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Event Review: Freedom Readers

Tuesday, Sept. 25 marked the first “Freedom Readers” event of the year sponsored by The Center for Vision and Values, Grove City College’s own conservative think tank. This month, Professor Richard Kocur (business department) spoke on the healthcare industry, specifically tackling the “Medicare for All” movement popularized most notably by Bernie Sanders.

Professor Kocur is not only personally interested in this subject matter, but he also focuses much of his independent research on this topic. Kocur started his lecture by reviewing the history of healthcare in the United States, then broke down the popular movement seen today and spoke on the implications of such a system in the United States. Kocur discussed how this would not work here due to myriad factors, and explained how those implications would affect the three major players in these scenarios: payers, providers, and patients. While some countries do have single payer systems, Kocur noted that the tax rates are significantly higher there to compensate for the costs, and as a result, certain parts of these nations’ economies and even their own healthcare systems suffer from such a large influx of participants that take part in the system.

Finally, Kocur went on to talk about market-based ideas that the United States could possibly explore to remedy the situation, citing direct patient contracts, health savings account expansion, and the ability to purchase healthcare across state lines as potential viable options.

The Center for Vision and Values is an organization on Grove City College’s campus that employs student fellows in the fields of research and marketing to help promote their events and to aid in producing scholarly content for the organization and their partners. If you would like to learn more about the Center, head over to http://www.visionandvalues.org/, or check out the student-run news site “Checkpoint” at https://www.checkpointnews.org/.

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Event Review: SGA September Coffee House

Tuesday, Oct. 9 featured the kickoff Coffee House concert hosted by the Student Government Association (SGA). The group took over the Student Union by setting up the stage for the six musical acts that performed. Each band was given a 30-minute time-slot to perform their favorite songs in front of their peers.

SGA provides coffee and food for these events, which take place monthly through the entire year on the first Tuesday of the month. This month, members of SGA’s social affairs committee baked homemade sweets for students to enjoy. Things like pumpkin rice krispie treats, cake pops, and more were enjoyed by students. They were such a hit that students cleaned out the entire supply about half way through the event. This event was also so well attended that coffee also ran out at about the same time as the food, which has never happened at one of SGA’s coffee houses before. The group is already prepared to make the appropriate adjustments for the next iteration of their event in November.

Also at this event, SGA ran a social media competition on Instagram where if students posted with the hashtag #gccyeti on Instagram they were entered into a drawing to win one of five mini travel size Yeti cups. The drawings took place after the event and students were awarded their Yetis.

Coffee houses have been one of SGA’s events where they continue to strive in improving. Last year, bands had to audition for the first time to make sure students attending the event would experience the best musical performances they could see. This small change improved the event by a significant amount, which continued into this year. While plans are still in the works for November’s coffee house, be sure to check back here for another event review, and go ahead and follow SGA on Instagram at @gccsga.

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IM Leagues

Intramural Sports (IM Sports) are pretty huge at Grove City College…like, “one of the best programs” kind of huge. Most of the student body participates in some IM sport each year, and there are IM leagues for just about anything you could think of. Everything from IM Basketball to IM Settlers of Catan exist. All of them occur each year on campus.

Registering and signing up for IM sports in the past was a pretty cumbersome process. For sports, you had to fill out a release of liability form for each sport. When a student plays in several sports each year, this got pretty tiring. Plus, if your team had a conflict with one of your scheduled game times and wanted to request a time change, you primarily had to communicate via email with the other team’s captain, which took up too much time to accomplish a fairly easy task.

This year, Grove City College switched over to IM Leagues, an app that handles all aspects of IM sports, and things have been so much easier. Inside the app, a student can register for a sport, join a team, and sign off on their waiver form all digitally. Once part of a team, the schedules are then uploaded to the app, which provides alerts for when one has an upcoming game. There are tons of features that seem like they come right from fantasy football, like the ability to trade players and pick up “free agents” (those who do not have a team).

So far, the transition to the app has gone pretty smoothly, which has eliminated a lot of the common headaches that students have to deal with. It also has helped keep more teams accountable with showing up to games, which has allowed everyone to actually play instead of facing a last minute cancellation due to a communication error beforehand.

