february 25, 2014 | the miami student

10
BY EMILY CRANE NEWS EDITOR When the anthropology depart- ment was burglarized in June, one of the many priceless artifacts to be lost was a painted vessel from the Greater Nicoya region of Costa Rica—not worth much monetarily, but impossible to replace, anthropol- ogy professor Jeb Card said. Despite ongoing attempts to recover the ar- tifacts, officials have yet to catch so much as a scent of them. The vessel is most likely gone forever. But the lessons and knowledge it contained are not. Students will con- tinue to be able to hold it, analyze it and learn from it—well, a replica of it, that is. Last spring, Card chose to scan this artifact using the university’s new 3D scanner before the artifact was stolen, collecting and safely storing all the information on the ar- tifact’s dimensions and coloring on his hard drive. And last week, using the B.E.S.T. Library’s new 3D color printer, he was able to recreate the vessel in its exact dimensions and color. “We’re not giving up on the origi- nal artifact but we can restore some of what has been lost,” Card said. “The material [of the artifact] is important; we don’t have that any- more. We couldn’t sample it and say where it comes from. But we can do stylistics analysis.” Unlike other 3D printers on campus that print items in plastic with hollow, hon- ey-comb interiors, the color printer in the B.E.S.T. library prints by putting down layers of Gypsum powder and coating them with ink from inkjets. The final product is denser and more cost- ly to produce, but pre- servers far more detail than the plastic rep- licas produced on regular 3D print- ers, senior library technician John Williams said. “I can do a lot with this printer,” Williams said. “For instance, I could print full-color topographical 3D maps. It has a much bigger build bed so I can print bigger objects.” And the printer is not only re- served for librarians and archaeolo- gists—every student on campus can utilize this 3D printer, paying 25 cents per gram for the final product. Williams said it was an honor to work with Card in bringing the lost artifact back. “It was a privilege to be able to recreate an object that was stolen,” Williams said. And though Card said he too was glad to be able to use the new color printer to recover some of what was lost in the robbery, he is more excited about the possibilities of his scanner. “[The replica] will look good on exhibit but for me, the digital aspect is way more exciting,” Card said. “I have literally e-mailed artifacts to people and they printed them out. In this case, it helps us recover from a robbery which is great, but the ev- eryday uses possibilities are even more exciting.” Thanks to the 3D scanner, aca- demics and amateurs alike can ac- cess artifacts from around the world with the click of a button. Card enthusiastically spoke of the pos- sibilities of creating “virtual mu- seums” online where entire cata- logs of artifacts would be available for download. As the technology catches on though, Card said he expects to see it muddy some waters that, until now, have been fairly clear. BY KAILA FRISONE SENIOR STAFF WRITER Ukraine experienced the deadli- est violence the country has seen in decades this past week, with at least 88 people killed since the vio- lence began Feb. 18. The protests turned violent when anti-govern- ment protesters clashed with riot police in Independence Square of the capital Kiev. Miami University sophomore Anna Tumenok moved to the United States from Kiev in 2004 with her parents. The rest of her family still lives in Kiev, and she returns every summer to visit. Tu- menok said her family and friends support the protesters but are not getting involved. At this point, she said she might not return to Kiev this summer. The protests began in Novem- ber 2013 after President Viktor Yanukovych’s government reject- ed the European Union Association Agreement in favor of stronger ties with Russia. To many Ukrainians, the EU Association Agreement was a step towards economic prog- ress and ensuring Ukraine remain independent of Russia. The crisis escalated Dec. 17 when Russian President Vladimir Putin offered to loan Ukraine $15 billion and pro- vided cheaper gas supplies. The Ukrainian Parliament passed anti-protest laws Jan. 16. The laws, which the opposition considered “draconian,” did not stop the protesters from occupying the streets of Kiev. The first fatali- ties occurred Jan. 22, and prosecu- tors confirmed the two protesters died from bullet wounds. In the following weeks, protesters oc- cupied government buildings in western Ukrainian cities and pro- tests also expanded east. Prime Minister Mykola Azarov and his cabinet resigned January 28. The opposition, which sup- ports developing stronger ties with the EU and remaining indepen- dent of Russia, strongly disliked Azarov, whom they accused of mishandling the economy and not stopping corruption. Sophomore Nester Semenyuk lived in Lviv, Ukraine until 2000 when he moved to the United States. Semenyuk said he was not surprised by the violent outbreak on Feb. 18. “That’s what happens when peo- ple are mad at the government,” Semenyuk said. His family, similar to Tume- nok’s, wants Ukraine to continue to be independent from Russia and align itself with the European Union. He said some family mem- bers have ventured to check out the protests, but no one has been injured or killed to his knowledge. “[My family] is worried the gov- ernment will continue working as it does now,” Semenyuk said. Ivan Ninenko, a political science instructor from Moscow, said na- tionalism is the backbone of these protests. He was not expecting the situation to come to this quite so soon. Senior Keary Iarussi said he was very surprised by the events on Feb. 18. As a Diplomacy and Global Politics major with a focus in Russian, Eastern Europe and Eurasian studies, Iarussi had his own predictions as to how the cri- sis in Ukraine would turn out. “Yanukovych is just a thug,” Ia- russi said. “He doesn’t care about governing, the economy or peo- ple’s lives. I was really surprised because his MO [modus operan- dum] has always been to wait ev- erything out. I thought he’d just let the protest dissipate and that would be it.” Since the violence broke out, Yanukovych was dismissed as president and parliamentary speaker Oleksandr Turchynov was named interim president. Ac- cording to the new acting interior minister of Ukraine, Yanukovych disappeared Friday. “By now, there are no support- ers of Yanukovych,” Ninenko said. “Even those who were against the opposition would see Yanukovych as weak for running away and not being a good leader.” Yanukovych’s lack of support in regions like Crimea, a historically Russian city, does not mean the people are fond of the new govern- ment in Kiev. Ukraine now faces a deepening political divide across the coun- try as it heads into a crucial time of transition. In 2000, The Miami Student reported two online student-startups had made it big, at least within the university community. With the annual pre-spring break bash just around the corner, fifth-year Patrick Shore launched Greenbeerday.com. Two weeks after its release, he had already sold over 900 t-shirts. The Miami Student TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014 Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826 MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIO VOLUME 141 NO. 35 TODAY IN MIAMI HISTORY Ukrainian students keep watch on developments in Kiev from Oxford Women’s hockey wins CCWHA championship Preserving the past: 3D printer recovers artifacts EMILY CRANE NEWS EDITOR Professor Jeb Card shows off a color replica of an effigy vessel from Costa Rica, stolen from Upham in June. LAUREN OLSON PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR SERVING UP SUCCESS Women’s Club Volleyball A Team finished fifth this weekend at the qualifier for Nationals in Reno, Nev. this spring. BY JOE GIERINGER SENIOR STAFF WRITER A Miami hockey team is head- ing to the national tournament after winning its conference champion- ship, though it’s not the one some might expect – in this case, the women’s program is leading the charge for Miami’s first-ever ice hockey national championship. In just their third year of ex- istence, the RedHawks have es- tablished themselves as a hockey powerhouse playing in the CC- WHA; that is, the Central Colle- giate Women’s Hockey Associa- tion. This year’s record of 26-2-2 is the best in the country and Miami will almost certainly hold onto the top seed in the American Colle- giate Hockey Association women’s Division-I rankings heading into Newark, Del. Senior forward and captain Nik- ki Stancampiano is tied for seventh among RedHawk scorers with 19 points, which speaks to the deep talent that runs through the roster. But the reason for her team’s suc- cess, according to Stancampiano, is much more than just skill. “The relationships we have on the team are so strong,” the Fair- port, N.Y. native said. “We’re such great friends off the ice, and … I’m real proud of everyone individually and our team as a whole.” The RedHawks will catch a few days of down time before preparing for their final weekend. “It’s really exciting, but right now we’re going to rest a little bit and take a day or two off,” senior goaltender Dana Lovin said. “Then we’re going to get right back at it and try to fine tune some of the things, and making sure we stay in shape so we’re ready to go when we get there.” Though she gave credit to her defense as the primary reason for Miami’s dominant play in the CCWHA tournament, Lovin was spectacular between the pipes. In five games, she recorded four shut- outs, including the 2-0 winning ef- fort in the championship matchup against Adrian College. That’s a 0.4 goals-against average over her last five starts. Head coach Scott Hicks, who is still a few months shy of 30, said he cannot stress enough how proud he is of his team, which consists almost entirely of freshmen and sophomores, and how hard they’ve worked all year to position them- selves as a favorite. That status was apparent after the way they bowled through Ohio State University, Grand Valley State University, and Adrian in Flint, Mich. He was com- plimentary of the goaltending and in the leadership displayed by Stan- campiano as well, but his enthusi- asm and appreciation of the overall team effort was apparent. “We were fortunate to get a good draw,” Hicks said. “But we played a full team effort, and we only gave up two goals in five games … these girls deserve a lot of recognition and a lot of support from their fel- low students. Women’s hockey isn’t the brand that the guys are, but these girls put the time in on and off the ice and they deserve the acco- lades for sure.” Miami travels to Newark to compete March 13-16 for the Na- tional Championship. You can check out the RedHawks’ progress at www.muwomenshockey.com or connect with them on Twitter @MiamiWHockey. 3D, SEE PAGE 8 CONTRIBUTED BY JEB CARD

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February 25, 2014, Copyright The Miami Student, oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826.

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Page 1: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY EMILY CRANENEWS EDITOR

When the anthropology depart-ment was burglarized in June, one of the many priceless artifacts to be lost was a painted vessel from the Greater Nicoya region of Costa Rica—not worth much monetarily, but impossible to replace, anthropol-ogy professor Jeb Card said. Despite ongoing attempts to recover the ar-tifacts, officials have yet to catch so much as a scent of them. The vessel is most likely gone forever.

But the lessons and knowledge it contained are not. Students will con-tinue to be able to hold it, analyze it and learn from it—well, a replica of it, that is.

Last spring, Card chose to scan this artifact using the university’s new 3D scanner before the artifact was stolen, collecting and safely storing all the information on the ar-tifact’s dimensions and coloring on his hard drive.

And last week, using the B.E.S.T. Library’s new 3D color printer, he was able to recreate the vessel in its exact dimensions and color.

“We’re not giving up on the origi-nal artifact but we can restore some of what has been lost,” Card said. “The material [of the artifact] is important; we don’t have that any-more. We couldn’t sample it and say where it comes from. But we can do stylistics analysis.”

Unlike other 3D printers on campus that print items in

plastic with hollow, hon-ey-comb interiors, the

color printer in the B.E.S.T. library prints by putting down layers of

Gypsum powder and coating them

with ink from inkjets. The final product is denser and more cost-ly to produce, but pre-servers far more detail than the plastic rep-licas produced on regular 3D print-ers, senior library technician John Williams said.

“I can do a lot with

this printer,” Williams said. “For instance, I could print full-color topographical 3D maps. It has a much bigger build bed so I can print bigger objects.”

And the printer is not only re-served for librarians and archaeolo-gists—every student on campus can utilize this 3D printer, paying 25 cents per gram for the final product.

Williams said it was an honor to work with Card in bringing the lost artifact back.

“It was a privilege to be able to recreate an object that was stolen,” Williams said.

