The Hillsdale Collegian 10.31.19

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Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Vol. 143 Issue 9 - October 31, 2019

Hillsdale Shotgun Team wins Division III Nationals By | Austin Gergens Collegian Reporter In its most important competition of the fall season, the Hillsdale College Shotgun Team delivered its best performance of the year. Over the Oct. 19 weekend, the Hillsdale College Shotgun Team claimed a Division III victory over 27 other schools during the fall Scholastic Clay Target Program Nationals tournament in Columbus, Ohio. Not only did the team take first by a large margin of 78 clays, they also ranked fifth in the High Overall category against teams of all divisions. More than 200 athletes participated in the tournament, which included the standard events: Trap, Skeet, and Sporting Clays. While the combined efforts of the team contributed to the win, there were also several significant individual achievements made during the three-day shoot. Freshman Woody Glazer, who led the team in trap, had the biggest individual accomplishment of the year to date. Glazer took first in the High Overall category for the Trap shooting competition. Glazer

shot 198 clays out of 200 clays, earning himself the title SCTP American Collegiate National Champion. “I didn’t think much of this competition other than I was competing for my friends and teammates,” Glazer said. “I tried to be my best for the team.” While he feels this is an important win for making a name for himself in the collegiate world, Glazer says he is also striving to be better in other disciplines so that he can be a better all-around shooter for the team. Freshman Ida Brown finished fourth overall in Ladies Trap with a score of 193 out of 200 clays. The team’s Mental Coach Bob Palmer has been working with the team to develop strategies of getting in the “zone,” which helped Brown during her skeet competition. Brown described how in between stations the comb on the top of her gun came loose. She managed to fix it and still finish the round with a score of 24. She attributed her calmness during the technical difficulties partially to Palmer’s strategies. Senior Lucas Pieraccini

was the fifth place HOA in the Skeet competition, with a score of 198 clays. Additionally, four shooters shot 100 straight during the competition. Brown and Glazer shot 100 straight in Trap, and Pieraccini and Tommy Rodgers shot 100 in Skeet. For Rodgers, this was especially significant because it was his first time doing so in a competition. After the rest of the team had finished their rounds, they gathered to watch Rodgers finish his. Head Coach Jordan Hintz said it was an unexpected occurrence, but that he and the team were very happy about it. “When I broke my 100th target, I just told myself that I knew I could do it and that I finally provided value to the team and to myself,” Rodgers said. “The support from the team was great.” Hintz said he was pleased with the team’s performance. “I think it has a lot of bearing on the rest of the season because I felt everything was working together,” Coach Hintz said. “My hope would be that this is the norm now.”

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Senior Arena Lewis led the Chargers to victory, finishing second overall at the GMAC conference championships. For coverage, see A10.

Courtesy | Ursuline College Ahletics

Senior class to donate ten oak trees for quad By | Madeline Peltzer Assistant Editor In the midst of Parents Weekend festivities, seniors took an hour out of their evenings to celebrate the class of 2020. The first event of its kind, Christening the Quad invited seniors to gather in the Dow Hotel lobby on Friday night to mingle with friends, enjoy an array of hors d’oeuvres, listen to a live jazz band, and learn what their class gift

would be. “This is very unlike past senior class gift announcements and was something we thought would be fun and unique,” said Senior Class President Adam Buchmann. “We wanted to make it a social event for the class.” Fundraising Chair Lucy Meckler announced the gift: 10 large, live oak trees that will be planted on the quad between Christ Chapel and Central Hall before graduation in May. Meckler ex-

plained that the class officers decided on the gift after reviewing results from a survey they sent out to seniors over the summer. 60% said they wanted something meaningful, lasting, and that would give back to the student body. “We’re the only class who has seen the quad pre-, during, and post-Chapel construction, which is kind of impressive because no other class will ever see that

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Q&A: Michael Goodwin By | Lily McHale Collegian Reporter Michael Goodwin is the chief politcal columnist for the New York Post and a regular contributor to Fox News and Fox Business. Before joining the Post in 2009, he was the political columnist for the New York Daily News. Prior to that, he worked for the New York Times for 16 years. Goodwin is the Dow Journalism Program’s Fall 2019 Pulliam Fellow.

