The Hillsdale Collegian 3.28.19

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Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Vol. 142 Issue 23 - March 28, 2019

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Off-campus permissions unusually low this year, should return to normal next year By | Emma Cummins Assistant Editor Fewer rising juniors were given permission to live off campus in the 2019-20 academic year, due to a smaller freshman female class and the planned re-opening of Galloway men’s residence.

When deciding which students receive off campus permission, the deans consider a student’s high school graduation date — in order to account for students who have taken a gap year — then credits earned at Hillsdale, and the number of dorm beds they have to fill. Filling the beds depends on the

incoming class size and which upperclassmen choose to live on campus. The deans operate on a staggered release system, giving a certain number of students off-campus permission in the first round. Once those students either accept or deny permission by a certain deadline, the deans release

Taryn Murphy takes first place in 19th annual Edward Everett speech contest By | Nicole Ault Editor-in-Chief Sophomore Taryn Murphy took first place at Hillsdale College’s 19th annual Edward Everett Prize in Oratory speech competition on Tuesday, winning $3,000 for her 10-minute speech on the topic of “Immigration and the Nation State: The Rights and Rules of Borders.” “I was very honored, and I felt very grateful to have won, especially because the other speakers were so talented. I didn’t expect anything walking into the awards ceremony,” Murphy said. The competition, hosted by the provost’s office and the department of rhetoric and public address, is named after Edward Everett, an American politician and orator who gave an hours-long keynote speech before Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address and who donated his library to the college. Sophomore Anna Katherine Daley and junior Nathan Grime took second and third place, respectively. Selected as

finalists from about a dozen semifinalist speakers earlier in the month, two other students -- senior Rachael Menosky and freshman Molly Buccola -- also competed on Tuesday. All the speakers were given the same prompt. Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn, philanthropist and entrepreneur Don Tocco, and Assistant Dean of Men Jeffrey Rogers judged the event. Criteria included logical flow, time management, memorization, persuasiveness, and recognition of audience, said Professor of Rhetoric and Public Address Kirstin Kiledal. “The judges thought that they were particularly well organized this year and that they sounded more oratorical this year than other years,” Kiledal said. She added that Murphy’s speech was particularly persuasive. “She was just fluid and had a charming presence that the judges all felt really made her speech engaging. But then it was true for all of the speakers — they really all had their personality in their speeches,” Kiledal said.

Murphy said she probably spent 15 to 20 hours crafting her speech and checked several books out of the library to research the topic. “I had never articulated my own stance on immigration, and writing the speech helped me to do that,” she said. “Now I feel much better equipped to express the beliefs that I had before.” Daley said she was delighted to take second place and knew she would regret it if she didn’t take the opportunity. “At first I was concerned about writing a speech about immigration, because it’s not a topic I feel like I’m an expert on, but I ended up being able to write a speech that I was passionate about, and I truly enjoyed giving it,” she said in a message. Murphy said she is grateful for the prize and learned a lot from the experience. “I’m very grateful for the college putting the competition on, and the compensation was just an added bonus to that,” Murphy said. “The experience was worth it and the prize was an additional blessing.”

From left: freshman Molly Buccola, senior Rachael Menosky, junior Nathan Grime, sophomore Anna Katherine Daley, and sophomore Taryn Murphy. Ryan Kelly Murphy | Courtesy

another round of permissions. This spring, the deans gave 45 men (32 rising seniors and 13 rising juniors), permission to live off campus next year, with eight students declining. Last year, 171 men were given permission, with 151 accepting. Dean of Men Aaron Petersen said an unusually

high number of rising sophomores were given off-campus permission last year, since Galloway men’s residence is under construction this school year and also because this year’s freshman male class was unusually large. Since many of these students were rising sophomores and do not need to re-apply for permis-

sion, the numbers appear smaller if looking only at the number of rising juniors given permission to live off campus this year. “In next year’s junior class, there’s a fair amount off that just got off a year early, depending on how you frame it,” he said.

