Michigan’s oldest college newspaper
Vol. 141 Issue 22 - March 22, 2018
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
Michigan gubernatorial candidate Patrick Colbeck visits campus
By | Joshua Paladino Opinions Editor With the Constitution in the pocket of his suit jacket and a finger pointed toward the sky, Michigan State Sen. Patrick Colbeck, R-Canton, said: “I know who I serve. I know why I’m serving.” Colbeck, who represents the 7th District in Wayne County, is running to replace Michigan’s Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, who is term limited. On Wednesday night in Lane 335, he gave a short speech, then fielded questions from the audience for more than an hour, noting that none of the other Republican candidates talked to their prospective constituents with such candor. “You need someone who is willing to speak truth to power,” he said, “and the other candidates just won’t do it.” In the Republican primary, he’s up against Michigan
Attorney General Bill Schuette and Lt. Gov. Brian Calley, who have widespread name recognition and much fatter campaign coffers. According to the Detroit Free Press, Colbeck has raised a meager $243,00 compared to Schuette’s $3 million and Calley’s $1.8 million. But that’s where he said he’s most comfortable. He’s an outsider candidate, a longshot, but that’s the history of his seven years in the Michigan Senate, he said. “I ran because I’m tired of cronyism — at all different levels,” he said. Colbeck earned his Senate seat in a longshot bid, too. Never having held public office, he faced four state house representatives and beat them all. Since he began the campaign, he has built a grassroots movement with little funding and hardly any name recognition outside of his district. He
Editor-in-Chief
Persson added that the Bon Appétit team has designed a vegetarian sandwich and that the entree salads will be gluten-free. Students will be able to find specials and menu updates on the shop’s Instagram @ hillsdalefresco. Daily menus will be available on hillsdale. cafebonappetit.com. In the future, Persson said Bon Appétit hopes to add even more selections. Café Fresco’s name is meant convey that its meals are made fresh daily in the Searle Center’s catering kitchen, but also available for students to grab quickly. Its hours mirror the Grewcock cafeteria’s to alleviate its lunchtime busyness. Between 1,100 and 1,300 people come to the cafeteria for lunch, mostly between 11:55 a.m. and 12:10 p.m. “The biggest challenge for me is the times when the cafeteria is open,” freshman Sam Swayze said. “That would resolve that complaint. The portability would be nice.” Students said they were excited about the new café, especially if it does free up dining space in the cafeteria. “A lot of days, you arrive at 12:15 p.m. and can’t find a seat anywhere,” sophomore Jillian Riegle said. “It can give me anxiety to go. I don’t look forward to it. I hope the grab and go does alleviate some of the overcrowding.” Apthorpe said the opening of Café Fresco will cause unexpected challenges but noted that Bon Appétit is working to make the project a success and will implement changes as needed. Ultimately, though, the hope is that the new service will benefit the students and functions of Bon Appétit’s service as a whole, Persson said. “I would have loved to have this option available,” he said. “It’s nice if you do not have time to go to lunch and spend an hour there, waiting in line and then you start talking to friends. That’s more like an event. Café Fresco will allow students to save time if they need to.” Riegle added that she is happy to save more of her Liberty Bucks when she cannot make it to the cafeteria. “It’s nice that I can use a swipe,” she said. “That way I can still buy coffee three times a week.”
He said, luckily for him, at least 50 percent of voters remain undecided with four months before Michigan’s Aug. 7 primary. In the general election, the Republican victor would likely face former Senate Democratic Leader Gretchen Michigan gubernatorial candidate Patrick Colbeck, a state senator, answered ques- Whitmore tions from students and local residents in Lane 335 on Wednesday night. or Abdul Breana Noble | Collegian El-Sayed, the former execsaid it stands opposed to what and Snyder. utive director of the Detroit he calls the “Lansing oligarIn two polls on Real Clear chy” — the trio of Michigan Politics, he registered at 3 per- Health Department. Colbeck said his campaign House Speaker Tom Leonard, cent and 4 percent, while the slogan — “principled soluR-Dewitt Township; Michigan Republican primary favorite, tions for Michigan” — inSenate Majority Leader Arlan Schuette, hovered between 30 forms his campaign and every Meekhof, R-Ottawa County; and 50 percent.
vote he takes as a Senator. The first principle is “The government works for the people, not the other way around,” he said. He said Lansing doesn’t follow this principle for basic services, like road maintenance. “The whole issue with our roads is that they’re treating it as a jobs program instead of a public service program,” Colbeck said. “The Michigan Department of Transportation is not focused on quality.” As evidence, he cited a MDOT study that looked at different road maintenance techniques and the number of union jobs that would result from each. Colbeck earned his Senate seat during the Tea Party movement, which has cost him political capital in the Senate Republican Caucus.
