October 28 2015

Page 1

thelantern

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2015 THELANTERN.COM

CAMPUS >>

OSU is set to hold its first Aruna Project 5K on Saturday to raise money for freeing victims from brothels in South Asia. ON PAGE 2

THE STUDENT VOICE OF THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

ARTS&LIFE >>

YEAR 135, ISSUE NO. 56 @THELANTERN

SPORTS >>

Family-owned business College Traditions, located on West Lane Avenue, is celebrating 30 years in the business. ON PAGE 4

Goalie Chris Froschauer has climbed OSU’s roster to become a starter his senior year. ON PAGE 8

THREAT OF VIOLENCE

Driving simulator donated to OSUPD AUBREY CORNWELL Lantern reporter cornwell.68@osu.edu

SAMANTHA HOLLINGSHEAD | PHOTO EDITOR

(Above) Police were on campus following a threat made toward OSU. Police said they were there to answer questions for students and to walk around the area. (Left) OSU PD and bomb sniffing dogs were seen outside Thompson Library on Oct. 27. Police patrolled the area while answering students’ questions.

Anonymous online post spurs heightened security on campus

The Ohio State University Police Department received a driving simulator on Oct. 20 on behalf of the Maria Tiberi Foundation. The simulator is meant to raise awareness of distracted driving. Maria Tiberi was a senior at OSU in Autumn 2013 when she died in a car accident attributed to distracted driving. The foundation was created by Maria’s parents, Dom and Terri Tiberi, in her name to spread the word about the negative effects of distracted driving. “We’ve always had a special place in our hearts for Ohio State, so when this opportunity came with our foundation, we identified a need and that’s the reason we put one at Ohio State,” said Dom Tiberi, WBNS-10TV sports anchor. SIMULATOR CONTINUES ON 2

Accompanied by overcast skies, the presence of a potential threat loomed over campus for most of Tuesday. “Today is a rainy day, but I actually noticed (significantly) less people walking outside,” said Brice Tugbenyoh, a fourth-year in microbiology. “I thought it was a little bit irregular, but I didn’t take too much thought to it until I saw the email.” The Ohio State Department of Public Safety sent a bulk email warning shortly after

midnight on Tuesday after an anonymous “threat of violence to the campus community” was posted online. The email, sent to students, staff and faculty, stated the threat was made online but offered no other details as to when the threat was received or to its nature. Despite the lack of additional information, Nicolette Genter, a first-year in finance, said she was concerned. “The email from the university definitely made me take it seriously,” she said. “There

(were) a bunch of rumors flying around, but just because we’re such a big campus, it wouldn’t be surprising for us to be a target. We’re a popular university, we have a lot of publicity with the championship and stuff. A lot of people know Ohio State.” OSU became aware of the threat late Monday evening, after receiving a call to the University Police non-emergency line, as well as an email containing additional information, including the quoted threat. The original post was dis-

covered by Wes Platt, creator of OtherSpace, the online gaming platform to which the threat was first published. After seeing the threat, which was translated from the constructed international language Esperanto to read, “If you live in the Ohio State University, I warn you. Tomorrow at 15 hours, I will kill students and teachers with guns. I have guns and explosives in my room, which I will use,” Platt first contacted University Police and then the FBI. The threatening party posted THREAT CONTINUES ON 3

AUBREY CORNWELL | LANTERN REPORTER

OSU coordinator for student life Ally Himes tests out the driving simulator.

Buckeyes pitch apps, tech projects at IDEA FEST INAKI DEGUZMAN Lantern reporter deguzman.5@osu.edu

MICHAEL HUSON | CAMPUS EDITOR

Members of IDEA FEST at the CBEC Building on Oct. 25.

Ohio State students and faculty gathered to compete at the first annual IDEA FEST, which took place this past weekend. The event, hosted by the College of Arts and Sciences with the help of the Technology Commercialization Office, was an open-house competition where students and faculty were invited to pitch ideas for apps and software that they think could have the power to im-

pact the world. Attendees from different fields collaborated on their ideas, such as students from the business college working with social science and engineering majors to design a project which would create immersion with technology, many focusing on how technology and software have the potential to help educate and improve lives. Andrea Ward Ross, assistant executive dean for research for the College of Arts and Sciences, said the event provided an opportunity to show the breadth of the dis-

cipline of the arts and sciences at OSU. “You got anthropology, dance, chemistry, art, all of that together — we believe that all of those people working together make for a much better experience and a much better world,” she said. “It just made sense to have a global event to bring a lot of people together, and I think you got to see the results of that (at the event).” The event took place at the newly renovated Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and Chemistry IDEA FEST CONTINUES ON 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.