The student-made dirt path to Howard was paved over this past weekend. For coverage, see A3. Nolan Ryan | Collegian

Former Times writer discusses paper’s decline By | Ashley Kaitz Collegian Freelancer In Ernest Hemingway’s novel “The Sun Also Rises,” one character asks, “How did you go bankrupt?” The other replies, “Two ways: gradually, and then suddenly.” According to Michael Goodwin, the decline of one of the world’s most famous newspapers could be described the same way. Goodwin, chief political columnist at the New York Post, gave a lecture titled, “The Downfall of the New York Times” on Oct. 24. He shared his opinion about the decline of the once-trusted newspaper, using knowledge he gathered over the sixteen years he worked there. Goodwin was on campus for the last two weeks as the Follow @HDaleCollegian

Eugene C. Pulliam Distinguished Visiting Fellow in Journalism. He taught a one-credit course on opinion journalism. “The collapse of the Times that we speak of is not about dollars and cents,” Goodwin said. “It is about the collapse of the traditional journalistic standards of fairness and restraint.” Goodwin said that falling standards at the Times are largely responsible for the current state of American journalism because of the paper’s power and influence. “The collapse of the Times’ standards is a virus infecting journalism everywhere, and the public has noticed,” Goodwin said. “A poll last year found that 72% of Americans believe ‘tradi-

tional major news sources report news they know to be fake, false, or purposely misleading.’” Although many Americans do not trust major news sources, Goodwin said this wasn’t always the case. He revealed that the Times’ own style manual says “fairness and impartiality should be the hallmark of all news articles and news analysis that appear in the Times.” Adolph Ochs, who bought the Times in 1896 when it was a struggling newspaper, was committed to fostering “civil discourse” in journalism. “He wanted his paper to present the news ‘in language that is parlia-

See Times A3

encouraging.

What have been your favorite pieces to write? I was just grateful to be writing in the beginning. I would write about anything. My first front page story in the NYT was about the weather. And I was heartbroken. Someone said to me, “It’s what people care about most. That’s why it’s on the front page!” And I learned a lesson from that. It’s not about me, it’s about the reader. I really enjoyed

Whatever mediums exist in the future, those skills will always be in demand and make you relevant and able to function. Experience breeds skill. It’s not a talent. I don’t think it’s God given. It’s something you learn.

Were you always interested in current events? I was very interested in current events. I always had an appreciation of government and the importance of it. And I have enjoyed writing about politics for a very long time. I actually admire politicians. First of all, Did you write for I think you cannot your high school or cover anything if you college newspaper? hate it. You can’t be That’s a great a sports writer if you question. I did hate sports. You can’t not. But, the most write about politics if important person in you hate politicians. my writing career I mean it’s not right, was my senior high it’s not fair to them, school English and it’s not fair to the teacher, a woman reader. You won’t do named Mrs. Novak. a good job at it. It’s She used to make good to write about us write every day the things you like, in class, and I fell in the things you care love with writing. about. If you don’t Years later, when I Michael Goodwin taught a class on opinions like the subject that got to be a reporter writing for two weeks. julia Mullins | Collegian disdain will come at the New York through and it will Times, she used to not make your write to me and correct my writing about sports. Not writing interesting to read. articles. She was absolutely the games, I don’t think I What will the reader get out brilliant about the English ever had a final score in of you sneering all the time? language. any of my stories, it was all But if you enjoy it, think about the business, about about what the reader will What did you learn the scandals. get out of that. from working in the Morgue of the New York Do you have any advice How has your experiTimes that helped you in for students who want to ence been teaching here at your writing career? break into the journalism Hillsdale this past week? Being around journalworld? I am really enjoying the ism, reading the paper, Do it. Go for it. Because students. I think they’re seeing what the reporters if you can master the skills sharp, on the ball, they care, were doing, talking to them, of writing, interviewing, they’re earnest, and they’re getting to know some of talking, and thinking on serious about their work. I them made me feel like I deadline, these are the hope people are having fun, was becoming part of this fundamental skills. Clear too! organization and that was thinking, clear writing.

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