“11:11 Make a Wish” senior show stuns

By Jesse Sailer, Sports Editor

The artwork of Ohio Wesleyan’s senior fine arts majors and minors are finally showcased in the Werner Gallery and the the Richard M. Ross Art Museum after several months of preparation.

Work done by fine art majors are shown in the Ross Museum while the fine art minors work is shown in Werner.

The artwork submitted for the senior show isn’t required to be work from the artists concentration, but rather the work they think is the strongest they’ve produced throughout their college career.

The inspiration behind “11:11 Make a Wish”, the title given to the senior show, comes from one of the many meanings behind the odd trend.

The repetition of 11:11 is a message to keep going, and no matter the path you’re on, you’ll find where you need to be no matter what.

Senior Shelby Ksiazek came up with this title as she thought it perfectly reflected the mindset of all the seniors.

“It was a relief to see it come together the way it did, I couldn’t believe my artwork was worth what it was, it was nice to see everything pay off,” Ksiazek said.

Each senior was allowed to submit as many pieces as they wanted but the final works that would go in the show was decided by the fine arts department.

The senior show collectively exhibits the work of 11 artists with artwork spanning their entire four years at OWU.

Jenna Chambers (Ceramics): Jenna finds a connection between the reconstitution of clay into new forms and the ever changing landscape around her, all the while building a relationship with a medium that is both frustrating and alluring at the same time.

Mariah Chery (Printmaker): Mariah expresses her inner self through a timeless medium and uncovers her own identity with her ancestry and present life.

Margaux Hackett (Sculpture): Margaux finds that the abstractness of the human form can be implemented into three dimensional works as it allows her to work on a whole new level.

Natasha Heusinger (Ceramics, Drawing): Natasha found a constant in her life when she found clay and an interest in ceramics in Japan. The combination of her personal drawings and ceramic throwing allows her to embed a part of herself into her work.

Shelby Ksiazek (Photographer, Mixed Media): Shelby has been surrounded by mixed media since a young age and pursuing the arts has allowed her to blossom and find a way to express her inner turmoils in a way that words can’t.

Corrine Rice (Photography): Corrine has always found a passion for art and has cultivated a love for the process put into each piece. Through photography she’s created a visual journal that explores her experiences with the outside world.

Syed Abuzar Raza (Drawing, Painting): Syed lives for the natural beauty of art and the patterns within. Through repetition and expressive movements in his work, he creates textures that mirror the vibrance of life.

Ellen Sizer (Sculpture): Ellen juxtaposes her metal work with color in a way that evokes more feeling for the mixed patterns and textures but has you thinking the pieces are visually blurred, completely contradicting the sharpness of the metal.

Rachel Spotts (Ceramics): Rachel plays with the malleability of clay and the freedom it allows her to shape the clay personally to her movements. The process of tearing down and reconstructing the clay leaves her pieces with distinct but simple marks.

Nicholas Tobias (Ceramics): Nicholas learned to push the limits when it came to ceramics and learned to navigate the uncertainty that comes with working with it.

Andrew “Mac” Willard (Photography): Mac finds a love for light and shadow and how it plays with the subjects of his photos, he looks to communicate emotions and expressions through the use of color and light.

“Having my own work up for the first time was one of the proudest moments of my life so far.” Willard said. “It was beautiful to see so many different works of art coexisting together,” said Willard.

An “important and complex” show hits the OWU

By Maddie Matos, A&E Editor

As spring comes to Ohio Wesleyan campus, the theatre department’s annual musical arrives with it.

The musical this year, Cabaret, tells the story of two people falling in love during the rise of the Nazi party in Germany during the 1930s. The show is based off the original 1966 musical written by Joe Masteroff, Fredd Eb and John Kander.

Students have been working on the show since February, with show dates on two different weekends.

The show has many dark elements to it, with the rise of racism and defying society, making it something that audiences could identify with in modern society.

