12.8.16 Hillsdale Collegian

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‘Frozen’ Salvation Army bell-ringers Three Disney princesses rang the Salvation Army bell to raise money at Jonesville’s Wal-Mart on Wednesday. A8

Orchestra selected to perform in D.C. Hillsdale’s college orchestra was selected to perform at George Mason Univeristy at the national CODA conference. A7

Larry Arnn goes to Washington In this semester’s issue of The Collision, Betsy DeVos takes over as Hillsdale College president, after Arnn becomes secretary of education. A4 Grace DeSandro | Collegian Freepik.com

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Vol. 140 Issue 13 - 8 December 2016

www.hillsdalecollegian.com

Hillsdale’s own ‘Christmas Story’

Former student Bob Clark directed the holiday classic

In “A Christmas Story,” Darren McGavin (left) — who plays Old Man Parker, Ralphie’s father — stands with director Bob Clark (right), who makes a cameo as the Parkers’ neighbor. YouTube

By | Thomas Novelly Editor-in-Chief When children wake up on Christmas morning and race downstairs, they can expect to see three things: the cookies eaten, the presents nestled under the tree, and TBS playing “A Christmas Story” on repeat. With lines recited as frequently as “Silent Night” during the holidays, the 1983 movie has become a permanent piece of Christmas nostalgia, because of the creative genius of the film director, Bob Clark. Just like when the young protagonist Ralphie, portrayed by Pete Billingsley, looks on in wonder as he opens the package to his coveted “Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action 200shot Range Model Air Rifle,” Hillsdale students, too, can feel that same sense of pride and ownership when watching the annual reruns on Christmas morning. That’s because Bob Clark is one of our own, a former student at Hillsdale College. Before he was directing child actors to stick their tongues to frozen flagpoles, Clark was briefly a student at Hillsdale, attending from 1960-1963. While he would later attend the University of Miami, Hillsdale College can be credited for many key moments in his life but most notably his ability to command an audience. Clark got his start in drama as a student actor in Hillsdale’s Tower Players productions. Clark was a southern boy. He was born in New Orleans; spent some years in Birmingham, Alabama; and was raised in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. In an interview with a Canadian film website in 2005, Clark said because his father died when he was very young and his mother was a barmaid, he grew up poor. He mustered up enough money to start his education at Catawba College where he began studying philosophy, but he soon left, when he earned a scholarship to play quarterback for Hillsdale’s football team. In a 1960 issue of The Collegian, Clark is recognized as one of the top prospects to play starting quarterback among several team veterans. “Newcomer Bob Clark, of Fort Lauderdale … will be a principled candidate for the quarterback spot,” the article said. Hillsdale’s archives don’t show much of Clark’s football career, but The Collegian highlighted a game in November 1961 when Clark scored a touchdown in a 24-7 win against Heidelberg College. “With 9:46 left, the blue and white struck again on a 14yard run around the right end by Bob Clark,” the article said. “Clay Roth kicked his 11th straight point after touchdown, and the Dales held their commanding 24-0 lead.” In a 2006 interview with Follow @HDaleCollegian

a cult-horror movie website, Clark said after he left Hillsdale and transferred to the University of Miami, he went on to play semi-professional football for the Fort Lauderdale Black Knights. But Clark was known for more than just his athletic prowess. Clark brought one of his hobbies from the sunshine state to Hillsdale’s snowy campus, and it garnered a lot of attention. According to a Collegian article published in February 1963, Clark and Doug Lockhart, a fellow classmate and Fort Lauderdale native, taught a one-credit Scuba Diving class to fellow students. Students could train with the two “professional scuba-divers from the Florida coast” for just $25. Clark noted that there were quite a few women in the class, many of them his top students. “Even though they are usually somewhat scared at first, they lose their fears and become increasingly sure of themselves,” Clark said at the time. Amid scoring touchdowns and teaching his fellow students in scuba class, Clark’s classmates also applauded another one of his talents: acting. A survey of Hillsdale’s archives shows that Clark acted in numerous Tower Players productions. He starred as the main consul in “Between Two Thieves” — a play showing the retrial of Jesus Christ — and was also cast in Hillsdale’s adaptation of George Bernard Shaw’s “The Millionairess.” But his most notable role was as disgruntled husband Joe McDougal in “Holiday For Lovers,” a 1957 play that shortly after became a Hollywood movie. According to a review of the play published in The Collegian in May 1962, Clark was the best actor in the whole performance. “Especially commendable was the fine job of character acting by Bob Clark,” The Collegian said. “Clark remains in full command of his audience with cutting remarks and bitter gestures all of which are directed at his annoying wife.” Twenty years later, Clark had a series of successful horror and comedy films that he made in Canada under his belt, including “Porky’s,” an irreverent teen comedy that was once one of the top 25 grossing films of all time, according to Variety magazine. With some credit to his name, Clark approached MGM to ask for money to create “A Christmas Story” with author Jean Shepherd, whose stories depicting his boyhood in Indiana was the inspiration for the film. According to a 2013 book on the making of the film by Caseen Gaines, Clark was given $4.4 million to produce “A Christmas Story.” Clark was apparently so excited to make t h e f i l m See Clark A7