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Double Chapel Credits

Grove City College requires students to obtain 16 chapel credits throughout one semester. Chapel credits are offered every Tuesday and Thursday for chapel, which most students usually attend, every Sunday night for a Vespers service, and for myriad additional lectures and events offered throughout the semester. While students at times complain that their semester’s worth of procrastination in obtaining their chapel credits does usually come back to haunt them, there is one event that unites the student body to make sure they attend a double chapel credit opportunity.

While these are usually pretty rare (at most once a semester), these are usually the highest-attended chapel events all semester (for obvious reasons). Students receive two whole chapel credits for attending these events. To put this into perspective, that is one full week of Tuesday and Thursday chapels in a one-hour event. It is easy to see why these would be so popular.

In the past, there have been double chapel credits offered for Orientation Board’s (OB) All-Campus Worship event held on the Quad, which aside from the amount of chapel credits offered, is a top favorite for all students. This year, the Homecoming Worship Service offered double chapel credit in Harbison Chapel. This, once again, drove out the students in masses (for the chapel credit and also for the features of the event). For starters, the service opened with the Warriors Worship team opening with a few songs, before the Homecoming Committee welcomed an alumnus to speak to the student body, offering his words of wisdom from his time as a student with his time in post-graduate life. The service then closed with a few more songs before dismissing students, making sure everyone got their student ID scanned to receive their credit.

This year’s speaker was Josiah Leuenberger (’08), who is now the director of young adult ministry at Orchard Hill Church, a church in the greater Pittsburgh area.

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Event Review: AEX Fall Party

On Saturday, Oct. 6, the men’s housing group Alpha Epsilon Chi (AEX) hosted its annual Fall Party from 7:30-11 p.m. Dr. Dudt, a biology professor at Grove City College, graciously offers his farm as the location of the event.

The event is widely known for its oversized bonfire, where at times nearby surrounding trees are charred from the heat and flames. During the day, many students are often busy with Homecoming festivities, whether it is with another group they are part of or with spending time with their own family, so the event is a great way to wind down a packed day.

The guys purchase apple cider from Emmett’s Orchard, a nearby apple orchard, for attendees to consume while chatting with their friends around the fire. While it does not seem like anything overly special other than being a large bonfire, the event is designed to foster community by having a fun and safe night to hang out off campus with friends.

In the midst of the event, there is an interesting tradition that takes place each year: a story telling time featuring a character named “Wakajankaga.” The tradition was started several years ago by a past group member who was incredibly theatrical and talented enough to make up the entire story on the spot. The time is meant to be a comedic relief, and a sort of “halftime show” to pull all of the attendees in to focus on one thing for a moment. This year’s rendition was special, as the group decided to conclude the character’s story arc, opening the door for new possibilities for a story for next year.

The event is primarily advertised through word of mouth, social media posts, and emails to friends (only because the space can hold so many people). Throughout the night, the group estimates that about 400 people attended the event, making it one of the higher attended years that this event has taken place.

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SGA Homecoming

Grove City College’s annual Homecoming was Oct. 6, and brought thousands of alumni and families back to campus, along with the families of current students. While many students and alumni attend these events to connect, whether from their fraternity, sorority, or housing group, Student Government Association (SGA) partakes in the festivities due to their wide-reaching network on campus. Regardless of other commitments as a student, SGA is one that can be held concurrently with many other positions, which creates a unique opportunity to get a wide range of students involved with the organization. As a result, SGA has a tent on upper campus for fellow SGA alumni to stop by, while the current members mingle.

Current student members also participate in the Homecoming parade each year. Apart from decorating their truck and float, they also throw candy into the crowd as they drive through the parade. With all of the children on campus for this event, this is easily one of the best parts, getting to see the smiles on all of their faces getting candy. Once the parade is over, SGA members take a shift at their tent to hand out caramel apples for attendees.

SGA orders 600 apples to hand out and hundreds of bottled waters, which worked out well because this year the weather was warmer than usual. The caramel apples are always a hit with attendees, as SGA usually runs out before the entire duration of the event is even over.

Each year, it is always interesting to hear stories from alumni that were on SGA during their tenure as students. Even the College’s own President McNulty served as the SGA Vice President of Social Affairs while he was a student here. These stories would most likely not be heard without the opportunity for SGA to participate in the Homecoming festivities each year.

