april 25, 2014 | the miami student

10
BY LAUREN OLIVER FOR THE MIAMI STUDENT Last summer, senior Ashley VanBuskirk studied abroad in Kosovo with the journalism de- partment intending to gain further experience in the field. However, she came away with something drastically different. After spend- ing time in the city, VanBuskirk’s interactions with the Kosovo resi- dents kindled the idea for her own stationery company – Flora. Flora Stationery, which offers journals, academic planners and notecards, is a nonprofit com- pany that will put all proceeds toward scholarships to help fund education for women in Eastern Europe. VanBuskirk’s last week in Kosovo sparked the idea for Flora. She met a young woman named Emma who inspired Van- Buskirk with her positive atti- tude, even as her family had been on welfare following her dad’s service in the Kosovo war in 1999. High unemployment rates and many other obstacles made affording Emma’s education very difficult. VanBuskirk was able to attend the Kosovo program with the help of five different scholarships. Due to her success in finding these scholarships, VanBuskirk said she believed she would be able to find something similar for Emma, as the University of Pristina, where Emma would attend, cost 250 Eu- ros per semester. In contrast, the average cost of a student attend- ing an in-state public institution in the United States is close to $9,000. After a long search, Van- Buskirk was unsuccessful. “I didn’t have the funds to support her, because that would be unsustainable and unreal- istic, so I felt there had to be a more sustainable way to support her,” she said. “So this is where my sister [Victoria] and I came up with the idea to sell school related supplies to raise money for a scholarship fund.” The scholarships will allow young women to better their lives and receive a degree in their own community, as many women are forced to receive an education elsewhere. Junior Elizabeth Arington, Flo- ra’s social media manager, signed onto VanBuskirk’s team after learning about the project in her Social Entrepreneurship class. “I love Flora’s mission and ev- erything it is doing for the women in Kosovo,” she said. “I love being a part of something that has such a vast opportunity for making a huge difference.” VanBuskirk and her team re- cently launched a pilot program to test out Flora’s potential suc- cess, where they sold 60 journals. For every 40 journals purchased, a semester of tuition is fully BY OLIVIA BRAUDE GREENHAWKS EDITOR It is Friday night, the weekend, the start of a break from the stress of college and time to relax. For many students, this night begins with a pre-game where they will down a few drinks before they hit the bars Uptown. But body- conscious students may find a fun Friday out comes with a hefty price tag in the form of calories. Two Natty Lights: 200 calo- ries. One Trashcan: 350 calories. Two Screwdrivers: 400 calories. A trip to Jimmy Johns to satisfy the alcohol-induced craving: 500 calories. For concerned students, prepa- rations for this caloric expendi- ture began earlier in the day. They began with each missed meal, each step on the treadmill, each and every thought about compen- sating for the calories consumed later that evening. These actions, termed colloquially as “drunkore- xic behaviors,” are little-known disordered eating habits affect- ing students who do not want to choose between partying and having the perfect body. According to Miami University junior Abby Gilligan, drunkore- xia has three main components: restricting calories or skipping meals in anticipation of drinking, drinking to excess and inducing vomiting to purge calories and working out in order to burn the calories from drinking. Gilligan, a kinesiology and nu- trition double-major, focused her research on the over-exercising behavior of drunkorexia, hypoth- esizing males would be more likely than females to compen- sate for alcohol calories by hitting the gym. “I actually thought that males would exhibit the behaviors more than females just because the re- search said that males consume more alcohol than females and workout more than females and just, keeping those two things in mind, I thought that just in terms of exercise, that males would exhibit that behavior more than females,” Gilligan said. Her results surprised her be- cause although they showed a positive correlation between alcohol consumption and ex- ercise in general, Gilligan did not find much difference in the number of times men chose to compensate for a night out by over-exercising and the number of times women chose the same compensatory behavior. Rose Marie Ward, a professor in the Kinesiology and Health Department, has been studying drunkorexia on Miami’s campus for the past few years. She con- ducts her research by surveying students using questions based on past studies. Ward’s interest in Miami’s potential problem with disor- dered eating was sparked by talks among faculty and students claiming one in five Miami stu- dents had an eating disorder. “I didn’t believe it,” Ward said, “We wouldn’t have the resources on campus to deal with that.” Her latest research centered on the motives for drunkorexic behaviors—restricting calories, over-exercising or purging—and she found that people participated for social reasons, in order to get drunk faster, to save calories and to cope with certain emotions. In 1997, The Miami Student reported that Miami fraternities were instructed to raise the GPA requirement for rush from 2.0 to 2.2. This change, however, was said to have only affected four to six men that year. The current GPA requirement for fraternities is 2.5, as is the requirement for sorority rush. The Miami Student FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014 Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826 MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIO VOLUME 141 NO. 49 TODAY IN MIAMI HISTORY Funding in the cards for European women’s education I think that the media probably has a lot to do with it. Body image and the whole thing with the freshman 15.” ABBY GILLIGAN MIAMI UNIVERSITY JUNIOR LAUREN OLSON PHOTO EDITOR SPRING FLING Kayla Miller and Jessica Dusing (top), Addie Lottman (left), Ashley Smith and Tori Collins (middle) and Kendall Pleasant (right) enjoy Springfest yesterday on Cook Field. DRUNKOREXIA, SEE PAGE 5 FLORA, SEE PAGE 5 Beauty over brains: Drunkorexia puts students in medical danger CONTRIBUTED BY A.VANBUSKIRK Robbery suspects arrested BY CHRIS CURME COMMUNITY EDITOR The Oxford Police Department (OPD) arrested two juveniles and two adults Wednesday in reference to a pair of robberies last weekend. As reported in the April 22 issue of The Miami Student, around 1:30 a.m. Friday, two males allegedly robbed a female Miami University student at gunpoint outside Oxford Commons apartments. A day later, around 2 a.m. Saturday, two males similarly dressed robbed at gun- point a male in the same vicinity. The suspects escaped on foot, absconding with the female’s purse and phone, and then the male’s cash. According to an OPD press re- lease, OPD’s investigation was aided by the Butler County Sheriff’s Office, the Oxford Township Police Department, the Miami University Police Department and the Butler County Prosecutor’s Office. Carson B. Buell, 20, of Hamilton, was charged with two first-degree counts of complicity to aggravated robbery. Nathaniel S. Nickel, 19, of Oxford, was charged with two first-degree felony counts of aggra- vated robbery. The two 17-year-old juveniles were each arrested and charged with one count of first-de- gree aggravated robbery. The Editorial Board reserves the right to publish adult suspects’ names at our discretion. For more information, please refer to the editorial discussion regarding the Police Beat policy change at Miam- iStudent.net. BUTLER COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

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Page 1: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY LAUREN OLIVERFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Last summer, senior Ashley VanBuskirk studied abroad in Kosovo with the journalism de-partment intending to gain further experience in the field. However, she came away with something drastically different. After spend-ing time in the city, VanBuskirk’s interactions with the Kosovo resi-dents kindled the idea for her own stationery company – Flora.

Flora Stationery, which offers journals, academic planners and notecards, is a nonprofit com-pany that will put all proceeds toward scholarships to help fund education for women in Eastern Europe.

VanBuskirk’s last week in Kosovo sparked the idea for Flora. She met a young woman named Emma who inspired Van-Buskirk with her positive atti-tude, even as her family had been on welfare following her dad’s

service in the Kosovo war in 1999. High unemployment rates and many other obstacles made affording Emma’s education very difficult.

VanBuskirk was able to attend the Kosovo program with the help of five different scholarships. Due to her success in finding these scholarships, VanBuskirk said she believed she would be able to find something similar for Emma, as the University of Pristina, where Emma would attend, cost 250 Eu-ros per semester. In contrast, the average cost of a student attend-ing an in-state public institution in the United States is close to $9,000. After a long search, Van-Buskirk was unsuccessful.

“I didn’t have the funds to support her, because that would be unsustainable and unreal-istic, so I felt there had to be a more sustainable way to support her,” she said. “So this is where my sister [Victoria] and I came up with the idea to sell school

related supplies to raise money for a scholarship fund.”

The scholarships will allow young women to better their lives and receive a degree in their own community, as many women are forced to receive an education elsewhere.

Junior Elizabeth Arington, Flo-ra’s social media manager, signed onto VanBuskirk’s team after learning about the project in her Social Entrepreneurship class.

“I love Flora’s mission and ev-erything it is doing for the women in Kosovo,” she said. “I love being a part of something that has such a vast opportunity for making a huge difference.”

VanBuskirk and her team re-cently launched a pilot program to test out Flora’s potential suc-cess, where they sold 60 journals. For every 40 journals purchased, a semester of tuition is fully

BY OLIVIA BRAUDEGREENHAWKS EDITOR

It is Friday night, the weekend, the start of a break from the stress of college and time to relax. For many students, this night begins with a pre-game where they will down a few drinks before they hit the bars Uptown. But body-conscious students may find a fun Friday out comes with a hefty price tag in the form of calories.

Two Natty Lights: 200 calo-ries. One Trashcan: 350 calories. Two Screwdrivers: 400 calories. A trip to Jimmy Johns to satisfy the alcohol-induced craving: 500 calories.

For concerned students, prepa-rations for this caloric expendi-ture began earlier in the day. They began with each missed meal, each step on the treadmill, each and every thought about compen-sating for the calories consumed later that evening. These actions, termed colloquially as “drunkore-xic behaviors,” are little-known disordered eating habits affect-ing students who do not want

to choose between partying and having the perfect body.

According to Miami University junior Abby Gilligan, drunkore-xia has three main components: restricting calories or skipping meals in anticipation of drinking, drinking to excess and inducing vomiting to purge calories and working out in order to burn the calories from drinking.