See Colbeck A2
Café Fresco opens Monday Daniel Cody wins Everett Oratory contest restrictions at the new café. By | Breana Noble Knorr Dining Hall will have competition for students’ meal swipes starting next week. Café Fresco, the new grab and go service from Bon Appétit Management Co. in Kendall Hall, opens Monday. Serving patrons from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., the shop will offer a new menu of sandwiches and salads for students to swipe to alleviate customer congestion in the Grewcock Student Union’s cafeteria and offer an easy way to get lunch to go. “We want to always push the limits of what we’re capable and expand the expectation of our guests,” said David Apthorpe, general manager for Bon Appétit at Hillsdale. “We want to get as much use out of the student union while providing an additional service and meeting demand.” Unlike A.J.’s Café or Jitters Coffee Cart — which accept cash, cards, and Liberty Bucks — Café Fresco takes only the meal sweeps that previously were limited to use in the Grewcock dining hall. Persson said based on how the project goes, it may consider accepting Liberty Bucks in the future. Students have a choice of two types of meals at Café Fresco. The first consists of a sandwich, side, drink, and dessert. Sides range from a mini kale salad to a bag of chips. “The items are nutrient-dense but also delicious,” said William Persson ’17, Bon Appétit’s marketing manager at Hillsdale. “They’re not some boring sandwich.” The second is a dinner-size salad with a dessert and drink. “The salads are a lot bigger,” Persson said. “They’re more like a full meal with meat and vegetables.” For Café Fresco, Bon Appétit has made up 12 new kinds each of sandwiches, salads, and sides (not including chips and desserts) for its soft opening this semester. Each day, there will be three options of each with choices rotating based on consumer demand. “The key was variety,” Persson said. “We didn’t want people to be bored going there every day.” Apthorpe said every day there will be options available for individuals with dietary
To read about Chi Omega’s Make-A-Wish pancake fundraiser, see A3
Follow @HDaleCollegian
By | Allison Schuster Assistant Editor Senior Daniel Cody won the 2018 Edward Everett Prize in Oratory, an annual speech competition that focused this year on “National Security and Privacy: Principles for Achieving a Just Balance.” This 18th annual competition was judged by President Larry Arnn, Professor of Politics Thomas West, and Professor and Chairman of Politics Mickey Craig. “Arnn announced that he and the judges believed this to be one of the strongest set of competitors since the competition began,” said Kristin Kiledal, department chair of rhetoric and public addres, and the event’s organizer. “The panel of preliminary judges was similarly impressed.” Cody, Weaver, and Carozza were among five competitors who qualified for the contest’s final round out of 21 applicants. Other finalists included freshman Taryn Murphy and junior Ellen
Friesen. Competitors created and memorized a speech on the assigned topic with a 10-minute time limit. “I thoroughly enjoyed every round of the competition and I am grateful for the opportunity. It is awesome to get a chance to present and defend your ideas,” Cody said. His speech centered on the current approach of the government to record everything and then have the ability to access detailed reports when anyone falls under suspicion. This, he argued, calls for policies that will fix the surveillance programs. He stated that people must recognize that these programs are only the vanguards to the new approach to law enforcement and national security. They are the representatives of the immense technologically enabled government power of mass surveillance. To help explain the need for clear principles to guide our government’s use of mass surveillance and limit it, he provided the example
of the precedence set by the United States government in the Telephone Records Program. Founded in 2001 after 9/11, President George W. Bush secretly authorized this program, which required that American telephone companies turn over all records each day so they could be accessed whenever. For each person who falls under terrorist suspicion, their telephone records are collected as well as all of the phone records of who that phone made contact with, as well as who those phones made contact with, as well as who those phones made contact with. Cody ended his speech by asking the audience to imagine what sort of technology will be possible a year from now, with this precedence in mind. He provided a call to action for all Americans to prevent their rights from being washed away by adopting principles limiting the use of mass surveillance. Cody said these ideas are transparency, accountability, and utility. This means not dissolving
what Americans consider to be right, holding programs responsible to the real courts, and doing so without increasing security of other rights. Cody was awarded $3,000 for his presentation. Senior Jacob Weaver received $2,000 for second place, and junior Shiloh Carozza received $1,000 for third. Weaver stressed the strict adherence of the 4th amendment as a means for creating the perfect compromise between privacy and security. This means ensuring that whenever the government is snooping around that it’s with probable cause. He ended his speech with a call for Americans to “hold our representatives accountable.” Carozza’s speech focused on the need for government today to “play by the constitution.” She explained that by respecting individual liberty and the 4th amendment, those truly posing a threat to our country will be sought out and those who are innocent will retain their liberty.
Senior Daniel Cody won the the 2018 Edward Everett Prize in Oratory contest on Tuesday. Matthew Kendrick | Collegian
Juniors elect their class of 2019 officers By | Alexis Nester Collegian Reporter After extending the elections through Monday evening because of a tie for one of the positions, Director of Employer Relations John Quint announced the officers for the Class of 2019 on Tuesday. Although Quint announced the elected officers in a campus-wide email on Tuesday, he has not told the position in which the tie occurred. Director of Career Services Joanna Wiseley said
she has not seen a tie occur in class officer elections in recent years. The rising senior class elected Ryan Kelly Murphy as president. Murphy, who currently is in Washington, D.C., for the Washington-Hillsdale Internship Program, is a George Washington fellow and a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. She also volunteers as a children’s ministry teacher at Pine Ridge Bible Church in Quincy. “I have always marveled at the position of president,” Murphy said. “I have really
www.hillsdalecollegian.com
respected the people who have taken on that role, people who serve their classmates. I wondered, could God have that opportunity for me to serve in that way?” Vice President-elect Marcus Koperski serves as Alpha Tau Omega’s new member educator, where he teaches new members and manages the active members in his chapter. He also works for the Kendall Contact Center and plays cello in the school orchestra. Koperski said he looks forward to working with Murphy and the other officers.
“I want to be reliable and help Ryan do what she needs to get done,” Koperski said. “Whatever bumps in the road, I know these officers will be able to handle it.” Kathleen Russo, who was elected secretary, serves as Students for Life president and recruitment chair for Chi Omega. She also is a member of the Federalist Society and the cheer team. Russo smiled as she recalled meeting most of the other members at freshman
See Officers A2
Look for The Hillsdale Collegian