“This show is very topical and has a lot of comments that are relevant today even though it’s set in the ‘30s.” assistant stage manager Logan Kovach said. “It’s not afraid to make people uncomfortable, and to push them to reevaluate things,”

The show opened on April 13 to a large crowd. Audience members such as freshman Hannah Carpenter enjoyed the performance and the message the show had.

“I enjoyed how talented the whole cast is, and how complex the show is,” Carpenter said.

Junior Ares Harper, freshman Miko Harper and senior Daniel Brothers all have leading roles in the show. The whole cast is composed of seventeen students and a large backstage crew.

The show has many interest points for audience members, leaving little predictability or boringness to overwhelm.

“I will say this is one of those shows that tricks you a little bit.” Carpenter said. “You think you’re going in one direction and you’re having a good time and then suddenly the rug is pulled out from under you,”

The music style in Cabaret is jazzier and more seedy than traditional musicals, helping to provide an eerie tone to the show. Some of the characters in the production are seen as anti-Semitic or homophobic, a topic that is still prevalent in modern society.

The crew of Cabaret have been working hard to ensure the audience enjoys the show, while also learning what it means to be a backstage player in the theatre world.

“Being a part of the management team has let me ride along through the entire shows process from a perspective I’m not entirely used to,” Kovach said.

The show addresses many topics and ideas that could potentially make audiences squirm, but in a way that will make audiences think.

“I think it’s an important to come and see this show,” Kovach said.

Firing Tomahawks at Syria, why and why now?

By Tung Nguyen, Online Editor

President Trump, despite his past denouncements toward president Obama’s policies in regard to the military fluctuations in Syria, publicly announced his firm stance against President Putin and President Assad as well as his decisions to get the “nice, new and smart” Tomahawk involved.

In the same tweet, President Trump also mentioned his concern about the violations of civil rights toward President Assad by calling him a “Gas Killing Animal.” The big question has been raised immediately of why President Trump, who has been completely indifferent of such subject, did so and why now.

First of all, President Trump may want to regain his public credibility and people’s trust in their leader after the ongoing “call and response” economic war with China recently. Earlier this month, Washington and Beijing have been attacking each other turn by turn with the inflated tariffs on China’s products. This trade battle put an overcast above the U.S’s domestic market and dropped the President’s approval rating to a much lower level. As a president who cannot care more about his support rate and the heat between China and the U.S. does not seem to cool down anytime soon, President Trump now has to redirect the public to an international affair.

On the other hand, by publicly stands against President Putin, President Trump can soothes the uprising doubts regarding to the probability of Russia dipping her hand in the U.S.’s last election. The investigation is close to its climax when Robert Mueller, the Special counsel, accused 13 Russians on February 16 for their attempts to spend millions of rubles on Trump’s campaign. More than that, recently, according to the CNN, the White House revealed to the press that President Trump is capable of firing Mueller and hiring a different Special counsel. Even though there isn’t any official decision made yet in regard to the future of Mueller, this could be something worth raising
eyebrows.

Second of all, President Trump can leans on his concern toward the violation of civil rights in Syria to retake the U.S.’s military presence in the Middle-East. On the global political chessboard, Russia is becoming more and more dominant on this regions after many constant military interferences in Syria. Moreover, the announcement of the U.S. retreating her troops from the Middle-East by President Trump worried the Western allies and created doubts about the leading position of the U.S. By warning Russia and President Assad about the possible counter-attacks with Tomahawk and, recently, firing these missiles at East Ghouta, President Trump is showing his capabilities to the whole wide world and calming the European fellows in some ways. This seems to be the only choice for the U.S. to regain her possession of this troublesome region.

However, firing Tomahawk at East Ghouta can be very risky for the presidency of President Trump. I personally think that if President Trump cannot keep these strikes on check and sinks himself in the prolong wars that have been broken out for almost a decade, not only many other soldiers and civilians from both sides will be crushed but the U.S. will also be positioned in a face-to- face war with Russia. Who knows what can happen if the tension
remains unsolved, if not escalated.

