10.22.2015 Hillsdale Collegian

Page 1

Courtesy

Greg Vylytel |

CROSS-COUNTRY CONCLUDES STRONG REGULAR SEASON Men take first, women take second at Michigan Intercollegiates. A10

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Local Employee Resigns Over Confederate Flag Hillsdale resident Wesley Rogers resigned from his job at Bob Evans instead of removing his Confederate Flag. A7

Alumna poet returns for homecoming Visiting Writer Kjersten Kauffman ’08 to participate in the Tower Light’s 60th anniversary celebration with a reading of her poetry. B1

www.hillsdalecollegian.com

Vol. 139 Issue 7 - 22 Oct. 2015

Honors Program becomes ‘Collegiate Scholars’

er is a serious problem for the consent of the governed,” Grant said. Associate Professor of Politics Kevin Portteus added that this marks the first time speakership searches have led to discussing candidates not in Congress. Regardless of who’s chosen, Hayes said the characteristics that led him to propose Arnn are the same needed for anyone to See Hayes A2

By |Breana Noble Assistant Editor After two years of discussion, Hillsdale College’s Honors Program finalized plans to change its name, alter its recruitment process, and get a new director. To emphasize the interdisciplinary aspects of the program, the name is changing to Collegiate Scholars. Additionally, the school closed the program to freshmen. The plan is 30 new members with at least a 3.4 GPA will apply for the program following the end of the academic year and enter as sophomores. Associate Professor of Classical Studies Eric Hutchinson is working with Professor of History Richard Gamble, current head of the program, to assume the role of director after the spring semester. “Honors can suggest — can suggest — that somehow Hillsdale College has to be improved to make it good enough for a certain applicant,” Gamble said. “That’s not the case.” Collegiate Scholars will no longer have core class sections specific to the program. Requirements will not specify Collegiate Scholars take more advanced science and math classes than the core curriculum necessitate as well. Students in the program will still write a thesis, take seminars, and have the opportunity to graduate with honors. Gamble said by accepting students after freshman year, comparing applicants becomes easier because students’ grades come from Hillsdale courses instead of a variety of high school backgrounds. Not having freshmen was a point of contention for current students in the program. “We were upset,” Honors Program co-President junior Luke Zahari said. “It was a formative experience. It was the thing that defined our freshman year and our introduction to a community of learning at Hillsdale.” Gamble said he hopes the seminars and program events will contribute to the development of community among the program’s members. He said he believes the students will make the most of the changes. Recruitment for the program will occur during the spring semester. Interested freshmen of any GPA may enroll in a new one-credit seminar entitled The Libe r a l See Honors A2

Roche and knew her for almost 40 years. She said Roche was a caregiver. She described how Roche called someone who recently had back surgery and lived alone every day at 9 a.m. to check on them. It was only the onset of an illness this month that made her miss a single day. Professor of Law Bob Blackstock and his family were also friends with Roche for nearly 40 years. “She was a really fine lady: caring, giving, always with an ear and the time for someone who wanted to be heard,” he said. “The world is a poorer place without her.” June Roche made Hillsdale her home after she arrived from Colorado in 1971 with her then-husband, Hillsdale President George Roche III. “She always came back to here,” Murphy said. “She loved to go to Denver and hangout with her high school friends, but she absolutely considered

Hillsdale her home, both the community and still at the college level.” Many said Roche was a gracious hostess while she lived at Broadlawn. After 1999, though less closely connected to the college, she remained a member of the President’s Club, attended Center for Constructive Alternatives seminars, and was present at the 25th anniversary celebration for Hillsdale Academy earlier this month. She participated in the Hillsdale Garden Club, met for breakfasts at the Coffee Cup, and lunched with friends. She is survived by four children, five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. Her funeral service is this morning, Oct. 22, at 11:00 a.m. at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church, 2551 W. Bacon Road. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Salvation Army and Kyomi’s Gift. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to Maggie Murphy at 3200 Stager Driver, Middleville, Michigan, 49333.

Vacant lots on Manning Street, south of Central Hall, will soon become the site of several new homes owned by college supporters. External Affairs | Courtesy

Construction begins on ‘College Park’ homes By |Amanda Tindall Features Editor The nearly vacant block on Manning Street just south of campus could soon be full of new homes owned by Hillsdale College supporters. One college supporter — alumnus William Brodbeck ‘66 — has already begun construction on one of the empty lots that he bought from the college. The school plans to sell the rest of the lots on that block to interested buyers for personal residences. Named “College Park at Hillsdale College,” these homes will be owned by alumni, trustees, friends of the college, parents, and business and national

leaders. The college originally had nine lots for sale, and seven are still available. It requires those wanting to purchase a lot to present a plan of their home to an architectural review board for approval. Brodbeck, chairman of the Hillsdale College Board of Trustees, has purchased the lot closest to College Baptist Church and started construction on his home. “The most phenomenal thing, I think those who are interested will find this as well, is what Hillsdale has to offer, which is extraordinary,” Brodbeck said. “The concerts, the classes, the speakers for the CCAs — all

these things amount to a pretty remarkable spot, which I don’t think is replicated around at other colleges.” Hillsdale’s Chief Administrative Officer Rich Péwé said the plans must fit within specific guidelines to create a fluid transition from the houses into campus. One of the goals of College Park is to create an aesthetically-pleasing neighborhood near campus that allows the surrounding area to blend into the campus. “We’d like to sell those lots [on Manning Street] with certain conditions, essentially deed requirements, that would build the kind of neighborhood that would be ideal,” Péwé said.