Professor of Biology Anthony Swinehart stands with Linda the edmontosaurus, a nearly complete dinosaur skeleton excavated with the help of Hillsdale College students in South Dakota, that was donated to the college’s Daniel M. Fisk Museum of Natural History in the Strosacker Science Center. Madeline Fry | Collegian

Dirt to display: Meet ‘Linda’ the dino By | Madeline Fry Social Media Editor Hillsdale College became one of four places in Michigan to display a full dinosaur skeleton Friday with the addition of an edmontosaurus to the Daniel M. Fisk Museum of Natural History in the Strosacker Science Center. The nearly complete remains, nicknamed “Linda” for the woman who found the fossil, is a donation from dinosaur-enthusiast Darla Roberts, who Professor of Biology Anthony Swinehart said wanted to help small museums with limited resources. Because dinosaur skeletons are large, epensive, and hard to acquire, only a few small natural history museums are able to display one, Swinehart said. Several dozen students and faculty gathered in the museum on Friday for the unveiling of the 26-feet-long dinosaur. As a speaker boomed the “Jurassic Park” theme song, Swinehart, the museum’s curator, dropped the curtain covering the skeleton. “The people present at the

unveiling, with the exception of about a dozen who excavated it and prepared it, were the first living organisms to see Linda in about 66 million years,” he said. The skeleton is mostly complete, with real bones from other skeletons as well as casts from real bones replacing what is missing. “The only appendage missing from the mount is one of the forelimbs,” Swinehart said. An amateur fossil hunter, Linda Bergman, discovered the dinosaur in South Dakota in 2013. As a part of an independent study with Swinehart, seniors Matt Hoenig and HeeSang Lee assisted Bergman and students from the University of North Georgia with the dinosaur’s excavation. “Specific bones that I worked on include some of the vertebrae, the pubis — one of the hip bones — and the ribs,” Hoenig said. “There’s no substitute for the hot sun, searing wind, and excitement of finding another bone. Digging up a dinosaur is meticulous, messy, and challenging, and this is what makes it so rewarding.”

Swinehart had contacted Associate Professor of Anthropology Steve Nicklas at the University of North Georgia about opportunities for Hillsdale students to study paleontology in the field. Over the past few years, students have helped excavate several types of dinosaurs, including a tyrannosaurus rex, triceratops, edmontosaurus, and ankylosaurs. Linda is an edmontosaurus, a type of dinosaur with a signa-

ture duck bill. Her kind were herbivores and prey for the tyrannosaurus rex. They could travel on two legs or four. The museums at the University of Michigan and Michigan State University as well as the Cranbrook Institute of Science all display dinosaur skeletons. Being only one of a few schools with such an exhibit, Swinehart said he hopes it will attract more students to the muse-

See Dino A2

At the excavation site in South Dakota, seniors Hee-Sang Lee (left) and Matt Hoenig (right) hold pieces of Linda the edmontosaurus’ vertebrae. Anthony Swinehart | Courtesy

Raising funds and ringing bells College, hospital compete for second year in collecting money for Salvation Army

By | Breana Noble News Editor ’Tis the season for giving — and friendly competition. After Hillsdale College won its first bell-ringing competition with Hillsdale Hospital in 2015, the businesses are facing off again to raise money for the Salvation Army. The hospital kicked off this year’s contest Saturday at the Kroger on W. Carleton, and the college will do its part Dec. 17 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.. “They are the two biggest employers in the county, and both exist to serve others,” Brock Lutz, the college’s director of health services and a member of the Hillsdale County Salvation Army’s advisory board said in an email. “Great success last year, people told me they loved doing it, so let’s do it again.” In total, the college raised $1,595.84 to the hospital’s $1,298.24. This amount doesn’t include the money raised by students ringing the bell for the Salvation Army by Mossey Library through the on-campus GOAL Program. The totals earned the col-

lege and hospital Bell Ringer Awards, being the second and third business to raise the most money in the county. The No. 1 spot went to WCSR Radio, which raised more than $10,000 in just six hours last year at the Market House on W. Carleton as it broadcasted live. “It’s the generosity of the our listeners,” said Bob Flynn, the afternoon host who will be ringing bells with Juli Morgan on Dec. 16 from noon to 6 p.m. “They bring buckets full of coins or very large checks and everything in between.” WCSR has corporate sponsors to match the funds, allowing the station to double whatever people put in the bucket. The Salvation Army returns all the donations to the community, supporting its efforts to provide a meal four days a week, fill its food pantry, provide fresh produce weekly, and fund activities for county children, Salvation Army Administrative Assistant Kathryn Stump said. That’s what Flynn said it is all about: “We just hope we can make it the merriest Christmas for everyone in the county.”

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Junior Taylor Hannel, sophomore Liz Laux, and junior Lyndsey Bice ring the bell for the Salvation Army GOAL Program outside of Mossey Library Tuesday. Breana Noble | Collegian Look for The Hillsdale Collegian


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