OWU faculty expels reporters on a secluded ballot

By Maddie Matos, A&E Editor

On Monday night, the faculty of Ohio Wesleyan University put into writing that reporters are no longer allowed into their meetings. Transcript reporters are no longer allowed into the meetings and the editor-in- chief will be emailed the summary of the meetings each month.

The staff voted 56-18 to keep reporters absent from meetings. This was conducted by a paper ballot.

The same night, the faculty also approved the committee for free speech on campus.

The idea of having a committee for free speech while banning journalism, the constant provider for free speech and freedom of the press, is blasphemy. The school is being hypocritical for endorsing free speech but taking away the right for someone to report on these meetings.

In an era of “fake news” and distrust of the media, it can seem almost impossible for anyone in the business to try and do their job. Most reporters simply are covering their stories and reporting facts, not attack someone or an institution.

The OWU journalism department is a small one. We often struggle for stories at the Transcript, are understaffed and are overworked. We each are attempting to learn what it means to be a journalist in the modern age, and the faculty closing off access to these meetings is inhibiting us more than ever.

Faculty meetings let us know, as both students and journalists, what different departments are doing. They tell us which professors are receiving different awards, what events are happening on campus. Meetings let us get the information out to the reader as soon as possible. Without these meetings, how can we do our very jobs?

The whole purpose of journalism is to inform the public of what is happening in the world. And at a campus as small as OWU’s, faculty meetings are an integral part of any journalist and their work.

In short, every single person on campus will now suffer from this decision. Whether it is a lack of information to the reader, a lack of communication between departments or simply a distrust between each other, we all suffer from this decision.

CEO of Heartland speaks on banking

By Tung Nguyen, Online Editor

How to succeed in businesses and how to effectively work in banks have been discussed year to year but “Morality in Business” does not seem so familiar for many people, both outside and inside the system.

G. Scott McComb made a visit to Ohio Wesleyan campus to share his knowledge as well as his experience about such subject on Apr. 12 in Benes Room B.

McComb is currently the president and chief executive officer of Ohio-based Heartland Bank. Before joining Heartland Bank in 1999, McComb was also an entrepreneur who has launched many successful businesses.

McComb started his lecture with the general basics of community banking. In fact, 92% of the United States’ banks are Community banks. Even though they only control less than 38% of the national assets, Community banks still stand a chance against the large-scale ones and people’s trust plays a big role in keeping these Community banks alive.

While large-scale banks use automated services to deal with a huge number of standardized accounts, Community banks put their eggs in maintaining long-term relationships with their core
customers by offering customized services, which require a substantial amount of people’s trust.

“There will be someone who really know their stuffs and will be able to guide you,” McComb said. “So don’t undermine the power of your Community banks.”

Heartland Bank itself largely relies on the confidence of its long-term customers to make incomes with the total assets of more than $683 million.

The financial crisis 2008 was also mentioned by McComb as one of the examples of how bad morality leads to devastated consequences. The crisis started when mortgage brokers initiated free loans to many homeowners without asking for pre-requisites and checking on their capabilities of paying.

Evan Cook, an OWU Economics major, said: “I definitely agree with him. Mortgage companies were pretty much giving out free loans to people that didn’t deserve them. The banks didn’t do their jobs and make sure the mortgage brokers were doing good works. When the bubble burst, people stopped trusting those banks, which helped cause the recession.”

Regarding to the decision-making process and the existing peer pressures in the working environments, McComb said: “There is no other way to put it. You just have to do the right thing, even if
the majority aren’t doing it. Let us keep it simple that way.”

After the lecture, Samantha Merino, an OWU freshman, said: “It was a nice reminder of the impact that small things contribute to the workplace. Mr. McComb did a great job on explaining these
complicated ideas to business oriented people.”

