3.17.16 Hillsdale Collegian

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Senior citizen wins lifetime theater award 89-year-old Bud Vear honored for decades of service to community theater. B1

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Former coat factory to become new apartments Eight apartments will fill the abandoned structure and feature retail on the first floor.

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Baseball wins ninth straight before falling in perfect game Chargers ranked third in the Midwest, the highest ranking of any GLIAC team. A10

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Vol. 139 Issue 20 - 17 Mar. 2016

Walberg visits campus U.S. representative consults campus Dawn Oren | Courtesy

veterans on the future of VA policy

Women’s track takes second at nationals By | Jessica Hurley Collegian Reporter

Congressman Tim Walberg, R-Mich., met with student veterans Jamal Jackson, John Novack, Michael Lafountain, and Michael Aavang on Thursday, March 10. Thomas Novelly | Collegian

By | Thomas Novelly Assistant Editor Congressman Tim Walberg, R-Mich., visited campus Thursday, March 10 to have a brief chat with students in the Hillsdale Veterans Association to get their thoughts on the future of veteran healthcare. President of the Hillsdale Veterans Association senior Michael Aavang coordinated with Walberg’s office and arranged for the congressman to meet with him as well as three other student veterans in A.J.’s Café. During the meeting, Aavang gave Walberg a copy of a policy proposal, which he recently drafted during a legislative fellowship in Washington, D.C., Aavang said the proposal, which aims at reforming medical care provided through the Veterans Affairs Administration, was well-received by the congressman. “My short chat about the proposal went very well,” Aavang said. “I was surprised to learn that he wanted to go even further with medical reform than what I proposed, which is great.” Walberg said current VA programs are filled with mistakes and that privatization or consolidation of treatment

could be a viable solution. “Veterans need to be cared for,” Walberg said at the meeting. “The first and primary responsibility is to make sure that when they come home they receive what they expect. The VA needs to give them the best care, the best of what they need.” Former Marine freshman Jamal Jackson joined Aavang and Walberg. He said he respected the congressman’s genuine care for veterans issues. “He understands the needs of the veterans in his district,” Jackson said. “In my opinion, Tim Walberg’s service-oriented approach to his duties as a congressman are clearly reflected in his desire to help military veterans.” Aavang said Walberg’s appearance on campus was more than publicity for the Veterans Association but also a positive reminder that there are politicians who understand the issues facing veterans. “Having the congressman here to talk to us, and just us, is going to generate a lot of interest from veterans on campus,” Aavang said. “I like the attention it’s going to draw. To see a congressman concerned with a

See Walberg A3

After scoring a school-record total of 58 points at the NCAA D-II National Championships, the Hillsdale College women’s track and field team left Kansas this weekend as the national runner-up. It was a dramatic meet between Hillsdale College and Lincoln University, with Lincoln ultimately coming out on top by two points. Out of the 10 female athletes that competed in the meet, eight came home as All-Americans, placing in the top eight in their events. Senior Emily Oren’s mile time would have even won the D-I national championship meet. She was crowned the national champion with a D-II record time of 4:35.48 — setting a personal best by 10

seconds — which contributed 10 points to Hillsdale’s total score. “I could not have asked for a better meet. I still don’t believe that that weekend happened,” Oren said. “The mile was a huge confidence boost. When I see other milers running 4:30s I think they’re elite runners, but now I’m one of those people.” Oren aspires to run professionally post-graduation. The 3K race resulted in three Hillsdale All-Americans and 23 points. Oren won the event with a time of 9:27.98, senior Kristina Galat came in close behind running 9:30.80

By | JoAnna Kroeker Collegian Reporter At its March 31 meeting, Student Federation will reconsider its approval of $781 for the Investment Club to travel to New York City. The club found out it will receive full funding for the trip from Morgan Stanley after Student Fed approved partial funding last Thursday. Because Student Fed funds are granted on a partial-payback basis, Student Fed President junior Christian Wiese said the organization no longer sees the

club’s need for the funds. “Because they came back and let us know that they got full funding for the trip, we will reconsider their request for website funding at the next meeting,” Wiese said. The Investment Club initially requested $2,500 during the Student Fed finance committee meeting on Monday, March 7. Club representatives said the money would sponsor a five-person trip to New York City supervised by Morgan Stanley. For an hour and a half Thursday, March 10, delegates

A conversation with Pulliam Fellows Mark and Mollie Hemingway Mark and Mollie Hemingway are one of America’s premier journalistic power couples. Mark is a senior writer at The Weekly Standard, while Mollie is a senior editor at The Federalist, which she co-founded. The Hemingways live in Washington, D.C., and have two children. How did each of you first get involved in journalism? Mark: It started out my freshman year in college when, instead of putting me in a dorm room, the housing department put me in a motel off of campus because they said they had overbooked their dorms. And the motel was filthy; there were all kinds of problems because there were all sorts of poor, vagrant types that were also living in the motel with people. I spent the first few months in school doing things like running out in the parking lot and saving co-eds from being assaulted by drunk people. And I got really, really frustrated that this was my living situation, so I started looking into it, and I found that the housing department at my university did this every year. They claimed to have overbooked the dorms, but they did this intentionally so that Follow @HDaleCollegian

when students joined fraternities and moved off campus, they would break their housing contracts and the housing department would make a bunch of money. So when I looked into this story nobody reported on it — nobody was interested in it, and I was just upset that this injustice hadn’t been rectified — that they were subjecting these kids to this horrible situation. As it turns out one of the campus publications, the Oregon Commentator, was finally interested. It was kind of a conservative campus, conservative/libertarian magazine. And the rest is history, I guess. Mollie: I did not start out interested in journalism. I studied economics and thought I wanted to go into academia, and to make a very long story short, I tried a few other things and ended up as a second career going into journalism. And I’ve loved every minute of it. Mark: That’s a much more elegant, concise story than mine. How did the two of you meet? Mark: It was my first job out of college. My wife is about 20 months older than I am, so she had been working at this place, a non-profit, think-tank-type place in northern Virginia.