And though Card said he too was glad to be able to use the new color printer to recover some of what was lost in the robbery, he is more excited about the possibilities of his scanner.

“[The replica] will look good on exhibit but for me, the digital aspect is way more exciting,” Card said. “I have literally e-mailed artifacts to people and they printed them out. In this case, it helps us recover from a robbery which is great, but the ev-eryday uses possibilities are even more exciting.”

Thanks to the 3D scanner, aca-demics and amateurs alike can ac-cess artifacts from around the world with the click of a button. Card enthusiastically spoke of the pos-sibilities of creating “virtual mu-seums” online where entire cata-logs of artifacts would be available for download.

As the technology catches on though, Card said he expects to see it muddy some waters that, until now, have been fairly clear.

BY KAILA FRISONESENIOR STAFF WRITER

Ukraine experienced the deadli-est violence the country has seen in decades this past week, with at least 88 people killed since the vio-lence began Feb. 18. The protests turned violent when anti-govern-ment protesters clashed with riot police in Independence Square of the capital Kiev.

Miami University sophomore Anna Tumenok moved to the United States from Kiev in 2004 with her parents. The rest of her family still lives in Kiev, and she returns every summer to visit. Tu-menok said her family and friends support the protesters but are not getting involved. At this point, she said she might not return to Kiev this summer.

The protests began in Novem-ber 2013 after President Viktor

Yanukovych’s government reject-ed the European Union Association Agreement in favor of stronger ties with Russia. To many Ukrainians, the EU Association Agreement was a step towards economic prog-ress and ensuring Ukraine remain independent of Russia. The crisis escalated Dec. 17 when Russian President Vladimir Putin offered to loan Ukraine $15 billion and pro-vided cheaper gas supplies.

The Ukrainian Parliament passed anti-protest laws Jan. 16. The laws, which the opposition considered “draconian,” did not stop the protesters from occupying the streets of Kiev. The first fatali-ties occurred Jan. 22, and prosecu-tors confirmed the two protesters died from bullet wounds. In the following weeks, protesters oc-cupied government buildings in western Ukrainian cities and pro-tests also expanded east.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov and his cabinet resigned January 28. The opposition, which sup-ports developing stronger ties with the EU and remaining indepen-dent of Russia, strongly disliked Azarov, whom they accused of mishandling the economy and not stopping corruption.

Sophomore Nester Semenyuk lived in Lviv, Ukraine until 2000 when he moved to the United States. Semenyuk said he was not surprised by the violent outbreak on Feb. 18.

“That’s what happens when peo-ple are mad at the government,” Semenyuk said.

His family, similar to Tume-nok’s, wants Ukraine to continue to be independent from Russia and align itself with the European Union. He said some family mem-bers have ventured to check out the protests, but no one has been

injured or killed to his knowledge.“[My family] is worried the gov-

ernment will continue working as it does now,” Semenyuk said.

Ivan Ninenko, a political science instructor from Moscow, said na-tionalism is the backbone of these protests. He was not expecting the situation to come to this quite so soon.

Senior Keary Iarussi said he was very surprised by the events on Feb. 18. As a Diplomacy and Global Politics major with a focus in Russian, Eastern Europe and Eurasian studies, Iarussi had his own predictions as to how the cri-sis in Ukraine would turn out.

“Yanukovych is just a thug,” Ia-russi said. “He doesn’t care about governing, the economy or peo-ple’s lives. I was really surprised because his MO [modus operan-dum] has always been to wait ev-erything out. I thought he’d just

let the protest dissipate and that would be it.”

Since the violence broke out, Yanukovych was dismissed as president and parliamentary speaker Oleksandr Turchynov was named interim president. Ac-cording to the new acting interior minister of Ukraine, Yanukovych disappeared Friday.

“By now, there are no support-ers of Yanukovych,” Ninenko said. “Even those who were against the opposition would see Yanukovych as weak for running away and not being a good leader.”

Yanukovych’s lack of support in regions like Crimea, a historically Russian city, does not mean the people are fond of the new govern-ment in Kiev.

Ukraine now faces a deepening political divide across the coun-try as it heads into a crucial time of transition.

In 2000, The Miami Student reported two online student-startups had made it big, at least within the university community. With the annual pre-spring break bash just around the corner, fifth-year Patrick Shore launched Greenbeerday.com. Two weeks after its release, he had already sold over 900 t-shirts.

The Miami StudentTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826

MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIOVOLUME 141 NO. 35

TODAY IN MIAMI HISTORY

Ukrainian students keep watch on developments in Kiev from Oxford

Women’s hockey wins CCWHA championshipPreserving the past: 3D

printer recovers artifacts

EMILY CRANE NEWS EDITORProfessor Jeb Card shows off a color replica of an effigy vessel from Costa Rica, stolen from Upham in June.

LAUREN OLSON PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

SERVING UP SUCCESSWomen’s Club Volleyball A Team finished fifth this weekend at the qualifier for Nationals in Reno, Nev. this spring.

BY JOE GIERINGERSENIOR STAFF WRITER

A Miami hockey team is head-ing to the national tournament after winning its conference champion-ship, though it’s not the one some might expect – in this case, the women’s program is leading the charge for Miami’s first-ever ice hockey national championship.

In just their third year of ex-istence, the RedHawks have es-tablished themselves as a hockey powerhouse playing in the CC-WHA; that is, the Central Colle-giate Women’s Hockey Associa-tion. This year’s record of 26-2-2 is the best in the country and Miami will almost certainly hold onto the top seed in the American Colle-giate Hockey Association women’s Division-I rankings heading into Newark, Del.

Senior forward and captain Nik-ki Stancampiano is tied for seventh among RedHawk scorers with 19 points, which speaks to the deep talent that runs through the roster. But the reason for her team’s suc-cess, according to Stancampiano, is much more than just skill.

“The relationships we have on the team are so strong,” the Fair-port, N.Y. native said. “We’re such great friends off the ice, and … I’m real proud of everyone individually and our team as a whole.”

The RedHawks will catch a few days of down time before preparing for their final weekend.

“It’s really exciting, but right now we’re going to rest a little bit and take a day or two off,” senior goaltender Dana Lovin said. “Then we’re going to get right back at it and try to fine tune some of the things, and making sure we stay in

shape so we’re ready to go when we get there.”

Though she gave credit to her defense as the primary reason for Miami’s dominant play in the CCWHA tournament, Lovin was spectacular between the pipes. In five games, she recorded four shut-outs, including the 2-0 winning ef-fort in the championship matchup against Adrian College. That’s a 0.4 goals-against average over her last five starts.

Head coach Scott Hicks, who is still a few months shy of 30, said he cannot stress enough how proud he is of his team, which consists almost entirely of freshmen and sophomores, and how hard they’ve worked all year to position them-selves as a favorite. That status was apparent after the way they bowled through Ohio State University, Grand Valley State University, and Adrian in Flint, Mich. He was com-plimentary of the goaltending and in the leadership displayed by Stan-campiano as well, but his enthusi-asm and appreciation of the overall team effort was apparent.

“We were fortunate to get a good draw,” Hicks said. “But we played a full team effort, and we only gave up two goals in five games … these girls deserve a lot of recognition and a lot of support from their fel-low students. Women’s hockey isn’t the brand that the guys are, but these girls put the time in on and off the ice and they deserve the acco-lades for sure.”

Miami travels to Newark to compete March 13-16 for the Na-tional Championship. You can check out the RedHawks’ progress at www.muwomenshockey.com or connect with them on Twitter @MiamiWHockey.

3D,SEE PAGE 8CONTRIBUTED BY JEB CARD

Page 2: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY SADIE MARTINEZ FOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Intense. Passionate. Dedicated. These three words have been

used by the Miami University field hockey team to describe head coach Inako Puzo.

Puzo recently signed a contract extension for five more seasons at Miami University.

“This team needs consistency and I think that with Ianko signing his five-year contract, it helps the team mentally to know that he is not go-ing anywhere,” sophomore Camerin Colby said.

Puzo began his coaching ca-reer more than 16 years ago, when he arrived in the U.S. from Barcelona, Spain.

“I was playing the game and started coaching kids in college and coaching in schools,” Puzo said. “I started coaching kids 14 and under and 16 and under until I got invited to start coaching 21 and under. After that I just kept moving up.”

Colby said Puzo is one of the greatest coaches she has ever had.

“To be honest, Inako does not even compare to any of my past coaches,” Puzo said. “He pushes the team in ways we have never been pushed and teaches us to break out of our comfort zone in order to achieve our goals. He is the best coach I have ever had, and I know many of my teammates could say the same.”

First-year Jenna Kapsar was out of her comfort zone when she came to Miami and had a male coach for the first time in her life.

“In high school I had a female coach, coming to Miami with a male coach was a lot different,” Kapsar said. “He is a lot more intense than my coach in high school, he makes you work harder.”

Colby said Puzo is demanding, but all of his actions have a purpose.

“Seeing someone so dedicated to the sport and passing down his ideas and opinions through us makes every player better on and off the field,” Colby said.

Puzo said he strives for excellence both on and off the field.

“Our commitment is to keep helping them to be successful in the classroom and on the field,” Puzo said.

Prior to his coaching at Miami, Puzo was an assistant at the Ohio State University and the University of Virginia. Puzo said he received the call that Miami was interested in hiring him while he was at Virginia.

“I was the head coach at UVA, when I got the call to coach at Miami three years ago,” Puzo said. “They were very interested in talking to me about becoming the head coach. I knew this place because I was at Ohio State for seven seasons and we would play Miami all the time. I got very excited because I knew this was a great place to build a program and a family.”

Puzo has led Miami to Mid-American Conference titles in each of the past two seasons and has high expectations moving forward.

“In the next five years I hope we can move forward at least one or two rounds in the MAC,” Puzo said.

BY VICTORIA TERSIGNIFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

From Budapest to Hong Kong to Sydney, Startup Weekend has been taking the world by storm. What start-ed as a mere non-profit in Seattle has blossomed to an international com-petition held in 200 cities all over the world—a competition now returning to Oxford for the third time.

More than 100 students will be competing in Miami Univer-sity’s third annual startup compe-tition, beginning Friday, Feb. 28. The event is open to students of all majors, but is especially geared to-wards students who are interested in entrepreneurship.

According to Miami’s Startup Weekend website, whether students are itching to propose their own ideas or are looking forward to the team-work aspect of the competition, they have the opportunity to sharpen their entrepreneurial skills by learning what it takes to start their own business in just one weekend.

Students will pitch their startup company ideas, form teams, develop business concepts, listen to guest

speakers, create prototypes for their projects, receive help from peer men-tors, develop their presentations and present their ideas before judges in a merely 48 hour process.

After the weekend is over, stu-dents will walk away with one hour of course credit by completing ESP 102: Startup Bootcamp and have the opportunity to meet with successful entrepreneurs, mentors and alumni.

Students are also able to net-work with other members of the Miami community interested in starting their own business and can walk away with their own free customized business cards.

Jessica Reading, assistant direc-tor for the Page Center for Entre-preneurial Studies, is actively in-volved in organizing and funding Startup Weekend.

She explained that Startup Week-end is a non-profit organization, so their funding comes from ticket sales and any kind of sponsorship they raise.

