Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 141 Issue 27 - April 26, 2018
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The men’s tennis team poseswith the G-MAC Championship trophy. Dugan Delp | Courtesy
Chargers tennis teams win G-MAC championships Men make history with first conference victory By | Scott McClallen Assistant Editor For the first time in school history, the Hillsdale College men’s tennis team are conference champions. On Saturday, the Chargers topped the Walsh Cavaliers in Owensboro, Kentucky, to become the 2018 G-MAC tournament champions. The Chargers blanked No. 4 seed Davis & Elkins University 5-0 during the conference semifinals on Friday. Hillsdale swept doubles play and then took two singles matches to clench the five points required for a tournament victory. Junior Justin Hyman and Sophomore Charlie Adams
won No. 1 doubles 8-6. Senior captain Dugan Delp and junior John Ciraci were No. 2 doubles winners 8-3, while sophomore Milan Mirkovic and Adams clenched No. 3 doubles 8-1. Sophomore Michael Szabo shutout No. 6 singles 6-0, 6-0, while Ciraci took No. 5 singles 6-0, 6-1. Mirkovic said Hillsdale’s semifinal shutout mentally prepared the Chargers to face No. 3 seed Walsh, who upset No. 2 seed Findlay on Friday, 5-4. “We won that match 5-0, which was crucial for entering the finals with confidence,” Mirkovic said. Hillsdale defeated Walsh University 5-1 on Sunday to
claim the title. The Chargers started off 2-1 in doubles play, with Hyman and Adams shutting out No. 1 doubles 8-0 and Delp and Ciraci fighting for an 8-2 victory at No. 2 doubles. Hillsdale entered singles play three wins away from clenching the championship. Adams claimed No. 2 singles 6-1, 6-1, his 11th consecutive singles win, followed by Mirkovic’s No. 1 singles win 6-3, 6-1. Delp, Hillsdale’s lone senior who helped start the team three years ago, grabbed his final Charger victory at No. 4 singles 6-1, 6-0 to clench the trophy.
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The men’s tennis team took first in the G-MAC championship. Dugan Delp | Courtesy
Bergen to leave president’s office By | Carmel Kookogey Collegian Reporter Victoria Bergen’s colleagues describe her as the gatekeeper of the president’s office. “If she were not so sweet and instantly ready to be helpful to everyone, I would call her the unmoved mover. She has divine attributes, but not that kind of deity,” College President Larry Arnn said. Bergen, who serves as the president’s office executive assistant, is leaving at the end
of the summer, after seven years of service. Bergen, who studied political economy while at Hillsdale, has worked in the president’s office since a month after her graduation in 2011. Dean of Women Diane Philipp recommended her for the job at a basketball game at the beginning of her last semester of school. “She told me there was an opening in the president’s office and that she thought I should apply,” Bergen said. “I thanked her; I thought it was
quite a compliment ,and I was quite inspired by that, but inside I was thinking, ‘Yeah, right, I could never work up there.’ I didn’t really think about it after that.” Bergen, who was applying for jobs with different political organizations in Washington, D.C., at the time, did not consider the opportunity again until Professor of Law Robert Blackstock suggested the job to her, independent of Philipp.
By | Madeline Fry Culture Editor “Hi, Pastalamizi,” Sue Postle calls from her little apartment off the lobby of Benzing Residence. Her burnt orange door is flung open, and a bouquet of “thank you” flowers rests on a stool: The women of Benzing have thrown her a surprise party to express their appreciation for her care and commitment as their house mom. She’s just come in from the side lobby, which she has recently turned into a bedroom for a resident assistant recovering from surgery. While residents pass by, the Benzing
house director calls to them to join them in singing “Tutti Frutti” by Little Richard. The song’s key line: “I got a girl, named Sue, / She knows just what to do.” She calls all the girls “pastalamizis,” which is a generic term of endearment or mild irritation, depending on the situation. “Nicknames are terms of endearment,” she says. It’s not the only way she expresses affection. An Italian, Postle shows love to her residents by singing, laughing, crying, or dancing with them, sometimes all in a moment. Allison Duber ’17, who
lived in Benzing her sophomore year, says Postle was her “mother away from home.” “When I came back from indoor track and field nationals, she took my trophy from me and ran it around the entire dorm shouting to everyone about our women’s second place finish. She then proceeded to sing, and I don’t even remember what song it was because I was laughing so hard. She is always the most excited person if you tell her any kind of good news, and she wants everyone to share in the celebration,” Duber said.
