Womens Basketball:
TikTok: consumes the music industry in 2021 See A7
wins seven out of eight games See A5
Courtesy | Hillsdale College Athletic Department
Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Pregnancy Center: pays off $54,000 mortgage See A4
Vol. 145 Issue 14 - January 12, 2022
| Helping Hands PRC
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Community raises more than $20K for Carrington family By Rachel Kookogey Associate Editor
More than 200 community members raised $20,230 for the medical expenses of Associate Professor of Politics Adam Carrington in December. “I am overwhelmed by the generosity shown to me and to my family by those who contributed,” Carrington said. “God has worked mercifully and mightily to comfort and provide, both directly and
through these dear people.” After Carrington was diagnosed with cancer in December, Associate Professor of Classics Eric Hutchinson and his wife, Allison, organized a fundraiser on GoFundMe for treatment-related expenses. “As they are making all of the preparations in their lives for the treatment, there are so many unknowns,” Allison Hutchinson wrote on the GoFundMe page. “One thing that we do know is that they have a large community of family and friends that might be able
Hillsdale in DC radio station expands its reach By Elizabeth Troutman Assistant Editor Hillsdale in D.C. 's radio studio recently expanded to allow students on WHIP and D.C. faculty to host new shows, enabling Hillsdalians in D.C. to advance Hillsdale’s mission beyond its 400 acres in Michigan. “Hillsdale in D.C. serves to advance the mission of Hillsdale College through various mediums,” Matthew Spalding, vice president of Washington operations, said. “Our audience appreciates radio and podcasts, and the Hillsdale in D.C. radio station allows us the capability of offering that to our students, faculty, and allies.” Spalding said the radio studio will continue to operate as an outlet for students, faculty, and allies to spread the ideas of Hillsdale College. The Boyle Studio was dedicated at the Kirby Center in November 2015. The studio is a remote broadcast studio for visiting radio hosts and personalities, including nationally recognized hosts, podcasters, and newsmakers, Spalding said. The studio includes amenities and accommodations for radio hosts and guests. It is furnished through the gift of the Vince Benedetto Bold Gold Media Group and the Bold Gold Broadcast & Media Foundation. Allison Schuster ’21, research assistant at the Kirby Center, manages the Hillsdale in D.C. radio studio. “The station provides the opportunity for our own faculty to conduct interviews or record material, as well as extending the studio’s use to organizations whose missions are friendly to our own,” Schuster said. “It also just gives us a space for students to explore the radio world and get handson experience using what Hillsdale has taught them during their WHIP semester or time in the graduate program.” Schuster’s job includes coordinating the use of the
studio for outside groups, producing shows, and managing student shows for WHIP and graduate students. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, The Federalist Radio Hour and other shows were regularly recorded at the D.C. station. Spalding decided to welcome back shows in the fall of 2021, so Schuster has spent the past six months developing the station. The Federalist’s culture editor, Emily Jashinsky, records The Federalist Radio Hour in the studio, Schuster said. Additionally, while on WHIP last semester, senior Elena Nabarowski recorded her own show, “Five Minute Myths,” the first student show recorded at the D.C. station in a few years. “I also look forward to more undergraduate students using the studio as this semester gets underway,” Schuster said. Scot Bertram, manager of the Radio Free Hillsdale, helps Schuster fix technical issues and develop the studio’s equipment and capability, as well as providing general radio counseling. “Hillsdale students who are involved here at WRFH are encouraged to continue working on their show or feature while on WHIP,” Bertram said. “The Boyle Studio features the same equipment that is used here in Michigan, so the transition should be seamless.” The studio has hosted The Vince Coglianese Show, which Schuster said provided an opportunity to raise awareness of Hillsdale’s mission among D.C. listeners. Vince Coglianese hosted Spalding; Matthew Mehan, director of academic programs for Hillsdale in D.C.; and Mollie Hemingway, senior journalism fellow at Hillsdale, on the show to discuss their areas of expertise. Mehan said he has used the station to record podcasts about the liberal arts, talk with Bertram on his show, Radio Free Hillsdale
See Radio A6
to join together to alleviate some of the miscellaneous financial expenses that will quickly begin to pile at their door.” By Dec. 22, the Hutchinsons closed the donation site because the community had covered and far surpassed the initial $10,000 goal. Eric Hutchinson said in an email he was impressed with how quickly the need was met. “I think the real story here is not the GoFundMe thing as such, but the speedy generosity of Carrington's colleagues
and extended friends and acquaintances,” Hutchinson said. “I wish that it were not even known who set it up, but that wasn't possible.” Among the 204 people who donated were many Hillsdale College professors, staff, students, and alumni. “I especially was touched by how many were affiliated with Hillsdale,” Carrington said. “These persons included many former students, who gave me so much joy when they were here, and continue to give me such joy in prac-
ticing their manifold virtues. It all shows how Hillsdale is a partnership, even a friendship where we not only learn together but take care of each other.” Professor of History Kenneth Calvert, one of the donors, said seeing how many colleagues responded was a “wonderful example” of what Hillsdale is about. “When people get sick, you always pray for their health but quite often you forget that there are other needs as well,” Calvert said. “So Eric did a
great job of getting news out.” Carrington’s wife, Emily, said she was very thankful for the Hutchinsons initiating the campaign, as the financial support was “a huge relief.” “I am so humbled by the number of people who contributed to the campaign,” she said. “Walking through cancer with someone you love is hard and can be really lonely, but as I watched the campaign grow I was in awe seeing how many people love Adam and love our family."