Reading said they received a gen-erous donation from an alumnus, Bill Kling, to help pay for some of the costs while the rest of the costs are

covered by ticket sales. Tickets are generally $100, but students receive a discount for $25.

Reading said she enjoys how natural the process is and how quickly ideas can turn into potential startup companies.

“It is a very organic process. Af-ter the students pitch their [startup] ideas, they are written down onto separate, large postage papers and we post them all around the room,” Reading said. “The students get to pick what their favorite ideas are, and what team they might want to be added to. From there, the men-tors and coaches help them to form teams.”

Reading said no students are al-lowed to work alone because a large part of this process is collaborating with peers, which is a crucial skill to have in the workplace.

Working on projects without any guidance can be difficult, Reading said, which is where coaches and peer mentors come into play.

Jon Leist and his partner Connor

EDITORSREIS THEBAULT

VICTORIA [email protected] CAMPUS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

Seeing someone so dedicated to the sport...makes every player bet-ter on and off the field.”

CAMERIN COLBYFIELD HOCKEY PLAYER

Student entrepreneurs suit up for startup event

Coach wins players’ hearts, earns five-year extension

Not so kosher: Strict religious diets may present challenges for students

BEN TAYLOR THE MIAMI STUDENTHIPS DON’T LIE Students from the American Culture and English (ACE) program get salsa instruction in the Shriver Multi-Purpose Room. ACE of-fers students a chance to participate in social events and program while improving their English skills.

BY OLIVIA BRAUDEFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Despite more than 25 on-campus dining options at Miami University, keeping Kosher and Halal diets is a challenge for religious students.

The university’s Demske Culi-nary Support Center puts a lot of re-search into understanding the diverse dietary needs of the student body, Beverly Rambo, a culinary specialist at Miami, said. Rambo works with students who have specific diets, in-cluding students who have religious dietary restrictions, such as those who eat Kosher and Halal foods.

The Kosher diet of the Jewish re-ligion is based on commandments given in the Torah, the written and oral law central to Judaism. There are variations in the practice of keeping Kosher among different sects, Marcy Miller said. Miller is the executive director of Hillel, the premier Jewish organization on campus.

Miller said the three main laws pertaining to what is or is not Kosher have to deal with the meat, the poul-try and the fish. The meat must come from animals with cloven hooves that chewed cud, the poultry must not prey on other animals and the fish must have fins and scales and cannot be scavengers.

In order to run a certified Kosher kitchen, a supervisor — a Mashgiach

— must be present to ensure the es-tablishment is maintaining the laws of Kashrut, or adhering to Jewish dietary law, Miller said.

“In order for something to be deemed Kosher, according to the laws of Kashrut, foods have to be su-pervised in the growing, preparation, slaughtering, the whole nine yards,” Miller said.

Miami has no space designated as a Kosher kitchen, and therefore, Rambo said, the institution cannot technically prepare Kosher meals.

However, Miller said she thinks the university’s Demske Culinary Support Center works hard to meet the needs of individual students.

“I have been very pleased that the staff in charge of that depart-ment have been as accommodating as they can be. They work with me, they work with the students, they re-ally strive to do what they can within their own limits,” Miller said.

One of these limits is the low number of Jewish students who keep Kosher on Miami’s campus. Around 1,000 Jewish students attend Miami, Miller said, but only a small percent-age of those students keep Kosher.

“If there were a lot of Jewish students who were coming to fore-front and requesting Kosher food I have no doubt the university would address the issue more directly,” Miller said.

Rambo said her office does not

get many requests for Kosher prod-ucts but that they continue to make an effort to provide packaged Kosher foods at the markets. She points spe-cifically to the chalkboard at Market Street at MacCraken where students can post their food requests and the manager will try to meet them.

“There’s another outlet for them to go to,” Rambo said.

A Kosher product has an insignia on it — a hechsher — that certifies the product meets Jewish dietary standards. This small symbol, often located on the bottom corner of pack-aged foods, is the only visible differ-ence between Kosher and regular food, Miller said.

Besides buying foods for the markets, the university purchases special cooking utensils only used to prepare Kosher meals, Rambo said. They are also willing to set-up accommodations for washing to avoid cross-contamination.

Still, it remains difficult for tradi-tional or observant Jewish students to keep Kosher and eat hot meals. Hillel offers a solution by providing a free hot Kosher dinner at Shabbat, the beginning of the Jewish Sabbath and “day of rest.” Shabbat services start at 6 p.m. and dinner is served at 7 p.m. on Fridays throughout the school year.

STARTUP,SEE PAGE 5

CONTRIBUTED BY MU REDHAWKS WEBSITE

PHILL ARNDT THE MIAMI STUDENT

NATURAL TALENT The Naturals, a male a capella group from Marquette University in Wisconsin, perform at the A Ca-pella Invitational Saturday night, hosted in Armstrong Student Center’s Harry Wilks Theater.

KOSHER,SEE PAGE 5

Field hockey coach Inako Puzo recently earned a new five-year contract.

Page 3: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY DANA HUMENFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

There was no shortage of red, white and blue in Oxford last Fri-day as hundreds of Miami Uni-versity students packed into the Uptown bars to watch the USA vs. Canada Olympic hockey game.

Last weekend, Brick Street Bar and Grille opened its doors at 7 a.m. for the USA vs. Russia Olym-pic hockey game and received great publicity after a video of the event went viral. The video, which featured the crowd’s reactions throughout the game, was featured on totalfratmove.com and Chan-nel 5 Sports in the days follow-ing. With beers flying, bar-wide “USA” chants, and a reenactment of the 1980 “Miracle” speech before the game began, Brick Street was deemed “The most American bar in America” across the Internet.

After an exciting win against Russia, Miami students were more than ready to head back to Brick Street this past weekend to watch team USA take on Canada. While the doors opened at 11 a.m. for the noon game, some students were there as early as 9:30 a.m. to ensure they would find a good spot in front of one of several flat screen TVs at the bar.

Sporting hockey jerseys or pa-triotic apparel, with American flags in hand, students gathered around the screens as they waited for the game to begin.

Junior Alex Sandberg was not able to make last weekend’s USA vs. Russia game, but as an avid hockey fan, she arrived

with her friends at 11:30 a.m. on Friday morning for the game against Canada.

“Hockey’s my favorite sport, and Miami’s a school of hock-ey, which is why I came here,” Sandberg said.

By the time the game started at noon, Brick Street was so packed that there was little room to walk around, and students were saying it could take up to 15 minutes to be served at the bar.

Plenty of pitchers of beer and Brick Street’s famous mixed drink, “the Trashcan,” were still sold, however, so many in fact the bar temporarily ran out of

the blue coloring are you sure its “blue coloring?” that is signature in Trashcans.

Seniors Mark Woerner and Matt Herbst were at the bar for both games, and Herbst described the crowd for the USA vs. Can-ada game as “10 times as big as before.”

“When we got here we couldn’t move, but last game we got a table right away,” Herbst said. Although the bar was crowded, both Woern-er and Herbst described the rowdy atmosphere as awesome.

First-year Peter Stanifer arrived at Brick Street around 12:30 p.m., but left for The Wood’s soon after

because it was too crowded and he couldn’t see the TV screens.

“New Bar [The Woods) was quiet at first but it picked up at 1:00 p.m.,” Stanifer said. “By third period it was pretty crowd-ed and by the end of the game it was packed.”

With team USA down by one point in the final minutes of the game, the atmosphere in Brick Street was full of nervous excite-ment. Although the United States ultimately couldn’t bring in a win on Friday, beers still flew and the patriotic afternoon continued as students left the bar, American flags held high.

EDITORSJANE BLAZER CHRIS [email protected] 3COMMUNITY

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

LAUREN OLSON PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Brick Street crowds grow at 11 a.m. Friday as patriotic fans gather for the U.S. vs. Canada Olympic hockey game.

Olympic dreams in the trashcan

The little engine that couldn’t: Train breaks apart

Routing a safer course: City moves on widening Rte. 27

Curb your enthusiasm: Thaw means more tickets

POLICE

BEATAn OVI after a long, hard day of ‘work’

Mirror, mirror, on the ground: Gimme a ride

BY CHRIS CURMECOMMUNITY EDITOR

A CSX train traveling through Oxford Saturday evening broke apart and stopped, causing a traffic headache at nearly every in-town crossing that lasted for nearly an hour and a half.

According to Oxford Police Department (OPD) sergeant Jon Varley, OPD dispatch received a 911 call reporting the train had struck and completely rolled over a vehicle.

“It came in as a car versus train call,” Varley said. “Of-ficers walked the entire [two-mile] length of the train and found nothing.”

The caller had heard an enor-mous bang and screech, which he assumed was a vehicle being struck, Varley said. However, that was not the case.

“The train was just passing through town like normal, and I guess the couplings in the cables

were, for whatever reason… pulled apart,” Varley said.

The train’s sensors detected this break and brought the two-mile long locomotive to a stop.

“The train actually came un-hitched around the South Main [Street] crossing,” Varley said. “It came to a stop over by the Central Avenue crossing.”

Most of the operation was ex-ecuted by CSX, a private com-pany, as the locomotive was pri-vate property on CSX’s track. OPD could only advise residents via their Twitter account to avoid railway crossings.

“It blocked up those crossings for about an hour and a half be-fore they were able to get backed up and moved out,” Varley said.

While not particularly danger-ous, Varley said crews must be careful when starting a train from a full stop, as there were work-ers on the train’s cars, which violently jerk into motion as the train pulls out.

BY CHRIS CURMECOMMUNITY EDITOR

As the snow, which has be-come a fixture of Oxford, begins to melt, the community becomes reacquainted with green grass and yellow curbs. According to Oxford Police Department (OPD) sergeant Jon Varley, when snow blankets streets and covers curbs, lines of parking legality are blurred.

“We kind of leave [cars] alone if the curbs are covered,” Varley said, confirming the suspicions of many Oxford residents.

While snowy roads may incen-tivize drivers to more strictly obey traffic laws, such as the posted speed limit, they also encourage a bending of parking regulation.

“We don’t expect people to dig through the snow to check [for yellow curbs],” Varley said. “However, once the snow starts melting and the curb becomes

fairly visible, it’s all fair game.”Students and residents alike

have noticed more cars than usual lining their street, when all curbs are white.

“[Drivers] tend to know we’re not going to enforce the yellow zones as strictly because of the snow,” Varley said. “I think there are people out there who will take advantage of this: people who live in the area and know this curb is actually yellow, but will park there because it’s not visible.”

Some may lament and say they have received a cita-tion while parked alongside a snow-covered curb.

“If [the police] are going to hold us accountable for parking in these areas, then they should be responsible for cleaning the streets properly,” sophomore Reis Thebault said.

BY KATE GROTONFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

Oxford City Council recently passed an ordinance to start the US Route 27 construction proj-ect, which will improve safety to the route.

Scott Otto from Oxford’s Service Department said the project will be adminis-tered by the Ohio Department of Transportation.

According to Oxford City Manager Doug Elliot, work will commence in March of 2013.

“The project’s main focus is widening roads so that there will be a center turn lanes as well as larger paved break down lanes along US 27,” Elliot said.

Elliot said the expansion of the route will take about one to two years.

