The Collegian – February 26, 2016

Page 1

Collegian

The

It reeks like old ladypants in here.

Friday, February 26, 2016

Vol. 102, No. 14

The Grove City College Student Newspaper

Eight in a row

Swimming and diving teams cap off another successful campaign Joe Setyon Sports Editor The Grove City College men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams recently capped off another successful season which included highlights for both squads.

For the women, the highlight of the year was the Presidents’ Athletic Conference Championships at Grove City College Feb. 11-13. There, the women won their eighth consecutive title, an astonishing achievement. The men fared well too, finishing in third place behind just Westmin-

ster College and Washington & Jefferson College. With PACs in the books, members of both teams took part in the Kenyon College Fast Chance Invitational which occurred this past weekend on Feb. 20. The squad collected 793 team points, which allowed

them a comfortable cushion against Westminster and St. Vincent College, which tied for second place with 663 team points. Saturday was one of the most successful days of the tournament for the Wolverines. Grove City recorded two wins that day, one coming from senior Me-

Ashley Meesuk swims the breaststroke during the PAC Championships that took place at Grove City College on Feb. 11-13.

Trump on top after S.C., Nev. Brooke Dymski Contributing Writer

During the past week, all eyes were on the South Carolina primary and Nevada caucus as the top Republican presidential candidates battled it out in the two states. Donald Trump sealed the deal winning with 32.5 percent while Marco Rubio came in second with 22.5 percent and Ted Cruz arrived just behind him with 22.3 percent. Trump still came out on top, despite his accusations that President George W. Bush lied to the American people about the Iraq War and failed to prevent the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in New York City. Though Trump was booed by the crowd, it apparently made no difference. Trump also won big in Nevada Tuesday night, earning 45.9 percent of the vote and shattering suggestions that his support would reach a ceiling in the mid-30s. Trump won all 50 delegates in South Caroline, but took only 14 of Nevada’s, with seven going to Rubio, six to Cruz

and one each to Kasich and Carson. At this point in the race, Trump is very optimistic and still confident that he will be the GOP nominee and beat Hillary Clinton in November. So far, every Republican presidential candidate who has claimed victory in New Hampshire and South Carolina has also become the GOP nominee. However, both Cruz and Rubio remain confident in their campaign efforts and hope they can acquire more votes as the Republican field narrows. After a poor performance in New Hampshire, Rubio was able to pull a much needed second-place victory. Rubio also picked up the endorsement of Gov. Mitt Romney, arguably making him the GOP establishment’s favorite choice. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush helped narrow the GOP field when he suspended his campaign after coming in fourth in South Carolina, and the Rubio campaign is banking ELECTION 2

gan Bilko in the 1650-meter race. Megan Smith also swam extremely well on the final day of the tournament, winning the 200-meter breast stroke competition. The tournament also included a win from freshman MePACS 12

HANNAH SHOEMAKER

GCC grad kickstarts HOWM Building homes for orphans, widows in Malawi

Grant Wishard Staff Writer Gret Glyer ’12 knows firsthand that the world is a fallen place, because for the past three years, he has lived with and worked for the ultrapoor people of the rural African country of Malawi. He can tell you about the daily suffering those remote villagers experience. And just as easily, he can describe the inexplicable joy of those same people who have nothing to hold to except God, and the fulfillment he has found in caring for their daily needs. After graduating from Grove City College in 2012, Glyer, an entrepreneurship major and two-year resident assistant with impressive internship experience, landed his first job. The company, Enterprise Rent-A-Car, would have looked good on a résumé, promised promotion and paid well. “But it wasn’t fun,” Glyer said, “it wasn’t fulfilling. If

I didn’t show up to work tomorrow, it would be inconsequential. They would hire someone else to be the cog in their machine.” Unlike most cogs, Glyer decided to switch continents. He credits an online talk by Scott Harrison, founder of Charity Water, as his inspiration. Within a month he had quit his job and boarded a plane to go teach in Malawi. “I never thought I would be a teacher and didn’t have a degree, but it’s difficult to get teachers out to third world countries. They don’t have super high standards, so I was a perfect fit,” he said modestly. In teaching, Glyer answered one of Malawi’s many needs, but in those first years he learned that he cared most about alleviating poverty. The high school kids he taught were relatively comfortable; most could find a hot shower and be sure of their next meal at home. But the vast majority of Malawians, over 80 percent, live in remote villages outside the

country’s few cities. In these places, tens of millions live under crushing poverty. “The truth is that there are three and a half billion people, half the world’s population, who are barely making it, who survive on two dollars a day,” Glyer explained. Glyer told of how he taught in the classroom knowing that just across the street lay a city slum which he could only describe as “Hell on Earth.” What does it mean to live on two dollars a day? Glyer explained that two dollars allows a person to eat enough for that day, but if anything goes wrong, that person’s life will end. In a place like Malawi, anything and everything can and will go wrong, putting lives in the most delicate balance. Glyer’s charity aims to convince us that if life is so fragile for millions of Malawian’s, then a seemingly insignificant action from us can rebalance the scales, savMALAWI 8

Life

The Lens

E!

Perspectives

Sports

Illusions arise during a fundraiser for Save the Storks, next week. Page 3

Take a glance back to when it was actually winter on campus. Page 6-7

One Grove City College employee has a theatrical past: find out who! Page 8

Do Muslims and Christians worship the same God? See what this author believes. Page 10

Women’s basketball postst best regular season record since 2010-2011. Page 12


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