TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2015 THELANTERN.COM
OPINION >>
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Photo Editor Samantha Hollingshead gives her take on the importance of communication, not judgement, between parents and kids. ON PAGE 3
THE STUDENT VOICE OF THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
ARTS&LIFE >>
YEAR 135, ISSUE NO. 55 @THELANTERN
SPORTS >>
OUAB chef Marc Dullin gives students cooking lessons every week in the basement of the Ohio Union. ON PAGE 4
After the 49-7 win over Rutgers, OSU football enters its only bye week this season. ON PAGE 8
Buckeyes recieve innovation awards CLAYTON EBERLY Lantern reporter eberly.72@osu.edu
COURTESY OF TNS
Former president Bill Clinton speaks on stage about the future of equality and opportunity at the Clinton Global Initiative at the Sheraton Hotel in New York City on Sept. 29.
Bill Clinton to visit OSU, waives speaking fee The former president is scheduled to speak at Mershon Auditorium at 3 p.m. on Nov. 19 JOELY FRIEDMAN ● Lantern reporter ● friedman.312@osu.edu
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ormer President Bill Clinton has waived the speaking fees for his Ohio State visit this November, said Hank Wilson, director of communications for the John Glenn College
of Public Affairs. ● In 2007, Clinton was OSU’s spring commencement speaker, and he has now been invited by the John Glenn College of Public Affairs to speak at OSU again in the Mershon Auditorium at 3 p.m. on Nov. 19. ● Clinton has previously charged between $100,001 and $200,000 for speaking engagements at Temple Law School and University of California Los Angeles, according to the Clinton Foundation website. CLINTON CONTINUES ON 2
EndHateOSU starts an expression SHANGQUAN SHI For The Lantern shi.719@osu.edu “When my professor said I read well for a black girl.” This message, scribbled on a Post-it note, joined a door-sized wall of accounts describing insensitivity experienced by students at Ohio State. The board, which welcomed students’ additions from Oct. 19 to 21 in the Ohio Union, was a soft launch of EndHateOSU. EndHateOSU is a collaborative program between the Undergraduate Stu-
dent Government and the National Residence Hall Honorary aiming to denounce stereotypes and slurs that are used across campus. “People are asked to talk about what they see on campus and what they experienced with this wall,” Adrienne Michelson, a third-year in political science and former director of diversity and inclusion for USG, said. “This wall represents systematic issues on expressions (concerning) race, gender, identities that are normally marginalized in society that are representative at Ohio State.” ENDHATE CONTINUES ON 2
SHANGQUAN SHI | FOR THE LANTERN
Ohio State students were invited to post Post-it notes describing instances of race, gender and identity insensitivity.
A team of five graduate nursing students won the student innovator award for developing an app called MobileYou at the 2015 Innovator of the Year Awards. This year’s awards were held at the Ohio Union’s U.S. Bank Conference Theater on Thursday, after the Annual State of Research Address given by the Vice President for Research Caroline Whitacre. “We are advocates for research, locally and nationally,” Whitacre said in her speech. “We communicate research stories and celebrate the research successes of faculty and students. We honor those who make extraordinary contributions to moving research forward.” The student innovator award was given to Sarah-Jane Baserman, Megan Miller-Lloyd, Phillip Newman, Stephanie Ritchie and Hayley Townsend. “We’re definitely very honored,” said Baserman, a second-year graduate student in nursing. “We were surprised to even be nominated — let alone win the award. It’s a privilege for sure.” Baserman said the app is for the low-income population here in Columbus.
2015 Innovator of the Year Awards recognize students, alumni and faculty “It finds free resources around town for food, housing, transportation and other things like that,” she said. The Innovator of the Year Awards began in 2010 and originally only consisted of two awards: the early career innovator and the innovator of the year, according to Beth Haas, director of communications and marketing for the Office of Research. The student innovator of the year award was added the following year in 2011. The nominees are requested by the deans at the university and they can each select two recipients in each award category, Whitacre said. “Colleges like engineering, medicine and agriculture tend to be where we see most of the nominations,” she said. “But this year,
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