“The project will span from Chestnut Street to Southpoint crossing,” Elliot said. “It will

begin in March and will take two construction seasons, there-fore being completed in August or September of 2015.”

Otto said they have started to move utilities to the road sites where the construction will take place, but nothing has been started.

According to Otto, the project’s main goal is to improve safety.

“By adding sidewalks and wider shoulders along the road, it will make it much safer for not only drivers but also walk-ers,” Otto said.

Miami University sopho-more Maura Fawcett frequently drives in the area that US 27 construction will take place.

“It will make the drive a lot better, having a center turn lane will help improve traffic flow, and also having a break down lane will make the roads much safer,” Fawcett said.

At 2:11 a.m. Saturday, an OPD officer was traveling south on South Poplar Street toward East Spring Street when she no-ticed a red sedan that appeared to be speeding eastbound on East Spring.

She followed the vehicle onto South Campus Avenue, where she stopped and clocked the car’s speed at 35 mph, confirm-ing her suspicion that the driver was not observing the posted limit of 25, OPD said.

The vehicle, alone on South Campus Avenue, quickly accel-erated right onto Chestnut Street and hooked a hard left onto Ar-rowhead Drive. The officer fol-lowed the car into the first park-ing lot off Arrowhead where it had stopped, according to OPD. She activated her overhead lights and stopped behind the car, which was left in reverse.

When speaking with the driver, the officer immediately noticed his speech was slurred. The 35-year-old man, residing on Arrowhead Drive, claimed he was returning from work, OPD said. He later amended this, and said he had finished work an hour prior, but had stayed to fill out paperwork. At this point, the officer noticed a six-pack of beer perched on the back driver’s side seat.

The suspect said he had con-sumed one beer, and agreed to take field sobriety tests. He failed, and was taken to OPD where he submitted to a breath test. His BAC was measured at .139. Had he truly only con-sumed one beer, his BAC should have been in the neighborhood of .02, according to OPD.

He was cited for speed and OVI, according to OPD.

At 4:14 a.m. Saturday, dis-patch received a 911 call from a resident in the 500 block of Sandra Dr., claiming an un-known person was ringing their doorbell.

By the time of arrival, OPD had received an identical com-plaint from a resident down the street. The suspect was de-scribed as a blonde female in her early 20s, wearing a black skirt.

As the officer spoke with a resident, he heard a loud break-ing sound from Glenview Drive. Through trees, he saw the OPD cruiser parked on Glenview had been vandalized.

The cruiser’s driver’s side mirror hung flaccid, dangling by electrical wire, and the wind-shield wiper was bent up and out at a 90-degree angle, in some perverse salute.

He recognized the first-year female matching the description given, and asked what she was doing. She said she was trying to get into the car, and need-ed to get someone’s attention to get home.

The officer found her Miami ID sitting on the cruiser’s hood beside her iPhone. Her New York driver’s license confirmed her identity and age of 19.

The female was scraped and covered in mud. She wore a green wristband from CJ’s bar and seemed disoriented, speaking through a heavy slur, according to OPD.

She was unambiguously in-toxicated and was found in pos-session of a fictitious Maine driver’s license.

She was cited for vandalism, sales to and use by underage persons, prohibited acts and dis-orderly conduct: intoxication. She was carted off to Butler County Jail.

KYLE HAYDEN THE MIAMI STUDENTA truck approaches the Spring Street railroad crossing.

CURBS,SEE PAGE 8

Page 4: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

BY EAMONN WALSHFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

A benefit of college is the abun-dance of student-driven perfor-mances. But what if you do not have time to make it to a big, formal per-formance? What if you are worried you won’t get a ticket?

Luckily, the Miami University Department of Music is bringing back the Brown Bag Recital Series after a semester hiatus to make mu-sic and student performances more accessible to the student body.

Every Wednesday this semester there will be student performances from 12 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. in the Shade Family Room at the Arm-strong Student Center while stu-dents come and go and grab a bite to eat. The performances are different from the standard performances at Hall Auditorium or Souers Recital Hall in the Center for Performing Arts, as the Brown Bag perfor-mances are informal and designed to reach a large number of students, according to Christopher Tanner, music professor and associate chair of the music department.

“The [music] department hopes to reach members of the Miami Uni-versity Community who may not regularly attend performances in our standard venues,” Tanner said.

The Brown Bag Recital Series distinguishes itself from traditional performances in its number of per-formers. Unlike recitals and con-certs that feature a single performer or group, the Brown Bag Recital Se-ries will present several performers per recital.

“For example, our first Brown

Bag recital featured five differ-ent students performing works for piano,” Tanner said.

In the future, Tanner and the mu-sic department hope to incorporate a variety of instruments or media into these performances, combin-ing for instance, a pianist a violinist and a flutist, rarther than featuring three pianists. This versatility and originality add dimension to a se-ries already breaking the standard performance mold.

With students always on the move, the Brown Bag Recital Se-ries allows audience members to unwind, put their feet up and truly enjoy their lunch breaks. Because of the casual nature of the venue and the performances, there is no need to be worried about staying seated or using a phone. The audience is free from the restraints placed on its shoulders if the performances were being held in a reserved setting. The liberated audience will allow the music the background to create a relaxed ambience that will make a lasting impression on the listeners in attendance, Tanner said.

The Department of Music hosts hundreds of recitals and concerts each year, yet there are people on campus who remain in the dark. Tanner hopes the Brown Bag Recital Series will shed light for students and faculty members in the department.

“Our students are tremendously talented and they work very hard to excel at their craft,” Tanner said. “We encourage everyone at Miami to take note of these performance; they represent an easy, relaxed way for people to enjoy great music.”

EDITORLAUREN KIGGINS

[email protected] ARTS & EVENTSTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

Sandwiches and Mozart

BEN TAYLOR THE MIAMI STUDENTDonors to the Miami University Performing Arts Series sip wine for a good cause Saturday at the 24th Annual Wine Tasting Gala.

BEN TAYLOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

The Tenors fill Hall Auditorum with lyrics in the languages of love as part of the Performing Arts Series .

Family struggles of the 50s rehashed on stage

Audio euphoria at ASCBEN’S BOOMBOX

TUESDAYFEB. 25

THURSDAYFEB. 27

WEDNESDAYFEB. 26

FRIDAYFEB. 28

The Miami Wind Ensemble and Men’s Glee Club will host a joint concert at 7:30 p.m. at Hall Auditorium. Repertoire includes a commissioned piece for the glee club and Julienne Work’s “Autumn Walk.”

“African Art: Confronting As-sumptions, Challenging Values Symposium” will explore the studies of six Miami students at 5:30 p.m. at the Art Museum.

Miami Libraries and the Howe Center for Writing Excellence will celebrate National Black His-tory Month through the 25th An-nual African American Read-In at 11:30 a.m. at first floor King Library. The read-in encourages readings from all literary genres, and the display of art, music and dance.

Wake up with donuts at the Study Abroad Donuts and Dis-cussion at 7:30 a.m. in Macmillan Hall 212 to learn more about study abroad opportunities at Miami.

SATURDAYMARCH 1

The 48th Maple Syrup Fes-tival kicks off at 8 a.m. with an all-you-can-eat pancake break-fast at Hueston Woods Lodge. Learn more about morning’s no. 1 condiment through maple syrup tours, which will run from noon to 4 p.m.

SUNDAYMARCH 2

MONDAYMARCH 3

Catch the Miami Trumpet Ensemble’s concert at 4 p.m. in Souers Recital Hall, Center for Performing Arts.

Ronda Brulotte of the Uni-versity of New Mexico will host “Oaxacan Mezcal: The Making of a Transnational Indigenous Com-modity” as part of the Lectures in Contemporary Anthropology se-ries at 4 p.m. in the Shriver Center Heritage Room.

ARTS & EVENTS CALENDAR

BY CHRISTINA CASANO SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Miami University’s Depart-ment of Theater continues its sea-son with a coming-of-age story, “Crumbs from the Table of Joy,” opening tomorrow on the Gates-Abegglan stage.

The play tells the story of two sisters whose mother dies and whose father gets remarried to a German immigrant after their move to Brooklyn from Florida, according to director Paul K. Bryant-Jackson.

The characters include the sisters, Ernestine and Ermina Crump, their father Godfrey, their Communist aunt Lily and their father’s new wife Gerte.

Jaime Coaker, a senior the-ater major, plays the younger daughter Ermina.

“Lots of outside factors that af-fect the family – racism, commu-nism, World War II, death, sexu-ality. But to be clear, it’s about the family and how we see the fam-ily dealing with all these things,” Coaker said.

“Crumbs” is a memory play, drawing on the main character Ernestine’s experiences and abil-ity to recall her family, reflected in the set design by Mari Taylor, a senior theater major.

“I was trying to see how Ernes-tine would see it in her memory. It’s skewed; memory is uneven. There are a lot of areas for her to step out, reflect on what hap-pened, connect to the audience,” Taylor said.

The function of the memory play is important to the way the story is told.

“It’s about fragments, putting together a narrative from a distant point, trying to give meaning to a series of images,” Jackson said. “It functions under the assump-tion that everyone involved has a meaningful experience, in that memories are ritualized.”

The script is very difficult, Jackson said, because of the ma-terial it deals with and the emo-tional lives of the characters.

“It’s a journey for all involved,” Jackson said.

One of the most important

aspects of the play is that it deals with the struggle of an African American family in the 1950s.

“I think it tells an important story of what it means of strug-gles that people had, which we seem to forget about,” Jackson said. “It’s about how people suc-ceed, or don’t succeed, and how they survive.”

Coaker discussed her experi-ence working on the show as an actor.

“It talks about things that no one wants to talk about. We un-derstand with our brains how real [the struggle] is, so we should be afraid to jump, but we are scared,” Coaker said.

The cast includes Miami alum-nus Vonzell Carter playing the girls’ father Godfrey.

“He’s an inspiration to all of us. He’s shared his gifts, brought to the part a beating heart making it both beautiful and painful and he’s made this experience mean-ingful,” Jackson said.

Performances are at 7:30 p.m. from Feb. 26 to March 1, and at 2 p.m. March 1 and 2.

The voice is one of the most in-teresting musical instruments used

on stage. Picture for a second an auditorium. Let’s make it empty except for one per-son: you. As you stand in the spotlights staring at the empty seats, you belt out

the last song you heard on the ra-dio. In the midst of your happiness, something doesn’t sound right.

You look around and realize once again, you are alone. A cappella is a hard skill to master. It takes a good ear and a pleasant pair of lungs to reach and sustain clarity.

As you stand on stage, you hear footsteps. Turning around, you see your friends; those who have stood by you in countless practic-es, all for this moment. They help you create the audio euphoria that is harmonizing.

Then there is a beat that adds the glue to the masterpiece. Each part of this creation is by the vibrations of vocal chords.

This past Saturday, I was a mem-ber of the audience awaiting the performances of many stunning “a capella” groups. There was a collec-tion of songs amongst the genres as

each show was better than the last. Participating groups were Miami University’s own The Treble Mak-ers, Miami Misfitz, and Just Duet. The invitational also had some travelers amongst the crowd: The Naturals from Marquette Univer-sity in Milwaukee, The WittMen Crew from Wittenberg University in Springfield, OH, and Freshly Brewed from Butler University in Indianapolis.

