For the hundreds of EMU students, faculty and staff who stream through the dining hall doors for their meals, every day is an election day.
A few paces outside those doors sits the question box. Its white, wooden exterior and five rainbow-colored buttons might appear unassuming, but its questions are anything but simple.
Do you think writing in cursive is a necessary skill? Would you go without internet for a year for $10,000? How young is too young for a child to have a smartphone? Are there more doors or wheels in the world? Those are just a few of the stumpers it’s asked.
Caleb Hostetler 鈥23 created the question box 鈥 otherwise known, in its code, as the EMU Views and Opinions-A-Tron (EMU VOAT) 鈥 for his honors capstone project during the 2022 fall semester.
鈥淪tudents will say, 鈥業 want my project to live on,鈥 but it doesn鈥檛 always work out,鈥 said Hostetler, who works as an electrical engineer near Cleveland, Ohio. 鈥淲hen I was designing this, I put a lot of effort into having someone else other than me run it. I鈥檓 glad to see, at least for a semester or two, it鈥檚 surviving after I left.鈥
After graduating last spring with an engineering and mathematics degree, he left his project in the capable hands of EMU students Doran Kennedy and Adam Hoover, who keep it running each day.

We sat down with Kennedy, a junior biochemistry major from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to find out how he comes up with his questions, what some of the most surprising results have been and whether sharks or gorillas would win in a fight.
How were you two (Doran and Adam) chosen to continue the project?
Caleb put out a Google form in the Royal Radar and was like, 鈥楧oes anyone want to take this over after I graduate?鈥 and I was like, 鈥榊eah, that could be fun.鈥
The Royal Radar?
It鈥檚 a campuswide group chat with about 600 people in it.
What鈥檚 in the machine powering it?
There鈥檚 a monitor in there sticking through the wooden frame, and we鈥檝e got a small computer called a Raspberry Pi and it鈥檚 running off that. Every five minutes, it will connect with the server on campus and it鈥檒l update itself with new poll results. Editor’s Note: For the past couple months, the server has been down and, unfortunately, so has the question box. Thanks to the tireless work of EMU Professor and computer whiz Stefano Colafranceschi, the question box is now back up and running.
Where do you get the ideas for the questions from?
A lot of it is either my own invention, someone else suggested it to me or I found it online. We do have a on there 鈥 people can go to the website and they can suggest their own questions, but we haven鈥檛 gotten a whole lot of those.
Are there any questions that stick out in your mind as especially weird or wacky?

There was one recently where I thought it would be cool to see what building people spent the most time in. I know we have a lot of STEM majors here, but it leaned a lot more 鈥楽cience Center鈥 than I thought it would.
Is there an average number of votes per question?
On weekends, we probably get 150 if we鈥檙e lucky. But, on weekdays, it鈥檚 usually upwards of 200 to 300.
They鈥檙e pretty great questions 鈥 have there been any results that have shocked or surprised you?

My friends and I had a debate the previous day about a topic and I put it in the poll box to see who would win. It was, 鈥業f you bake two lasagnas and stack them on top of each other, is it one lasagna or two lasagnas?鈥 I thought it was a funny question, and I am very much of the school of thought that it is one lasagna, so I hoped to prove my friends wrong, which I think I actually did.
That鈥檚 one of those great philosophical questions like, 鈥楬ow many holes does a straw have?鈥 Actually, in our building we have a long-running debate about who would win in a fight: three gorillas or five great white sharks. They鈥檙e on a neutral site where the sharks can swim through the air like it鈥檚 water.
Oh, interesting. Wait, is it three gorillas and five sharks? Well, for sure, it鈥檚 the sharks.
That seems to be what the majority of people think
It鈥檚 probably the right answer.
Is there a website where people can view the results?
It鈥檚 the same one people go to submit their questions. We have an IP address () on the screen and they type that into their browser and, as long as they鈥檙e on EMU wifi, they can go in and see the list of all the previous questions that have been asked.

Have you ever run into the issue of someone repeatedly pressing a button?
I wouldn鈥檛 really know, but the machine does have a sort of cooldown time, where if you press the buttons too quickly, it will say something like, 鈥楽low down, wait three seconds,鈥 to stop people from spamming. But, I guess if someone was really dedicated, they could just stand there and tap it every three seconds.
Is there any thought that maybe the colors of the buttons affect people鈥檚 choices?
I鈥檝e always heard that, in marketing, people are drawn to red. I haven鈥檛 noticed any correlation, but then again, I haven鈥檛 been looking.
What鈥檚 the best part of running the machine?
I like hearing when people enjoy using it. I think coming up with the questions is also really fun, and thinking 鈥榊eah, that would turn heads, that would get people鈥檚 attention.鈥

The questions seem a bit deeper than surface-level. It鈥檚 not like, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 your favorite color?鈥
I do think it would be funny to ask, 鈥榃hat鈥檚 your favorite color?鈥 and then make sure none of the colors of the buttons match the answers.
What are you up to when you鈥檙e not coming up with questions or studying?
I like playing video games. I run a game show on campus called EMU Taskmaster and I鈥檝e been running it for four seasons so far, once a semester. The last one was won by Josh Stucky.
Any plans for after you graduate in 2025?
I鈥檓 probably going to go to graduate school at some point. Not right away, though. I think I want to build some experience first and then we鈥檒l probably see about grad school.
Answers have been edited for conciseness