 

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Event Review: Meat and Greet

“It’s that time…Meat time” read the posters advertising the main draw for this event: free steak. While the dining halls unfortunately do not serve steak, the Delta Rho Sigma (Buffalos) housing group and Nu Lambda Phi (Nu Lamb) fraternity teamed up to bring the people what they asked for at the beginning of the semester.

On Sept. 14, the two groups held the event dubbed “Meat and Greet,” where free steak, burgers, and hot dogs were freshly grilled for attendees. As part of an excellent advertising campaign that educated the student body on what the event actually is, this motivated students to get a free dinner away from the dining halls as a change of pace.

Addison Hockins, the social chair of the Buffalos recorded a total of 850 student attendees throughout the entire night, a record setting attendance count for the event. The group found it necessary to keep track of attendance to ensure that each attendee could receive their fair share of steak, which equated to be four ounces worth of meat. When this is paired with the hot dogs, hamburgers, and chips available, this proved to be quite the sizable dinner on a Friday night.

This year, the cookout was held in front of Rockwell on upper Quad. The groups also added live music with student bands performing at the bottom of Rockwell steps to add the extra element needed to keep students at the event to hang out. The bands played setlists filled with hit songs that kept the student body engaged with the atmosphere.

The event had enough food to last through the night, but unfortunately the steak ran out early due to the rapidly growing demand. Looking ahead to next year, the groups will be bringing this event back with only one change: more steak.

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Event Review: OmiCron Lawn

On Sept. 15, the Omicron Xi (Okie) fraternity and Sigma Phi Omicron (CRON) housing group teamed up to throw a tailgate cookout on lower campus in preparation for the annual night football game. This was the fifth time the event has taken place to show school spirit for the game.

The event was a classic tailgate cookout: grills in place to cook burgers and hot dogs, cornhole sets, spikeball games, volleyball, and bocce ball rounds all acted as a draw to get students to come down to lower campus. Grove City experienced beautiful weather for the event, which usually acts as a huge draw to get students outside to hang out with their friends.

Dan Gibson, president of the Okies, estimated there were about 500 students present for the cookout. Toward the end of the event, to mark its conclusion, the Wolverine Marching Band came down Rainbow Bridge and warmed up a few songs with the crowd before everyone made their way to Thorn Field to take the stands to cheer on the Wolverines.

This cookout concluded a three-day series of cookouts on Grove City College’s campus. While all three were unrelated and catered to different demographics of students, many found it as a great way to welcome in a new semester by spending time outside with their friends, enjoying the nice end of summer weather and their friends’ company.

Although Grove City fell to Case Western in the football game, the student section was rowdy to cheer on the Wolverine football team. The night game is one of the best attended football games each year due to the unique atmosphere it creates for students and families in the community. The postgame celebration featured fireworks, and although the team did not secure a victory, the campus certainly won by having a day filled with community, camaraderie, and school spirit.

 

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Event Review: Fall Fest 2018

Saturday Sept. 22 featured the 4th annual Student Government Association (SGA) Fall Festival. The event is designed to welcome students back to campus as part of a new semester by bringing everyone together to experience part of what makes the community at Grove City College so special.

This year, the event was held on the Quad, a departure from lower campus, which is where it has been held in the past. The event featured 47 group organization sponsored carnival-style booths with a carnival style game to go along with it. These booths handed out tickets to participants to put towards redeeming prizes, which were solicited from businesses in the surrounding Grove City area. Prizes included gift cards to Collage Coffee, a local coffee shop in town, Dairy Queen coupons, pumpkin carving kits, and much more.

The event also featured inflatable games, such as an obstacle course, jousting arena, baseball throw, wrecking ball arena, etc. Finally, the event also had a petting zoo with exotic animals such as a zebra, camel, and alpaca, along with goats, cows, and pigs. The petting zoo is easily a crowd favorite each year, with the zebra and camel being the main attractions.

Grove City experienced its first fall day for the event, reinforcing the entire fall theme. A photo booth with supplies donated from Seivers Farm added the perfect setting for a quality Instagram photo on everyone’s feed.

An estimated 1,500 students packed the Quad to enjoy the festivities and celebrate a new semester at the College while enjoying the company of their fellow peers for an afternoon. While the event is a tremendous undertaking by SGA members, which requires a full day’s worth of setup and several hours of tear down, the results are tangible by witnessing firsthand the smiles on everyone’s faces that come out to the event, along with seeing professors bringing their families along to enjoy the festivities, too.