Chaplain inducted on 50th anniversary of MLK

By Reilly Wright, Managing Editor

Ohio Wesleyan’s Chaplain Jon R. Powers became one of 26 preachers inducted into the Martin Luther King Jr. Board of Preachers in Atlanta, Georgia.

Located at Morehouse College, King’s alma mater, the board claims to honor faith leaders from multiple traditions. Inductees are chosen for their commitment to “promote peace, tolerance, interfaith understanding” and other ideals exemplified by King.

Rev. Dr. Lawrence Edward Carter Sr., dean of the Martin Luther King Jr. Chapel and director of the Martin Luther King Jr. College of Pastoral Leadership selected Powers for induction. The induction ceremony took place on April 5.

“To be only one of two white persons in this nationally honored group of 26 MLK preachers at the 50th anniversary of Dr. King’s assassination was a powerful and humbling experience for me,” Powers said.

King was assassinated on April 4, 1968 and this year’s ceremony took place one day after its anniversary. Powers said the consecutive assassinations of his longtime heroes of King, Senator Robert F. Kennedy and then the suicide of his beloved father was traumatic.

“Those three deaths, so close together, marked my soul for eternity, and more than any other thing, made me the chaplain I have been for the rest of my life,” he said.

Powers, who joined OWU in 1988, was raised in rural Michigan exposed to racial diversity by his black grandmother. Until he joined a city school, he said he did not recognize the racial prejudice in the world.

He said teachers told his parents that the Martin Luther King Jr. books he brought to class were “communist literature” that was causing trouble with classmates.

“I have been creating trouble among my classmates and my peers ever since!” he said. 

When meeting this year’s other inductees, Powers said there was an immediate link as they shared stories and compared notes on their lives of religious dedication.

“For each of us, I sensed this was a snapshot in time of our curiously collective lives that none of us will ever forget, and none of us will ever totally comprehend,” Powers said.

Powers’ honor is something that comes from a life of devotion toward acceptance according to Ohio Wesleyan President Rock Jones.

“Jon Powers has devoted his life to the work of justice, equality and inclusion for all people,” Jones said. “His ministry, including his ministry of preaching, reflect these commitments in every way and now is recognized by the Martin Luther King, Jr. Board of Preachers.”

Ultimately, Powers expresses his gratitude to be part of a community that embraces King’s principles as core values, but asks that these values be used as often and as diversely as possible.

When it comes to the OWU community, Powers said students, staff and faculty see the face of “an old, white bearded white man.” But, underneath, he said he has a vulnerable soul raised past racial boundaries and proud to love God by loving everyone he meets. 

“Maybe we all need to stop assuming that the person we meet on the Jay or in class is one-dimensional?” he said.

A legacy: the history and struggles of the Strand Theatre

By Gopika Nair, Transcript Correspondent

The pale, yellow walls inside the Strand Theatre hold pieces of history.

A poster advertising the 1938 version of “Marie Antoinette,” starring Norma Shearer and Tyrone Power, hangs on the far right, near where Tracey Peyton, the managing director of the Strand Theatre sits. In the middle is a poster of Victor Fleming’s “Gone with the Wind.”

Scattered on the walls throughout are numerous framed certificates from the Delaware Gazette, recognizing the Strand Theatre as the “best date place” and “best family fun entertainment.”

Affixed by the entrance is the Strand Theatre’s opening announcement, published by the Journal-
Herald on April 8, 1916.

“To the public: Your handsome new motion picture home will be opened on the above date with a program of clean, wholesome, highly interesting and educational moving pictures,”
the first line reads.

But since Peyton began her term as the managing director of the Strand Theatre in 2015, she has lost count of the number of times someone has told her, “Oh, you’re a real movie
theatre.”

“The very thing that makes [the Strand] special is the thing that’s our Achilles’ heel, both to the public and the studios,” Peyton says.

Marketing the Strand Theatre is tough despite the fact that it has operated for 102 years and is the tenth longest operating movie theatre in the U.S. In addition to being nonprofit, the theatre currently has three screens and most moviegoers are charged $5 a ticket, a price that’s often paltry to break even.