The concert was a show indeed. Each group brought uniqueness and did not disappoint with their song selections. There was even a Kanye West medley and a R. Kelly remix. Legit.

If you ever find yourself on stage with the spotlight blaring down on you as you stare into the empty seats, remember that it can be a lot more satisfying when the seats are filled. The Wilks Theater at the Armstrong Student Center housed the concert and the building looks as amazing as it sounds. The acoustics are set just right. At one point in the show, the microphones wanted to voice an opinion about how loud they can be by creating a loud malfunction in the speakers. Because of the room design, the groups carried on with their routine and the dynamics were anything but a blunder. Check out the next concert that falls upon your calendar. The shows are great, the people are awe-inspiring, and the voices couldn’t connect any better.

BEN MEINKING

Page 5: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

Kohlenberg placed second last year with their project and are peer men-tors this year.

“Jessica [Reading] reached out to myself and one of my partners to be peer mentors [for this year],” said Leist. “Our responsibility is to help these groups, whether it’s playing devil’s advocate or just being an extra resource for them.”

Leist and Kohlenberg conceived their project idea, BasketBeam, in their ESP 201: Introduction to En-trepreneurship class. Their project focuses on a system that projects basketball court lines onto any sur-face. They said they are still work-ing towards making their concept a reality today.

According to the Startup Weekend website, while sometimes new com-panies do not form from the process, some continue after the weekend is over.

“Approximately 55 percent of Startup Weekend participants con-tinue working on their idea with all of their team, and 23 percent with only some members of their team,” she said.

Leist explained that being a part of Startup Weekend really “pays off” and people whoplace well in the com-petition receive benefits to further their potential companies.

“Students get different services that are donated by other mentors and coaches,” Leist said. “I know last year one of the prizes was a free consulta-tion while some offered services like a website development. And there’s also fun little prizes like gift cards to places Uptown or some Miami gear.”

Mark Lacker, a John W. Altman clinical professor of entrepreneur-ship at Miami, is responsible for the Institute of Entrepreneurship’s Startup courses, co-curricular pro-gramming and internship initiatives. He will be one of the coaches for Startup Weekend.

Having 20 years of entrepreneur-ship experience and being involved in three startup companies him-self, Lacker said he was excited for students to take advantage of this unique opportunity.

“I am excited about the momen-tum that has occurred around Startup Weekend in the last three years,” Lacker said. “We were the first uni-versity to run an undergraduate-only Startup Weekend, and now that we have seen that this traction has oc-curred, it says a lot about the inter-est in entrepreneurship from our Miami students.”

J.T. Fox, a junior at Miami and president of the co-ed Professional Business Fraternity Delta Sigma Pi, was one of the first-place winners of Startup Weekend last year. Fox and his team, Samantha Von Hoene, Steven Zid, Justin Fox and Brandon Holvey, took home the gold with their idea of a water bottle filter, which could be especially useful for study abroad, called TransFill.

Fox will be competing again this year, and he raved about the experi-ence he had last year.

“I learned so much through Startup Weekend,” Fox said. “It was an awe-some experience for me. I encourage all Miami students who are interested in entrepreneurship or want to get a broader scope of the business world in general to take advantage of this unique opportunity.”

Miller said Hillel has a Ko-sher kitchen and is in the process of having it certified by the Ohio Department of Health. Certifica-tion will make it more feasible for Miami to use the kitchen to pro-vide Kosher meals to its students.

“I think one of the key issues here is that the university and Hil-lel work together to provide for Kosher students,” Miller said.

The Halal diet is easier to ac-commodate than the Kosher diet, Rambo said.

The Demske Culinary Support Center is able to purchase Halal meat and buy special cooking utensils used only to prepare Ha-lal food, Rambo said.

Halal food is prepared accord-ing to Islamic law. Miami gradu-ate student Hussein Abu Jeib said the name of God is said over the animal during slaughtering.

Some Islamic scholars say that if Halal meat is not available, it is alright to eat not Halal—some-times called Haram—foods. Pork and all pork products are Haram. Fish is considered neither Halal nor Haram so, Abu Jeib said, most of his friends who eat Halal turn to Miami’s seafood options.

“I eat the meat here and I know it’s not Halal,” Abu Jeib said, “I would like to have Halal instead.”

In his first year at Miami, Abu Jeib said he asked about Halal op-tions but was told the university did not have Halal meat. He did not press the issue further.

The lack of follow-through from students with special dietary

needs is one of the challenges the Demske Culinary Support Center faces, Rambo said.

She said several students make arrangements with her but then decide they can handle the diet on their own with the options avail-able in the dining halls.

This is the case for first year Rami Abu-Attiyeh, who found eating Halal at Miami was not difficult.

“I never usually run into issues with eating something Halal,” Abu-Attiyeh said.

He still takes precautions and reads food labels carefully. Mus-lims, much like Jews, do not eat pork or pork products. Pork gela-tin is a common ingredient in packaged foods and this further restricts Abu-Attiyeh’s options.

Despite this, Abu Jeib said it is not too difficult to find a simi-lar product that does not contain pork gelatin.

“If you are looking for cheese and you look on the label and it says ‘pork gelatin,’ you put it back but you can always find an-other cheese without it,” he said.

The effort made by the univer-sity is evident, but Abu Jeib said if there were one place on campus that served Halal meat, the Mus-lim student community would be better accommodated.

“I’m pretty sure if there’s the option for a Muslim student to eat Halal food they would choose that over what’s offered,” Abu Jeib said.

While Miami has made no mention of building a dining fa-cility that serves Halal meat, Rambo stressed their desire to

accommodate all students’ diets on an individual level.

If students have special dietary needs, they should call the Dem-ske Culinary Support Center to set up an appointment to meet with a culinary specialist-usually Rambo-and discuss their needs.

It is important for students to take the initiative, Rambo said, because the school does not have a large inventory of Kosher and Halal foods, but will purchase them for meal plan holders who need them.

“We really do take it on an indi-vidual basis,” Rambo said.

The Demske Culinary Support Center encourages students to explain exactly what their needs are using specific brand names of foods and to provide the school with recipes they enjoy. Once this is sorted out, the Demske Culinary Support Center goes to a food purchaser to determine what products can be bought. They usually designate the din-ing hall closest to the student’s residence hall to train the staff and prepare the student’s meals at no extra charge.

“If you live on campus and have a meal plan it is our job to assist you,” Rambo said.

The Demske Culinary Sup-port Center has seen an increase in the number of requests for special diet foods and continues to try to meet the needs of all Miami students.

“People just have to be willing to work with us and understand that we can’t do this overnight but we take this quite serious,” Rambo said.

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Page 6: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

I read your editorial on guns in the Feb. 4 paper, and generally speaking, with the exception of Reis Thebault, it was not too bad. Reis’s statement implies he is not a history major or even using his intelligence that GOD gave him.

In the mid-1930’s Hitler banned all guns under the ad-age that Germany would be safer and the police more efficient. We all know how that went for the 6 million Jews, and the 8 mil-lion Christians who were killed in WWII.

I would like to hear Reis’s comments on the DHS purchas-es of 2 billion rounds of ammo (enough to shoot every person in America 5 times), 7000 AR-15s, 2700 urban tanks, 500,000 caskets and FEMA concentra-tion camps (as seen on “60 Min-utes Show”) all to be used on Americans in America.

The only thing keeping this administration in check is the 2nd

amendment. Whether there are shootings at colleges, schools or malls, you have failed to identify who is doing the shoot-ings. Most, if not all have been

liberal democrats or brought up in a house with those teachings. If anything needs banning it is the liberal democrat. Now I offer you the solu-tion that will put an end to gun violence. Think back when this country was formed and found-ed, it was formed around GOD and the 10 Commandments.

This country has declined in moral integrity and respect for others. We have strayed away from GOD in the name of po-litical correctness and let the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) destroy our morals.

GOD has been forced out of schools and we are being at-tacked as Christians. I place blame on parents who want to be “friends” and not a parent. Par-ents do not teach love, respect, integrity and honesty. Parents and schools need to teach these traits again. Teach the “Golden Rule” that is “Do unto others as you want done to you” and I promise you the country would be a better place.

This country has been so tied up with political correctness and

racism that it has taken our coun-try apart. If I come to your house I respect your rules and policies and I do not try to change you to my standards or wants. America believed in GOD and based on Christianity and you are wel-come here as long as you learn our practices and ways.

We also have to vote for Amer-ica and not our ethnic origin, our skin color, our heritage or any-thing else except what is good for America.

In summary, put GOD back in schools, teach love and respect, act as Americans (not black, Jewish, Hispanic, white etc.), de-port illegal immigrants, learn the language, remove corrupt politi-cians, treat mental illness and we will all prosper and guns will not be an issue.

This letter was written to your staff as a challenge to dig deeper and put the blame where it be-longs and not on the gun. A gun never killed anyone, it was the person holding the gun.

EDITORSEMILY ELDRIDGE

NICOLE THEODORE [email protected] OPINION

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

PATRICK GEYSER THE MIAMI STUDENT

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

Rule of Thumb

Miami needs to take reshaping the financial aid system seriously

Gun violence a moral issue, not a legal issue

UP Magazine launch partyCome celebrate UP’s online issue 9 p.m. Wednesday at The Wood’s!

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

MU women’s hockeyThey won the CCWHA championship. Congrats!

Mystery guitarist at ASC Whoever you are, you’re singing and strumming was really nice to listen to while studying.

Gray, windowless walls surround a small waiting room equipped with four chairs cast off to the side and two desks with unsmiling Mi-ami employees saying, “How can I help you?” over and over like a broken record. Students wait in line, their hands in their pockets, checking their phones nervously, at times even leaving the gray office with tears in their eyes their pend-ing questions still unanswered, or not in the way they had hoped.

Welcome to the Financial Aid Office, an overlooked service in which the university does not seem to place a lot of value.

For the 76 percent of Miami stu-dents who require financial aid to make four or five years at Miami work, life isn’t always easy when it comes to trying to keep up with one of the most expensive public schools in the state. What makes it harder for this 76 percent of stu-dents is dealing with their finan-cial aid and scholarship issues in an office that handles these issues publicly, in front of everyone in the room and with few smiles and little helpful encouragement.

A service that should be an intri-cate part of Miami’s core seems to be cast aside. For a university that prides itself on diversity and mak-ing sure all students have access to all of the amazing amenities it can provide, why are the services and overall environment of the finan-cial aid office so unpleasant? The cramped office sits quietly in the basement of the Campus Avenue Building (CAB), full of students embarrassed to talk about their money problems and financial aid issues in front of a room full of un-familiar faces.

Most of Miami’s services and operations have inviting rooms, full of couches and separate rooms equipped for private conversa-tions between a student and a faculty member or an employee. The Study Abroad Office is one to note, with large pillars and warm, smiling faces always waiting to greet a potential study abroad stu-dent. This makes sense since Mi-ami is consistently no. 1 in study abroad programs.

It only makes sense that since more than half the school has some sort of financial aid, the administra-tion should provide an office wor-thy of its students, equipped to help them engage in tough and compli-cated financial aid conversations in an informative and pleasant way.

The Miami Student Editorial Board believes the reshaping of this service in its infrastructure and overall methods should be an im-mediate priority.

