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URMC V127no118 20180403.Pdf (7.352Mb) EDITORIAL SPORTS A&C OUR ASCSU CLUB BASEBALL STEPS THE SECRET ENDORSEMENT UP TO THE PLATE LIFE OF C.A.M. Vol. 127, No. 118 Tuesday, April 3, 2018 PAGE 6 PAGE 12 PAGE 13 Zero Waste Team pushes for LSC composting By Austin Fleskes @Austinfleskes07 While back of house composting is already in effect for some of the restaurants in the Lory Student Center, members of Associated Students for Colorado State University and the Zero Waste Team are pushing for front of house composting to be initiated in the student center. Back of house composting for the eight restaurants in the LSC that are owned by the LSC includes composting waste from the kitchens of those restaurants. Front of house composting would consist of getting composting bins in the common area of the LSC for the community to use. Last July, back of house composting began in the LSC owned restaurants, explained Geoff Valdez, the assistant director for retail operations in the LSC. ASCSU Vice Presidential candidate Lynsie Roper and Presidential candidate Liam Aubrey answer questions during the ASCSU Theatre Debate in Valdez said it took about the Lory Student Center on March 21. The Aubrey-Roper campaign has come under fire by student organizations for Aubrey’s previous affiliation three quarters of a year to with conservative group Turning Point USA. PHOTO BY COLIN SHEPHERD COLLEGIAN get to that point, as there was a large education piece that came with back of house composting. Student government presidential candidate Valdez said currently, front of house composting options are being explored for the LSC. “We’re doing our renounces Turning Point USA affiliation homework, and seeing what By Haley Candelario TPUSA is a national views or the views of the shock value stuff is not the most other institutions have done,” @H_Candelario98 conservative student group speakers TPUSA endorses. productive way to get to that.” Valdez said. “We’re looking at with a local chapter on campus. “I am a political conservative, TPUSA has been known this logistically. We are trying Colorado State University Presidential candidate but I feel that (TPUSA’s) views to help student government to plan out the education piece student government Liam Aubrey said, while he are not representative of my campaigns on college campuses so that there is less sorting to presidential candidate Liam was formerly involved with own,” Aubrey said. “Ultimately, across the country, such as at do front of house and so our Aubrey announced his TPUSA because he agreed my main value when it comes Ohio State University and the custodial team and our LSC campaign has no affiliation with the financial values of to politics is just figuring out University of Maryland, by guests—everybody—is on the with Turning Point USA on the organization, he distanced how we can help people and financially assisting campaigns, same page. We want to get it the campaign’s social media himself because he does not do the most good for the most encouraging TPUSA members right from day one.” Thursday evening. agree with the organization’s people. I think sometimes the see AUBREY on page 4 >> see LSC on page 4 >> COLLEGIAN.COM 2 Tuesday, April 3, 2018 FORT COLLINS FOCUS Colorado State University junior buisness student Zach Poe prepares to do some trad climbing at Duncan’s Ridge. “Hiking is fun as long as it’s vertical and with a rope,” Poe said.PHOTO BY JOSH SCHROEDER COLLEGIAN overheard on the plaza TUESDAY CORRECTIONS In the letter to the editor “Conservative stu- 7 AM - 9 AM DJ Bach dents deserve an apology” Josh Silva was “There’s only so much room in his referred to as an immigrant. He is actually heart, and you don’t deserve it.” 9 AM - 11 PM DJ JJ the son of immigrants. The article titled “Type1ne wins Clash of 1 PM - 3 PM Local Local Lunch Hour the Titans, J.I.D headlines,” referred to Mad “Your personality is thicc.” Dog and Royale. These names are actually 4 PM - 5 PM News Rocky Mountain Review spelled Mad-Dog and Royell. 5 PM - 7 PM DJ Squid Cephalopodcast Everybody makes mistakes, including us. “All this building has is cameras and asbestos.” If you encounter something in the paper 7 PM - 8 PM B&B Sports you believe to be an error, email errors@ collegian.com. “Curling is just Swiffers and Roombas.” SHOW SCHEDULE 4/2 - 4/4 Follow Live show at 7 p.m. CSU Collegian “I brought everyone chocolate since the actual Monday Sports Show on Snapchat love of my life — my dog — can’t have chocolate.” abailable on Comcast channel 11, stream at Follow Tuesday News @CSUCollegian collegian.com, YouTube on Twitter Have you recently overheard something funny on campus? Put your Wednesday CTV Local Beats and Facebook. On Like eavesdropping to good use. Tweet us @CSUCollegian and your submissions demand 24/7 on YouTube. could be featured in our next paper! Rocky Mountain Collegian Thursday News on Facebook Lory Student Center Box 13 EDITORIAL STAFF | 