Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 142 Issue 14 - January 17, 2019
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Marine Corps commandant to address Class of 2019 By | Nolan Ryan News Editor Gen. Robert Neller, commandant of the United State Marine Corps, will be the commencement speaker for the Class of 2019’s graduation in May, the Provost’s Office announced on Monday. “It’s pretty clear Gen. Neller, while innocent of any kind of self promotion or self regard, is clearly a man of great accomplishment, of serious understanding, and of enormous — almost immeasurable — service to the country,” said Provost David Whalen. “A lot of people are very ready to takes things easy as they approach their senior years. Being commandant of the Marine Corps has to be the definition of the opposite of taking things easy.” Senior class president Ryan Kelly Murphy said Neller, whose son Brett graduated from Hillsdale in 2006, had the characteristics and values the senior class officers were looking for in a commencement speaker. “Gen. Neller has had a long and admirable career, and his contributions in the defense of our country have been
tremendous,” said Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn in a statement to the Collegian. “He is known for his courage in combat and his prudence in the highest levels of command — a man worthy of great honor. Murphy and the other senior class officers were part of the decision process for this year’s speaker, and they chose Neller for his admirable qualities of service and the fact that he has experience with Hillsdale College through his son who went here, according to Murphy. Students, regardless of whether they plan to join the armed forces, will benefit from Neller’s perspectives on life, she said. “He has dedicated his life to ultimate service. To have that example for the seniors as we’re preparing to go out into the world will be a remarkable reminder about how we are called to dedicate our lives to service,” Murphy said. “It will be a meaningful capstone lesson to our experience at Hillsdale.” Michael Murray, legal counsel and administrative director of gift and estate at Hillsdale College,
Gen. Robert Neller, commandant of the United States Marine Corps, will address the Class of 2019 as this year’s commencement speaker. Wikimedia Commons
served under Neller when they were both deployed in Iraq in 2006 and later introduced the general to President Larry Arnn in 2016.
Neller is the perfect choice for commencement speaker, Murray said in an email. “The Marine Corps and Hillsdale College are both
mission-focused organizations that appreciate and honor our nation’s founding principles,” he said. “To hear from the leader of the Marine Corps seems very fitting.” Seniors Joshua Bailey and Dan McAlary are both planning to serve in the Marine Corps after graduation and said they are thrilled to have the opportunity to hear from Neller. “Some Marines go their whole careers without coming near the commandant of the Marine Corps,” McAlary said. “Somebody’s who’s spent their life in service to their country is an example to give back.” Bailey said high-ranking officers in the armed forces are often well-educated and worthy of looking to as a model. “Men who end up in positions that high up have come up with a life in leadership philosophy that’s worth knowing,” Bailey said. “Being that committed for so many years to his profession and doing it well — that kind of character is something you want a little bit of, whether you’re headed into the Marine Corps or some other position. That’s the
kind of person you want to take cues from.” The fact that Neller’s son went to Hillsdale means he already has a knowledge of the college’s values, Murphy said. “He understands Hillsdale through the experience of his son, and that is one of the many wonderful perspectives Gen. Neller can provide to the graduating seniors,” she said. Whalen said in choosing the speaker, college administrators and senior class officers have to find someone who can speak to the graduates in particular but also more generally to the college’s wider audience. The speaker, he said, has to address the purposes of a life well-lived. “You want somebody who understands what a good, proper liberal education is for, why it’s important, and how that translates into a kind of high calling on the part of the graduates,” he said. “You have to have a speaker people hopefully will recognize as accomplished, as someone admirable and someone whose work and place in the world has somehow been a model.”
More than 10,000 students enrolled in Barney Schools
Bill Grewcock, a longtime donor, died Dec. 8, 2018. Bill and his wife Berniece, who survives him, have been involved with Hillsdale College since the 1980s. External Affairs
‘The complete man’: Administrators, students remember Bill Grewcock By | Emma Cummins Assistant Editor
Known as a man of character and generosity, William “Bill” Grewcock died on Dec. 8, 2018, at the age of 93. Grewcock was the former vice chairman of construction and mining at Kiewit Corp., and he and Berniece, his wife of 70 years who survives him, made considerable charitable donations to Hillsdale College. “He was a giver, and when he gave, his eyes shone with love,” Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn said in a eulogy delivered at Grewcock’s funeral. “Hillsdale is next year 175 years old, and in its long history, Bill and Berniece are among the few most generous.”