First, there is the issue that students are not able to set up in-dividual, private appointments. Then, there are the bureaucratic ambiguities between the duties of the Bursar’s Office and the Finan-cial Aid Office. And more often than not, a trip to the basement of the CAB building leaves students feeling alone and upset in a process that should be dealt with genuine care and sympathy by those who

specialize in it. Since the Bursar’s office and Financial Aid do not function seamlessly together, even though the offices are a couple rooms away from one another, a student must contact both offices to figure out what is going on if there is an issue holding up their aide. The Bursar’s office can only dis-burse aid and scholarships when it receives the funds from the Finan-cial Aid office, and when both of-fices claim the other service needs to be contacted, it is pretty exhaust-ing, confusing and tiring.

An online Miami Student Poll asked, “Do you think services at the financial aid office are help-ful?” to which 7 percent of students answered yes, 14 percent said the office could sometimes be helpful but needs improvements, 62 per-cent answered no and 17 percent said they were not sure. When we tried to contact the Financial Aid office seeking a comment on this poll, we got no answer the first time we called and were kept on hold for 10 minutes the second time, only to eventually hang up in frustration.

Even though we appreciate all the recent beautiful additions to our campus, the administration should not forget about the core services on which students rely every single day. The Financial Aid office is one of these services that should not be forgotten, especially since students are less than happy with it.

Needless to say, the first round of winter term scholarships and financial aid did not go great for students who needed it. Even though federal aid could be applied to winter term, this money would come straight out of money stu-dents could receive for the follow-ing spring term. A student would then have to make up the remain-ing cash one way or another to pay for tuition or books. Trying to study abroad in the summer isn’t a walk in the park either for those who can’t afford a $10,000-20,000 trip on their own. Financial aid should be working more closely with the Study Abroad Office in an effort to make sure students who don’t come from families who can afford to send their kids abroad still get the chance.

It also shouldn’t be a process that leaves students fighting to get their aid disbursed in time to buy books and other supplies before they fly half way across the world.

The timing is awkward with aid disbursement for most and students have to basically figure out how to front the money in order to go and then sit around and wait for the aid to come.

Students have even had to wor-ry about being dropped from a program because their aid hasn’t gone through to pay for their tuition in time.

The board believes this is a system that will continue to have some flaws, but it should be re-formed. After all, with 76 percent of its students using financial aid services, it’s about time the office and the system went through some significant improvements.

CLAYTON [email protected]

Page 7: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

If you haven’t already binged on the 13 newest chapters of “House of Cards,” go ahead and do your-self a favor – don’t. In fact, con-sider those 12 agonizing hours I just saved you a down payment on another show you’ve been meaning to watch.

With twisted sex scenes, cold-blooded killings and a little bit of animal cruelty thrown in for good measure, the second sea-son of the Netflix original is not only downright disturbing, it’s also misleading.

It paints a picture of D.C. and the American political process that is both inaccurate and cynical.

While annoying, I can live with little oversights when it comes to parliamentary procedure and pro-cess. But, then again, as a friend of mine rightly pointed out, would it have really been that hard for Beau Willimon, the show’s cre-ator and producer, to share a copy of the script with someone in the industry?

“The West Wing” did this for the better, having people like Law-rence O’Donnell, Peggy Noonan and Frank Luntz serve as writers and consultants throughout the show’s run.

But I guess Beau Willimon wasn’t too concerned about this since, as he put it in an interview with the Daily Beast, “House of Cards” is about power, plain and simple…you are either exercising power or someone is exercising it on you.”

And that right there is why I have a problem with the show. It’s not the little inaccuracies or lewd scenes (although I could do with-out those), but the cynicism which is pedaled at a time when we have too many cynics.

The show takes everything that is good and positive about politics and perverts it.

It takes handwritten letters from school children learning about their government and turns it into a fourth wall breaking Kevin Spacey who says, “I despise children.”

It reduces the dedicated public servants who send their condo-lences to grieving constituents and turns it into confrontation and manipulation while at the church pulpit.

Sure, the show wouldn’t have been the same if it focused on those things or the lighter side of politics, but with a Congressional approval rating of just 12 percent and 64 percent of the public saying the country is headed in the wrong direction, we certainly didn’t need more cynicism.

Maybe I am wrong. In fact, the early numbers would suggest I probably am. According to Va-riety, 16 percent of Netflix’s 31 million users have now watched at least some or all of the show. Clearly there is something that I am missing.

Still I like to think that the real people missing something are the folks out in Hollywood. The same people who produce movies and shows like “House of Cards” or “The Wolf of Wall Street.” Shows and movies that lack any sense of morality.

Right now the country sure could use a little more Gregory Peck and Jimmy Stewart on the silver screen instead of the corrupt politician amassing power or the Wall Street crook living excessively.

And, hey, since I saved you 12 hours of watching “House of Cards,” go ahead and watch “Twelve O’ Clock High” and “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington.”

What transpired in Ukraine last week was nothing short of remarkable; after three months of mass protests against the decision of their president Viktor Yanu-kovych not to sign a deal which would have brought Ukraine and the European Union closer, Ukrainians humiliatingly forced him to step down.

But they didn’t stop there, de-manding and getting snap presi-dential elections, a return to an earlier, more democratic constitu-tion and the release of prominent political prisoner Yulia Timsh-enko. When Vladimir Putin, Rus-sia’s strongman president, cajoled and bribed Yanukovych into turning down the EU deal in No-vember, he certainly didn’t have this in mind.

A series of closed-door meet-ings between the two heads of state were forced on Yanukovych because Moscow threatened to raise Ukraine’s gas bill and limit Ukrainian exports to Russia.

In addition, as a result of the corruption of Yanukovych and his regime, Ukraine was in des-perate need of a financial bailout. Putin made an offer Yanukovych couldn’t refuse; what amounted to a $15 billion loan and a 30 per-cent discount on Russian natural gas, contingent upon closer ties between Russia and Ukraine, as well as the possibility of the lat-ter’s entry into Russia’s corrupt and authoritarian version of the EU, the Eurasian Customs Union.

Whether the last scenario would happen or not is academ-ic; Ukrainians were alarmed at the prospect of living any longer under Putin’s model (i.e. less de-mocracy, more cronyism and eco-nomic stagnation). Predictably, they took to the streets.

Putin’s worry was evidenced through Moscow’s actions. First, the screws began to tighten at home, featuring a crackdown on more independent Russian media outlets. Next, the idea that those protesting in Ukraine were “fas-cists,” conspiring with the West to undermine Russia, began to gain traction in Russia at the Kremlin’s

behest, perfectly embodied in a documentary, titled “Biochemis-try of Treachery,” that premiered in primetime on Russian state television a week ago.

This was more below the belt than you might think since some Ukrainians fought with the Na-zis during World War II against the Soviets.

Finally, a campaign was waged by Moscow to change the dynamics of the situation in Ukraine. Putin’s right-hand man and chief propagandist, Vladislav Surkov, was dispatched to Ukraine, followed by Russian security advisors.

When the protests in the Ukrai-nian capital became violent and spread to other areas, primarily Ukrainian-speaking regions in the west of the country, more pro-European than the primarily Rus-sian-speaking, pro-Russian east, a paramilitary group appeared in the latter to support Yanu-kovych and “cleanse the country of fascists.”

An article in the Russian government daily, “Rossiys-kaya Gazeta,” confirmed this. Then there were the reports that groups of Russian special forces were clandestinely operating in Ukraine, attempting to break the protests.

They say desperation is a stinky cologne, and indeed it stunk when Putin’s aide, Sergei Glazyev, pub-licly called on Yanukovych to “suppress the insurgency, which is provoked and financed by ex-ternal forces [read “the West”].”

Even more so when an assistant to Russian deputy prime minis-ter, Dmitry Rogozin, tweeted the link to a video released on You-tube of a conversation between the US Ambassador to Ukraine and the Assistant Secretary of State, Victoria Nuland, where the latter can be heard uttering, “f*ck the EU.”

The consequences of the recent developments in Ukraine deeply trouble Putin.

For one, it’s axiomatic that whoever governs Ukraine next will be less pro-Moscow than

Yanukovych, meaning closer relations with the EU because, as we have seen, this is a non-starter for Putin. Consequently, wran-gling Ukraine into the Customs Union will be nearly impossible, effectively rendering the project dead. Moreover, the notion of Ukraine, which Putin described in 2008 as “not even a state,” chart-ing a different course than Russia is a deep shock to Moscow.

Most concerning for the Krem-lin is the example the events of the last few months in Ukraine have set; that is, sustained people-power can topple unresponsive regimes in the post-Soviet space with minimal violence.

The fact this occurred in Ukraine, a place with deep his-torical and cultural ties to Russia, makes it all the more threaten-ing. While unlikely because of the deep structural nature of the political and economic reforms needed in Ukraine, the possibility that it could shed its Soviet past and become a ‘normal’ European country represents Moscow’s worst nightmare.

As the Olympics wind down, Putin will be forced to face real-ity; while his power appears safe for now, there is an economic storm on the horizon because of his statist, kleptocratic policies.

This, combined with Putin’s failure in Ukraine, only mean greater and harsher repression in Russia. An ominous example of this was the February 21 deci-sion by a Moscow court against eight individuals who took part in mass protests in Russia two years ago in order to intimidate would-be protesters.

In short, the future of Putin’s Russia and what will come after it look substantially bleaker after the Ukrainian people’s success.

The author is a junior fellow at the Havighurst Center for Rus-sian and Post-Soviet Studies.

‘House of Cards’ adds to the cynicism of U.S. political scene

Not what Putin bargained for with Ukraine

7TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014 OP EDwww.miamistudent.net

COMMENTARY

COMMENTARY

It’s a Friday evening; classes are in the rearview and an ice cold Shock

Top sounds good.

Adorned in a red Mi-ami hockey hoodie, a few buddies and I make our way Uptown to our favor-ite establish-ment: Skip-per’s Pub.

The big screens in Skipper’s make it the perfect viewing location for the best college basketball games. Add in a quarter pound of savory cheese-burger and tonight is going to kick-start a great weekend.

Permeating the loud chatter and music at the bar is a sound unfamiliar to Miami students: A buzzing over-head. If Skipper’s was located in the most remote tribal areas of Pakistan, the accustomed would be fleeing in desperation. Instead, I take a swig of Shock Top, my mind on the cute girl at the end of the bar.

Then there’s a whirring followed by an explosion that obliterates the Top Deck at Skipper’s. The large tree in front falls down, cutting through

the middle portion of the bar. The burning flesh of survivors smells like charcoal, as they pour through the broken doors, bleeding and confused. There is no love and honor here – just chaos.

In the aftermath, seven people are dead and scores more wounded. The Miami community is in an up-roar to find answers: Why did this happen? Who was the target? The families of the victims go before the Parliament in Yemen to testify. Their son or daughter wasn’t a terrorist; they were not guilty of anything. Why did they have to die? Nobody gives an answer.

National reporters in Yemen pick up on the story and want to ask President Hadi, “why did this drone bombing occur on apparently in-nocent civilians in a college town in Ohio?” No answers. Hadi will not even acknowledge it occurred.

The only recourse is to turn to the Yemeni public. But the public doesn’t care, either. Some collateral damage is the price of war.

