Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 142 Issue 25 - April 11, 2019
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Kalthoff receives Daugherty Award at spring convocation By | Nolan Ryan News Editor Professor and Chairman of History Mark Kalthoff received the Daugherty Award for Teaching Excellence for the fall semester of 2018 at convocation on Thursday. “Mark Kalthoff exemplifies the kind of steady, wise teaching that we prize at the college,” Dean of Faculty and Associate Professor of Education Daniel Coupland said in an email. “The hundreds of Hillsdale students who have sat in his classes over the years have been shaped by his deep understanding of his particular field and of liberal education in general.” Dean of Women Diane Philipp said the criteria for the Daugherty includes dedication to one’s profession and
craft, sensitivity to students’ learning, and a demand for excellence. Student GPAs from fall 2018 were announced at convocation as well. The allschool GPA was 3.320, while the average women’s GPA was 3.477, and the average men’s GPA was 3.262. For the Greek scholarship cups, Kappa Kappa Gamma had the highest sorority GPA at 3.483, while Sigma Chi won the fraternity prize with an average GPA of 3.273. Eleven seniors qualified for the top 10 of the Class of 2019, with two tying for 10th place: In alphabetical order, they were Nicole Ault, Catherine Bodnar, Marina Bostelman, Kathryn DuHadway, Ellen Friesen, Hope Jonker, Rebecca Kaiser, Daniel Maisonville, Samuel Roberts, Jessica Skoudis, and Gill West.
Graphic by Anne Buzzell
Kalthoff, Young to take new positions as academic deans
Hillsdale College President Larry Arrn announced that Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas will be speaking at the dedication of Christ Chapel next semester. Chirstian Yiu | Collegian
By | Elizabeth Bachmann
Collegian Reporter
Professor and Chairman of History Mark Kalthoff will assume the dean of faculty position, and Chairman and Associate Professor of Chemistry Matthew Young will become the dean of natural sciences beginning in the 2019-2020 academic year. Kalthoff will take over
from current Dean of Faculty Daniel Coupland. This will be Kalthoff ’s third term in the position; he served two terms previously from 2005-2009, after Hillsdale College President Larry Arnn asked him to stay for a second term. As dean of faculty, Kalthoff will serve primarily as a middleman between the faculty and the administration.
“In the role in the past, I lost track how many times I was in the top floor of Moss Hall for meetings, either in the provost or the president’s office, because I was involved in conversations and learning about how the college works,” Kalthoff said. “As dean, it is your responsibility to represent the administration to the faculty and to represent the faculty to See Deans A3
Clarence Thomas to speak Graduating senior officers at Christ Chapel dedication By | Isabella Redjai Assistant Editor Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas will be delivering a speech at the dedication of the campus’ new Christ Chapel at its opening ceremony in early October, President Larry P. Arnn announced this past Parents
Weekend. Arnn and faculty agreed that Thomas is an appropriate speaker for the dedication ceremony, due to his relationship with the college in recent years, coming as the 2016 commencement speaker where Arnn awarded Thomas an Honorary Degree, his service to the public, and his upstanding character.
“We are related in that he is widely admired here,” Arnn said in an email. “I personally think and have thought for a long time him the best public servant of our time.” Arnn said he invited Thomas to speak at the ceremony through a letter more than a month ago
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pass torch to Class of 2020 By | Madeline Peltzer Collegian Reporter
Adam Buchmann is the new senior class president after officers announced the voting results for the incoming class of 2020 officers, Monday night at the Junior
Legacy Dinner. The board also consists of Lukas Swenson as vice president, Reagan Cool as secretary, Lizzie Leathers as treasurer, Hadiah Ritchey as social chair, and Lucy Meckler as fundraising chair. “My initial reaction was
one of general excitement for the next year and the many endeavors the position entails,” Buchmann said. “I’m very excited to get the team together to make senior year a great one.”
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Senior Colleen Prince wins Fulbright scholarship By | Regan Meyer Web Content Editor When senior Colleen Prince first received the email telling her that she had won a Fulbright Scholarship, she didn’t think it was real. “I was literally dancing on stage and took a break to check my phone, which I shouldn’t do,” Prince said. “I saw the Fulbright email with congratulations, and I thought to myself, ‘This has to be an April Fool’s joke.’ I was so nervous.” Prince may have received her email of congratulations on April Fool’s Day, but there was nothing fake about it. She is a Fulbright Scholarship recipient through the English Teaching Assistant program and the sixth Hillsdale College student to win a Fulbright Scholarship in the last five years. The Fulbright U.S. Student Program awards graduating U.S. students, both undergraduate and graduate, with the opportunity to further their education in foreign countries either through individually designed research/ Follow @HDaleCollegian
study projects or through the English Teaching Assistant Program. The Fulbright provides grants in 144 different countries. Once Prince decided to apply, she had about three weeks to complete the extensive application that includes a grant purpose, personal statement, letters of recommendation, proof of foreign language abilities, and interviews with both the campus Fulbright board and the host country. Director of Career Services Ken Koopman spent what he estimated to be about 10 hours with Prince working on her application. “Sometimes when people are preparing for something like this, there’s so much work and so many things going on, they want to write the essay and give it one look for grammar,” Koopman said. “Colleen spent hours and hours doing this and doing it the right way. I looked at it. She had other people look at it. For any students that are interested in this kind of award in the future, that’s the dedication that it takes.” One of the most time-con-
Senior Colleen Prince received the Fulbright scholarship, and she will be training at a Ukranian dance school and working on dance therapy for PSTD. Colleen Prince | Courtesy
suming aspects of the application was the grant purpose. Prince’s grant purpose is
twofold. The first is to train at a Ukrainian dance school. The second is to work with
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a holistic health clinic that is seeking to implement a new kind of dance therapy that could be used to help soldiers suffering from PTSD. Prince will pursue her grant purpose while working as a teaching assistant to a professor at a Ukrainian university. Prince chose Ukraine because of her own Ukrainian heritage and her experiences within the culture. She has been dancing semi-professionally with a Ukrainian folk dance troupe since 2008. “It would be such an honor to be able to train at a Ukrainian dance school in Ukraine. That is just the culmination of everything I’ve wanted as an artist,” she said. “Being able to, at the same time, be an ambassador through teaching a language that is going to be so hopefully and necessary to these students there, for their success — that combines the skill sets and what I desire to do with my life, which is all I could really ask for.” Hillsdale’s Fulbright Program Adviser, Professor of German Fred Yaniga, said
he is proud of Prince and the hard work she put into applying for the program. “I’m happy that she did it,” Yaniga said. “She had a project that is near and dear to her heart, to her background. She’s going to come back a changed person with huge opportunities because, when her application for a job, internship, or postgraduate study position falls on someone’s desk, the first thing they see will be ‘Fulbright winner.’ And her application will flow to the top.” The program runs September 2019 through May 2020. Prince said she looks forward to her time in the country and wants to thank all those who helped her through the process. “It’s great to know that I now have a story that I can share with future undergrads,” Prince said. “It’s a story about how you should take every single opportunity you are presented with, because it could turn out really great and you have absolutely nothing to lose by trying.”
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