Gilligan, a kinesiology and nu-trition double-major, focused her research on the over-exercising behavior of drunkorexia, hypoth-esizing males would be more likely than females to compen-sate for alcohol calories by hitting the gym.

“I actually thought that males would exhibit the behaviors more than females just because the re-search said that males consume more alcohol than females and workout more than females and just, keeping those two things in mind, I thought that just in terms of exercise, that males would exhibit that behavior more than females,” Gilligan said.

Her results surprised her be-cause although they showed a positive correlation between alcohol consumption and ex-ercise in general, Gilligan did not find much difference in the number of times men chose to compensate for a night out by

over-exercising and the number of times women chose the same compensatory behavior.

Rose Marie Ward, a professor in the Kinesiology and Health Department, has been studying drunkorexia on Miami’s campus for the past few years. She con-ducts her research by surveying students using questions based on past studies.

Ward’s interest in Miami’s potential problem with disor-dered eating was sparked by talks among faculty and students claiming one in five Miami stu-dents had an eating disorder.

“I didn’t believe it,” Ward said, “We wouldn’t have the resources on campus to deal with that.”

Her latest research centered on the motives for drunkorexic behaviors—restricting calories, over-exercising or purging—and she found that people participated for social reasons, in order to get drunk faster, to save calories and to cope with certain emotions.

In 1997, The Miami Student reported that Miami fraternities were instructed to raise the GPA requirement for rush from 2.0 to 2.2. This change, however, was said to have only affected four to six men that year. The current GPA requirement for fraternities is 2.5, as is the requirement for sorority rush.

The Miami StudentFRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014

Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826

MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIOVOLUME 141 NO. 49

TODAY IN MIAMI HISTORY

Funding in the cards for European women’s education

I think that the media probably has a lot to do with it. Body image and the whole thing with the freshman 15.”

ABBY GILLIGANMIAMI UNIVERSITY JUNIOR

LAUREN OLSON PHOTO EDITORSPRING FLINGKayla Miller and Jessica Dusing (top), Addie Lottman (left), Ashley Smith and Tori Collins (middle) and Kendall Pleasant (right) enjoy Springfest yesterday on Cook Field.

DRUNKOREXIA,SEE PAGE 5

FLORA,SEE PAGE 5

Beauty over brains: Drunkorexia puts students in medical danger

CONTRIBUTED BY A. VANBUSKIRK

Robbery suspects arrestedBY CHRIS CURMECOMMUNITY EDITOR

The Oxford Police Department (OPD) arrested two juveniles and two adults Wednesday in reference to a pair of robberies last weekend.

As reported in the April 22 issue of The Miami Student, around 1:30 a.m. Friday, two males allegedly robbed a female Miami University student at gunpoint outside Oxford Commons apartments. A day later, around 2 a.m. Saturday, two males similarly dressed robbed at gun-point a male in the same vicinity.

The suspects escaped on foot, absconding with the female’s purse and phone, and then the male’s cash.

According to an OPD press re-lease, OPD’s investigation was aided by the Butler County Sheriff’s Office, the Oxford Township Police Department, the Miami University Police Department and the Butler County Prosecutor’s Office.

Carson B. Buell, 20, of Hamilton, was charged with two first-degree counts of complicity to aggravated robbery. Nathaniel S. Nickel, 19, of Oxford, was charged with two first-degree felony counts of aggra-vated robbery. The two 17-year-old juveniles were each arrested and charged with one count of first-de-gree aggravated robbery.

The Editorial Board reserves the right to publish adult suspects’ names at our discretion. For more information, please refer to the editorial discussion regarding the Police Beat policy change at Miam-iStudent.net.

BUTLER COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE

Page 2: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY EMILY C. TATESENIOR STAFF WRITER

Just six months ago, during her semester abroad, junior Megan Valerio was staring up at the bright lights of the Eiffel Tower, riding a gondola through the canals of Ven-ice and walking along what remains of the Berlin Wall.

Now, she is back in Ohio, with only the Beta Bells to stare upon, a bike to ride through Oxford, and the Phi Delt gates to walk past.

Valerio said it has been difficult to transition back to her Miami routine after living such a fast-paced, action-packed lifestyle abroad, and she is not alone.

While Miami students across the board treasure their time abroad and often return with new perspectives and altered worldviews, the experi-ence can come at a cost.

Many students struggle with something called reverse culture shock, or ‘re-entry shock,’ as they return from extended travel or study abroad. Essentially, this is the mental and emotional process of readjusting to your life back home and is often even more painful and frustrating than adjusting to culture shock in the

host country. However, few people are aware

reverse culture shock even exists, including those who have experi-enced or will eventually experience

it. Students are not fully prepared for the difficulties they will face when returning home, whether it be isolation, depression or other-wise, which makes the transition

that much more distressing. Junior Emily Houghton, who also

BY LIBBY MUELLERSENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Miami University Learning Management System (LMS) Re-view Committee is currently in the process of comparing the Sakai sys-tem, Niihka, to two others. By the end of the month, MU will decide whether to continue using Niihka or switch to another LMS. The two systems being considered are De-sire2Learn and Instructure/Canvas.

Assistant Provost for e-Learning Beth Rubin said Sakai was devel-oped as a community effort among several universities.

“Sakai is open source, which means everybody can see the source code,” Rubin said. “It was

created, developed and enhanced by a consortium of six to eight universities. Each of those univer-sities hired coders and put hun-dreds of thousands of dollars into developing it.”

According to Rubin, three years ago there was a plan in place for the introduction of a new and improved Sakai system.

“Sakai was out and there was a plan for a new system that was going to be amazing,” Rubin said. “The plan was to create a new sys-tem that was flexible, highly social and fully integrated and that effort was not successful. A prototype was built but it would only work with less than 20 students. What’s

happened since then is most of the universities left the consortium.”

Rubin said many of the universi-ties who originally developed and used Sakai dropped it in favor of other systems.

“Indiana University did an in-tensive two-year study and decided last week they’re leaving Sakai, and they were among the people who designed it,” Rubin said. “We moved there because it was open source. We thought it would be flexible, and everyone was expect-ing this wonderful new version and the version was never created in a way that could scale.”

The LMS Review Committee was created to evaluate other LMS

options following complaints about Sakai and the changing landscape of technology, including the advent and increased use of mobile devices and social media. The Committee conducted tests of two systems in addition to Sakai.

Julie Straub, the Educational Technology Coordinator on the Middletown campus, serves on the committee. She said the committee is looking at specific factors when comparing the systems.

“They’re looking at ways to in-crease the integration of technology and make sure we’re using an LMS

EDITORSREIS THEBAULT

VICTORIA [email protected] CAMPUS

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014

BEN TAYLOR THE MIAMI STUDENTCLEAN IT TO THE BONEChi Omega and Tau Kappa Epsilon hosted a wing-eating contest Thursday on Central Quad to raise money for their philanthropies.

Niihka not so ‘friendly’ after all

Reverse culture shock: MU students’ silent struggle

NEW ASG CABINET

Changing keys: MAP pitches new ideas for annual campus concertsBY AMANDA MAYFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Miami Activities and Program-ming (MAP) partners with the Performing Arts Series to bring entertainers to campus every year, particularly for Family Weekend in October and the annual spring concert. However, for the last two years, a large spring concert has not been scheduled.

The Arts, Culture and Entertain-ment (ACE) board, one of four stu-dent boards comprising Miami Ac-tivities and Programming (MAP), is in charge of bringing in artists for Miami students.

When trying to choose which art-ist should perform, the board con-siders artists students want as well as artists who approach the university on their own, said MAP President junior Maddy Haigh.

The Performing Arts Series helps MAP find talent, determine what is in the budget, negotiate prices and market the show. Director of the Performing Arts Series Patti Lib-eratore, who helps MAP find and secure entertainment, attributes the lack of spring concerts the past two

years to various conflicts. “The fact that we don’t have a

concert planned for this spring is just the result of a variety of circum-stances, rather than anyone mak-ing a decision to not have shows in

the spring,” Liberatore said. “Not having a concert this year was an anomaly.”

Haigh said many factors come into play that could cause conflicts when trying to book artists. These

include technical issues, space avail-ability, pricing and dates, among other problems.

“There are your factors on the Miami side, and then there are the artists’ factors,” Haigh said.

Miami can only offer to host an artist when a space, usually Mil-lett, is available to hold the concert, which limits the number of possible dates. Then, one of these dates has to line up with a performer’s schedule.

The last major spring concert MAP held was The Fray in 2012. In years prior, as many as four major entertainers visited Miami during just one school year.

In 2002-03 alone, the campus saw shows from the Counting Crows, John Mayer, Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds, and comedian Bill Cosby.

Since that year, however, there has been a decrease in the number of performers MAP has brought to campus, with some school years only seeing a single comedian and no musicians, such as with Jay Leno in 2008 or Jim Gaffigan in 2013.

For Family Weekend, Haigh said MAP is starting to focus on bringing in comedians instead of musicians, as they have previously done. Comedians seem to ap-peal better to both age groups and are something the family is more likely to attend together. They plan to continue this trend in the future. Haigh said following this year, MAP hopes to bring in a greater number of smaller artists throughout the year as opposed to only one large act in the spring. This will give them

more flexibility with scheduling and leave funds to plan more perfor-mances throughout the year, as well as lower ticket prices for students to purchase, resulting in greater inter-est and attendance.

Sophomore Bijan Sharifi said that he would be more likely to attend concerts on campus if ticket prices were lowered.

MAP currently receives all of its funding from ASG through a pre-approved budget, with about $20,000 typically allocated for one of these events. The costs to bring in the artist vary widely based on the performers, and the ticket prices are then based on the costs to assure the concert pays for itself. The tickets can run up to $40 for one big name musician or comedian.

