10.5.17 Hillsdale Collegian

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Strength competition Local gym owner James Campbell took second place in a strength competition on Saturday. A7

Buzz about beekeeping With bees dying at unprecedented rates, local groups step up to help nature with sweet results. B6

Vol. 141 Issue 6 - October 5, 2017

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Remembering Tom Petty The singer supplied the soundtrack to our best memories.. B1

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Football sets offensive record in homecoming shutout By | S. Nathaniel Grime Assistant Editor Never in the 124 seasons of Hillsdale College football had the team exceeded 611 yards of offense in a single game. In year 125, they’ve done it in consecutive weeks. The Chargers’ offense piled up 659 total yards in a 56-0 thumping of conference adversary Kentucky Wesleyan College on Saturday during Homecoming. The offensive output broke a school record set just seven days earlier, when Hillsdale totaled 650 yards against the University of Indianapolis. The defensive effort amounted to the Chargers’ first shutout since 2015. The victory improves Hillsdale’s record to 3-2 this season and 1-0 in the G-MAC. Head coach Keith Otterbein took a chance right from the start, dialing up an onside kick to begin the game. Redshirt freshman Joe Philipp executed the kick, and junior tight end John Brennan fell on the ball near midfield, giving Hillsdale’s offense prime field position to begin its onslaught. “That’s always a tough decision, because you may give up

momentum or field position,” Otterbein said of the onside kick call. “But it worked out perfectly, and that’s the kind of stuff you do on Homecoming.” The Chargers’ first-team offense scored touchdowns on all seven of its possessions on the field, and Hillsdale’s lead swelled to 42-0 by halftime. Junior quarterback Chance Stewart was as efficient as he was effective, completing 16 of 21 passes for 281 yards and four touchdowns. He added two more touchdowns on the ground. “We just wanted to come out, make a statement, put our foot down from the get-go, and show that we’re ready,” Stewart said. “It was nice to play on homecoming and in all phases, just really dominate the whole football game.” Stewart’s efforts earned him the G-MAC offensive Player of the Week award, the second consecutive week a Hillsdale football player received the honor. Thirteen different Chargers caught passes in the victory. Junior wide receiver Trey Brock again led the receiving corps, hauling in six passes for 70 yards and a touchdown. Brennan had two recep-

tions, and made the most of both. The first was a 3-yard touchdown; the second was a

thought it was going to be open just based on the film, and once I caught it, I just

Junior tight end John Brennan scores the first of his two touchdowns Saturday against Kentucky Wesleyan. Ryan Kelly Murphy | Collegian

66-yard highlight-reel score in which he outran the Panthers’ secondary on his way to the end zone. “We usually run that play for wide receivers, but the coaching staff had enough faith in me to run it this week,” Brennan said. “I

headed for the pylon, didn’t want to get caught from behind, and it worked out.” The two touchdowns were the first two of Brennan’s collegiate career. Junior wide receiver Austin Sandusky caught a 23-yard touchdown pass from backup

Class of 2017 sets new donation record Forty-five percent of the class of 2017 donated to Hillsdale, the highest percentage ever

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See Football A8

Erik Prince says privatizing military cuts costs and save lives

Senior Ashlee Moran was named Homecoming queen uring the Saturday football game. Josephine von Dohlen | Collegian

“The money doesn’t just got to a Central Hall-shaped piggy bank,” McGinness said. “It actually goes to an immediate cause — scholarships that help current students.” According to the President’s Report for the 2016 2017 year, the cost of providing an education for one student at Hillsdale College is $72,000 per year, a cost already cut in half because of the donors. In addition, nearly all students — 98 percent — receive additional financial aid. The average college or university receives one-third of its total funding from the government. Because Hillsdale College does not accept any government funding, including government loans or the GI Bill, donors are the biggest source of funding. The marketing department targets three types of people for

threshold for the first time since homecoming last season. Ficyk directed the offense for four possessions in the second half, giving Stewart a rest thanks to the lopsided score. The sophomore quarterback led the Chargers

to scoring opportunities three times. “When you compare [Ficyk and Stewart], they’re both good quarterbacks,” Sandusky said. “It’s the same offense, nothing different. They know it, we know it. The routes are all the same. It’s just a matter of going out there and doing our jobs.” Ficyk finished the game 7-for-11 with 108 yards passing. Third-string redshirt freshman quarterback Ty Cox made it onto the field for the Chargers’ last offensive possession of the game. Hillsdale continues to get production out of its backfield, despite the news that 2016 honorable mention all-GLIAC running back Joe Reverman will miss the remainder of the season. The junior entered the year recovering from offseason knee surgery, and re-aggravated the injury on Sept. 9 against Michigan Tech. He, along with doctors, decided another surgery is his best option in the long run. In the meantime, sophomore running back David Graham continued to build on

