11.3.16 Hillsdale Collegian

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Handmade sandwich shop opens in old Oakley’s building Two weeks ago, Derek Spiteri launched his new restaurant, serving sandwiches, ice cream, and beer-inspired coffee. A6

Michigan’s oldest college newspaper

Gary Johnson makes his case in Michigan

Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson addressed supporters in Detroit, Michigan, Friday, defining himself as the “honest” candidate in the 2016 race. Wikimedia Commons

Culinary arts club Sophomores stir up campus through new cooking club with a recipe for success, exciting new acitivities, and a passion for food. B1

Vol. 140 Issue 9 - 3 November 2016 By | Kate Patrick and Kaylee McGhee Associate Editor and Assistant Editor DETROIT — “Be libertarian with me.” That was the theme of presidential candidate Gary Johnson’s rally at the Cobo Center Friday. The Libertarian Party nominee jogged onto the stage in his jeans and sneakers to highlight key platform issues such as immigration and gay rights, while emphasizing his integrity and personal connection with voters and jabbing at his opponents. “I think Trump is toast,” Johnson told a crowd of a few hundred supporters. “And Hillary was cruising along until today. We have an opportunity to win.” In an exclusive interview with The Collegian, Johnson called the FBI’s Friday announcement to reopen its investigation of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s private email server “damning.” “The FBI would not be doing this if it wasn’t something that was substantive and not 11 days before the election, knowing that there would not be a resolution to it before the election,” Johnson told The Collegian. “Given what’s happened today, maybe there’s still a chance for me to occupy the White House.” In his speech, Johnson attacked Clinton and described himself as the “honorable alternative to Trump.” He challenged his supporters to recognize that he is the most

qualified candidate for the presidency based on principle and experience and said he believes he is the only honest presidential candidate. “If there’s one thing in life that resonates all the time, it’s telling the truth,” he told the crowd. “If there’s one unforgivable, it’s hypocrisy.” When discussing the economy, Johnson promised he wouldn’t increase taxes if elected. He also encouraged supporters to engage in entrepreneurship and promote the sharing economy because it is the future of the free market. “Apply whatever you know, whatever you do, entrepreneurially,” Johnson said. “There will never be anything better you do than create your own job and jobs for others.” Johnson also condemned Trump’s immigration policy and said America should embrace Mexican immigrants and make it as easy as possible for them to get work visas. Because Mexico is its neighbor, Johnson said he thinks the U.S. should develop economic ties with Mexico. He ended his speech by reminding voters that as president of the United States, he would have an “open door after four,” referring to a policy he enacted while governor of New Mexico in which he welcomed constituents and heard their opinions and complaints. Johnson then personally greeted and conversed with supporters, who chanted, “We love Gary.” “Johnson represents what we believe in, which is mini-

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‘Ballot selfie’ ban is back Federal judge rules Michigan can enforce its 125-year-old law this election By | Thomas Novelly Editor-in-Chief Despite successfully overturning Michigan’s longstanding “ballot selfie” ban Oct. 24, a federal appeals court rejected Hillsdale alumni Joel Crookston and Stephen Klein’s victory Friday, making it again illegal to take a picture of one’s ballot. “By filing their motion to stay off the ruling in our case, Secretary of State Ruth Johnson and Attorney General Bill Schuette put their administrative convenience over free speech,” Klein said. “They haven’t respected this challenge from the beginning. People shouldn’t be deprived of their right to vote because of their right to free speech.” A federal judge granted

Crookston ’06 and Klein ’05 a preliminary injunction Oct. 24, successfully subduing the punishment of 90 days in jail, a $500 fine, and the forfeit of one’s vote for taking a picture of a marked ballot. But Michigan Secretary of State Ruth Johnson and Attorney General Bill Schuette filed an emergency motion to delay the injunction, citing that it would be a logistical nightmare with less than a week until election day. The 6th District Court of Appeals moved in favor of Johnson and Schutte’s case in a 2-1 decision. In the dissenting opinion regarding Secretary Johnson’s motion to keep the “ballot selfie ban,” Chief Judge Guy Cole said he strongly disagreed with the majority’s decision to keep the hefty punishment because of the alleged problems re-

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Going to Google Students visited Google’s corporate headquarters and met with John Farrar ’98, head of home services for the U.S. B4

moving the ban would cause at polling places across the state. “While the election is fast approaching, the administrative changes required by the preliminary injunction are not so onerous that they rise to the level of irreparable harm,” Cole said. “The secretary, however, is only required to convey to election officials that they will not be voiding ballots when voters take ballot selfies. It does not require a new set of procedures; rather, it only requires communication to the various polling officers and polling sites.” Klein — an attorney for the Pillar of Law Institute in Washington, D.C. — represented Crookston after Klein discovered a photo that Crookston had posted of his ballot on Facebook in 2012. They

teamed up in September to file a lawsuit against existing state laws and orders from Secretary Johnson, stating that the “ballot selfie ban” was an obvious violation of free speech. Judges Ralph Guy Jr. and Jeffrey Sutton, however, disagreed. They said in their opinions Friday that the timing of Crookston and Klein’s case is problematic and that their attempt to repeal a more than 125-year-old law just days before a presidential election would be disastrous. “Thirty-two days ago, Joel Crookston sought a preliminary injunction to prevent the state from enforcing the Michigan law...so that he could take a ‘ballot selfie’ with his cell phone and post it on social media,” Sutton said. “Timing is everything.