MAP and the Performing Arts Series are looking into a concert for next spring, although nothing has been set in stone. Family Weekend is their first priority, which is also currently in the planning stages, ac-cording to Liberatore.

“We always hope for concerts, but we try to be creative about it,” Haigh said.

STUDY ABROAD,SEE PAGE 4

I want to make senate something everyone is proud to be a part of.”

DAN STEWARTPRESIDENT OF THE STUDENT SENATE

PERFORMERS OF THE PASTTHE TEMPTATIONS

SIMON & GARFUNKEL

ELTON JOHN

JOHN DENVER

THE BEACH BOYS

BB KING

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN

BILLY JOEL

JIMMY BUFFET

RAY CHARLES

JAMES TAYLOR

TALKING HEADS

I think social media is important for organiza-tions like ASG.”

MAGGIE REILLYSECRETARY FOR ON CAMPUS AFFAIRS

I want to continue the work I have done and ... help ASG get their word out to the student body.”

ALLISON GNAEGYSECRETARY FOR PUBLIC RELATIONS

I am a part of the I Am Miami undergraduate committee and really believe in their cause ...”

KRISTEN FOWLERSECRETARY FOR ACADEMIC AFFAIRS

I want to continue the work I have done with making Miami more sustainable ...”

ELIZABETH BEUMELSECRETARY FOR SUSTAIN-ABILITY INITIATIVES

NIIHKA,SEE PAGE 4

CONTRIBUTED BY MIAMI GLOBAL INITIATIVES The “W-Curve” is a general outline of the emotional highs and lows people undergo during and after an experience abroad. This often includes both culture shock and its lesser-known counterpart, known as reverse culture shock. The Miami study abroad department introduces this model to students traveling abroad in their Pre-Departure Orientation

HOST COUNTRY HOMEHOME

You incorporate what you learned and experienced abroad

into your new life and career.

Everything is new, interesting and exciting (honeymoon)

Differences become apparent and irritating.

Problems occur and frustration sets in.

You may feel homesick, depressed and helpless.

You develop strategies to cope with difficulties and feelings, make new friends and learn to adapt to the host culture.

You accept and embrace cultural differences. You see the host as your new home and don’t wish to depart or leave new friends.

You are excited about returning home.

You may feel frustrated, angry or lonely because friends and family don’t under-stand what you experienced and how you changed. You miss the host culture and friends, and may look for ways to return.

You gradually adjust to life at home. Things start to seem more normal and routine again, although not exactly the same.

Page 3: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY MATTHEW RIGALIFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Oxford’s Lane Library is about to get a new modernized home on Locust Street, occupying Walmart’s former space. The new building will stand two stories tall and will address complaints of cramped space at the Lane Library’s current location on 15 S. College Ave.

The new building is slated to open in June 2015 after an estimat-ed $8 million worth of construction is complete.

Miami University sophomore Evan Bader, who grew up in Oxford and has been a visitor to Oxford’s Lane Library since he was young,

said he hopes the new library build-ing will be able to accommodate technology that most modern librar-ies already have.

“It didn’t have the space for the re-sources we need now, like computers and other technology,” Bader said.

“In my opinion, the Hamilton branch usually had more books and didn’t run out of popular ones as quickly as (the Oxford branch) did, so I’m wondering if the additional space will bring in more books to the Oxford branch,” Bader said.

Interior designer for SPH Lead-ing Design Jenny Gallow said she believes the new library creates a flexible environment to serve the Oxford community.

“We tried to create different spaces within the large, open plan, that would serve different func-tions,” Gallow said.

“The new library will have three study rooms, a large meeting room with seating for up to 80 people, a dedicated Children’s Story Time Room, and different seating ar-rangements for individual or group work,” Gallow said.

There will be many new ex-pansions to the previous library, Gallow added.

“The first floor will have bar height seating, a lounge and café area, a separate teen room, and the children’s department,” Gallow said. “The children’s area will feature

interactive games and activities to promote literacy through play.”

The second floor of the new branch building will house the “Liv-ing Room,” which will feature mo-bile tables and soft seating under a large skylight.

“We wanted an overall environ-ment that could serve the different needs of library users,” Gallow said.

Branch Manager of the Oxford Lane Library Rebecca Smith said the needs of library patrons sim-ply can no longer be met at the branch’s current location on South College Avenue.

“We have currently maxed out our space at this location and we need to expand,” Smith said.

EDITORSJANE BLAZER CHRIS [email protected] 3COMMUNITY

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014

Library to reshelf in new location

POLICE

BEATA, B, C: Getting arrested is easy as one, two, three

Officer takes out the garbage, sniffs trashcan

BLAKE WILSON THE MIAMI STUDENTU R A BBQ-TStudents residing in Hawk’s Landind capitalize on Spring weather Easter weekend and host a barbeque.

At 1:09 a.m. Wednesday, an OPD officer responded to a bur-glary report in the 600 block of North Campus Avenue.

The complainant said she fell asleep without locking her door and awoke upon hearing noises coming from inside the house.

After calling OPD, she noticed an unknown fe-male in her bathroom. When the resident called out to the female, the suspect va-moosed from the premises.

Officers later located a bare-foot female trotting south on South Campus Avenue. The fe-male did not respond when of-ficers attempted to contact her. The officer noticed the suspect wore an over 21 bar wristband.

The officers asked her if she had been drinking that night. “I’ve only been drinking,” she said. The female said she had no clue where her shoes were or where she was. However, she remem-bered she was 18.

While speaking with the fe-male, officers received a com-muniqué from dispatch that said another report had come in of a barefoot female breaking into a house in the 500 block of North Campus Ave.

At this time, the suspect was transported to OPD and charged with burglary and offenses in-volving underage persons.

While being booked, the fe-male kept whispering “A, B, C; one, two, three” under her breath. She was taken to Butler County Jail.

At 2:24 a.m. Wednesday, an OPD officer was traveling west on High Street when he noticed a male standing in front of Brick Street Bar & Grill, 36 E. High St., holding a clear cup containing blue liquid.

The officer stopped the male and asked to smell the beverage. The officer sniffed out the beverage to be a “Trashcan.”

When asked for his ID, the male presented an over-21 Pennsylva-nia driver’s license and his Miami student ID.

However, the officer spotted an-other ID in the male’s wallet that was turned around. He then asked the suspect if the Pennsylvania driver’s license was fictitious. The suspect admitted it was, and hand-ed the officer an under-21 Ohio driver’s license.

The male was arrested, taken to OPD and charged with open con-tainer, sales to and use by underage persons and certain acts prohibited. He was released and transported back to his residence hall.

TOTAL CRIMES: 20TOTAL PERSONS CITED: 10

Criminal trespass

Dogs running at large

Total Miami Students Cited

Harmful intoxication

Marijuana drug paraphernalia

Offenses involving underage persons

Refusal to disclose personal information

Open container

Warrant

Disorderly conduct

Certain acts prohibited

Student-athletes donate money, time to sick childrenBY CAITLIN LAMBFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Miami University’s varsity ath-letes balance classes with practices, conditioning and long weekends traveling across the country for games, meets and competitions. Sometimes, even scheduling some sleep is difficult; yet somehow many have found precious time to give back to our community.

One such athlete was Cody Reichard. As a RedHawk hockey goalie, Reichard would visit Cin-cinnati Children’s Hospital to hang out with kid patients. Today, Reichard plays for the Orlando So-lar Bears, but his legacy at Miami lives on through the organization he founded: Swoop’s Stoop.

Swoop’s Stoop originated dur-ing the 2010-11 hockey season, when the team began recognizing

a Cincinnati Children’s child pa-tient and their family at each home game. Soon, the team strengthened its relationship with Cincinnati Children’s and began visiting the hospital and fundraising. By the end of the 2011 school year, they raised over $16,000. The follow-ing year, senior football players Sam Olberding and DJ Brown took over Swoop’s Stoop’s reins when Reichard graduated. Thereafter, it continued to grow, but the univer-sity only recently recognized it as an official organization.

“We filed everything through The Hub this past week,” junior track and field runner Jessica Hoover said in an email interview squeezed in somewhere between a track meet in California, a full week of classes and practices.

A member of RedHawk Council and captain of Miami’s

cross-country and track and field teams, Hoover said her interest in Swoop’s Stoop was immediate.

“John Strawser, who is a mentor to Cody [Reichard] and member of the Red & White Club, came to speak at a Redhawk Council meeting,” Hoover said. “He told us about Swoop’s Stoop and how they were hoping to make it a stu-dent organization on campus. I felt very moved by everything he said and decided immediately I wanted to be very involved.”

Saturday, eight to 12 Miami ath-letes will attend the official kick-off of Swoop’s Stoop at Cincinnati Children’s. According to Hoover, students will do crafts and hand out blankets, all to give the kids a break from the everyday struggles of living with serious illnesses.

“Long term, we will be send-ing student-athletes down once a

month,” Hoover said. “We will be bringing kids and families to sport-ing events at Miami, starting a rooftop garden at the hospital, and funding other projects for the hos-pital as well through donations.”

The organization emphasizes the mutual benefit of these activi-ties. As its mission statement reads, “This relationship provides mem-bers different life perspectives and the opportunity to inspire, and be inspired by the children they are interacting with.”

According to Hoover, Swoop’s Stoop has plans to involve student-athletes from other local colleges, like the University of Cincinnati or Xavier University, who have al-ready expressed interest.

“I know that we can have a very big impact on these kids and that it will only grow from here,” Hoover said.

CONTRIBUTED BY SPH LEADING DESIGN

The new Lane Library will occupy space on the old Walmart lot on Locust Street. It will open June 2015.

