editor After a week of in-person classes, no Hillsdale College students have tested positive for COVID-19, according to Dean of Men Aaron Petersen. Five students who showed symptoms have tested negative, and five more currently await test results. “I think the students came here ready to do their part, especially with all the precautionary measures to help
us get through these first two weeks,”Petersen said. “For the most part, it's been a spirit of cooperation and cautiousness. I look forward to when we can get back to normal.” President Larry Arnn and college administrators have asked students to wear masks on campus and to practice social distancing. Students also undergo daily temperature checks. Those with normal temperatures receive color-coded stickers which
By | Allison Schuster Associate Editor
Aug. 24 to postpone homecoming events until the spring semester, when it hopes to hold a more typical celebration. “Homecoming is a celebration of the lifelong connection that alumni have with the college,” McGinness said. It’s an important event for the Hillsdale community, she added, but the timing didn’t offer a safe way to welcome back generations of alumni, many of whom had already contacted the college to say they wouldn’t be attending homecoming this year due to the pandemic. McGinness said scheduling homecoming became difficult because of Michigan’s lockdown restrictions and the
must be displayed while on campus in order to enter the dining hall. In addition, 63 cross-country, golf, and tennis athletes and coaches have tested negative for the virus, according to Athletic Director Don Brubacher. The NCAA required all student athletes to be tested when they arrived on campus, even if they did not show symptoms of coronavirus. Student athletes must
receive additional temperature tests before practices, games, and meets. Those who report “any symptom whatsoever” and at any time are immediately tested, Brubacher said. “We test one or two every day so we can be certain about it,” he added. Simpson Residence Head Resident Advisor Barrett Moore, a senior, said every dorm has been tasked with making sure all residents get their temperatures checked
in the morning before leaving for class. “We offer morning temperature tests at 7:15 a.m., 7:45 a.m., and 8:30 a.m., and the RA’s have a rotation for that,” Moore said. “Everyone gets up for at least one check,” Moore said. “Right now, to a degree, everyone’s morning is centered around doing that before doing what you need to do. Like Simpson, other dormitories and Greek houses re-
quire daily testing, with house moms and resident assistants conducting temperature and symptom checks. Testing is performed on a rolling basis, giving students multiple opportunities for a health check no matter where they live. In the Pi Beta Phi sorority, roommates are required to sleep with their heads at opposite sides of the room.
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Alumni board delays homecoming Q & A with Victor Davis Hanson Hillsdale College has postponed next week’s homecoming celebrations due to health concerns about COVID-19. The college hopes to hold an alumni reunion event in the spring semester, according to Executive Director of Alumni Relations Colleen McGinness. “Homecoming was particularly early this year,” she said. “We felt that with the requirements the students are having to undergo with all the temperature checks and masks, we're focusing on keeping the community safe right now.” The college’s senior leadership officially decided
college’s health measures. The college had planned events around a Sept. 12 football game. Alumni events traditionally have revolved around the football tailgate. The football team is tentatively planning for a short spring season, but McGinness said she’s considering other possibilities for homecoming celebrations. Since the college contacted alumni to inform them of homecoming’s cancellation, their response has largely been supportive, she said. “I probably got 50 emails from alumni who have said this is the right call and we want to protect the student’s opportunity to go to school and have in-class training and education,” she said.
Right now, the alumni office is surveying alumni to learn what they prefer for a postponed celebration. McGinness said classes with 10-year anniversaries often draw the most alumni. “We have alumni who really get excited to come back on their 10-year anniversaries. So 10 years out, 20 years out, 30, 40: that's a lot of alumni,” she said. “When it's their 13th and 14th reunions, they're really disappointed not to be able to come back, so we want to make sure that we recognize and honor those people if we can.”
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College breaks donation records despite economic downturn By | Elizabeth Troutman Collegian Freelancer-
Courtesy | Alex Nester
Courtesy | Twitter
CNN analyst doxxes recent Hillsdale grad By | Caleb Lambrecht Collegian Reporter Alex Nester ’20 was “doxxed” on Twitter by CNN analyst Asha Rangappa last week after Nester raised questions in her reporting for the Washington Free Beacon about Rangappa’s public comments. “Doxxing” is the practice of publishing personal information for the purpose of encouraging harassment. Rangappa posted Nester’s email and phone number on Twitter after Nester, an intern at the Free Beacon, contacted Yale University’s Jackson Institute for Global Affairs, which employs Rangappa, for a comment on Rangappa’s criticism of former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley. On Aug. 25, Rangappa had accused Haley of changing her name to “Nikki” instead of using her given Indian name, Follow @HDaleCollegian
“Nimrata.” Rangappa suggested Haley did so to conform to racist conventions, which she claimed undermined Haley’s comments at the Republican National Convention on Aug. 24 that America isn’t a racist nation. In her article for the Free Beacon, Nester pointed out that Haley has gone by “Nikki,” her legal middle name, since childhood. In Punjabi, “Nikki” means “little one.” Nester also noted that Rangappa goes by her middle name, “Asha,” rather than her first name, “Renuka.” Prior to publishing her article, Nester emailed Yale University’s Jackson Institute, requesting a comment on Rangappa’s remark. Nester asked if Rangappa’s tweet was “appropriate.”