“We sometimes can’t get the film we want because we can’t produce the revenue the studio wants and if we can’t produce the revenue the studio wants to see, we can’t get the
[movie],” Peyton says.

She cuts me off before I can finish asking whether the Strand Theatre’s historic reputation helps her and her booker get the movies they want.

“They don’t care,” she says. “I know where you’re going with that and they don’t care.”

Peyton’s booker represents 300 theatres across the nation. Citing the upcoming summer film “Ocean’s 8,” produced by Warner Brothers, as an example of a movie that could either do
well or poorly in Delaware County, Peyton says the studio might tell the booker that only 80 of the theatres he represents can play “Ocean’s 8.”

“They protect the radius like they do with radio stations,” Peyton says, which means that Marcus Crosswood Cinema in Columbus, Rave Cinemas in Polaris and the Strand Theatre are unlikely to get “Ocean’s 8” all at the same time.

Instead, the studio will give the movie to theatres that are guaranteed to generate the best revenue, such as Rave Cinemas, a theatre complex.

“It doesn’t matter that we’re [more than] a century old, it doesn’t matter that we’re nonprofit,” Peyton says. “What matters is how many people we can get to these shows, how long we can keep it there and [whether] it will give us the returns we want because … there is a loose expectation that each theatre has to provide or produce a certain amount of revenue.”

While the Strand Theatre tries to appeal to Ohio Wesleyan students, its main demographic is families in Delaware County. Keeping that in mind, Peyton and her booker consult past history to determine what kind of films generate the most revenue and book films accordingly.

Though nearly every Best Picture Oscar-nominated movies have been shown at the Strand in the coming weeks, Luca Guadagnino’s “Call Me By Your Name” did not snag a spot
on the theatre’s marquee.

“It would never flow in [Delaware] because it’s a conservative city, but I would love to see it,” Peyton says.

By contrast, “Love, Simon,” an upcoming film about a closeted 17-year- old boy might do well. Though the two movies share similar themes, “Love, Simon” contains a bullying subplot.

“Anything with kids and bullying resonates [here],” Peyton says.
Family, superhero and animated movies are Delaware’s top picks. Additionally, based on a recurring pattern, Peyton says Delaware is a hero-oriented town and movies such as “American
Sniper” and “15:17 to Paris” did well.

“I have tried to explore different movie niches [to appeal to OWU students], but … we can’t [play] cult favorites because as a first run theatre, we have to protect our primary times for Sony, Universal and Warner Brothers,” Peyton says.

Peyton’s attention is diverted when she catches sight of an employee working, projectionist Peyton Ennis.

“Any word on that video?” she asks Ennis.

“What video?”

“That you’re doing for—”

“Oh, I really haven’t had any time.”

“Do you think we should try it?”

“Well, I don’t know.”

“‘The Room’ and then—”

After a pause, Ennis grins. “I think we should try those movies, yeah.” Ennis goes back to standing behind the ticket counter and Peyton explains that the two of them have been toying with the idea of showing Tommy Wiseau’s “The Room” and James
Franco’s “The Disaster Artist” as a double feature. “The Disaster Artist” shows the making of Wiseau’s “The Room,” which is simultaneously a cult-favorite and regarded as one of the worst
films ever made.

Getting the two films will cost the Strand nearly $800 and to break even, at least 160 patrons must attend.

Coming from a corporate background, Peyton says working at the Strand Theatre has been a different experience. Her last job was at the Nationwide Hotel and Conference Center in Lewis Center, but she has previously worked at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton. While her past jobs provided her with an expense account, every dollar the Strand Theatre makes goes back into maintaining the building.

“But that’s what’s so charming about this place,” Peyton says. “Everyone here loves it and wants it to stay and do well, so we’re kind of like the underdog of movie theatres.”