Total Miami Students Cited

Sales to and use by underage persons

PHILL ARDNT THE MIAMI STUDENTSLAM DUNKStudents of Alpha Omicron Pi celebrate around the dunk tank Tuesday at the anti-hazing baseball game.

Save the trees! Please recycle when you’re finished reading!

CRIME STATISTICS: April 17 – 24

Page 4: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

studied abroad last fall in Luxem-bourg, underwent her own version of reverse culture shock.

“I think I underestimated how different it would be when I came back,” she said. “The hardest thing was coming back to all of my friends on campus. When I was abroad they were always like ‘Oh, everything is the same here,’ but when I came back it felt like a lot had changed.”

This feeling is normal for a stu-dent who has spent a semester abroad, Study Abroad Advisor Kevin Fitzgerald said. After they return, students often feel like they missed out on time with friends or that the relationships have shifted or changed.

“A lot of people have the ‘I missed out’ feeling, or you come back and can’t get past the elevator speech with your very best friend,” he said. “Sometimes all you want to do is talk about your experiences, which is a challenge when you can’t get past 90 seconds of small talk.”

Valerio identified with this, as she said she is always eager to share her stories from Luxembourg, but most people are not as interested in hearing them.

“I’m not sure if it was because they didn’t get to experience it them-selves or because they think I’m bragging, but no one really wants to

hear about it,” Valerio said. “Even my parents wanted to see two pic-tures and then they were bored.”

Beyond changing friend groups and impatient listeners, study abroad veterans endure a number of other problems.

With overseas travel typically comes a better understanding and appreciation for other cultures, but not everyone has traveled abroad. Students who have never been im-mersed in another culture might be less tolerant of people different from themselves, which Valerio said she has noticed a lot more since she got back.

“[The other day] one of my friends was talking about the Asians on campus and said ‘they’re in Ameri-ca, they should learn to speak Eng-lish,’” she said. “That honestly hurt me. I spent four months in a country and never learned the language.

“It just makes me realize that my friends and a lot of people who haven’t studied abroad are kind of stuck in a bubble,” Valerio said, “like they are so comfortable they just don’t want anything to change.”

Houghton has dealt with similar problems as well. While in Luxem-bourg, she took a class about Hitler and eventually got to visit Aus-chwitz, one of the biggest concentra-tion camps from the Holocaust. Ex-periences like that one have changed the way she looks at certain things, she said, and now, she said, she

notices small-minded comments from her peers that she doubts she would have noticed before.

The professionals at Miami’s study abroad department are aware of the struggles returning students face and have various resources to help ease the adjustment process, Fitzgerald said.

One such resource is a sprint course called IDS 156: Study Abroad Reentry, in which students are able to reflect on their time abroad.

“We consider it the unpacking of the emotional side of the expe-rience,” Fitzgerald said. “A lot of students come back and they real-ize they need help processing their study abroad experience, so it is a great resource to have for [them].”

Fitzgerald also suggested return-ing students get involved at school because many of them come back and feel like something is missing. Through activities like the Inter-national Peer Orientation Leader (IPOL) program or Global Buddies, students get to feel like they are giv-ing back, which can help with the emptiness they may be feeling.

“[When you’re abroad], you get pushed so far out of your com-fort zone that it breaks,” he said. “That’s where the reverse culture shock comes in – because you have changed so much.

“Then all of a sudden you have to leave, and when you get home it’s not right,” he said. “It wasn’t quite

right when you were there and it’s not quite right at home anymore when you get back.”

This state of limbo is painful when students are experiencing it, but Fitzgerald said it ultimate-ly contributes to the growing up process, as does the entire study abroad program.

“When I’m advising students, I tell them to stay true to their experi-ence,” he said, “whether that’s keep-ing a journal or writing down key moments and turning back to those when you need them.”

Having something tangible like photographs, videos or journal en-tries allows students to stay con-nected with their experience. Many people return from study abroad and declare that it ‘transformed’ or ‘changed’ them, but unless they actively keep up with the culture and country in which they were immersed, Fitzgerald said most students revert back to their for-mer selves within months of being back home.

“You could follow [the host country’s] news, keep up on your language skills, stay in touch with the people you know still living there,” he said. “I’m not saying it’s by any means easy to do that, but it is a lot easier than it used to be, just with resources like Facebook.”

Students may not be able to re-main on their study abroad trips

forever, but they can bring back stories, memories and some of the lessons they learned and incorpo-rate it into the lives they have back home. It takes effort, but it is pos-sible, Fitzgerald said.

He also said study abroad ad-visors try to teach mindfulness, which is the idea of being true to yourself and living in the cur-rent situation—wherever you are, whatever you are doing. He also said that committing to a study abroad program is committing to a unique kind of stress—the stress of being uncomfortable in a for-eign place, of not understanding what the people around you are saying, the stress of trying unusual food items.

“And with stress comes rever-berations,” Fitzgerald said. “It’s like Newton’s law, ‘for every ac-tion there is an equal and opposite reaction,’ and I think reverse cul-ture shock is just a part of that, a part of the emotional process.”

When students are abroad, he said, they are being pushed and pulled by the realities of their situ-ation, and it causes them to exam-ine their lives and themselves.

“While abroad, you have to look at what is most precious to you, what is real,” he said, “like throwing certain items out of your backpack because it’s too heavy. And while it’s tough, the benefits do outweigh the costs.”

4 FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014 www.miamistudent.net

STUDY ABROAD,FROM PAGE 2

that will be useful to and support all classes, traditional, online and hy-brid courses,” Straub said. “And it should have a variety of tools that are necessary for faculty to utilize technology for teaching and for stu-dents to use it for learning.”

Rubin said the increase in use of mobile devices introduced new priorities for which Sakai is not well suited.

“Students and faculty have

mobile devices and they want to teach and take classes on their pads, tablets and phones,” Rubin said.

Constantly changing technol-ogy offers many possibilities for incorporating different elements into an LMS. Junior Hannah Cor-ner said there are some features she would like to see if a new system is implemented.

“It would be really cool if it synced with my Google account somehow,” Corner said. “I don’t know if that’s possible, but I would like to organize my Google drive

with my courses and calendar.” The committee finished pi-

lot testing at the end of March. They tested Sakai in addition to Desire2Learn and Instructure/Canvas, which were the two sys-tems deemed the best alterna-tives based on a set of criteria the committee developed.

“We set up a pilot,” Rubin said. “We created a fake course for fac-ulty and a fake course for students and we put it on each of the three LMS’s, Sakai and two others. We asked people to do the things they

would normally do when they teach or take a class and evaluate how easy the system was to use. A good system supports teaching and learning.”

The data from the pilot tests are now being aggregated and evaluated.

Sakai, because it is open source, is free to use. However, MU hired three full-time employees to code and administer the LMS. If a new system were chosen to replace Sakai, coders would not be needed.

Rubin said price is not a principal

factor in determining which LMS will ultimately be chosen. She envi-sions a system that allows for live chat, video and even integration of social media.

“What’s really important is that the evaluations are done not on the basis of price, but solely on the ba-sis of how well the LMS supports teaching and learning,” Rubin said. “What I love and believe in is cre-ating online courses that have a strong connection. You can do the Miami experience online, but only if the technology allows it.”

NIIHKA,FROM PAGE 2

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Page 5: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

5 FRIDAY APRIL 25, 2014www.miamistudent.net

VISIT PENSKEU.COM OR CALL 800-281-9084

BETTER BRING THATCOUCH HOME.

YOUR PARENTS GAVE AWAY YOUR BEDROOM.

Find Us Online at MiamiOH.edu/Library

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NYTimes Online is now free!The Miami University Libraries is pleased to announce an

exciting new program with the Center for Research Libraries and The New York Times!

The NYTimes Group Pass provides all Oxford campus students, faculty, and staff members with full access to the

NYTimes.com and their smartphone app! All at no charge to you!

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To sign-up, follow these three simple steps.

STEP 1Open a web browser and visit:NYTIMES.COM/GROUPPASS

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Log in using your @MiamiOH.edu e-mail address and the password you created in step two.

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For sign-up help, please visit an Information Desk at:King Library ~ B.E.S.T. Library ~ Art & Architecture Library

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“The interesting thing for us was that people have a conscious thought about the alcohol,” Ward said.

Senior nutrition major Teresa Schwendler studied the correla-tion between dieting behaviors and social situations, such as pre-gaming. Her results empha-sized those found by Ward’s most recent research in re-gards to the social reasons for drunkorexic behaviors.

“In social environments where there is alcohol being consumed, those people who are consuming alcohol for the social aspect are more likely to have dieting be-haviors,” Schwendler said.

In other words, people who enjoy pre-gaming on Friday and Saturday nights are more likely to restrict their intake, purge or over-exercise in order to com-pensate for the calories from the

alcohol they drank. Gilligan, Ward and Schwendler

stressed that research on drunk-orexia is limited and more is nec-essary to prove anything about drunkorexic behaviors and what causes them.

“We don’t know exact moti-vations behind the people [sur-veyed] but that’s something our lab is trying to look into more,” Gilligan said. “But it’s hard to fig-ure that out.”

The lack of research is one of the main reasons Gilligan and Schwendler chose this topic to explore further.

“Since a lot of people don’t know about it, I feel like some people might participate in that behavior and not really realize that it can lead to other problems or not even realize that it’s a prob-lem in itself,” Gilligan said.

Gilligan suggested Miami add-ing drunkorexia and drunkore-xic behaviors to part of the Al-choholEdu program required of

Miami first-year students. Schwendler went one step fur-

ther and called attention to the physical dangers of drunkorexia.