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Hillsdale College recently received the archives of the late Sir Martin Gilbert, official biographer of Winston Churchill. External Affairs

College receives Gilbert archives, Holocaust research material By | Victoria Marshall Collegian Freelancer

Hillsdale students and future generations will have access to eye-witness accounts to the Holocaust, thanks to the college’s recent acquisition of Sir Martin Gilbert’s archives. Hillsdale College recently acquired the entire working library and archives of the late Gilbert, the official biographer of Sir Winston Churchill from 1968 to 2012, who died in 2015. The collection features Martin’s research on the Holocaust, including notes on conversations with witnesses and survivors and documents from the national archives of

the United States and United Kingdom, according to a Hillsdale College press release. The collection also includes published and unpublished diaries and memoirs of survivors, an annotated diary of the secretary of the Kovno ghetto, and research on the British Mandate for Palestine and the first 70 years of Israel’s establishment. The college purchased Gilbert’s entire working library and archives in 2017, which included the Holocaust materials, according to Soren Geiger, director of research for the Churchill Project, but due to European Union regulations, the collection only just arrived to campus this past Christmas. Packed

in shipping containers in the Fowler Maintenance Building, the archive awaits to be transported, unwrapped, and cataloged. The acquisition of this collection is the result of the college’s Churchill Project, which seeks to promote Churchill scholarship. Geiger said the college hopes to make as much of the collection available to the public where possible and appropriate. He also said the college plans to partner with institutions such as the Holocaust Memorial Center in Detroit on research and scholarship due to the significance of this collection. Gilbert’s collection is significant because of the

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Dykstal ’13 one of 12 winners of international writing competition By | Danielle Lee Collegian Reporter Professor of History David Stewart studied the paper, nodded, then crossed out the student’s entire first paragraph. The student, Andrew Dykstal ’13, considered himself a good writer, especially after successfully competing in essay speech writing, but he realized this was a delusion upon entering Hillsdale. Nevertheless, with his professors’ guidance, he learned to clear out empty language, force himself to get to the point, and develop an analytical style that valued evidence and close analysis. Six years later, Dykstal is internationally recognized for his writing talent: He was recently named one of twelve

winners of L. Ron Hubbard’s 35th annual The Writers of the Future Contest. His short story will be released to the public after “L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Vol. 35, an annual anthology of the winning pieces, is published. In its 35th year, the international competition rewards winners with a week-long professional workshop and awards ceremony on April 5 in Los Angeles, California. Distinguished authors, such as Tim Powers of “Stranger Tides” and Orson Scott Card of “Ender’s Game,” will teach this year’s workshop and show the basic mechanics of writing a story. The winner’s stories will be published in an anthology, the “L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 35,”

which has appeared on bestseller lists for the past four years. “I’m looking forward to meeting these authors. I’ve read at least something from all of them,” Dykstal said. “Basically I’m going to sit in a room with 11 talented authors and geek out terribly, while wringing out as much information as I can.” President and publisher of Galaxy Press, the publisher and distributor of L. Ron Hubbard’s works, John Goodwin said most workshop participants’ stories end up selling afterward. “This competition has the highest success rate of introducing novelists and artists into the professional side of science fiction and fantasy,” Goodwin said.

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Saying hello and goodbye: Community remembers Don Turner By | Carmel Kookogey Culture Editor Professor of Theology Jordan Wales described the memorial service for former philosophy professor Don Turner like only knowing one verse of a song, and “suddenly being in a canyon” which echoed other voices singing the whole song. “I felt like I was saying

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‘Hello’ to him in a new way, even though we were all saying ‘Goodbye,’” Wales said. On Saturday morning, March 23, Hillsdale College faculty, students, and members of Hillsdale Free Methodist Church congregation gathered to celebrate and remember the life of Professor Donald Turner. A former philosophy professor at the college, Turner died of cancer on Nov. 11, 2018, after

teaching at Hillsdale for 18 years. Hillsdale Free Methodist Church and Linda Turner, Turner’s mother, hosted the service and luncheon to share stories and memories of his life. “It was very moving to me, because it was not just the community of Hillsdale professors and students who were there, but the wider community of the church, the choir of which he was a mem-

ber,” Wales said. “But he was absent, he who had always been at the center of every gathering.” Rev. Keith Porter began the service by reading from Ecclesiastes 7 — “a philosophical book to celebrate the life of a philosopher,” he said. Stephanie Acosta Inks, a former student of Turner’s, shared stories with the congregation about how as a professor, Turner’s encour-

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agement helped her through many difficulties during her four years of undergraduate school. Inks said he did this by making himself and his time uniquely accessible to his students. “He would start every class — and I took six of them — by telling his students that they could call him at any time, even if it was at 3 a.m. And they did,” she said. Inks also shared his will-

ingness to provide an ear to his students continued beyond the classroom, and her friendship with him even supported her during her postpartum depression after the birth of her first child. “I remember talking on the phone to him, and he said to me, ‘You must just want a warm meal and an uninterrupted shower.’ I

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