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Benzing house director to retire at end of semester
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The women’s tennis team defeated Walsh Univeristy on Saturday to win the G-MAC Championship. Corinne Prost | Courtesy
Women secure NCAA tournament bid
By | Breana Noble Editor-in-Chief They did it. The women’s tennis Chargers won their first conference tournament championship since 1983 on Saturday, after defeating the University of Findlay 5-0 on Friday and Walsh University 5-1 on Saturday in Owensboro, Kentucky. It is Hillsdale’s fifth G-MAC championship this academic year. Ranked No. 47 nationally and No. 6 regionally by the Intercollegiate Tennis Association, Hillsdale College’s seniorless team earned with its championship victory its first-ever automatic bid into
conference awards in their first-ever G-MAC awards banquet. The conference named junior Halle Hyman the G-MAC Player of the Year for taking over No. 1 singles and going undefeated in the conference. Overall, the 2015 Freshman of the Year was 22-9 this season. Hyman’s doubles partner, freshman Hannah Cimpeanu, won G-MAC Freshman of the Year. Cimpeanu fit right into the Chargers’ lineup and has a 24-5 record, the best single-season winning percentage for any Charger player since the program’s 2011 revival.
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CHP explores the jungle By | Regan Meyer Collegian Reporter Students attending Centrahallapalooza on Saturday will step from Hillsdale College’s cozy campus into the wild depths of the jungle. The Student Activities Board this week is working to transform the lot next to the Mu Alpha Residence into a jungle complete with live animals in the form of an exotic petting zoo. SAB team member junior Kendra Lantis said the team chose the theme so that students could immerse themselves in it and dress the part. “We just loved how fun last year’s space CHP was with having a theme people could dress up to,” Lantis said. “We didn’t see that as being as crazy and fun as people wanted it to be. We all came up with Welcome to the Jungle together and love that there is a lot of freedom to dress up.” SAB Creative Team Leader senior Jake Kenyon said students should look forward to many different aspects of CHP. “The theme is amazing,” Kenyon said. “It’s going to be lit because of that. Everyone is going to be all dressed
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the NCAA Division II Midwest Regional tournament on Saturday. The team will head to Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan, with a 14-4 overall record and an undefeated 7-0 in the G-MAC. “We kind of dominated this season, going undefeated and sweeping the conference awards,” head coach Nikki Walbright said. “It confirmed the achievements my girls did this year and how hard we worked, which was nice. It was a really fun way to end the G-MAC play. It’s kind of a new era, a new beginning for us.” On the evening of April 19, the Chargers swept the
up. There will be a costume contest. It’s going to be a great time with friends and good food. Be prepared to have a great time, and there’s chicken tenders. People need to know that.” The costume contest will occurr at 9:30 p.m., before the final musical act, electronic dance music group SEEB, performs. Winners will receive a prize that has not yet been determined. “It will be kind of a hype thing,” senior event coordinator Lyndsey Bice said. “Our crew will be on the lookout for good costumes throughout the day, and then we’ll personally go up to those people on stage. The winner will be based off crowd applause.” Before SEEB takes the stage, three student bands will perorm their own sets: Penny and the Mandimes, The Village Idiots, and Trophy Wives. Director of Student Activites Ashlyn Landherr said securing SEEB was based on feedback from CHP 2017. “We brought in the Lost Kings, a DJ act, last year,” Landherr said. “We really liked that and got a lot of good survey feedback from it. The students knew they wanted to do that type of act again.
We worked with an agent to try and get some ideas. We had to bargain a little bit for sure, but it wasn’t too difficult to bring them here.” While the music and costumes are a large part of CHP, SAB has planned a variety of different activities to keep students entertained throughout the night. “We’ll have lots of food,” Lantis said. “There will be lots of things to do with friends, so whether it’s inflatables, face-painting, listening to college bands open up for our main act, there’s going to be a lot of food, a lot of activities, and just a lot of places to enjoy each other’s company.” As the last SAB event of the year, Landherr said CHP is a great way to celebrate the end of the year. “It’s just a really fun way for everyone to come together,” Landherr said. “This is an event that everyone goes to. It’s a great way to build community especially towards the end of the year. It’s the last thing for seniors. For everyone else, it’s the last thing before they go home for the summer. It’s a culmination of everything: all those memories you’ve made throughout the year, all of the relationships that you’ve built.” Pexels Look for The Hillsdale Collegian