970-491-7513 Fort Collins, CO 80523 Randi Mattox | A&C Director Olatz Pascariu | Spanish Editor Erin Douglas | Editor-in-Chief [email protected] [email protected] This publication is not an official publication of Colorado [email protected] Zoë Jennings | A&C Editor State University, but is published by an independent corporation Josh Kloehn | Webmaster Tatiana Parafiniuk-Talesnick | Managing Editor [email protected] [email protected] using the name ‘The Rocky Mountain Collegian’ pursuant to Shelby Holsinger | Design Editor a license granted by CSU. The Rocky Mountain Collegian is a [email protected] Haley Candelario | News Director [email protected] Chapman Croskell | Videography Director 6,500-circulation student-run newspaper intended as a public [email protected] forum. It publishes four days a week during the regular fall and [email protected] Tony Villalobos May | Photography spring semesters. During the last eight weeks of summer Colle- Rachel Telljohn | News Editor Director ADVISING STAFF gian distribution drops to 3,500 and is published weekly. During [email protected] [email protected] Jim Rodenbush | Student Media Adviser the first four weeks of summer the Collegian does not publish. Michelle Fredrickson | Opinion Editor Davis Bonner | Photo Editor Kim Blumhardt | Advertising Manager Corrections may be submitted to the editor in chief and [email protected] [email protected] Hannah Copeland | KCSU Adviser will be printed as necessary on page two. The Collegian is a Mikaela Rodenbaugh | Digital complimentary publication for the Fort Collins community. The Colin Barnard | Sports Director KEY PHONE NUMBERS first copy is free. Additional copies are 25 cents each. Letters to [email protected] Production Manager Distribution | 970-491-1774 the editor should be sent to [email protected]. Seth Bodine | Night Editor [email protected] Classifieds | 970-491-1683 [email protected] Darby Osborne | Social Media Editor Display Advertising | 970-491-7467 [email protected] NEWS Tuesday, April 3, 2018 3 CAMPUS/CITY PhD candidate asks University to repurpose Hughes By Samantha Ye With Horsetooth Reservoir Haberecht’s statements and said @samxye4 222 feet above the stadium and the University should pause the an electrical substation nearby, demolition of Hughes to at least do Hughes Stadium is on the way Hughes is in the ideal location for a structural evaluation of its base. to demolition, but Colorado State pumped storage development and In an effort to provide more University PhD candidate, Aaron an ideal infrastructure project for proof of concept, Million brought Million, feels is does not have to be CSU, Million said. in the senior capstone engineering that way. “As the supposed ‘green class, who did their own Million wants the University energy’ campus, why aren’t they calculations for the operational to repurpose the concrete base (CSU and the Board of Governors) feasibility of the project. He also of the stadium by turning it into seriously considering this?” worked with Neil Grigg, a civil a pumped storage hydropower Million said. and environmental engineering Aaron Million has a proposal to turn Hughes Stadium just west of Fort plant. About a year and a half ago, professor. Collins into a power plant. PHOTO BY JON PRICE COLLEGIAN During the day, when Million presented his idea to Using rough estimates of electricity is highly demanded and various University and City staff Hughes and other standard pump/ rates from Xcel Energy. Harris Office. consequently more expensive, but has not made much progress turbine calculations, Million, said he was confident repurposing CSU is currently looking at water from Horsetooth Reservoir since. Grigg and the senior design team costs would be $40-50 million, developer applications for the would flow down to the plant, Fred Haberecht, campus estimate a Hughes hydropower based on their research of similar land. Once chosen, the developer generating electricity via turbine. planner, said when CSU facilities station could generate between projects. will complete the final zoning The electricity would be engineers looked at the proposal, 31,000-40,000 kwh of energy per Hughes’ demolition, which designation with the City. Based transferred to the electrical they found it would take centuries day and use 37,000-43,000 kwh was approved in fall, has completed on CSURF’s Request for Proposals, substation at Overland Trail and to recoup the cost of building it. He per night. the abatement process and moved the land will ideally become a Drake Road and distributed to also said Hughes would not be able “I don’t think Aaron is as onto actual demolition, where mixed-use development with the grid. All the equipment would to serve as a water tank. crazy as some people think,” the contractor begins to take the possible opportunities for open be underground so it would not “We have a football stadium said Andrew Harris, a senior on structure apart.
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