The Grewcocks endowed several scholarships, were benefactors to the Grewcock Student Union, supported Hillsdale Academy, and endowed five professorships, among other things. One of the scholarships the Grewcocks established was awarded to students from Nebraska who had attended a private, Christian high school or had been homeschooled, were academically qualified, and showed a financial need. Since its establishment in January 1994, 143 students have received the scholarship. “We would get the Nebraska kids, usually 40 of them at a time, together each January when they were home for the holidays to meet with Bill and Berniece,” Arnn said. “Nei-
ther of them wanted to be thanked. They wanted to tell the kids how great they are.” Arnn also spoke to Grewcock’s character, saying he “possessed the moral and intellectual virtues.” “He was ‘a character’ in the sense that he was distinctive and formidable,” Arnn said. “He was more direct, more confident, readier to think and act than the ordinary. He was ‘a character’ in that larger sense that means a complete man.” Chief Administrative Officer Rich Péwé only met the Grewcocks once, when they were working on the plans for the student union, but in that time, Péwé said he was impressed with how humble they were. “They were very straight-
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By | Alex Nester D.C. Correspondent In 2018, the Hillsdale College Barney Charter School Initiative reached an enrollment milestone, with more than 10,000 students attending 21 schools across the country. The Treasure Coast Classical Academy in Stuart, Florida, is one of four Barney Charter Schools projected to open for the upcoming 20192020 school year. According to Phil Kilgore, director of the Barney Charter Schools Initiative, three other schools — Northwest Classical Academy in Toledo, Ohio, Treasure Valley Classical Academy in Fruitland, Idaho, and Tallahassee Classical Academy in Florida — will open alongside TCCA later this year. Typically, charter schools require anywhere from one to four years of planning before opening their doors for students, depending on state requirements, finding locations for the school, and acquiring proper funding. According to Kilgore, state laws across the Midwest create challenges for prospective charter schools, so the Barney Charter School Initiative has better luck in states like Florida, Texas, and Colorado, where laws and regulations are more friendly to charter schools. Lynda Daniel, chairman of TCCA’s governing board, said she appreciated the support the Barney Charter School Initiative provides to charter schools as well as the mission. According to the Hillsdale
College website, the initiative’s mission is “excellence in knowledge of the world, high moral character and self government, and civic virtue.” “Once they work with a team to open a school, they agree to provide training and curriculum,” Daniel said. “From BCSI to the local team, everything is mission-focused and very intentional; Hillsdale’s mission informs all decisions.” The Barney Charter School Initiative provides assistance with principal training and selection as well as training for educators at no cost to the prospective charter school. TCCA announced Monday that Janine Swearingin had been selected as principal. Swearingin received her Master of Education from National University and has worked in education for more than 20 years. The school is projected to enroll 650 students in kindergarten through sixth grade this fall through the lottery process. TCCA will add an additional grade each year through the 12th grade in 2025. John Snyder, a member of the leadership team for TCCA who focuses on community engagement, said he and Daniel are excited to bring another educational option to parents and children in Martin County. “Martin County has the highest private school enrollment of the 67 counties in the state of Florida, and what that tells us is that, as great as the public schools are, parents are looking for another alterna-
tive,” Snyder said. “We can bring this amazing offering here and fill that void.” According to Snyder, three groups have been integral in the establishment of TCCA: Hillsdale College, the Optima Foundation, and the TCCA Leadership Team and Governing Board. Hillsdale has helped provide the charter school framework and curriculum, and the Optima Foundation has, among other things, helped TCCA comply with state charter school regulations. The TCCA Leadership Team and Governing Board work as a “grassroots effort” to spread the word in the community. Snyder, a veteran of the United States Marine Corps, likens the founding of TCCA to working on an airplane. “I worked on the C-130. You see this one plane, but when you get up there, you see that one company made the propellers, another company made the avionics,” Snyder said. “That’s how I feel that TCCA has come together, with subject matter experts in each of the fields.” Per Florida law, 75 percent of the funding used per student in a public school will be granted to each student who attends TCCA. Snyder said this, along with targeted marketing, will help draw students to TCCA from across the socioeconomic spectrum. “We use targeted marketing to disadvantaged areas of our community because again, that is part of the American dream — anyone who works hard and puts forward the
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Government shutdown closes Farm Service Agency, creates uncertainty By | Nicole Ault Editor-in-Chief The federal government shutdown has closed part of the United States Department of Agriculture office in Hillsdale County -- cutting farmers off from financial and administrative services that will prove vital to decision making in the coming weeks. “It makes us a lot more uncertain on what we’re doing,” said Scott Welden, a grain farmer in Jonesville. Though not dire at the moment, the problem will worsen in the Follow @HDaleCollegian
next few weeks if the shutdown drags on, he said. Located in Jonesville, the Hillsdale County USDA office holds the Farm Service Agency and the Natural Resources Conservation Service. The FSA is closed during the shutdown while the NRCS remains fully open. NRCS employees are paid, and the center is operating on prior years’ funds, according to Jason Wheeler, the district conservationist at NRCS. Wheeler said he does not know how much longer the office will
stay open, however. Farmers rely on the FSA for multiple services, including yield reports, land registration, low-interest loans, and other financial transactions. Farmers can’t get USDA reports on crop inventory and stocks from last year because of the shutdown, said Terry Finegan, board president of the Hillsdale County Farm Bureau. Without the reports, farmers are less certain of how to market and what to plant for the next harvest season; high inventories of a certain
crop can lower its price. Farmers also don’t have access to payments from the Market Facilitation Program, created by the Trump administration to mitigate the impact of tariffs on grain farmers and delivered through the FSA. “That could be pretty significant on the income side,” Finegan said, noting that farmers could use the MFP cash to buy inputs such as seed and fertilizer. “It directly affects a lot of our decision making on our direction.”
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There’s a “window” here, though; farmers usually start planting in April and “like to have stuff locked in” by the end of February, Finegan said. Loans processed through the FSA are also on hold during the shutdown. Though most well-established farms receive loans through banks and aren’t affected, smaller farms don’t necessarily have that luxury. “If you were a young farmer and you wanted to expand your farm here, then you might not be able to get that
loan to buy property that you need or equipment that you need,” said Sarah Fronczak, environmental management educator at the Michigan State University Hillsdale County extension. “If they’re not established, then this is an important method for them to grow their business, and that’s pretty much unavailable right now.” The USDA announced Wednesday that many FSA centers, including the one in Jonesville, will be open Jan.
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