OWU, too, has a strong connection with the Strand and has supported the theatre for several years. In 2002, OWU owned the Strand, but the university transferred the property to the Strand Theatre and Cultural Arts Association in 2006. But if the Strand Theatre and Cultural Arts Association stops operating as a theatre and cultural arts association, the property would revert
back to OWU, according to President Rock Jones.

“We remain very engaged and are grateful for many opportunities to partner with the Strand,” Jones says.

The university collaborates with the theatre to host various student events, encouraging students to seek employment, co-sponsoring the annual International Film Festival with OWU’s Film Studies program, among other partnerships.

Lynette Carpenter and Martin Hipsky, professors of English, both teach the Introduction to Film course at OWU. As part of the course, students are required to view select films, which
are screened at the Strand for $6. The movies selected are chosen by Carpenter and Hipsky and they change every year, according to Carpenter. Typically, the selection includes two to three American genre films, an adaptation, several foreign films and a recent independent film.

“The Strand is the only movie theatre within walking distance of the campus, and showing our films there allows students to see them as they were meant to be seen – on a full- size movie screen in an audience of others who are also watching and reacting to the film,” Carpenter says.

Though scheduling the film series can be challenging because of the Strand’s contractual obligation as a first-run theatre, Carpenter says OWU’s Film Studies program is fortunate to have the theatre’s cooperation.

“Few colleges can say that their introductory film students watch movies in an actual movie theatre,” Carpenter says.

While some might view high school or college as the most special part of their lives, several members of the Delaware community give that recognition to the Strand.

“The Strand is a part of their lives; it’s a part of their families; it’s a place where they’ve made memories,” Peyton says. “There no doubt in my mind that people, long after I’m gone, will continue to support this place because it’s important to them and it represents their history.”

Delta Delta Delta devotes day to philanthrophy

By Casey O’Toole, Transcript Correspondent 

Mechanical bulls, Dan’s Deli and dogs are just a few of the perks in attending this Saturday’s Deltas on the Block.

The sisters of Delta Delta Delta (Tri Delta) are hosting their second annual philanthropy event Deltas on the Block Saturday April 21, from noon through 3 p.m. on Fraternity Hill.

Anyone interested in attending will be supporting Tri Delta’s philanthropy, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. President of the sorority, Leah Crawford, is optimistic about the funds being raised this year.

“Our goal for this event, specifically, is [raising] upwards of $5,000,” Crawford said. “Last year we raised around $4,000 at the event, which was phenomenal, but we think this year’s event is going to be even bigger and even better.”

Tri Delta does not keep any of the raised money and it does not toward marketing their event either.

Encompassing the hill will be a multitude of activities for families and even younger children. Many of the sorority members’ siblings are planning to be in attendance to show support for their sisters. Tri Delta’s Philanthropy Chair Emily Black is in charge of setting up the whole event.

“Some of the different events that will be happening are food trucks, a succulent stand, ‘surviving cancer’ obstacle course, Kendra Scott Jewelry, a mechanical bull and, of course, dogs,” Black said.

Many of the Tri Delta members have close connections to St. Jude. Whether through personal experience, past connections or other ties, St. Jude holds a close place in members’ hearts.

“St. Jude to me means freedom, financial freedom and knowing that your child will be taken care of with the highest and best minds in the country,” said member Nathalie Bidwell.

Ciocanel connects cells and mathematics

By Tung Nguyen, Online Editor

Mathematics and biology are two subjects that many non-scientists would think of as completely separate fields. Yet, by using specific mathematical equations, biologists can understand more of how
protein molecules move and organize for cells to function properly.

Veronica Ciocanel, a postdoctoral fellow with the Mathematical Biosciences Institute at The Ohio State University, presented her recent research on this subject to the Ohio Wesleyan community on April 12.

Titled “Modeling the Cytoskeleton Roads in Transport and Localization of Protein Cargoes,” Ciocanel
spoke in the Schimmel/Conrades Science Center as part of this year’s Science Lecture Series.

