Etownian Issue 3 - 09/30/2010

Page 1

the

Above and beyond YouTube

First

Could you live without Facebook?

Friday

Etownian Campus Life, page 10

Centerfold, pages 8-9

Opinion, page 11

elizabethtown college

September 30, 2010• Volume 107, No. 4

One Alpha Drive • Elizabethtown, PA 17022-2298

academics

McClellan moves up Huntley C. McGowan News Editor

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fter his twenty-ninth year at Elizabethtown College, Dr. Fletcher McClellan has taken on a new responsibility as Dean of Faculty. McClellan served as the Political Science Department Chair for nine years before being promoted to his new position this past July. He replaces Dr. Christina Bucher, current Professor of Religious Studies. “My position is enjoyable because I get to work with dedicated and talented people among the faculty and staff. It is challenging because of the need to keep the academic program exciting and relevant,” McClellan said. The Office of the Dean of Faculty has a number of goals for this academic year. First, to continue to support the teaching and scholarly activities of the faculty. “Simply put, we want the best teachers and scholars,” McClellan said. Next, the office hopes to explore collaboration between the academic areas and Student Life. “You see a lot of this [teamwork] in the First-Year Program,” McClellan said. Another goal of the office is to promote Etown as an exciting intellectual and cultural venue. “My office supports the Writers House, organizes Wednesdays at 11 and contributes to the cultural life of the College,” McClellan said. Their fourth objective is to keep the faculty working together collegiately. “The faculty here are very dedicated to helping students,” McClellan said. “As long as we keep our eye on the ball, it won’t be a problem.” Lastly, the office hopes to support the academic departments and give them the best resources available. “We want to provide students with the skills to succeed in their major beyond graduation,” McClellan remarked. “We are particularly focused on the core program because it belongs to everyone, not just one department.” And the core program is exactly what sets McClellan apart from previous Deans of Faculty. His idea to revamp the College’s program, though still in the making, is an important change that could shape the future of academic life. The core program supports the academic goals expressed in the College’s mission statement, “promot[ing] truth, tenable judgments and important ideas by assuring that a student

N O I S A V IN

See MCCLELLAN, page 2

Peter S. Northrop Assistant Editor

F

or the past few weeks, Elizabethtown College has been at the mercy of an evergrowing tide of stinkbugs. As temperatures drop, these harmless (albeit annoying) pests rush headlong to warmer places-namely, our dorms and classrooms. While it seemed merely irritating and isolated at first, the Great Stinkbug Ambush of 2010 is now a

growing concern for the entire mid-Atlantic region. Mike Raupp, an entomologist at the University of Maryland, is justifiably worried about the stinkbug menace. “ This is the vanguard,” Raupp said in a recent interview with the Washington

CNN, stinkbugs are causing severe damage to several kinds of crops in Pennsylvania, Maryland and New Jersey. They’re currently swarming over corn and soy bean crops across Lancaster County. Experts even report that dairy farmers across the mid-Atlantic are worried about their products. Apparently, stinkbugs can infest feed for cows, and in turn, make milk smell rank. On campus, we’re beginning

“This is going to be Biblical this year ... The [bug] populations are just through the ceiling.” Mike Raupp Entomologist, University of Maryland

Photos: Janelle K. DeAngelo Image: commons.wikimedia.org

Post. “ This is going to be Biblical this year ... The [bug] populations are just through the ceiling.” The brown marmorated stinkbug (Halyomorpha halys) is actually an invasive species, thought to have been accidentally brought to the United States from either China or Japan. The first documented appearance of the stinky little pests was in Allentown, Pa., in 1998. But now, 12 years later, things are spiraling out of control. According to a news release by

to witness the “biblical” side of the stinkbug movement. Senior Caitlin Koller, an RA in Ober, has seen just how bad it can get. “I thought originally that, since I taped my window shut, I would be fine,” Koller said. But apparently, that wasn’t enough. “They like to crawl in every little crack in the wall or through the screens,” Koller said. It got to the point where she came back to her dorm one See STINKBUG, page 3


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