All of this may seem like an ab-surd scenario, but it serves to illus-trate what it would be like if the roles between the United States and Ye-men were reversed in the operation of drones.

Such an action did happen to 16-year-old Abdulrahman al-Awlaki, an American citizen born in Den-ver. In 2011, Abdulrahman and his teenage cousin were eating dinner at an open-air restaurant in southern Yemen when they were killed by an America drone, along with nine other civilians.

Two weeks prior to his son’s death, Anwar al-Awlaki, born in New Mex-ico and affiliated with al-Qaeda, was killed by a drone strike also in Ye-men. It’s the first known case of an American president ordering the as-sassination of an American citizen.

Some may scoff at the death of Anwar, saying, “He’s a terrorist, who cares?” What about his 16-year-old son? By every account and report, he was innocent.

Even despite talks from President Obama and senior administration of-ficials about more transparency over the drone program, just two weeks ago, reports surfaced that the presi-dent was considering a drone strike on another American citizen thought to be living in Pakistan.

Last year, the Obama administra-tion confirmed four American citi-zens had been killed by drone strikes, only Anwar’s was intentional. Why does that not incur more outrage

from the American public? If Presi-dent Bush or a President McCain or a President Romney had ordered the assassination of an American citizen, would they get a pass from Democrats, too?

Will Democrats be back in the streets protesting robust executive power and drone killings once a Re-publican is doing them?

We should absolutely want to know what the legal standard is to target an American citizen for death. Naureen Shah, advocacy adviser at Amnesty International U.S.A, be-lieves little has changed since Obama promised more transparency.

“The public and most members of Congress are still completely in the dark about where the U.S. claims authority to strike, the legal rules and the identity of those already killed,” she said.

The Presidential Policy Guidance, which outlines the conditions for le-thal attack, states no attack would be ordered without “near certainty” that no non-combatants would be harmed or killed. Has that “near certainty” been upheld?

Nobody knows if such a stan-dard is being upheld, according to the New York Times, because there is still a tight security blanket

over the data. And even more problematic is that

the Obama administration consid-ers all military-age males killed by drones as militants. Still, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism estimates that total civilian casualties since 2004 in Pakistan alone have ranged from 416 to 951.

It is not just American citizens; the men, women and children that have been killed in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, Mali and other countries should concern us.

Sure, President Obama did not launch a preemptive war against a country under false pretenses, like Bush, but he is claiming a power even Bush didn’t conceive of: The ability to assassinate an American citizen without due process.

While it does appear drone strikes have stalled in Pakistan at least, past and continuing drone strikes and the power claimed to use them should not be acceptable to the American people.

In the name of the innocents killed on our behalf, we should rein in the executive branch and demand full transparency.

BRETTMILAM

MILAM’S MUSINGS

Public must demand more accountability after innocent civilians are killed by drones

When you’re finished reading

The Miami Student,

please recycle!

Colorado RE-legalized cannabis (marijuana) over a year ago and the sky hasn’t fallen (Budding movement to legalize, Feb. 14, 2014): Ohio will likely witness the same results.

Another reason to end cannabis prohibition that doesn’t get mentioned is because it’s biblically correct since God (The Ecologician) created all the seed bearing plants saying they’re all good on

literally the very first page of the Bible. A sane or moral argument to continue caging re-

sponsible adults who use cannabis doesn’t exist.

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Marijuana debate stems back to the Bible, God

STAN WHITEDILLON,COLORADO

[email protected]

SENIOR, [email protected]

GREG DICKJUNIOR, POL. SCIENCE

[email protected]

KEARY IARUSSISENIOR, DIPLOMACY & GLOBAL POLITICS

[email protected]

Page 8: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

“This raises the issue of who has the right to copy and scan artifacts,” Card said. “This is going to com-plicate things, but in a good way. […] It undermines certain kind of business practices in museums. For example, a museum with cool arti-facts but crap exhibits will lose out. But a museum with great exhibits will be fine.”

And of course an additional ben-efit to the 3D scanning technology is its ability to gather and safely store priceless data. In the future, though artifacts may be lost, stolen or damaged, much of their infor-mation will safely be preserved on hard drives and in cyberspace for generations to study, analyze—and

even print in color.Among the estimated $8,000 of

artifacts stolen was a Civil War-era pipe that served as Junior Claire Meyer’s final project for her Intro-duction to Archaeology class last spring. After spending hours work-ing with it and studying it, she was upset to see it taken. But because she too had done a 3D scan of the pipe, she has been able to print rep-licas of it since the burglary.

“To hear the pipe was stolen was quite disheartening,” Meyer said. “Almost like someone stole a painting you’ve devoted hours to in order to create it. But to have Dr. Card be able to re-print the ob-ject thanks to the 3D printer was awesome. While It may not be the real object, the essence of it is still there.”

3D, FROM PAGE 1

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CORRECTIONS POLICYThe Miami Student is committed to providing the Miami University community with the most accurate information possible. Corrections may be submitted up to seven calendar days after publication.

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Thebault was recently given a ticket for a yellow zone violation by the Miami University Police Department, though he said the curb was completely disguised by snow.

“Just because the curb is cov-ered doesn’t mean you can’t be cited for another violation,” Varley said.

There are regulations restrict-ing proximity to driveways and fire hydrants that should be ob-served regardless of whether one can see the color of the curb, Varley said.

“If you park so badly that you should have known better, you’ll get ticketed,” Varley said, adding parking services makes a certain

value judgment when consider-ing how a car is parked in snowy conditions. “There’s [usually] an-other violation, beyond the curb, that will fit your offense.”

Despite the vast number of drivers who do, in fact, know better, OPD leans toward giving drivers the benefit of the doubt, Varley said.

So, as the seasons change and the parking free-for-all dies down, drivers will again be remanded to gray curbs.

“[Drivers] usually don’t check on their vehicle when the snow melts,” Varley said. “So they’ll get a citation anyway.”

This, coupled with the warmer temperatures that brought about the melt, may even incentivize students to forget their vehicles and walk.

CURBS, FROM PAGE 3

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Page 9: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

yet again, as two quick goals within 1:22 of each other on two of St. Cloud’s first three shots put the ’Hawks in a hole early. Miami never was able to recover from that pair of defensive breakdowns, and a goal by Huskie senior forward and captain Nic Dowd in the latter half of the third period buried the Red and White.

“Tonight we did the opposite [of Friday],” Blasi said. “We keep playing this little dance here of a step forward and a step back. Until we decide we want to take two steps forward, we’re back to square one.”

Junior goaltender Ryan Faragher made 33 saves in the shutout effort for the Huskies. The loss drops the

RedHawks to 11-16-3, though the series split is an encouraging sign for the ailing squad.

Miami remains the basement dwellers of the National Collegiate Hockey Conference, standing sev-en points behind Colorado College with just 17 points and a 5-14-1-1 league record. With the weekend split, St. Cloud moves into a two-way tie for first place in the NCHC with 39 points. Even with four wins in their final four games, the RedHawks will still likely finish last or second to last in the confer-ence, pitting them against now-fa-miliar opponents in the University of North Dakota or St. Cloud in a first round matchup.

For now, however, the ’Hawks will play their final home stand against the University of Minneso-ta-Duluth this coming weekend.

9 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014www.miamistudent.net

HOCKEYFROM PAGE 10

MEN’S BBALL, FROM PAGE 10

WOMEN’S BBALLFROM PAGE 10

within one, 25-24 with 4:11 remain-ing in the first half. Two 3-pointers from the pair of Australian fresh-men – forward Josh Oswald and guard Jaryd Eustace – helped Miami build a 35-25 lead heading into the locker room.

Bowling Green made several key adjustments in the second half that got them back into the game.

The Falcons made a concerted ef-fort to pound the ball inside and take advantage of Miami’s lack of size. BG held the advantage in points in the pain 38-22 for the game.

“They were looking to exploit us,” Felder said. “We’re obviously a small team, even when I’m in there on [senior center] Cameron Black, I’m pretty undersized compared to him in the post … to try to offset the size [difference], we have to box out and rebound as a team.”

Black had eight points and 10 rebounds.

Despite Miami’s deficit in size,

they still competed on the boards, being outrebounded only 39-36.

Another second-half change the Falcons made was a switch to their zone defense. The ’Hawks had trou-ble penetrating the zone, converting only five field goals for the entire second period.

Despite their struggles in the sec-ond-half, the RedHawks were able to hold on the rest of the way, never relinquishing their lead.

In search of a spark for his team, head coach John Cooper inserted Moore into the starting line-up. Moore has struggled for most of the season, shooting only 37 percent on the year. It was his first career start at Miami.

“We’ve sort of been trying to find some energy, trying to find someone who can bring different things for us and help us out,” Cooper said. “We called Willie’s number and I thought Willie did a pretty solid job.”

Moore, who added three assists and six rebounds to his team-leading 11 points, handled point-guard duties for large portions of the game.

“He hasn’t run the point a ton for us,” Cooper said. “Still, he remem-bered just about everything and was able to keep us in offense and made pretty good decisions in transition, which is what I was looking for.”

The RedHawks certainly hope Moore’s improved play is a positive trend that will continue for the rest of the season, starting with their next game against Akron University (17-10, 9-5 MAC) Wednesday.

MU lost its first meeting with the Zips 59-52, in a comeback bid that fell short. Felder led all players with 16 points in that contest.

Akron has lost two games in a row, giving up valuable positioning in the Mid-American Conference standings. The Zips are paced by se-nior forward Demetrius Treadwell , who leads the team in both scoring and rebounding at 14.7 points and 8.8 rebounds. Treadwell recorded a double-double with 15 points and 10 rebounds in the first matchup be-tween these two teams.

Tip-off is scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday at Millet Hall. Wright said. “We weren’t able

to stay in reach of them and keep it competitive.”

The RedHawks fell short in the rebounding battle in consecutive games, as Kent State outrebound-ed the Red and White 29-27.

The Golden Flashes dominated the paint, an area where the Red-Hawks have been strong this year. Kent State tallied 28 points in the paint, while Miami had 14.

“We allowed them to get po-sition low and get too close to the basket,” Wright said. “[Kent State] has some pretty good size and they were able to hit shots.”

The RedHawks were funda-mentally sound in taking charges Sunday; taking more than five charges in the game.

“We definitely do drills in practice centered around [taking

charges],” senior guard Haley Robertson said. “We want to have that advantage for our defense.”

The RedHawks were led by Robertson, as she scored 11 points. Senior forward Erica Al-mady scored nine, while junior guard Courtney Larson and se-nior guard Hannah Robertson each had eight points.

The ’Hawks will have a few days off before returning to north-eastern Ohio for a Wednesday night game against the University of Akron Zips (17-8, 11-3 MAC).

“I would say we have some things we need to refocus on,” Robertson said. “Within the next couple days we need to work on playing together.”

Miami’s final regular season road game is set for 7 p.m. After Wednesday, the RedHawks will wrap up their regular season with three home games against MAC East Division opponents.

SOFTBALL, FROM PAGE 10

Senior designated player Allie Larabee recorded the only hit for the ’Hawks in two at-bats and the pitch-ing staff as a whole struggled as it allowed six earned runs on eight hits and recorded only two strikeouts.