“Because alcohol is considered to be something that doesn’t have any nutritional value to it, it’s kind of like empty calories, and so if you’re restricting your food intake and you’re only consum-ing alcohol, you’re not getting any of those vitamins and min-erals, you’re not getting protein or fat, whether it’s good or bad, you’re really not getting the type of nutrients you need from your food, you’re just consuming alco-hol,” Schwendler said.

If the drunkorexic behav-iors occur frequently enough, malnutrition may result, Schwendler said.

In addition, drunkorexia has the potential to lead to eating disorders such as anorexia ner-vosa and bulimia, or it may lead to alcoholism.

Despite all the negative

side-effects of engaging in drun-korexic behaviors, a news release from the Eating Disorder Center of Denver concluded drunkorexia is on the rise.

The trend of more men and women skipping meals or over-exercising to compensate for cal-ories, or intentionally drinking to the point of vomiting, has several potential causes.

“I think that the media prob-ably has a lot to do with it. Body image and the whole thing with the freshman 15,” Gilligan said, “A lot of students are drinking more than they did in high school and I think people are more con-scious of, or trying to make up for that in a sense, so they feel like they have to over-exercise.”

Schwendler also blamed the media and the images they por-tray as the “perfect” male and female body.

The combination of body-im-age pressures and the pressure to drink can result in students

taking desperate actions to control their weight.

“Just in general, our social environment, media, everybody wants to be thin, but then there’s also, especially in college, there’s the want to go out and drink and be intoxicated because it’s fun and people enjoy themselves, but I think it can be dangerous,” Schwendler said.

Ward said she would like to see students become less con-scious of the calories they are drinking, and instead learn to drink responsibly.

It is not uncommon, Gilligan said, to hear someone comment about drinking too much at a pre-game party Friday night and needing to step on the treadmill in order to make up for it.

According to her, whether ig-norant or not, students are en-gaging in drunkorexic behaviors and until more research is done on the subject, it appears that will not change.

DRUNKOREXIA, FROM PAGE 1

FLORA, FROM PAGE 1

funded. It is estimated that fully funded semesters from the pi-lot program will account for 3.6 semesters, and partially funded semesters will account for 7.2 semesters. The projected scholar-ship funding is $1,137.50 and one young woman will be fully sup-ported for almost two academic years as a result of this program.

Upon reaching out to a contact

in Kosovo, VanBuskirk received numerous amounts of watercolor prints from Kosovo students to be used for the stationery. After that, Flora began development last Oc-tober through an affiliation with a company at Grove City College in Pennsylvania. Venture Lab, a company that helps young entre-preneurs, also helped in the pro-cess, and all funding was donated.

VanBuskirk believes that all of the outside help has been crucial in establishing Flora. As she and

her sister are not business majors, all of the assistance they have re-ceived has been a big help.

“I have no idea what I’m do-ing, but I’ve loved every part of it. It’s been very difficult at times and very frustrating, but I’ve grown so much as a person and a student through all of this,” she said. “It’s been one of the great-est experiences during my time as an undergraduate.”

If the opportunity presented itself, VanBuskirk would love to

continue with Flora full-time and has already begun imagining her future with the company.

“I don’t think this will ever be something I stop pursuing, and helping young women like Emma is what I’m passionate about,” she said. “I don’t know what it will become in the future, so maybe I’ll work for a company with the same mission. I would highly recommend every student to pursue a project that they’re passionate about.”

In order to market Flora’s mission to a broader audi-ence, VanBuskirk and her team have launched a social media campaign.

“As of now, we have reached over 750 followers on our social media sites, and we project fur-ther growth as time progresses,” Arington said.

If interested in purchas-ing a Flora Stationery product, visit Florastationery.com for more information.

The MiamiStudent: There’s an app for that!

Well, not yet. But we’d like one!If you’re interested in designing an iPhone app for The Miami Student,

please e-mail [email protected] for more information.

Page 6: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

EDITORSEMILY ELDRIDGE

NICOLE THEODORE [email protected] OPINION

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014

PATRICK GEYSER THE MIAMI STUDENT

EDITORIALThe following piece, written by the editorial editors, reflects the majority opinion of the editorial board.

Rule of Thumb

Never drink without eating: Stop the calorie counting, stay healthy

Joan RiversHer joke about the two Cleveland women kidnapped and raped for decades by Ariel Castro is not funny.

Blooming treesSome of them smell like _______ (fill in the blank with a gross body part.)

CHRIS CURME COMMUNITY EDITORJANE BLAZER COMMUNITY EDITORVICTORIA SLATER CAMPUS EDITORREIS THEBAULT CAMPUS EDITOR TOM DOWNEY SPORTS EDITOR

KATIE TAYLOR EDITOR IN CHIEFEMILY CRANE NEWS EDITOREMILY ELDRIDGE EDITORIAL EDITORNICOLE THEODORE EDITORIAL EDITORLAUREN KIGGINS ARTS AND EVENTS

S.O.S.Five missing boaters off the coast of Australia were saved after a rescue plane spotted their sign in the sand.

Google Translate

Salvaste nuestras vidas este semestre.

DNA DayToday is the 61st anniversary of the first papers published on DNA structure.

Newborn babiesAdorable, but not if they weight 14.5 lbs. like the baby born Tuesday afternoon in Massachusetts.

A slice of your favorite Will’s cheese pizza is around 350 calo-ries. But so is a Vodka Tonic at Brick Street, by our best estima-tions — so which do you choose? There is a growing trend among Miami students to go with the lat-ter and nothing else. Many would rather hear their stomachs growl and save room for alcoholic drinks than risk putting on a few extra pounds.

That’s the thought behind “drunkorexia,” which is the act of restricting food intake dur-ing the day in order to get drunk at night to eliminate the fear of gaining weight. From skipping meals to exercising excessively, some students will do just about anything to avoid that doomed beer belly.

The editorial board of The Mi-ami Student believes drunkore-xia is a dangerous habit. We be-lieve this get-drunk-fast method puts students at a much greater risk for alcohol poisoning, black-ing out and other high-risk situ-ations. Although binge drinking is a regular occurrence at many colleges, including Miami, drun-korexic behavior intensifies the associated risks.

Since drunkorexia usually involves drinking on an empty stomach, it’s easier to get in-toxicated quicker throughout the night.

The motivation behind drun-korexia is often to keep your calories down during a night out. But for those trying to keep their figure, drinking your calories is neither a healthy nor effective way to stay thin. When the ma-jority of your daily calorie count comes from alcohol, you miss out on the nutritional benefits of a quality meal.

Plus, you might just end up binge eating at the end of the night with less-than-healthy food items. It’s inevitable: the hungri-er and more intoxicated you are,

the more tempting that Crunch N’ Munch may sound at 3 a.m.

The next reason to avoid drun-korexic behavior has to do with the morning after. Yes, believe it or not, hangovers are signifi-cantly worse after drinking on an empty stomach.

Though the only sure-fire way to avoid hangovers is not to drink, eating food and drink-ing water before, during and after you consume alcohol will lessen any morning side-effect.

The “Huffington Post” rec-ommends incorporating pick-les, almonds, hummus, eggs, milk and asparagus into your lunch or dinner to ward off hangover symptoms.

The harms of this kind of prac-tice go beyond one weekend’s antics. “Psychology Today” states that an empty stomach leads to higher BAC levels and increases long-term risk for al-cohol related medical conditions, including liver disease, diabetes and dementia.

Drunkorexia is especially a concern for Miami students as we try to combat the ongoing cul-ture of drinking. This behavior is a dangerous blend of the two stereotypes that often dominate Miami’s campus: physical per-fection and top party school.

In the same place where stu-dents feel pressure to be skinny and maintain a certain image, go-ing Uptown is also an extremely popular activity.

We’ve seen far too many so-called “Miami Girls” nibble at a side salad while knocking back martinis. This is something all students should avoid doing. So it’s time to be smarter about par-tying, one well-balanced meal at a time.

Next time you’re prepping for a night-out, don’t leave the house on an empty stomach. It might just make your night that much more enjoyable and safe.

At every juncture in the fight for civil rights and human dignity, young people — especially college students

— speaking up, com-ing out and calling for change has helped define A m e r i c a n history.

That was the case in the civil rights move-ment of the

1960s, with the formation of groups such as the Student Nonviolent Coor-dinating Committee (SNCC), which organized sit-ins at racially segre-gated lunch counters. “Young people were at the heart of that movement,” Rep. John Lewis, who mobilized sit-ins and served as a chairman of SNCC once told me.

That’s been the case with the LGBT rights movement. For ex-ample, Gay Straight Alliance chap-ters (GSAs) across the country, with straight allies advocating for their LGBT friends, classmates and relatives, have played a key role in reshaping attitudes and broadening the conversation around LGBT is-sues. The GSA movement started in San Francisco in 1998, the same year “Will & Grace” hit the airwaves and made the necessary cultural ar-gument that for every Will Truman, there’s a Grace Adler — the straight best friend, the ally.

But what about immigrant rights, one of the defining civil rights move-ments of our time, inexorably linked to a demographically evolving America? America looks the way it does right now because of immi-grants, documented and undocu-mented. Like the fight for LGBT

equality and the advancement of women’s rights, this increasingly diverse, hyper-connected Millennial generation has grown up listening to the national debate about “border security” and “illegal aliens.” What are college students in campuses and communities across America do-ing to advocate for fair and humane treatment of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants — many of whom are their relatives, friends and classmates?

Since disclosing my undocument-ed status in the New York Times Magazine — and forming the Define American campaign while filming a documentary called “DOCUMENT-ED” nearly three years ago — I’ve visited more than 100 colleges and universities in all regions of the country. At each stop, whether in the South, at the University of Georgia in Athens, or the Midwest, at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, I’ve engaged students and asked them to connect the dots between their own immigrant backgrounds and the struggle of undocumented immigrants today.