“Homes that have a similar style to that of the college — classical. It could be Victorian or neo-classical or a similar style, not modern. They have to be within a certain size that would ensure a particular quality and made out of particular materials. So it wouldn’t have metal siding or something like that.” According to Péwé, the college hopes this development will create an economic bridge between the town and the college. The city of Hillsdale’s Zoning Administrator Alan Beeker agreed, calling the situation a “win-win.” College standards require

See College Park A2

Arnn for Speaker, says Steve Hayes of the Weekly Standard By |Macaela J. Bennett Editor-in-Chief For the first time, candidates outside of Congress have been discussed for Speaker of the House, and President Larry Arnn is one of them. During a Fox News segment two weeks ago, Steve Hayes, Weekly Standard senior writer and Fox News contributor, said Arnn would be a quality choice for the position. While Republicans continue to shuffle the deck of candidates since Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced his plans last month to resign and Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) turned down the bid to replace him in a last-minute decision, no other candidate has garnered widespread support. As a regular on “Special Report with Bret Baier,” Hayes with his fellow panelists discussed the search for a new House Speaker on Oct. 8. During the final commercial break leading into the segment’s conclusion, Baier told

the panelists he wanted to ask about their ideas for a speaker candidate from outside Congress. Hayes had 90 seconds to determine his response, and he said Arnn’s was the first name he considered. “There’s a reason he rose to the top of my head,” Hayes said. “He’s intelligent, serious, and has a background with understanding statesmanship. Having spent hours in the classroom and in lectures he’s given, I know he understands what’s at the heart of the republic.” Hayes said the television segment during which he offered Arnn as a choice was meant mostly in jest, but the reasons he considers him a good candidate are serious. “While principles are being laughed at in the media and in politics, we need someone who can provide big-picture perspective,” Hayes said. “And as someone who knows a lot about Churchill, he knows a little about big things and big battles.” Hayes’s proposal has in-

Shannon wins AEI Scholars Award

By |Nicole Ault Collegian Freelancer

Senior Jack Shannon recently won the American Enterprise Institute’s 2015-2016 Young Scholars Award for his economics honors thesis, which is about the theory of “just price.” Shannon is one of four college students to receive the honor, which includes a $5,000 scholarship and invitation to AEI’s annual spring dinner. Shannon also will defend his thesis before a panel in Washington, D.C. Meredith Schultz, Program Manager of AEI’s Values and Capitalism division, which gave out the awards, said Shannon’s thorough research and unique approach distinguished his thesis. “Jack’s application demonstrated superior understanding Follow @HDaleCollegian

of economic principles and a record of high-quality research in previous projects,” Schultz said. “His research proposal for this award was creative and interdisciplinary — including personal translations of primary sources — and showed the potential to contribute new ideas to this field of research.” As part of his award application, Shannon submitted a prospectus of his thesis project and a statement about his views on free enterprise. “[We looked for] demonstrated academic achievement, significant promise in their field of research, and commitment to principles of liberty, individual opportunity, and free enterprise,” Schultz said. Shannon’s thesis is about the theory of “just price.” The topic’s con-

See AEI A2

duced other media outlets to discuss Arnn’s merits, but Arnn takes the suggestion lightly. “I am more likely to become Speaker of the House of Representatives than I am to become manager of the moon,” Arnn said in an email, “but not much more likely.” Aside from having a close friendship with Arnn, Hayes has other ties to Hillsdale that led him to immediately consider its leader in the speaker discussion. Hayes’s family lineage includes two presidents of Hillsdale College. Also, his great-grandfather was Harold Stock, former owner of Stock’s Mill in downtown Hillsdale. These familial connections meant Hayes spent a lot of time in the city of Hillsdale before understanding the mission of the nearby college. Looking ahead to the continuing debate over who will assume the House’s speakership, Hayes said the job is a “wide open free-for-all” if Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) chooses not to pursue the position.

Steve Hayes, senior writer for the Weekly Standard, appears on Special Report with Brett Baier. Fox News | Courtesy

While Arnn’s is one of a few names not elected to Congress being light-heartedly tossed around for the speakership, Assistant Professor of Politics John Grant said he believes it’s both a bad idea and unconstitutional to have a House Speaker from outside the elected body. “Article I Section 2 [of the United States Constitution] says everyone in the House needs to be elected, so the idea of having an unelected manag-

Remembering June Roche

died Oct. 16. She was 79. Those who knew her remember the passion and energy with which she sought to bless even strangers she encountered. One of her daughters, Maggie Murphy, recalls when she mentioned a student of hers who had been diagnosed with cancer and was struggling with the loss of her hair. “The very next day she said, ‘Come on, we’re going to get her a gift card to a wig shop at the mall so that she can get a wig,’” Murphy said. “If she saw someone in need, she took upon herself to try and make their life just a little bit easier.” Linda Moore, Mossey Library’s public service librarian, was in a monthly breakfast club with External Affairs | Courtesy

By |Micah Meadowcroft Associate Editor June Roche loved people — to help and to care for them. The first wife of former Hillsdale President George Roche III

www.hillsdalecollegian.com

Look for The Hillsdale Collegian


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
10.22.2015 Hillsdale Collegian by The Hillsdale Collegian - Issuu