At the beginning of her talk, Ciocanel laid out two main questions: How do the protein molecules move in the precise time and spatial scales? What are the mechanisms of transport?

“Intracellular transport of different cargoes is fascinating,” Ciocanel said. “Mathematical techniques can help us study transport mechanism.”

As Ciocanel explained later in her talk, cargoes switch between different dynamical states and interact differently with motors and filament roads. Microtubules were used as an example for this biological process. Microtubules are component of the cytoskeleton and are vital in the means of creating
particular platforms for many intracellular transportation processes.

“Microtubules are the longest and largest in diameter and they are kind of like a highway,” she said. “Because they are the longest, microtubules are important in cargoes transferring across the cells.”

Ciocanel also answered her second question by pointing out that active transport on microtubules is a key mechanism. Therefore, investigating the role of microtubule geometry is considered essential.

Ciocanel explained the fundamental mathematical equations to draw the transport models of mRNA (messenger RNA) along the microtubules, along with the help of a specific microscopy data analysis. The analysis shows that these orientations are key in predicting how the mRNA particles spread.

“Differential equations modeling gives us insight into the mechanisms of the messenger RNA journey along microtubule highways and ultimately into its localization, which ensures proper embryo development,” she said. “In neurons, stochastic simulations are used to understand how neurofilaments
navigate axons and their constrictions, to maintain a healthy speed of neuronal communication.”

“I never experienced lecture talk like this before,” said Andy Xie, an OWU senior. “It made me realize the importance of collaboration and the value of open source knowledge.”

Big Red bears a beating

By Jesse Sailer, Sports Editor

Ohio Wesleyan men’s lacrosse defeated sixth ranked Denison 13-8, leading the Big Red all four quarters.

OWU hadn’t seen a victory over Denison since the 2015 season when the men’s lacrosse team went 18-1 in the regular season and 8-0 in the conference, winning the NCAC men’s lacrosse tournament.

“Beating them does not mark the high point of our season,” said senior defenseman Justin Smith, “We have a long way to go and we’re gonna rock the national tournament this year.”

In what was the 100th meeting on the lacrosse field between the two rivals, Ohio Wesleyan gained momentum early with a goal from freshman attackman Will Anton.

Junior attackman Steve Hildebrand put one in the net soon after, making it 2-0. Denison responded with a goal at the 10 minute mark, putting Big Red on the scoreboard, but was met with four more unanswered goals by the Bishops.

Freshman midfielder Sean Gellen and sophomore midfielder Lucas Smith each contributed one goal each, with Hildebrand racking up two more goals in the first quarter. By the end of the first, the score was 6-1 with Big Red trailing by five goals.

The second quarter started with a goal from senior midfielder Peter Hamblett to extend OWU’s lead. Denison scored their second goal of the game with 10:24 left in the quarter but was met with a goal by freshman midfielder Storm Schalit. The Big Red went on to score three more goals to make it 8-5 by the end of the third quarter.

Junior attacker Max Tennant scored during the first minute of the third quarter, courtesy of a Hildebrand assist, and Tennant and senior midfielder Luke Leyden followed with goals, both assisted by junior midfielder Cole Jamieson, for an 11-6 Ohio Wesleyan lead.

Ohio Wesleyan led 11-7 entering the fourth quarter and Luke Leyden gave his team some breathing room with an unassisted goal at the nine-minute mark. Denison managed to get one more on the scoreboard but was met with another goal by Leyden and a total of six stopped shots by senior goalkeeper Ben Rigger to preserve the lead.

The 13-8 victory moves the Battling Bishops into first place in the North Coast Athletic Conference at 12-2 overall and 6-0 in league play. The loss drops Denison to 11-3 and 5-1 in conference play.

The win also moved the men’s lacrosse team up to No. seven in this week’s USLacrosse Magazine poll and to No. nine in this week’s United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association Division III coaches’ poll.

“Super proud of all the guys, we had seniors all the way down to freshman stepping it up big time for this game,” said senior midfielder Trent Schulte.