more fun having everyone there,” Galat said. “Leading up to it I didn’t let myself think negative thoughts. Especially having Hannah in the race and Coach Joe believing in me really helped a lot.” The defending champions in the distance medley relay entering the meet, Hillsdale repeated its national title in the event and broke the school record with a time of 11:24.39. Junior Molly Oren ran the 1200 with a split of 3:34, senior Corinne Zehner had a 400 split of 54.7 seconds, sophomore Hannah Watts ran the 800 leg with a 2:14.6 split, and Emily Oren sealed the deal with a 1600 meter split of 4:40. The relay team earned 10 points. This was Watts’s third time running the DMR and first trip to the national meet. Now, she is a See Track A9

Student Fed to reconsider Investment Club proposal

Reporting from Washington By|Andrew Egger Assistant Editor

and placing second, while sophomore Hannah McIntyre placed fourth running 9:33.28, which was a personal record. McIntyre and Galat earned another spot on the podium in the 5K. McIntyre placed third with a time of 16:13.91 and Galat placed fourth running a 16:17.09, which was a personal record. The duo scored 11 points for Hillsdale. Before the meet, Galat was ranked lower than she had been in previous years for her events. “This year was a little bit more nerve-racking, but a lot

debated a lowered proposal of $1,511.40, drawing comparisons with funding of the College Republicans’ trip to the Conservative Political Action Conference. Following the Investment Club’s preliminary proposal to the finance committee on Monday, the committee recommended that Student Fed spend no money on the website, fully fund the cost of the Wall Street Prep program, and apportion $250 — or $50 per person — for the trip. Between Monday’s pitch to the finance committee and Thursday’s Student Fed meeting, the Investment Club refined its mission statement for the funds and decreased its request by $1,000 by lowering how much it wanted for the website and the trip. Junior Eddie Shaw, president and co-founder of the Investment Club, consulted Vice President for Finance Patrick

Flannery about alternative funding solutions for the trip. Shaw said if this funding came through, as it has since the decision, he would reimburse Student Fed. During Thursday’s meeting, Independent Rep. sophomore Josh Lee, an Investment Club member, said the committee made its recommendation because the Investment Club came unprepared and failed to justify its proposal. The debate focused on weighing the benefit of establishing Hillsdale connections with Wall Street at the cost of $1,500 in student fees that would not directly benefit all of campus — usually a requirement for funding approval. Shaw said the trip participants agreed to each pay $40 for the opportunity to go to the headquarters of some of the biggest banks in the world and develop a pipeline for conn e c - See Funding A3

Arnn’s book surpasses 25,000 copies sold

Husband and wife team Mark Hemingway of the Weekly Standard, and Mollie Hemingway of The Federalist, teach a class as this semester’s Dow Journalism Program’s Pullaim Fellows. Rachael Reynolds | Courtesy

She’d been working there for about two years, and it was my first job. I remember I walked into a staff meeting one day, and she was basically the most attractive girl in the room. We went out for drinks shortly after that, and the rest is history. You can just conclude all answers with that. Mollie: I was there. That was how it happened. At the present moment in politics, what is most interesting to write about for the two of you? Mark: The question now is

what’s not interesting to write about. I’m not that old, and I remember when there was downtime in politics, and now it seems like everything is go, go, go in the 24-hour news cycle. This year in particular things are utterly insane. Every election cycle, people would joke about a brokered convention: “Wouldn’t that be cool?” Well, now it’s looking like a very good chance that will happen. And characters like Donald Trump — how do you even begin to foresee

See Pulliam A3

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By | Michael Lucchese Collegian Reporter President Larry Arnn’s newest book “Churchill’s Trial: Winston Churchill and the Salvation of Free Government” has sold more than 25,000 copies. Although Arnn serves as the editor of the official Winston Churchill biography project, he said his book does more than simply retell Churchill’s life. “‘Churchill’s Trial’ is ultimately our trial, and we have a better chance to emerge victorious from ours because of the example of true statesmanship we have in Churchill,” Arnn said in an email. “By understanding the challenges Churchill faced, we can better understand our own challenges and how to confront them.” “I am proud people are buying the book,” he added. “I’m grateful to the college, which

gets all the revenues, for helping to make it known.” “Churchill’s Trial,” released on October 13, 2015, by Thomas Nelson publishers, has already garnered a number of accolades from public figures and scholars in their reviews. “‘Churchill’s Trial’ is an invaluable volume from an author who has committed much of his life to maintaining Churchill’s reputation as the outstanding statesman of the 20th century,” former Heritage Foundation President Edwin Fuelner said. Once his health began declining, Sir Martin Gilbert, Churchill’s official biographer, passed on the project to Arnn and Hillsdale College in 2012. The biography set includes eight volumes of narrative history and 23 volumes of primary source documents. Hillsdale is editing and planning to publish the final six documentary volumes. Look for The Hillsdale Collegian


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