When the Hillsdale College women’s cross country team traveled to Olivet College for the Comet Open, a 5k race that the women said they planned to treat as a practice run. According to head coach R. P. White, the team achieved that goal, and is now charged up for the next meet of the season....
Whitmer challenged in narrow lead over Dixon
Though Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer leads her Republican opponent Tudor Dixon, the race is far from decided. Whitmer led her Republican opponent Tudor Dixon by 11%, in a poll of likely voters last month. But Whitmer may have to win over a number of Michiganders to remain in the governor’s mansion, as more than half...
As nation, state increase electric vehicle use, county offers two charging stations
Hillsdale County is home to only two electric vehicle charging stations, at a time when federal and state programs aim to increase electric vehicle usage and create a national electric vehicle charging network. The two charging stations are in Jonesville, according to the Department of Energy’s Alternative Fuels Data Center. There are no stations...
Patriot’s Day event offers helicopter rides, raffles
Students and local residents will have the chance to catch a birds-eye view of Hillsdale on Sunday, Sept. 11, during the seventh annual Patriot’s Day Fly-In. From 7 a.m. to 2 p.m, the Hillsdale Municipal Airport will offer plane and helicopter rides, breakfast, raffles, and a military aircraft display. Airport Manager Ginger Moore said the...
Kacey Reeves West ’18 lectures on Big Tech
Despite a growing sentiment among academics and legal scholars favoring strong government regulation for Big Tech monopolies, Kacey Reeves West said the Chicago School of Economics still provides the answers concerning companies that impact every American’s life. Hillsdale’s political economy club Praxis hosted West’s lecture, “Antitrust and Big Tech: Has the Chicago School Failed?,” on...




