VOLUME 111, ISSUE 17 | THE-STANDARD.ORG The Standard/The Standard Sports
TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 2018 TheStandard_MSU
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M I S S O U R I S TAT E U N I V E R S I T Y
WHAT WILL HAPPEN WITH
NET NEUTRALITY? IT’S TOO SOON TO TELL CORTLYNN STARK News Editor @Cortlynn_Stark Think of the internet as a series of tubes. Its job is to move information from one place to the next. Think of net neutrality as the post office. You want to send a letter. You take it to the post office and place an American flag stamp on the upper right hand corner. They mail it for you. Think of the post office opening each birthday card you get from a relative, checking to see if they used the right brand of paper. No? The post office will make them pay extra. Or they just won’t mail it. That’s how “interactive development studio” Self Interactive owner Charles Rosenbury explains net neutrality. “(Taking away net neutrality) allows the internet service providers to look at the nature of what it is and make it move slower or faster or block it altogether if you haven’t
paid (for) the type of content,” Rosenbury said. Missouri State computer science professor Lloyd Smith said net neutrality is the idea that all internet traffic will be treated the same. Rosenbury’s company, based in the Springfield EFactory – a program through Missouri State University that helps tech-focused business grow – focuses on web, mobile app and virtual reality development. The internet is a huge part of his business, especially as a startup, Rosenbury said. That’s why he’s concerned about the Federal Communications Commission’s decision to roll back Obama-era net neutrality rules. On Dec. 14, the FCC voted 3-2 to “restore the longstanding, bipartisan light-touch regulatory framework that has fostered rapid internet growth, openness and freedom for nearly 20 years,” according to the FCC’s initiative on Restoring Internet Freedom. According to the FCC, legal and economic analysis along with consumer and stakeholder comments were examined by the FCC. u See NET, page 9
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The Phi Delta Theta house
Greitens proposes cuts to higher ed
Phi Delta Theta Missouri State could chapter removed lose $8 million from Missouri State Hanna Sumpter Senior Reporter @hannasumpter
ALEC McCHESNEY Editor in chief @Alec_McChesney The Phi Delta Theta Fraternity National Headquarters alerted officials at Missouri State University on Saturday, Jan. 20 of its decision to immediately suspend the Missouri Epsilon Chapter at Missouri State
news Most graduates don’t leave Missouri See page 2
University for alleged violations of the risk management policy. The fraternity’s national headquarters confirmed and, in a statement, said: “After a thorough investigation conducted by the General Headquarters, the General Council, the governing body of Phi Delta u See FRATERNITY page 8
Gov. Eric Greitens announced a state budget proposal last week that reduces funding for higher education, including Missouri State, for the second year in a row. The 2019 fiscal year budget proposal announced Jan. 22 calls for a 7.7 percent reduction of funding for higher education. According to a news release from the Missouri House of Representatives, this reduction, combined with
money frozen in the state budget since July 1 of last year, amounts to a 10 percent reduction overall. When Greitens announced the budget proposal he said the budget “increases funding for our priorities: infrastructure, education, public safety and protecting our most vulnerable children. “We’re able to afford those investments by making tough choices, protecting every taxpayer dollar and eliminating wasteful spending,” Greitens said. u See GREITENS, page 8
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MADISYN OGLESBY
life
sports
How dating has changed for students See page 4
Freshman sharpshooter takes the court See page 7