Midterms are rough on everyone. They’re like a gaping, evil hole of hell right in the middle of the semester. Almost before you know it, that President’s Ball high has worn off, leaving you with nothing but the bare shell of an existence until Olds Glow. That, and more than two whole midterms to take...
Councilman announces mayoral run
Matt Bentley hands his candidate paperwork to City Clerk Katy Price Monday night. Courtesy | Isaac Kirshner Matt Bentley, a Hillsdale native, will face the acting mayor Matt Bentley announced he will run for mayor of Hillsdale in the August special election, and he’s “singularly focused” on stopping plans to create bike lanes and other...
Pothole plague: Repairs increase but complaints remain
A pothole on Howder Street. Ally Hall | Collegian Hillsdale should imitate the Roman Empire’s high quality roads, according to Samuel Sadler, a first semester graduate student. “If you go back to what made the Roman Empire so great, part of it was the fact that they had this great system of roads,” he added,...
Professors discuss Trump’s economics
Associate Professor of Economics Charles Steele discusses the economy under Trump in Lane 124. Courtesy | Megan Li The three greatest threats to American liberty today are the government, the left, and malign foreign actors, said Charles Steele, associate professor of economics and director of the Center for Commerce and Freedom, in a talk hosted...
Gehrke lectures on history of Catholic church
Jason Gehrke ’07 teaches history at Hillsdale College. Courtesy | Hillsdale College The history of Catholic Christianity after 325 A.D. is the history of being divided by its agreement, Assistant Professor of History and Director of the Center for Military History Jason Gehrke said during his lecture “What Happened to Catholic Christianity?” Feb. 28. Gehrke,...




