The Lantern - October 31 2017

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TUESDAY

COFFEE

THURSDAY

P2

OSU student helps coffee supplier improve product for campus sales.

COLUMBUS’ OWN

P4

Jazz band Funk Worthy looks to revive gospel, funk, and rock.

BUCKEYE BRIEF

P8

There are still games to be played and improvements for Ohio State to make moving past Penn State.

BASKETBALL

P8

Chris Holtmann plans to get the Schottenstein Center rocking again.

The student voice of the Ohio State University

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

thelantern.com

@TheLantern

Year 137, Issue No. 46

Student organization aims to bring smart technology to campus YINI LIU Lantern reporter liu.4194@osu.edu

LANTERN FILE PHOTO

Greek Row, located on 15th Avenue in Columbus. From 2011 to 2015, Ohio State suspened or disciplined 10 fraternities for hazing.

OSU Greek life has history of hazing culture OWEN DAUGHERTY Assistant Campus Editor daugherty.260@osu.edu At least three Greek organizations at Ohio State have been, or are currently being, investigated for possible violations of the code of student conduct in the 10 weeks since Autumn Semester began. While it remains unclear what the violations might be, one thing is known: All three of the fraternities recently, or currently, under university pressure — Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Tau Kappa Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Mu —

have been suspended from campus before, in the early 2000s. One similarity between Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Tau Kappa Epsilon is that both have been suspended from campus for hazing in the past. Hazing is nothing new, both nationally and at Ohio State. The Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority made headlines in 2015 when a 19-year-old new member was hit by a car soon after joining the organization. The accident resulted in the student being hospitalized and the incident subsequently landed the sorority a two-year

suspension after an investigation of the chapter found a culture of hazing. KKG was reinstated to Ohio State campus last spring following its two-year suspension. The sorority will begin recruiting new members in January. From 2011 to 2015, Ohio State suspended or disciplined 10 fraternities for hazing. Seven sororities were suspended or sanctioned for hazing in that same time period, according to a WBNS-10TV report. Only four organizations disciplined in the time period were found guilty of something

VOTE

ELECTION 2017 LANTERN ILLUSRATION BY KELLY MEADEN | ASSISTANT DEISGN EDITOR

You step into the voting booth on Nov. 7 to cast your ballot. You go down the list voting, likely, for the candidate representing your preferred party. Then you get to the judges. No party is listed next to the names. What do you do? The judges ran in primaries, but there is no party affiliation on the ballot. Were you supposed to go to the clerk of courts and research their past decisions and legal philosophy? How do you make an informed judicial vote? This is a dilemma many voters face. “In 2017, voters in most of the state (including Columbus) will be choosing municipal court judges, and information about municipal court candidates is scarce,” Lawrence Baum, a professor emeritus in political science at Ohio State, said in an email. “The ballot provides only the names of the candidates; the campaigns are

“We want students to feel more connected to each other, to the infrastructure, to the buildings and to the vehicles.” Danny Freudiger Smart Columbus organization member

small in scale and the news media doesn’t provide much coverage.” The judges whom voters elect differs year to year, and this year’s ballots will be cast to elect municipal court judges. Jill Snitcher McQuain, executive director at the Columbus Bar Association, said everyone should be concerned with who is elected to municipal courts, not just the people appearing in those courts, because there are many different kinds of legal matters that come through it. “Even if it isn’t something that you [partake in], you can be impacted by the case law that comes out of that decision,” she said. Voting for a judge is a difficult process as there is little to no information available on the candidates, and most voters don’t know where to go or what information to look for. The United States is nearly alone internationally in having its citizens elect judges, according to

“The goal of this organization is to improve students’ lives,” said Danny Freudiger, a graduate student in mechanical engineering who leads the organization. “We want students to feel more connected to each other, to the infrastructure, to the buildings and to the vehicles.” The organization uses campus as a test bed, where solutions developed there can be applied to a larger scale, said Maryn Weimer, the senior associate director of CAR and adviser to the student group. “Campus is humongous. There is so much that goes on within this tight, confined space,” Weimer said. “It’s almost a city within a city.” One ongoing project in the organization is creating a mobile app to increase efficiency of the patient courtesy shuttle — a campus service that transports patients between Ohio State’s Wexner Medical Center and other campus locations. Different from the courtesy shuttle operations, the app would send a signal to the shuttles immediately after a request, which shortens the process, Freudiger said.

VOTES CONTINUES ON 2

SMARTCITY CONTINUES ON 2

HAZING CONTINUES ON 3

Judicial elections: How to know who to vote for ZACH VARDA Lantern reporter varda.6@osu.edu

A new Ohio State student organization created to enhance connectivity and mobility of transportation is now on campus. The organization, called Smart Columbus, shares the vision of the Smart City challenge — an initiative to improve transportation and sustainability. While collaborating with Ohio State’s Center for Automotive Research, Transportation and Traffic Management, the student group strives to make campus transportation cleaner, safer and more efficient by incorporating smart technologies.


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