Bradley struck first in the game Sunday with a five-run top of the second, but the ’Hawks responded with a RBI double from junior outfielder Shanyn McIntyre in the bottom of the inning. In the third, Miami had three runners on with one out, but could not do anything with it as the inning ended with a strikeout and a groundout. The Braves tacked on two more runs

in the fourth. The RedHawks kept on fighting as senior catcher Kayla Ledbetter had an RBI double in the bottom of the fourth and Modic drove in a runner in the seventh in a failed rally attempt.

Ledbetter had a solid outing, go-ing 2-3 with an RBI and a walk while sophomore outfielder Taylor Shuey also went 2-3 with a steal. After the seven runs were given up, Myers did a great job in relief, go-ing 3.2 innings without a score and two strikeouts.

“This week, we need to keep it simple, have our defense make routine plays and have our pitch-ers step up,” Crowell said. “I don’t question our girls’ effort, and they’ll come in next week with a good at-

titude and we talked after the game [Sunday] about getting the train back on the tracks. We did see some good things.”

Second baseman Kristy Arbour, who went 2-4 against Bradley, echoed her coach’s sentiments about the weekend.

“We opened well, but we couldn’t find hits,” Arbour said. “We couldn’t find ways to drive in runs. We need to work on swinging at good pitches and fielding the ball cleanly.”

The RedHawks return to action this weekend in the Saluki Invi-tational as they face Murray State University and Southern Illinois University Saturday and take on Western Illinois University and the University of Kansas Sunday.

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Page 10: February 25, 2014 | The Miami Student

SOFTBALL,SEE PAGE 9

WOMEN’S BBALL,SEE PAGE 9

MEN’S BBALL,SEE PAGE 9

BY JOE GIERINGER SENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Miami University hockey team broke out of its tailspin in a big way Friday night, besting No. 4 St. Cloud State University in a 4-3 home victory. The ’Hawks ul-timately split the series with the Huskies, as they were blanked the following night in a 3-0 loss.

Despite allowing an early goal in the opening game, the Brotherhood (11-16-3) bounced back with three unanswered tallies, starting with junior forward and captain Austin Czarnik, who extended his scoring streak to six games. The biggest story of the night, however, was

the return of junior forward Blake Coleman, who has been out of the lineup with an injury since Dec. 6. Coleman potted the final two goals to boost the RedHawks to their first win in nearly a month.

“I had a lot of fun,” Coleman said. “I was just trying to get my legs back under me more than anything. But the team stepped up, there was a lot of belief in the lock-er room tonight.”

The much-needed win comes at a crucial point in the RedHawks’ season – they need any and all the momentum you can get.

“I felt like our team took a step forward tonight,” head coach

Enrico Blasi said. “They’re [St. Cloud] not a top team in the coun-try for nothing … we played hard. I thought our demeanor was good tonight. Sports is funny, isn’t it? You can be down in the dumps one night and the next you can get results.”

Friday’s optimism gave way to Saturday’s reality, when St. Cloud came back with a vengeance and played a complete game, dominating the RedHawks in all three zones.

Spotty play cost the RedHawks

HOCKEY,SEE PAGE 9

EDITORTOM DOWNEY

[email protected] SPORTSTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2014

JUSTIN MASKULINSKILINSKI’S LIST

EXPECTING THE BEST FROM UNITED STATES HOCKEY

LAUREN OLSON PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Miami sophomore defensman Chris Joyaux attemps a shot during Miami’s 3-2 loss to Western Michigan Feb. 8.

HOCKEY

RedHawks split series with St. Cloud State

BY JUSTIN MASKULINSKISENIOR STAFF WRITER

The Miami University wom-en’s basketball team lost its fifth straight game Sunday, as the RedHawks fell to Kent State University 67-51.

The loss was the sixth in sev-en Mid-American Conference (MAC) games for the Red and White. The RedHawks (7-18, 3-11 MAC) have four regular sea-son MAC games remaining.

The Golden Flashes (6-19, 2-11) earned the victory by shoot-ing 53.5 percent from the field and 50 percent from behind the arc. Entering Sunday’s game, the Flashes were shooting 37 percent from the field and 27 percent

from 3-point range. Miami head coach Cleve

Wright said the RedHawks tried to change their defense to adjust to the Golden Flashes high per-centage shooting.

“We tried to play zone a lit-tle bit,” Wright said. “We tried to get in the passing lanes and [Kent State] did a great job of being patient.”

The two teams battled back and forth for the opening eight minutes of the game. At the 11:09 mark of the first half the Golden Flashes went on a 9-0 run that lasted over four minutes. Kent State led 22-12 at the 7:06 mark and the ’Hawks were un-able to regain the lead for the rest of the game.

The RedHawks began shooting in the bonus with 9:35 remaining in the second half, down 53-40, but the Golden Flashes continued to answer every Miami scoring possession with one of their own.

Four of the five Kent State starters finished the game with four fouls.

The RedHawks struggled from the field, sinking just 16 of 48 shots for a 33.3 percent field goal percentage. The ’Hawks shot 4 of 15 from behind the arc, making 26.7 percent of their 3-point attempts.

“We weren’t putting the ball in the basket on our end,”

’Hawks drop fifth straight MAC game

MU drops last three games in Spring Fling

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

SOFTBALL

The 2014 Winter Olympic Games have been over for a few days now, and the hearts of many American hockey fans are still hurting.

And why wouldn’t they be? The amount of heartbreak experienced in three days for this fanbase is un-heard of for those who aren’t Cleve-land or Buffalo fans.

The women’s hockey team fell to the Canadians during the prelimi-nary round, 3-2, and the two teams met again the gold medal match.

The thought running through my head as I refreshed Twitter for score updates of the gold medal game re-match was, “don’t blow it again.”

(Disclaimer: As a Buffalo sports fan, this mentality is ingrained in me, no matter the sporting event or team.)

Sure enough, my thoughts went unheard, and the gold medals went to the country up north.

It is insane to think about how close the women’s team was to win-ning the gold medal. They had a 2-0 lead with under 3:27 to play. Less than 240 seconds.

That’s 44 seconds shorter than Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believin’.”

While I was hoping MU-Wireless wouldn’t disconnect, Canada didn’t stop believin’ and scored with 3:26 remaining to pull within one goal of tying the game. Three minutes and 26 seconds is not a lot of time.

An even shorter amount of time is 1 minute and 35 seconds. At this point, Canada pulled its goalie, and began to look for the tying goal.

With 55 ticks remaining, they found it.

Before that happened, the Ameri-cans were inches away from an empty net goal that would have all but knocked the Canadians off their Olympic throne. The clearing at-tempt that was aided by an in-the-way referee looked like a sure goal before it swerved to the left and hit

the post.Canada, as you know, then scored

a goal in overtime.Now, on to the USA men’s

hockey team.They took on the Canadians last

Friday, a rematch of the gold medal game from the 2010 Olympics. Canada won the game 1-0.

This one was not nearly as ex-citing from a fan’s perspective. Canada dominated play while the Americans struggled to maintain offensive pressure. The better team (at least on that day) won the game, plain and simple.

After the loss, a feeling of emptiness surfaced.

Canada ripped the hope from the proud hand of American fans (and players) twice in two days. This sounds dramatic, yes, but the way the men’s team played in the bronze medal game confirms the impact of the loss.

I’ll be 100 percent honest: I did not watch one second of the bronze medal game. Why?

We had already lost in my mind.The bronze game is exactly what

they call it, a consolation game. A way of saying, “Great job, but you fell a little short, so battle it out for third place.”

USA didn’t even get the shiny brown medal, as it fell to an old, but talented Finland team 5-0.

Mentally, you’d have to be one incredible athlete to forget just how close you were to playing for gold, turn around, and play for bronze less than 24 hours later.

Both USA teams went into the tournament with one thing on their mind: gold medals. Optimism is a great personality trait to have, but no one can convince me that any of the players are happy with the way things ended up.

There is a big difference between happiness and acceptance. And un-til 2018, that’s all we can do; accept

BEN TAYLOR THE MIAMI STUDENTMiami freshman forward Joshua Oswald goes through his free throw routine during Miami’s 55-52 victory over Bowling Green. Oswald sank the free throw

Miami knocks off BGSUMEN’S BASKETBALL

BY JORDAN RINARDSENIOR STAFF WRITER

After kicking off the Hilltopper Spring Fling 2014 with a 5-0 vic-tory over Canisius College Friday, the Miami University softball team dropped its last three games of the tournament. The RedHawks (3-5) fell 5-3 to Belmont University in the second game of the Friday double-header, 7-0 to Western Kentucky University Saturday and 7-3 to Bradley University Sunday.

“The weekend was disappoint-ing,” head coach Clarisa Crowell said. “We would have liked to win more games. We need to play more games, have our hitters see more pitching. We’re learning lessons, but we need to be on the dirt and it’s hard to prepare when you can’t be on the field because of weather.”

Miami started out strong in its doubleheader Friday, as it downed Canisius 5-0 off a complete game, three-hitter from senior Paige My-ers and junior shortstop Kylie McChesney’s career-high five RBIs.

Things did not come so easily in the game against Belmont, as the ’Hawks found themselves down 4-1 in the bottom of the fourth when the Bruins broke the game open with three runs. The Red and White kept on fighting as a double by sopho-more designated player Jenna Mod-ic brought in a runner and junior out-fielder Bree Lipscomb had an RBI double to make the game 4-3 in the top of the sixth. Belmont responded with another run in the bottom of the frame and the RedHawks managed to load the bases in the following in-ning, but the Bruins sealed the game with three consecutive outs.

Modic had a strong evening for Miami as she went 2-4 with two RBIs. The pitching staff was in-consistent, giving up eight hits, six bases on balls and six strikeouts.

The sluggers started slow Satur-day against Western Kentucky, as the Hilltoppers exploded for three runs in the bottom of the second with two outs. The RedHawks avoided a di-saster in the following inning when the host team had the bases loaded with one out, but Myers got out of the jam with a strikeout and foul out. The RedHawks stranded three run-ners in the top of the fourth with two outs, while the Hilltoppers tacked on another run in the bottom of the in-ning and put on another three runs in the sixth.

BY ZACH MACIASZEKFOR THE MIAMI STUDENT

The Miami University men’s basketball team (10-15, 6-8 MAC) halted a five game losing streak Sun-day, toppling Bowling Green State University (11-16, 5-9 MAC) 55-52 at Millet Hall.

The Falcons’ Jehvon Clarke)came up short on a 3-point heave from half-court as time expired. Falcon sophomore forward Spencer Parker scored a game-high 18 points in the losing effort.

Senior forward Will Felder and sophomore guard Willie Moore led the RedHawks with 11 points apiece. The ’Hawks were shorthanded, as senior forward Bill Edwards was out with a hamstring injury.

Felder said it was a relief for Mi-ami to pull off the win, its first in three weeks.

“It feels great,” Felder said. “It’s never a good thing when you have back-to-back losses because that can do a lot for your morale in terms of pushing it down. This win is defi-nitely a turning point for us.”

The Red and White came out strong to start the game, going on a 15-6 run in the opening five minutes of play. MU employed its full court press from the onset, forcing several turnovers that led to easy baskets.

For the game, Miami held an 18-5 advantage in points off turnovers.

Bowling Green fought back to