Last month, I visited Miami Uni-versity, the alma mater of Rep. Paul Ryan, one of the most powerful lead-ers in the country. Miami holds a special place in the civil rights move-ment; some 50 years ago, during the Freedom Summer of 1964, more than 800 volunteers gathered at the Western College for Women, now Western Campus of Miami Univer-sity, to prepare for African-American voter registration in the South. Dur-ing my visit at this university, I spoke about Ellis Island, our country’s first immigration station, where nearly one in three Americans can trace their European ancestors during one of the largest recorded migrations in history. “My name’s Ryan,” Ryan

once said about his own immigrant background. “I’m here because the potatoes stopped growing in the 1850s in Ireland.” Indeed.

Between 1892 and 1954, about 12 million undocumented Europe-ans — white people — crossed the border known as the Atlantic Ocean and landed on Ellis Island without papers. Most didn’t speak English; they needed translators to pass ba-sic literacy test. Many had little to no money. But they were inspected, registered and, various degree of struggle, welcomed to America.

Now, nearly 60 years later, Amer-ica is faced with the migration of yet another 12 million people — not from only Europe but mostly from across the world, particularly from Latin America and Asia. An esti-mated 100,000 undocumented work-ers live in Ohio, contributing about $104 million in state and local taxes. They call Ohio home, they drive in Ohio’s freeways, they attend Ohio public schools, they shop and buy at Ohio stores.

On Monday, I will be back at Miami for a special screening of “DOCUMENTED.”

After the screening, I hope to en-gage students, faculty and commu-nity members. I will answer every question I am posed. But I have a few of my own: What can you do to help your undocumented neighbors? What is your role in this immigrant rights movement? How do you de-fine American?

Vargas, the writer and director of “DOCUMENTED,” is the founder of Define American, a non-profit me-dia and culture campaign about im-migration and citizenship.

JOSEVARGAS

GUEST COLUMN

Immigration activist poses important questions to students regarding undocumented citizens in U.S.

FOUNDER OF DEFINE [email protected]

Page 7: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

Nelson Mandela and Amy Biehl have lessons of recon-ciliation we should pay more

attention to. A m y

Biehl was only 26 years old when she was stoned and stabbed to death by a mob of black militants in Cape Town,

South Africa, in 1993. She was there as a scholar in the Fulbright program as a recent graduate from Stanford, wanting to im-merse herself in Apartheid in South Africa.

For those of you unfamiliar with Apartheid, the name Nelson Mandela might ring a bell. South Africa was on the brink of a race war because of this system of legislation. It enforced policies of racial segregation and was im-posed by the National Party, an all-white government. Despite grave backlash from inside the country and from the internation-al community, its laws remained intact for almost 50 years.

Biehl was an anti-Apartheid activist and her murder was con-sidered a turning point for some in South Africa. Both whites and blacks joined together in peace rallies across the country to honor Biehl. This prompted her parents Linda and Peter Biehl to go to South Africa, trying to un-derstand why their daughter went there in the first place.

Almost 21 years later, Linda and Peter have reconciled and

worked with two of their daugh-ter’s killers in an effort to di-rect and implement after-school youth programs near Cape Town. These programs include metal and art programs and even ses-sions for those who want to go on to college.

It takes an insane amount of courage and forgiveness to work alongside people who took some-one from you, and it’s hard to imagine for most of us how we could even begin to do what the Biehl family has done.

This story matters because it is exactly the kind of reconcili-ation Nelson Mandela expressed and tried to teach the world dur-ing his historic life. He men-tioned the tragic death of Amy in a speech in 1998, showing how much her death meant to the fight against Apartheid.

Lisa Biehl is currently visiting Cincinnati with Ntoeko Peni, one of her daughter’s convicted kill-ers to participate in a panel for the community program “Nelson Mandela’s Legacy of Reconcilia-tion: Lessons for Leading An In-clusive Community,” today at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center Auditorium. The panel begins around 4 p.m.

This is an event that can teach us so much about forgiveness, tolerance and reconciliation. I really encourage students and anyone interested to attend. If a mother can forgive two of her daughter’s killers, I think we can all forgive our roommates, ex-boyfriends and girlfriends and even parents for past mistakes.

The idea of intellectual property where someone can copyright, trademark or patent an idea should

be seen as an outdated concept and unnecessary to the flour-ishing of cre-ativity and innovation.

W i l l i a m Shakespeare, the great-est and most in f luent ia l

writer in the history of our spe-cies, turned 450 years old on April 23. Since 1993, anyone can access “The Complete Works of William Shakespeare” on the Internet. For free. Right there on your screen.

Since procuring an iPhone, I can now say I have William Shake-speare in my pocket. If such a re-ality should amaze us, then the re-ality of intellectual property laws in the United States should equally dismay us.

Around Shakespeare’s time in Europe, if you wanted to see a play, you had to pay for it. Therefore, writers could be paid. Even today, the thought of being paid to write for the public is an astounding notion.

Once this occurred, a great many writers emerged, like Chris-topher Marlowe, Thomas Kyd, Ben Jonson and yes, Shakespeare.

“As with much else, literary

talent often remains undeveloped unless markets reward it,” Scott Turow, Paul Aiken and James Sha-piro noted in the New York Times.

Sometime after, in 1709, Britain enacted the first copyright laws “for the encouragement of learned men to compose and write useful books.” A number of decades later, the United States Constitution also had copyright infused with it “to promote the progress of science and useful arts.”

Turow, Aiken and Shapiro see this as the start of something won-derful, as the copyright market al-lowed authors and other creators — historians, musicians and such — to flourish under the knowledge that they were not only protected but rewarded for their labor and creative endeavors.

This is where I diverge with them. I see copyright as the an-tithesis to creative flourishing. Un-derstand that Britain enacted those first copyright laws almost 100 years after Shakespeare’s death.

It would seem to me, then, that getting paid for his efforts was enough to “flourish.” He didn’t need government copyright laws to ensure that. And it goes with-out saying, we saw a great many works of art manifest in the cen-turies prior to Shakespeare and copyright law.

Am I violating Shakespeare’s “intellectual property” by reading “King Lear,” perhaps my favorite of his works?

Moreover, the emergence of copyright law, especially in mod-ern times, has more to do with protecting publishing houses, re-cord labels and movie studios than it does with some lofty notion of protecting the creators and inno-vators. In essence, it is a govern-ment-granted monopoly on ideas.

As with any government-grant-ed monopoly, larger corporations can incur the costs of dealing with intellectual property laws.

“Large firms can more readily incur the costs of both acquiring and defending a patent than can an individual or a small firm,” Butler Shaffer, a teacher at Southwestern University School of Law, said.

He also noted that government agencies, like the Food and Drug Administration, also have regula-tions and tests, which incur further costs upon a person or business.

On the other hand, property rights do make sense because it covers the area of what is tan-gible, finite and scarce, unlike “ideas,” which are none of these things. Protection of property rights is paramount to ensuring social cooperation.

To put it more simply, as Shel-don Richman did, you and I can-not drink the same Coke at the same time. We cannot occupy the same space at the same time — the space is finite. Ideas are different since we can have the same or similar ideas at the same time.

Richman offered this example

to further elaborate on the point:“Jones invents (and patents) the

wheelbarrow and uses it on his land. He intends to produce this great new device and sell it to a world that eagerly awaits it.

Smith lawfully walks by Jones’s property and watches him using the wheelbarrow, realizing this is something no one has ever seen before. If Smith goes home and, using her own materials and labor, makes a wheelbarrow from the mental image stored in her mind, what has she taken from Jones? Smith’s mental image is hers.”

Of course, some would argue that if Smith tried to compete with Jones in selling wheelbar-rows, then she has diminished his potential sales. Thus, the role of the government seems obvious in stopping such an action in the

form of patent laws. But again, as Richman point-

ed out, now you’re suggesting someone owns economic value or would-be profits, which makes no sense.

Sure, if someone took this editorial word-for-word and put themselves as the author, I would see that as wrong, but not in a legal sense. How can I rea-sonably “own” the arrangement of words in this piece and the ideas expressed?

Perhaps ending all manner of intellectual property law is a futile goal, though, not to say anything of it seeming blasphemous to peo-ple, so I would settle for reform. One reform that I think anyone could agree on is the length.

At the start of copyright law in the United States, an author could copyright their work for up to 14 years and then renew it for another 14.

Now copyright, according to the Washington Post, lasts the du-ration of the author’s life plus an additional 70 years. As they note, this mostly seems at the behest of companies like Disney.

Polonius said to Hamlet in “Hamlet,” “Though this be mad-ness, yet there is a method in’t.”

You can think me mad. I will not claim ownership of the idea.

“A great education made afford-able” is how Miami refers to itself in one of the most recent recruit-ment brochures aimed at prospec-tive students. At $24,646 a year for Ohio residents and $40,436 for out-of-state students, “affordable” hardly seems to be the right term to describe the wonderful educa-tion Miami provides. As an out-of-state student, even with a substantial scholarship, I have to question that claim—the current four-year cost for out-of-state students is upward of $160,000. But according to Denise Krallman in the Office of Institu-tional Research, the definition Mi-ami uses is altogether different than the traditional meaning.

“When you’re talking about af-fordability, it’s a combination of a quality education in a reasonable amount of time and at the end of that time we’re hopeful that the students will either have a job or be going on to graduate or professional school.”

And in fact, according to Krall-man, the median time to graduate for Miami undergraduates is 3.7 years. In addition, of all students graduat-ing in 2012-13, 91 percent either have a job lined up or have been ac-cepted to graduate or professional schools. This is a much higher per-centage than others around Ohio, as is Miami’s four-year graduation rate.

“The most recent graduation rate, for example, for Kent State, is 52 percent, whereas we’re 80 percent. UC’s graduation rate is 55 percent,” said Krallman.