Craig Blanchard as Defensive Coordinator in 2014. Courtesy | Hillsdale College Athletic Department
'A Charger through and through': Hillsdale remembers Craig Blanchard By Luke Morey Assistant Editor Present and former Hillsdale Charger football players mourned the loss of defensive coordinator Craig Blanchard. “He was just a great guy, and he was a great guy 24/7,” Hillsdale’s head football coach Keith Otterbein said about Craig Blanchard, who died at the age of 62 on Dec. 22 after a battle with multiple myeloma. Blanchard grew up in Jonesville. In his senior year at Jonesville High School, he earned Class C first-team all-state honors while rushing for 1,706 yards. “When I was playing football at Hillsdale, I actually hosted Blanchard as a recruit,” Otterbein said. “I didn’t do a very good job because he went to Grand Valley State University.” After his four years at Grand Valley, Blanchard got into coaching, working at several schools before coming to Hillsdale in 2001. “He had been here a long time,” Otterbein said. “He
affected an unbelievable number of kids and families, and his legacy is going to live on through the players that he influenced and their families, and just continue on for generations.” Dan Shanley ’19 said Blanchard cannot be encompassed in any one story. “He truly cared about us as men first and athletes second,” Shanley said. “In any meeting or conversation I had one-on-one with him, he always asked about my life and how I was doing before we talked about football. In the very last meeting I had after my fifth year, we were talking about the job I had and how I would have to spend a few weeks in Minnesota.” Two years later, Shanley saw Blanchard at homecoming. “He was asking me about how Minnesota was and how I was enjoying living in Grand Rapids,” Shanley said. “It blew my mind that he even remembered that, let alone truly care about how that went for me while he was
battling cancer.” Wainwright Clarke ’19 said he remembers Blanchard calling players “fire ants” or “fire plugs” whenever they made a gusty play. “The other great thing that I immediately remember occurred in Findlay University’s locker room after we beat them in 2018 on our way to winning the championship that year,” Clarke said. “As we were celebrating the win, Coach Lindley leaned over to Blanch and bet that he wouldn’t start dancing in the locker room to show how happy he was with our performance. And sure enough, that’s exactly what Blanch proceeded to do.” Freshman Luke Constantino said Blanchard brought a positive attitude to every rainy practice. “Last year when the weather at practice was miserable, he’d just say ‘it’s 70 and sunny, men,’” Constantino said. “That has stuck with me all this time, because ‘70 and sunny’ is how life should always be lived. No matter what circumstances you are
faced with, no matter how dark and cold you think it is, it’s all about perspective. That’s how Blanch lived, like it was 70 and sunny every time we stepped on the field.” Junior Kyle Kudla recalled Blanchard’s intensity for game day. “Coach Blanch would say ‘Bugaboo’ when referring to an opponent’s offensive play that would be tough for our defense to stop and we always got a kick out of that so we adopted it as a linebacker mantra,” Kudla said. Kudla said Blanchard’s game day intensity always got the defense fired up. “We would all meet pregame and he would yell ‘ATTACK’ repeatedly and we would follow loud enough to scare anyone in a 100-foot radius,” Kudla said. “He had this innate ability to always put a smile on your face but also tell it to you straight up. He always let us know how much he loved us and it was easy to see how much he cared for his guys."
See Blanchard A6
Hillsdale Academy appoints new headmaster By Sean Callaghan Assistant Editor
Hillsdale Academy will welcome Assistant Headmaster Mike Roberts as its new headmaster on July 1, 2022, replacing David Diener after four years in the position. “Mike Roberts is more prepared than anybody could be to run that school,” said Ken-
neth Calvert, former headmaster of the Academy, professor of history, and director of the Oxford program at Hillsdale College. Beginning Jan. 1, Roberts received some of the responsibilities as headmaster in order to best prepare him for the transition. After graduating from the college in 1998, Roberts joined
the Academy in 2002 as assistant headmaster and athletic director. “He has been part of the college, and here at the Academy for 20 years,” Calvert said. “He knows what the school is about and what its influence is.” Roberts said the new position surprised him, but he is grateful to serve the school in
this capacity. “I am glad to help the school in whatever maximizes carrying out its mission,” Roberts said. The motto of Hillsdale academy is virtus et sapientiae: virtue and wisdom. “Everything we do at the Academy is striving toward cultivating our students into people of virtue through
classical education,” said David Diener, current headmaster at the Academy until the end of the 2022 spring semester. “We provide an academically excellent classical Christian education.” Calvert spoke of the headmaster’s primary role in upholding this mission.
See Headmaster A6
Mike Roberts. Courtesy | Mike Roberts