thelantern
Monday April 27, 2015 year: 135 No. 30
@TheLantern weather high 56 low 38 mostly cloudy
Why OSU didn’t issue a public safety notice this semester
Looking back on the sports year
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Passion Pit excels at OSU
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A letter from a soon-to-be grad
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RUNNING ON
GIUSTINO BOVENZI Lantern Reporter bovenzi.3@osu.edu
$10 MILLION (PROJECTED)
What led to a major budget deficit for the College of Arts and Sciences Liz Young Editor-in-chief young.1693@osu.edu Two years after Ohio State’s conversion from quarters to semesters, the university’s largest college might be feeling impacts beyond academic calendars in the form of a projected $10 million budget deficit. The College of Arts and Sciences — which encompasses nearly 80 majors, 38 departments and more than 2,000 faculty and staff members — has a fiscal year 2015 deficit of $4.6 million. The amount is projected to grow in fiscal year 2016 by $5.4 million. That will mean budget cuts, the exact effects of which remain uncertain. David Manderscheid, who took over as Arts and Sciences dean in 2013 from now-Provost Joseph Steinmetz, told The Lantern that he sees two causes of the budget deficit: an unanticipated decline in the college’s credit hours this past year, and the college’s reliance on a tuition increase that didn’t happen. He said in an April 9 meeting with faculty in Independence Hall, where the college’s chief administrative officer John Nisbet also spoke, that the lack of a tuition increase was a major factor. “We’re in a position now in the college where if we (had) gotten the 2 percent tuition increase, we wouldn’t have been having these serious discussions, but what happened was we were skating too close to the edge,” Manderscheid said. “What happened was, when we
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$4.6 MILLION
The last time Ohio State students received an OSU Public Safety Notice was before Christmas, a period spanning longer than four months. From Dec. 20 to last week, there have been more than 900 reports filed with University Police, according to the daily log found on the OSU Department of Public Safety website — none of which has prompted an alert. University Police Chief Paul Denton said that isn’t necessarily a bad thing and could be a telling factor that the University Police have been containing and resolving incidents quickly and effectively. “I like to cite good police work, giving credit to our officers for resolving incidents in a safe and effective manner,” Denton said. Denton highlighted the work his officers did in finding and arresting Wayne Miller in a matter of hours after a crime was reported to police on the morning of April 16. Miller, 32, was arrested by University Police April 16 and charged with kidnapping and aggravated robbery after he allegedly forced a female faculty member off campus. Miller has been indicted on charges including kidnapping and aggravated robbery and remains in jail in downtown Columbus until court proceedings are completed, according to Franklin County Municipal Court records. Two other crimes, a shooting near Summit Street and 11th Avenue on April 6, and a fatal stabbing near Summit Street and Northwood Avenue on March 1, have also caused some members of the student population to
2015
2016
What’s next for the College of Arts and Sciences and its department heads chelsea spears and michele theodore Multimedia Editor and Managing Editor for Content spears.116@osu.edu and theodore.13@osu.edu Susan Olesik, chair of the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, is worried about the College of Arts and Sciences. “It’s been a high-anxiety time,” she said. “But what are you going to do?” Olesik, along with several other department heads at Ohio State, is worried about what 2015 holds for her program. Ongoing budget challenges have left the College of Arts and Sciences with a deficit that could reach $10 million by fiscal year 2016. And with the college also facing more retirements than usual at the end of this academic school year, that same deficit could potentially impact whether those positions are filled. “We’ve had some significant losses, retirements,” Olesik said. “We’re getting there, but it takes a while.” But time might not be on her side. Pension reform legislation, passed in 2012, changes retirement eligibility and the benefits that come with it. The biggest of those changes are set to hit in 2015, and there’s a benefit offered to people who retire by July 1, so some professors have been leaving the university. On top of the expected wave of retirements, Olesik also fears the possibility of cuts coming from the college.
ASC DEFICIT
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School of Public Affairs lifts off to become college MICHAEL HUSON Lantern Reporter huson.4@osu.edu
elliot gilfix / For The Lantern
Brutus attempts a backflip during the drum major and Brutus Buckeye tryouts on April 25 at the Woody Hates Athletic Center.
Ohio State spirit leaders unite Tryouts for Brutus Buckeye, OSUMB drum major combined for 1st time ROBERT SCARPINITO Lantern Reporter scarpinito.1@osu.edu Through the rain that fell Saturday, four drum major candidates and 15 Brutus Buckeye candidates jumped, twirled and tossed batons as they competed for the chance to perform in front of a packed Ohio Stadium at a home game and at other university events next year. The candidates vied for their respective positions at a new event
that combined both tryouts for the first time, according to a statement released by Ohio State. “We’re holding them at the same time of year, and it really made a lot of sense for us to combine those efforts and do it together to show that we are all one team,” said Stewart Kitchen, the drum major instructor. The new head drum major is Nathan MacMaster, a graduate student in the Glenn College of Public Affairs. He was on the drum
major training squad from 2010 to 2011, and he was the assistant drum major for the past two years. “Tryouts are terrifying. There’s nothing like it. I’ve been doing this for a long time, but it doesn’t make it any easier,” he said. “The nerves are there, and to go out there and execute what I wanted is the greatest feeling in the world.” MacMaster said he looks forward to working with what he
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With a crowd of onlookers gathered in anticipation and a clear blue sky affording favorable weather conditions, the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the John Glenn College of Public Affairs was a go for launch. The ceremony and open house at Page Hall on Friday celebrated the college’s change of status from what was previously the John Glenn School of Public Affairs, making it Ohio State’s 15th and newest college. The countdown began Jan. 30, after the creation of Glenn College was announced during an Ohio State Board of Trustees meeting. The college’s undergraduate, graduate and doctoral programs “equip students with the skills to become tomorrow’s citizen-leaders or public service professionals,” according to its website. Trevor Brown, dean of Glenn College, said during the ceremony that the college takes pride in embodying the university’s motto, “disciplina in civitatem,” or “education for citizenship,” as its students, faculty and alumni “work to solve today’s problems and produce tomorrow’s leaders.” “In honor of the two whose name we are so proud to adorn our college, Sen. John Glenn and Annie Glenn, we pledge to continue their legacy of inspiring citizenship and developing leadership,” he said. John Glenn served in World War II and the Korean War; he became the first American to orbit Earth,
ethan scheck / Lantern photographer
Former astronaut and U.S. Senator John Glenn speaks on April 24. piloting Friendship 7 in 1962 and he served as a U.S. senator from Ohio from 1974 to 1999. Glenn spoke at the ceremony, expressing his views on the importance of leadership. “All you have to do is look at the front page of the paper or watch TV news to know how badly we need good leadership, not only in Washington but up and down the line: in our communities, our state and our nation,” he said. Glenn added that the college’s new level of prominence can help foster that development by, over time, attracting new faculty and developing high-school recruiting programs. “There’s no reason why our college, here, can’t be just as eminent, eventually, in this field of public service and public policy, as the football team is nationally,” he said. Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said during the ceremony that for him,
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