Often, people look at Return on Investment reports like those on Pay-scale.com to see whether a college is really “worth” its tuition. Recently, a report came out stating that Miami’s ROI is the first in Ohio, meaning we RedHawks get the most bang for our buck, so to speak. Though those numbers look good, looking at the

ROI is not the best way to determine the worth of a Miami education, es-pecially since they’re put together by a third party using information Miami has published and statistics gathered from an uneven spread of Miami alumni.

“These ROI’s are looking 30 years down the road. We can’t do that,” Krallman said.

Senior Sociology major and His-tory minor Katie Kromer is begin-ning to look down the road, as she is graduating in May. Kromer fits Miami’s definition well—she spent eight semesters in four years at Mi-ami, and has different avenues open to her upon graduation.

“[I’m] still waiting to hear back from grad school and from job offers. I have a lot of options,” said Kromer.

Kromer is an Ohio resident with a scholarship and has worked as an RA for the last two years. I asked if she thought Miami was affordable in the traditional meaning of the word.

“That’s tricky. Comparing it to other state schools it’s not, but com-paring it to other private schools I would say it is. But for the education I’m getting, my experience here, yeah, I would say it’s affordable,” she said.

In the university’s definition of the word, Kromer agreed that Miami is affordable.

Ohio resident Taylor Smith, a se-nior Strategic Communications ma-jor, had a different opinion. When I asked her if she thought Miami was affordable in the traditional sense, she replied with a very quick “no.” Smith has been a Miami student lon-ger than most—she entered in the fall of 2010 and will not be gradu-ating until December of 2014, but she’s actually graduating in only seven semesters.

“Technically, but I’ll be here a

semester later, because I took two semesters off. I did a Semester at Sea… and then I just took a semester off and did an internship.”

Even though Smith has had an unusual path through Mi-ami, it hasn’t hindered her post-graduation options.

“I got offered a job last week, but then when they found out I’m gradu-ating in December they said I should seek them out if I’m interested in the position when it comes time for my graduation,” she said.

For Smith, affordability all comes down to how willing a student is to look for a job through LinkedIn and network with Miami alumni.

“A lot of my friends who’ve done that route have been really success-ful,” she said. “I think in terms of jobs, offering positions is very rare. I think it’s something you have to put a lot of effort into, which isn’t neces-sarily weird or unusual. But the way they say that in 3.7 years, you’ll have a job, it makes it sound like people reach out to you, which probably does happen but it seems like most of my friends have found their jobs through networking and reaching out to other people.”

Krallman summed it up best, saying, “Students have to make that decision of the quality of the education they’re getting here and if what they’re going to leave with is going to help them throughout their career.”

Think of it this way: Miami may or may not be affordable now, but graduating quickly with a fantastic education is sure to pay for itself many times over in the long run.

We must realize intellectual property rights allow government to monopolize ideas

MU can’t claim it is affordable to the ‘average Joe’

7FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 2014 OP EDwww.miamistudent.net

NICOLETHEODORE

BRETTMILAM

NICOLE’S TWO CENTS

MILAM’S MUSINGS

COMMENTARY

Mandela, Amy Biehl have worthy lessons of reconciliation to offer

Am I violating Shakespeare’s “intellectual property” by reading “King Lear,” perhaps my favorite of his works?

ALISON BLOCKFIRST YEAR, PROF. WRITING & ENGLISH

[email protected], JOURNALISM & PSYCHOLOGY

[email protected]

SENIOR, [email protected]

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Page 9: April 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

pitching did a good job keeping us in there.”

Crummy also said the pitching was good.

“That’s probably the longest game I’ve ever played,” Crummy said. “But it really shows what kind of bullpen you have. Our pitchers threw strikes, Tommy [Ricciardi] threw strikes and did all we asked of him and they were just lucky enough to score a couple runs and come out on top.”

Miami only managed four hits in the eight-run loss to the Fly-ers (18-20) Tuesday, as not much went the RedHawks way.

“We played bad,” Hayden said. “We didn’t hit it, didn’t pitch it didn’t field. You lose 100 percent of the games you do that.”

Freshman Christian Bokich

started for the RedHawks Tues-day, allowing two runs on five hits and was credited with the loss in 4 innings of work.

Senior Alex Brown gave up four runs on just five hits in two innings on the mound Tuesday.

Hayden said the team should be able to bounce back for the weekend.

“We just do our best to come back out ready to roll,” Hayden said. “It shouldn’t be too hard to get these guys to lock in for a big MAC weekend. I think our guys will be excited and ready to go for that.”

The RedHawks host the Uni-versity of Toledo for a three game series this weekend. The Rockets (16-23) are in the third place in the MAC West, with an 8-8 record. First pitch is set for 6 p.m. Friday, 3 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sun-day. Fans can listen to the game on redhawkradio.com/sports.

been solid this season with senior pitcher Paige Myer’s ERA of 2.89 and sophomore pitcher Amber Logemann’s 101 strikeouts. The defense has been fairly steady as well as it is fourth in the MAC in fielding percentage with .962. Lipscomb is the only everyday starter who has yet to commit a fielding error.

“We’re relaxing this week; we can’t do too much and we have to stay calm,” Myers said. “Our pitch-ing and our fielding has been solid, so if we can score some runs we should be fine. This weekend, we have to perform and feed off of each other.”

The MAC West Division lead-ers Ball State University (27-16, 7-3 MAC) have won three straight games, with 10-0 (six innings) and 7-0 victories against the East-leading Bobcats. The team is

tops in the conference with a .322 batting average, but is also second-to-last in the MAC with a team-ERA of 4.33.

Four of the top 11 batting averag-es in the MAC belong to the Cards, with sophomore outfielder Briana Evans owning the top spot with a .409 average. Senior outfielder Jennifer Gilbert, who was named MAC West Player of the Week this week, leads the league with 15 home runs and 45 RBIs. Sopho-more pitcher Kelsey Schifferdecker has been effective on the mound for the Cardinals with three complete game shutouts.

“Ball State’s a great team,” Crowell said. “They pitch well, hit well and field well. They’ve got power, speed, everything you could want in an offensive lineup but they’re not invincible. Our girls come out motivated for big games like this and we’re excited.”

The RedHawks hit the road to take on Ball State 2 p.m. Saturday and 1 p.m. Sunday.

BASEBALL, FROM PAGE 10

SOFTBALL, FROM PAGE 10

Miami hosts RedHawk Invitational meetTRACK & FIELD

BY TYLER YOUNGFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

The Miami University men’s and women’s track teams both return home this weekend to host the RedHawk invitational Satur-day. The men are coming off a productive weekend at the Ken-tucky Relays in Lexington, while the women bring back seven ath-letes from the Mt. SAC Relay in California.

This is the fifth straight year the RedHawks have hosted the event. The invitational brings in schools such as the University of Cincinnati, University of Ken-tucky and Ohio University. Last year, both the men and women’s team took first place in the event and are hoping for a similar result

this year.The men’s team is looking to

keep its momentum going from the past two events as the Red-Hawks approach the end of the season. Two weekends ago, the men’s team finished third in the All-Ohio Championships and notched five top-five finishes at the Kentucky Relays last week-end. As the end of the season nears, the race to make NCAA qualifying marks heats up.

“Everyone is trying to make good marks with each opportu-nity that is given to them,” men’s head coach Warren Mandrell said.

Much of the RedHawks wom-en’s team will return to the track this weekend after much of the team had rest days this past week-end. The women, who also placed

third in the All-Ohio Champi-onships, will also seek to build off their recent performances as the season starts winding down. With just two events left before the Mid-American Conference championships, women’s head coach Kelly Phillips said the team is starting to focus on two things.

“There are two different focus-es,” Phillips said. “We have the athletes that go to conference and expect to be in the top three and they’re focusing on getting na-tional qualifying times, and then we have the people that are trying to get to the conference meet by making the required mark to get into the meet.”

The events for the RedHawk Invitational kick off 10 a.m. Sat-urday at George Rider Track.

9 FRIDAY APRIL 25, 2014www.miamistudent.net

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EDITORTOM DOWNEY

[email protected] SPORTSFRIDAY APRIL 25, 2014

WHAT YOUR FAVORITE NHL TEAM SAYS ABOUT YOU

JOE GIERINGER NOT YOUR AVERAGE JOE

The NHL Playoffs are well un-derway and as I write this piece, six of the eight series will require at least two more games to deter-mine a winner. American interest in hockey has surged over the past five years, partially due to its excit-ing, electric playoffs, while players like T.J. Oshie boosted the profile of the sport on the Olympic stage in February.

Miami University in particular is known as one of the bigger hockey schools in the country. You’ll be hard pressed not to see a playoff team represented in the form of a jersey or hat on a Friday afternoon uptown, but just what does your choice in team say about you? Read on and try not to get your feelings hurt too much.

Chicago Blackhawks:Yes, your defending champi-

ons have been one of the most consistent competitors since the 2004-05 NHL Lockout. Die hard Chicagoans are some of the most fierce and loyal supporters of any hockey team, professional or oth-erwise. Superstars like Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane headline what is one of the deepest benches in the league. But the problem is, Toews and Kane (and a few other buzznames) are just about the only players you know. Has there ever been bigger bandwagon team to claim allegiance to? Even those that can name more than one line of players most likely started watch-ing in 2010 during the Cup run that made hockey relevant again in Chitown. Yes, not all of you are guilty of this travesty, but I’d bet dollars to doughnuts that the ma-jority of you can’t name more than two players from the 90’s.

