Former beavers wrap up in las vegas
Oregon would be fiscally smart to legalize weed
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The Summer Barometer
DAILYBAROMETER.COM • 541-737-3191
DAILYBAROMETER
WEDNESDAY JULY 23, 2014 VOL. CXVII, NO. 5
@BARONEWS, @BAROSPORTS, @BAROFORUM
Students serve students in START n
Program provides incoming students, enrolled students resources, opportunities By Sean Bassinger THE SUMMER BAROMETER
START leaders direct guide the next generation of Oregon State University students and have a unique opportunity to reflect on their own experiences when they were new to OSU. While START connects incoming and current students at OSU, enrolled students have an opportunity to join the team and learn more about their peers. Meanwhile, new students have an opportunity to explore the campus, ask questions and become acquainted with the community. Emily Shroyer and Lauren Barry, two students who work as leaders in START, became better friends after joining the program. “I didn’t think we’d actually get to know each other so well,” said Shroyer, who is a senior in sociology. Barry, a senior transfer student who studies public health, said the relationships created within the START program have become like family. “We really are a team,” Shroyer said. Sessions of START focus on com-
mon experiences faced by first-year students and transfers from other colleges. Unlike first-year periods, which last for two days, transfer sessions only run through the morning to the afternoon. As a transfer student herself, Barry said transfer students get a much more rushed experience. “It’s definitely a different vibe,” Barry said. Students in the first-year START are offered tours of residence halls and have an option to spend the night there if desired, Barry said. Though she wishes she could have had a more solid experience when she transferred, Barry recognizes the need for a condensed session since many still had other college experiences to prepare them for campus life. “We don’t have to help (transfer students) register, because they’ve done it at other colleges,” Barry said. Teague Teece, a senior studying agricultural sciences and serves as a START coordinator, said her time as a student at Linn-Benton Community College made her first START experience more than enough at the transfer session. “Going over here wasn’t that big of See START | page 3
Jodie DAvaz
| THE SUMMER BAROMETER
Andrew Eddy, junior in accounting, helps incoming students locate their next destinations outside the Memorial Union lounge. Each START session focuses on specific needs for either first-year or transfer students.
Breaking ground at Sather property Goats eat bad plants at OSU n
Retreat at Oak Creek development to house 1016 residents in Corvallis By Chris Correll THE SUMMER BAROMETER
JUSTIN QUINN
| THE SUMMER BAROMETER
Landmark Properties’ housing project, the Retreat at Oak Creek, is set to open in 2015.
After initial delays, construction of Landmark Properties’ studenthousing complex is in full swing. About 40 people, including members of the Corvallis City Council, gathered near the Oregon State University Foundation building at Southwest 35th Street and Western Boulevard for a groundbreaking ceremony June 26. The event marked the official start of the Retreat at Oak Creek, a housing project more than two years in the making.
Renting service provides landscaping for OSU, all-youcan-eat bananza for goats
The goats eat ivy up to six feet up trees, Murphy said. She uses fences to keep the goats away from hazardous plants like rhododendrons, which are poisonous to goats. The goats ignore pansy ragwort if they’re THE SUMMER BAROMETER Oregon State University’s uncon- pulled off the plot fast enough, ventional, four-legged landscapers Murphy said. “You have to manage projects left campus Tuesday after chowing down on ivy around the Crop closely,” Murphy said. “You can’t just throw goats out there and let Science Building. Briana Murphy, the Shepherdess them do whatever they want.” In lieu of goat landscaping, OSU of Goat Power LLC, brought her flock of goats to the OSU campus facilities services usually use power equipment and herbicide to remove for one week of ivy-munching. “They just plowed through it,” the problem plants before haulMurphy said. See GOATS | page 3 n
See OAK CREEK | page 3
New academic programs among action items for board OSU board of trustees discusses future programs, code of conduct, reporting fraud, waste, abuse
and Automation Engineering” and an undergraduate program, “Religion/ Religious Studies.” The board also approved a new policy on reporting suspected cases of fraud, waste and abuse at OSU. The THE SUMMER BAROMETER policy includes a hotline for reporting The Oregon State University board incidences of fraud, waste and abuse. of trustees approved two new aca- It outlines responsibilities for OSU demic programs Friday during the employees to report such infractions first official meeting. The new board to the OSU office of audit services or is a departure from the governance of the hotline at 1-855-388-4971 and the Oregon University System. www.oregonstate.ethicspoint.com. The OSU proposed code of ethics The board approved a graduate program, “Mechatronics, Robotics passed, with emphasis on honesty n
Column: New hope for baseball
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and integrity, respect, stewardship and compliance and accountability and responsibility. “All employees, officers, students, and volunteers acting on behalf of OSU have a responsibility to work towards the fulfillment of our mission and conduct themselves ethically, with the highest integrity, and in compliance with all applicable laws, regulations, and policies,” according to the passed proposal. The Summer Barometer On Twitter @baronews news@dailybarometer.com
Knights: WCL All-Star Game cancelled Sports, page 5
courtesy of briana Murphy
Briana Murphy’s goats eat and dispose of ivy, a problematic climbing plant, reducing the use of herbicides.
North Porch Cafe review
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