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Grace DeSandro | Collegian

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Education Department clarifies Hillsdale is a four-year institution Statement says Hillsdale incorrectly labeled as a ‘predominantly certificate degree-granting institution’ By | Breana Noble News Editor The U.S. Department of Education acknowledged on Monday its error last year in calling Hillsdale College a “predominantly certificate degree-granting institution” rather than a four-year institution that offers bachelor’s degrees as well as master’s and doctoral degrees. The erroneous statement came in September 2015, when The Collegian asked an Education Department spokeswoman why Hillsdale College was excluded from the department’s new College Scorecard, which President Barack Obama said provides a “comprehensive” look at information of all four-year colleges. “The department’s first discussion with Hillsdale included an incorrect explanation of Hillsdale College’s not appearing on the scorecard; that explanation, related to certificate-granting schools, applied to another Hillsdale,” the Education Department said in a statement to The Collegian. The original comment from Denise Horn, now-former Education Department assistant press secretary, drew concerns from parents, prospective students, high school counselors, and college supporters at the time, Senior Director of Admissions Zack Miller and Provost David Whalen said. “We’re pleased the Department of Education understands the degree-granting nature of the college,” Whalen said. “Its error about that created some confusion...However, it would still be preferable, if the scorecard approached more nearly its stated informational purpose and included so venerable and academically strong an institution like Hillsdale.” The reason for Hillsdale’s exclusion, despite President Barack Obama calling the scorecard “comprehensive” for its September 2015 launch, was made more evident in January, when the department added 700 certificate degree-granting institutions to the scoreboard but not Hillsdale. Monday’s statement reaffirmed that the Education Department excluded Hillsdale from the College Scorecard because it is not a Title IV institution, meaning it doesn’t accept federal funds. “Hillsdale College...does not, and is not required to, report to the department the student-level data that the Education Department uses to calculate federal debt, repayment rate, and median earnings data,” the statement said. “In fact, the department is by law permitted only to collect student-level information for federal financial aid recipients, so we would not be permitted to collect data on other, non-recipients of federal financial aid. Because those institutions would lack many of the key data points the Scorecard publishes and promotes, the site does not include institutions that do not participate

in the federal financial aid programs, including Hillsdale.” While the Education Department cannot demand student-level information from non-Title IV institutions, Hillsdale College is already submitting such data to the department’s National Center for Education Statistics for the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, though that information doesn’t include student loan repayment to the college. The College Scorecard obtains information on federal loan repayment from the Internal Revenue Service. Registrar Douglas McArthur said Hillsdale offers baccalaureate, master’s, and doctoral degrees. President Larry Arnn said he was happy that the Education Department does recognize that Hillsdale isn’t a certificate degree-granting institution. “The college is an excellent college and widely known to be an excellent college,” Arnn said. “It is serious about its mission...The college has these purposes, and it announces them, and it pursues them, and it pursues them objectively at a high level. In the end, that will determine our reputation and not what people say who don’t know who we are. Those people are powerful, but that doesn’t mean they have credibility. It depends on their excellence. And I don’t have anything to say about that.” The department wouldn’t specify the institution it mentioned as being mistaken for Hillsdale College in Monday’s statement, though Hillsdale Beauty College is classified as a “certificate” institution in the College Navigator, a platform of the Education Department’s National Center for Education Statistics. The information displayed in the College Navigator is supplied by IPEDS, which also provides some of the College Scorecard’s data. At that time, Hillsdale College was submitting information to NCES for inclusion in IPEDS, but the agency didn’t accept the data, Whalen said. The college, therefore, would have appeared in neither IPEDS nor the College Navigator. “Hillsdale is a predominantly certificate degree-granting institution,” Horn said in September 2015. “Hillsdale does offer bachelor’s degrees. However, because the plurality of degrees it awards are certificates, not two-year or fouryear degrees, it was not included on the scorecard at launch.” Hillsdale College is now listed as a four-year institution, offering bachelor’s and “advanced” degrees and not certificate awards, in the College Navigator. The NCES added Hillsdale, after the college received notice it could voluntarily submit information to IPEDS without ethnic or racial data of students on Oct. 8, 2015, Director of Institutional Research George Allen said. Hillsdale submitted the fall 2015 survey Oct. 9, 2015, to be included in the database. It,

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