Boston Bruins:Ah, the Bruins - a team that ev-

eryone loves to hate. The best team in the league and this year’s Cup favorite also holds the distinction of being the dirtiest team in the league. Players like Zdeno Chara, Milan Lucic and Brad Marchand are your favorites because of their power-style hockey and bruising, take-no-prisoners attitude. Bos-ton’s a tough city, and your hockey team reflects that attribute. They can fight, they can score, and you can plead ignorance of the occa-sional cheapshot that your team distributes. Still, they’re a force to be reckoned with, and have one of the strongest followings of any team in hockey.

New York Rangers:You value great goaltending

(see: Henrik Lundqvist) above all else. You’re from upstate NY or not too far from the Big Apple, and in the absence of a better alternative in the sports world at the moment you’re putting all your weight be-hind the Blueshirts. You’re too young to remember Mark Mess-ier’s guarantee in 1994 and have known nothing but heartbreak, but hey, maybe this is the year.

Detroit Red Wings:Like most Michigan natives,

you’ve had nothing to cheer for sports-wise in your lifetime with the exception of U of M football and the Wings. The most success-ful Original Six team in the past 20 years has also made 23-straight playoff appearances, cementing them as a beacon of hope in an otherwise depressing city (no of-fense, but you have to admit it). You appreciate their don’t-quit at-titude and the way they seamlessly transitioned from a veteran pow-erhouse to an upstart young-gun franchise. You’re loyal to a fault, and have some of the best hockey knowledge of any city due to your understanding of the Wings’ his-tory. It’s not like there’s much worth knowing about the Lions anyway, right?

Montreal Canadiens:“Look, we have 24 Cups!”

Yeah, but they’re all from 1993 or before you were born. You can ar-gue history all you want, but that doesn’t mean you’re the best now. Instead of focusing on the past, try

getting by the Bruins and then you can gloat about your “Drive to 25.”

Philadelphia Flyers:Like Bruins fans, you value

hard-nosed hockey and a team that can fight as well as score. You’re notoriously tough on your players and insanely proud as a collec-tive city. Unfortunately for you, the last decent goalie you’ve had is Ron Hextall and you’ll never trust the position again after that Michael Leighton mishap in the 2010 Finals.

Tampa Bay Lightning:You’re from the South and by

God, the Lightning are the only team on that side of the Mason-Dixon line capable of keeping up with the rest of the NHL lately. The following scenario is a perfect ac-count of your one week of playoff hockey this year:

“We finally have a goalie! This is the year!” *Ben Bishop gets hurt. “I hate you, Canada.”

Pittsburgh Penguins:You love the offensive side of

the game and don’t mind the fact that your team takes more dives in the course of a full season than an entire Summer Olympic squad. Yes, everyone loves to hate Sidney Crosby. But he’s the Kid! How can you not like him? Move some-where other than Pittsburgh and get back to me with that answer.

Los Angeles Kings:“I have no idea what hockey

is, but they won a few years ago and I’m from California so I love them.”

Anaheim Ducks:You’re either an enormous

Teemu Selanne fan, or are from anywhere in Cali that isn’t L.A. You’ve suffered through some heartbreak as a child, but that 2007 Cup was more than worth it. Oh, and you hate the current Ducks jerseys. Like, REALLY hate them. Where’s the Mighty Ducks purple and teal that you grew up with? I feel your pain.

Columbus Blue Jackets:Oh, how you love the under-

dog. You’re probably from Ohio and just realizing that you’ve had a hockey team not 100 miles away from you for 13 years, but hey, there’s no time like the present, right? So trade in the scarlet and gray for the navy and white and “carry the flag” to prove to the rest of the NHL that Columbus fans are for real.

Colorado Avalanche:Either you grew up a hockey fan

in the 1990’s, or you’re from one of those odd, Western Plains states that don’t have much hockey near them. You’re excited to see Patrick Roy behind the bench and a young team full of promise, so you no longer have to hide that jersey in shame from all of those Red Wings fans that have been making fun of you for the past decade.

Dallas Stars:“Wait, you’re telling me the

Stars aren’t a football team?”Minnesota Wild:You’ve been biding your time

ever since the North Stars left way back in the day, and finally you’ve got a fairly consistent product to put on the ice. You’ve most likely played hockey your whole life and grew up in those northern states, but it’s lonely down here in Ox-ford, so you wear your colors with pride. Maybe Ilya Bryzgalov will take you to the promised land? Oh, wait.

St. Louis Blues:Ah, you’ve been waiting for-

ever. The Cardinals might have your heart, but at least the Notes aren’t as big of a let down as the Rams, right? The Blues will suffice as your source of fall and winter entertainment for now. T.J. Oshie is an American hero and hey, you’ve got Ryan Miller this year, so if you ac-tually know who he is you’re probably excited.

San Jose Sharks:“Please, someone pay attention

to me.”

BASEBALL

Miami falls to Dayton and Eastern Kentucky

WEEKEND HOME EVENTS

TENNIS HOSTS MAC TOURNAMENT

BASEBALLMiami vs. Toledo, 6 p.m. FridayMiami vs. Toledo, 3 p.m. SaturdayMiami vs. Toledo, 1 p.m. Sunday

TRACK & FIELDRedHawk Invitational, 10 a.m. Saturday at George Rider Track

’Hawks head to Ball State for two gamesSOFTBALL

BY STEVEN PERKINSFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

The Miami University baseball team fell short in a game that tied the mark for longest in school his-tory. After over four hours and 14 innings, Miami lost 7-5 to Eastern Kentucky University. The loss was Miami’s second in a row, as the RedHawks lost 10-2 to the University of Dayton.

Miami (18-22) lost after giv-ing up two runs in the top of the 14th inning Wednesday. The RedHawks pieced together 14 hits in the 14 innings but only managed five runs against the Colonels (20-21).

Head coach Danny Hayden said execution was a problem.

“We didn’t do a great job ex-ecuting on our bunts today,”

Hayden said. “We had three bunts that we didn’t get down. Any-time you’ve got little things like that in close games, which this one was throughout, it’s going to bite you.”

Senior catcher John Crummy agreed that not following through hurt the team.

“It’s tough because it just means the timely hitting wasn’t there,” Crummy said. “A lot of guys had opportunities, myself included, to knock in a couple more runs.”

Crummy was 3 for 6 with one RBI.

Junior Charlie Suich got the start Wednesday, going 4 2-3 innings and allowing three runs on five hits and recording three strikeouts.

Also pitching for the Red-Hawks was sophomore Wynston

McMartin. He pitched 3 2-3 in-nings, giving up one run and two hits. He also recorded three strikeouts.

Making a surprise appearance on the mound for Miami was catcher sophomore Tommy Ric-ciardi. Ricciardi pitched the 14th

inning, allowing two runs on one hit and two walks. He recorded two strikeouts in the final frame, but was tagged with the loss.

Hayden did not blame the pitching staff for the loss.

“They kept us in the game,” Hayden said. “They did a good job. EKU is a good team. They do some things offensively that sort of make you uncomfortable. They run the bases really hard but our

BY JORDAN RINARDSENIOR STAFF WRITER

Losers of seven of its last nine contests, the Miami University softball team will try to right the ship as it heads to Muncie, Indiana this weekend for two games against the team with the second-best over-all record in the Mid-American Conference, Ball State University. The RedHawks (18-23, 6-8 MAC) are 3-3 in conference games away from Oxford this season and are 2-4 against West Division opponents.

“This week we’re going to focus on us,” head coach Clarisa Crow-ell said. “We just need to feel good about ourselves and feel confident.

We’ve been playing hard, but it’s hard to stay confident when you’re not winning. There’s no reinventing the wheel at this point in the season: We have to work on the mental part and what we can control. We’re a very good team, and we have to put everything together the next two weeks.”

The RedHawks have been in a rut for much of April as have gone 5-8 so far with losses to the Univer-sity of Toledo, Bowling Green State University, Northern Illinois Uni-versity and the University of Akron, plus sweeps at the hands of West-ern Michigan University and Ohio University. The ’Hawks have won consecutive MAC games on only

two occasions this season. They split against Ball State last season.

Despite the recent struggles in the win-loss column, Miami has had some strong individual and team performances this season. Junior outfielder Bree Lipscomb is cur-rently fourth in the MAC in RBIs with 34 to go with her .311 batting average and .656 slugging percent-age. Senior catcher Kayla Ledbet-ter has also been a force on of-fense this season with a team-high .398 on-base percentage and .485 slugging percentage.

The pitching staff as a whole has

BASEBALL,SEE PAGE 9

SOFTBALL,SEE PAGE 9

The Miami Univeristy ten-nis team, winners of its last five matches, hosts the Mid-American Championships this weekend at the Hebpurn Var-sity Tennis Courts. The tourna-ment starts 10 a.m. Friday, but Miami won’t begin play until 10 a.m. Saturday.

The RedHawks won their sixth straight MAC regular sea-son title, giving them the No. 1

seed and a first round bye. The RedHawks will face the winner of No. 4 seed University at Buf-falo and No. 5 seed University of Toledo. Miami lost to Buffalo 5-2 April 4, which marks the RedHawks most recent loss. Mi-ami swept Toledo 7-0 April 12.

If the RedHawks win, they will play in the Championship match noon Sunday. The winner of that match gets a berth in the

NCAA Tournament. Several RedHawks took home

MAC awards for their efforts in the regular season. Head Coach Anca Dumitrescu was named MAC Coach of the Year and se-nior Nimisha Mohan was named first-team all-MAC. Fresh-man Andreea Badileanu was named MAC Freshman of the Year and garnered second-team all-MAC.

PHILL ARDNT MIAMI STUDENT

Miami senior pitcher Alex Brown delivers a pitch during Miami’s 10-2 to Dayton Tuesday. Brown went 2 innings, allowing four runs, all earned, on five hits and a walk. Brown is 0-1 with a 12.19 ERA in five appearances this year.