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Hillsdale College received more than $200 million in new donations in its latest fiscal year, which ended in June, setting a new record for its fundraising. “People in large numbers love the mission of the College and how we pursue it. Our determination to carry on pursuing it has been much admired by many,” President Larry Arnn said in an email. The college began the Four Pillars Campaign last October when it celebrated its 175th anniversary and dedicated Christ Chapel. The fundraising effort, which seeks to raise $686.8 million by 2024, draws its name from the four pillars described in the college’s founding documents and articles of association: learning, character, faith, and freedom. Because Hillsdale doesn’t accept federal funding, the college relies on the generosity of supporters to continue in its mission. The capital campaign will primarily fund undergraduate scholarships, as well as general operations, according to Nancy Johnson, a vice president of institutional advancement. Other funds will support endowments for outreach projects such as the Barney Charter School Initiative, and capital projects such as New Dorm, which is yet to be fully funded. According to Calvin Stockdale, senior director of institutional advancement, the
Four Pillars Campaign goes “right back at the core of what Hillsdale is as an undergraduate education.” Danny Drummond, institutional advancement associate, weighed in on Arnn’s push for the program. “Dr. Arnn is always going to fight for what he knows to be right, and for what Hillsdale has always stood for,” Drummond said. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic, Arnn continued to reach out to Hillsdale supporters. Johnson said supporters continue to view Hillsdale as a “voice of reason in these uncertain times.” The campaign also aims to endow about 50 faculty chairs in the music department, the developing master’s program in classical education, and elsewhere. Arnn, along with senior-level staff and Provost Chris VanOrman, plan to meet this week to discuss the use of these endowments. Hillsdale’s commitment to returning to in-person classes and holding an in-person graduation encouraged the supporters of Hillsdale’s mission, Johnson said. “They believe that our students are key to the future leadership of our country, both in big and small ways, both in public office and as citizen leaders and educators, in families, and in business— in communities across the nation,” she said. “They believe in and want to support you and your fellow students.”
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By | Madeline Peltzer News Editor Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, a military historian, and a visiting professor at Hillsdale College. His latest book is “The Case for Trump.” He gave a lecture at Hillsdale College on Wednesday titled “Plague, Panic, and Protests—The Weird Election Year of 2020.”
The past few months have been wild: We’ve been shut in our houses, our cities are burning, plus there’s a big election. What’s going on? I’m not sure if it would’ve happened like this if we hadn’t had the lockdown and the recession. The average age of these Antifa types is 27 and they’re angry at the system. They’re scared by the recession, frustrated by their student-loan debt, angry that their majors in environmental studies doesn’t translate into jobs, and they see people who are better off than they are and they resent it. How could that translate into voting patterns come November? I think it explains why we see these mysterious polls moving black support for Trump from 8% to 28% and Latinos from 22% to 36%. To a lot of minority people, these white kids with their whiny, shrill voices seem like privileged, spoiled brats. And when they see their enablers on cable television, even if they’re black or brown, they tend to be elites too. They may not like Trump but they think he’s gritty and effective and tells you what he thinks and they appreciate it. I think he’s going to do very well in a way that’s counterintuitive. Mitt Romney and the late John McCain knew how to appeal in the moderate sense, but they actually
came off as white elitists. Trump should come off that way because he’s a billionaire white person, except he’s an outsider. Nobody liked him in Manhattan, he has a Queens accent, he dresses funny, he looks weird, and he tells you what he thinks. That seems to appeal to working-class people. In any other year, defunding the police, burning cities, and looting businesses would be a sure way to lose an election. Yet until just a few days ago, the Biden campaign has ignored the situation, denied it, or encouraged it. Why? If somebody came from a different planet, they’d say you can easily beat Trump, you just need a working-class conservative black guy or white guy – it doesn’t matter – to talk about class and economic issues and deplore the violence and you win. But the Democrats can’t do that because they are captive to Bernie Sanders and the young people who make up about 20% of their party who are so hard left. They’re scared of them. If you look at what they’re being told by their intellectual champions, it’s “looting’s okay, stealing’s okay, every white person is a racist,” and they kind of believe that. They think they’re the cutting edge but they’re not. They don’t understand that most Americans don’t want looting or to stigmatize a whole race and say they’re all racists any more than they want to say blacks have a higher crime rate and therefore they’re all criminal. These people come out of the universities, which are all left-wing, and listen to the left-wing media, and they get bad advice.
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Hillsdale College erected a new statue of James Madison on the Liberty Walk. Carmel Kookogey | Collegian Look for The Hillsdale Collegian