Homecoming Issue.Indd

Homecoming Issue.Indd

Who is the The best-dressed professor? Page 5 Collegian September 21, 2012 The Grove City College Student Newspaper THINGS2DO Homecoming Edition Friday: 3 p.m. Campus tour (beginning at Crawford Hall) 3:30 p.m. Alumni lecture: “Heaven in the American Imagination” by Dr. Gary S. Smith ’72 (Sticht Lecture Hall) Saturday: 9-10:30 a.m. Continental breakfast with Willie the Wolverine and the cheerleaders 9 a.m. Women’s water polo (Competition Pool) 9-10 a.m. Shuttle service (follow signs posted in parking areas and event locations; also from 12-5 p.m.) 9-10:30 a.m. Student Research Showcase (upper level STU) 9:30-9:45 a.m. President Jewell’s Offi cial Welcome (STU) Kevin Hanse 10 a.m. Homecoming Worship Service (Harbison) Women’s rugby match 9-11 a.m. All-alumni registration (HAL) 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Fellowship of Christian Educators Book Fair Looking homeward (Room 122, HAL) 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. All-alumni registration (Hospitality tent/Quad) Campus alive with Homecoming festivities 11 a.m. Homecoming Parade 11 a.m. - All-Alumni Lunch Mariah Syre Richard Jewell ’67 has a special Stillwagon, extensive prepara- 1 p.m. Staff Writer emotional attachment to this tion in the form of contacting 12-4 p.m. Greek Village (below Rainbow Bridge) year in particular, as his class is outside equipment companies, Future Grovers play area (Main Quad) As Grove City College celebrating its 45th reunion. buying supplies and meeting 1 p.m. Men’s rugby match welcomes back alumni and old Almost half a year of plan- with campus offi cials drives the Campus tour (beginning at Crawford Hall) friends this weekend, students ning went into staging this event’s organization. 1:15 p.m. Float awards and pre-game show (Thorn Field) and faculty remember what a busy week. According to Current students had the 2 p.m. Football Game special time of year Homecom- the Homecoming Commit- opportuni- ing is. Even College President tee president, senior Bethany ty to enjoy HOMECOMING 3 New archives house College treasures Claire Healey Hilary Lewis ’09 stepped in and received, hoping that someday put her archival skills to work. “ we would have a profes- Contributing Writer “We’ve been focusing on the sional archivist on staff ,” Diane Yearbooks, some old and preservation of the materials Grundy, head director of the worn, others glossy and pol- fi rst,” Lewis said. Library, said. ished, line the 15-foot wall Lewis obtained her master’s In 2009, Melissa MacLeod from corner to corner. On the degree in archival studies and ’04, senior director of Alumni far side of the room, gray fi ling public history from Indiana and College Relations, began boxes line the shelves from fl oor University of Pennsylvania. She to organize the archives into a to ceiling, containing photos, contacted the College to see if system better suited to research news articles and building she could do any work for the and more easily accessible to blueprints. A beige Gamma Chi school, and it hired her to begin alumni and students. blazer dated from the 1970s ordering and preserving the “Grove City College has a lot hangs in the corner. This room, existing contents of the archives. of tradition. In alumni, it’s about full of artifacts and steeped in Alumni who wanted to preserving common threads,” history, resides in the basement donate photos, fraternity or MacLeod said. of the Carnegie Alumni Center. sorority paddles, and framed With Lewis’s arrival, preserva- For the fi rst time, Grove diplomas or other memorabilia, tion work is in full swing. Lewis City College is reorganizing often called the Henry Buhl works in the archives room two its archives room. For years, Library, as did those attempt- days a week reorganizing the no specifi c system existed for ing to research genealogies or print documents and memora- housing the various memora- college history. Though the bilia. bilia, legal documents and news Library staff did its best to keep She places print items in acid- items which directly link to the donations in order and answer free folders to counteract the College’s history. questions, it was clear a profes- aging process. Dozens of boxes However, in January 2012, sional archivist was needed. fi le delicate Kevin Hanse “We always kept the items we copies of old ARCHIVES 4 Archivist Hilary Lewis ’09 organizes documents in Carnegie Hall basement. The Collegian Vol. XXI No. VI Life E! Perspectives Sports News..................................2 Bon Appé t is making Get a sneak peak at Mum- Can Wall Street be saved? Get an behind-the-scenes Life.....................................5 some changes. How will ford & Sons’ upcoming Peter Melnik reviews the look at the trainers who keep Entertainment....................10 they aff ect you? album release. new book ‘God and Man on the Wolverine football team Perspec ves.......................12 Pg. 6 Pg. 10 Wall Street.’ on the fi eld. Sports.................................14 Pg. 13 Pg. 16 2 News September 21, 2012 OutsideOutside the BubbleBubble Obama administrationadministration seeks to ban smokingsmoking on campus Kristie EshelmanEshelman exactlyexactly howhow thethe initiative tion,”tion,” UniversityUniversity ofof MichiganMichigan andand employees.employees. To encourageencourage 120 collegecollege campusescampuses imple-imple- NewsNews EditorEditor wouldwould achieveachieve its goal.goal. TobaccoTobacco ResearchResearch NetworkNetwork studentsstudents to quitquit smokingsmoking – at mentedmented smoke-freesmoke-free policies.policies. HeHe beganbegan byby thankingthanking the executive director and Koh leastleast while on campuscampus – the Williams said the most suc-suc- WitWithh tthehe UniversitUniversityy ooff UniversityUniversity ofof MichiganMichigan forfor its advisoradvisor CliffordClifford DouglasDouglas said.said. schoolschool offersoffers freefree sessions to cessfulcessful effortsefforts to eliminateeliminate thethe MichiMichigan’sgan’s national rereputa-puta- effortsefforts in eliminatingeliminating smokingsmoking “Through“Through theirtheir campuscampus poli-poli- supportsupport themthem ifif theythey attemptattempt use ofof tobaccotobacco arose fromfrom thethe tion and the imimplementationplementation amongamong the student popula-popula- cies,cies, collegescolleges and universities to quitquit smoking.smoking. It also pro-pro- students and staff, themselves of its no-smokinno-smokingg ppolicyolicy tion,tion, highlightinghighlighting the health havehave a uniqueunique opportunityopportunity vides free nicotine patchespatches – those directlydirectly affected byby this ppastast JJuly,uly, the universituniversityy problemsproblems that smokingsmoking causes toto influence a student’s dailydaily andand gum.gum. thethe smokers.smokers. pprovedroved to be an ideal location and the influence that collegecollege life.”life.” In addition, the Univer-Univer- “[These policies]policies] typicallytypically fforor HowarHowardd KoKoh,h, assistant campusescampuses can have.have. TheThe UniversityUniversity of Michi- sitysity of MichiganMichigan offers free come about because students secretarsecretaryy for health at the “We“We are witnessingwitnessing a publicpublic gan’sgan’s chiefchief healthhealth officer,officer, Dr.Dr. counselingcounseling sessions andand mon-mon- andand facultyfaculty are question-question- DeDepartpart of Health and Human healthhealth evolution to make RobertRobert Winfield, said the etaryetary incentives to encour-encour- inging the role of tobacco in an Services, to announce the smokingsmoking historyhistory and protectprotect ban has effectivelyeffectively eliminated ageage employeesemployees to quit,quit, and educational settingsetting and decid-decid- federal Tobacco-Free ColleCollegege peoplepeople from tobacco depen-depen- smokerssmokers on campus.campus. “There each employees’employees’ benefits planplan inging to discouragediscourage its use and CamCampuspus Initiative on SeSept.pt. 1212.. dence so that theythey have a wasn’t a smoker in sight,”sight,” he covers nicotine-replacementnicotine-replacement exposure,”exposure,” she said.said. AAss ppartart of the Health and fightingfighting chancechance to enjoyenjoy theirtheir said,said, referringreferring to thethe entrance drugs.drugs. Over 774 collegescolleges havehave Human SServices’ervices’ Tobacco fullfull potentialpotential forfor health,”health,” KohKoh of thethe MichiganMichigan Union, a American Nonsmokers’Nonsmokers’ bannedbanned smokingsmoking on theirtheir Control StrateStrategicgic Action Plan, said.said. popularpopular placeplace for smokers to RightsRights Foundation ProjectProject campusescampuses voluntarily,voluntarily, upup the new initiative tartargetsgets “Twenty“Twenty million students,students, loiter.loiter. ManagerManager Liz Williams said from 131 campusescampuses in 2008,2008, collecollegege camcampusespuses sspecificallypecifically about a third of all youngyoung TheThe smokingsmoking bans, while campaignscampaigns to stopstop smokingsmoking accordingaccording to the American in an attemattemptpt to ban the use adults in this country,country, are welcomed byby many,many, posepose on campuscampus are gaininggaining trac-trac- Nonsmokers’ RightsRights Founda-Founda- ooff totobacco.bacco. KoKohh ddidid not reveareveall enrolledenrolled in higherhigher educa-educa- challengeschallenges forfor some studentsstudents tion. DuringDuring thethe pastpast year,year, tion.tion. Freedom Readers goes British UK economist highlights accomplishments of Margaret Thatcher Kristie Eshelman Blundell’s work outside of before entering politics. edge of Margaret

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