Blackwater founder advocates for privatized military

For complete Homecoming coverage, see A2

By | Alex Nester Collegian Reporter The class of 2017 claims 45 percent participation in alumni donations this year, the highest percentage from a recently graduated class to date. More than 2,000 alumni donated $5.2 million to Hillsdale College from July 2016 to June 2017. The officers of the class chose to partner with the 1844 Society by donating to the Ransom Dunn Scholarship Fund, according Colleen McGinness, director of strategic partnership and student giving, in an email. Four seniors from the class of 2017 received this scholarship, thanks to donations from the class of 2016, and three current seniors are now receiving monies donated from the class of 2017.

quarterback Steven Ficyk in the fourth quarter to put the Chargers over the 50-point

scholarship donations: “fans and friends” of the college, alumni, and current students. Friends of the college, people not affiliated with the college directly, donate the most: 88 percent of total scholarship donations. The 1844 Society currently uses Give Campus, a website for students to donate online. One 2017 alumna, Anna Goodwin, said she donated to the scholarship fund over Venmo. Junior and 1844 Society President Shelby Bargenquast joined the society as a sophomore and said she believes in the importance of giving back to the school in a manner that impacts current students. “Some students can’t come back due to unforeseen financial circumstances,” Bargenquast said. “Being able to help means a lot, and I find it rewarding to give back.”

The 1844 Society’s threepronged mission statement emphasizes the importance of gratitude, stewardship, and service, and the Society encourages students and alumni to donate both to the Ransom Dunn Scholarship and to various other programs, including the current campaign for athletic scholarships. Last year’s 1844 Society members, which included students from the classes of 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020, donated a total of $23,859 and have pledged another $68,000 in donations to scholarship programs. This was raised by the semesterly dues of $18.44, as well as the promise to donate $184.44 within three years of graduating from the college. “There is a difference with our alumni,” McGinness said. “You can’t force this type of gratitude.”

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By | Jordyn Pair News Editor For Blackwater founder Erik Prince ’92, a government-funded military just isn’t going to be enough. “Sixteen years of war, a trillion dollars in Afghanistan, and we’re losing,” the Hillsdale alumnus said in his lecture in Searle Center on Monday afternoon. “I think as taxpayers and citizens, as parents who send our kids into difficult places, it’s time to rethink what’s been going on.” To a crowd of more than 300 Center for Constructive Alternatives attendees and students, Prince argued for increased privatization of the military, saying companies like Blackwater, which provide private military services, can reduce the cost and number of lives poured into war. “We’re wasting a lot of money,” he said. “Conventional approaches have not been working for the last 16 years.” Prince left the U.S. Naval Academy to attend Hillsdale but returned after his graduation in 1992. He founded Blackwater in 1997 to provide private military contracting services. He later sold the company, now named Academi, amid controversy. Prince also wrote the book “Civilian Warriors: The Inside Story of Blackwater and the Unsung Heroes of the War on Terror.” In his lecture, Prince spoke to the bloat and ineffectiveness of the military, using the U.S. Navy as an example. He said despite an overabundance of commanding officers, the Navy still struggles with “multiple collisions [between friendly ships], real culture problems, and real readiness issues.” Transferring the military to the private sector, he ar-

gued, could reduce spending and boost innovation. “Imagine if the Pentagon today tried to build an iPhone,” he said to laughter from the crowd. “Why has there been so much advancement in the tech space? Because it’s the least regulated.” It would also save lives, he said, since a smaller, private team could work faster than military forces. Private response teams are not a new concept, according to Prince. Early insurance companies who provided firefighting crews were essentially a contracted response team, as was the Flying Tigers, the volunteer pilot crew from the United States who defended Japan from China during World War II. “This idea that contractors are a new thing: sorry, but that’s ignorance,” Prince said. And although privatized military contracting might receive pushback elsewhere, some veterans in attendance reacted positively to Prince’s idea. “I think most veterans think it’s a good idea,” said freshman Elias McConnell, who served for four years in the Marine Corps before attending Hillsdale College. Senior John Novak, who served in the Marine Corps for 13 years, said the life-saving aspect of Prince’s proposal particularly interested him. “I thought it was great, as far as effectiveness and being easier on the American people,” Novak said. For Prince, it comes down to the power of the free market. “If you believe in the power of market forces… [If you believe] in the power of the private sector,” Prince said, “you should think about how the private sector can do better in the national security space.”

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