April 6, 2012 | The Miami Student

Page 1

The Miami Student Oldest university newspaper in the United States, established 1826

VOLUME 139 NO. 52

FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 2012

MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIO

TODAY IN MIAMI HISTORY In 1994, The Miami Student reported the formation of a campus watch program created by Miami University Associated Student Government. The

Student reported student volunteers would be stationed across campus, identified by bright orange vests and bright yellow identification tags, and would assist those walking alone or those in compromising situations.

Miami, UC communities rally against hate

CATHERINE UBRY THE MIAMI STUDENT

Miami University students and staff and Oxford community members gathered at the Phi Delta Theta Gates Thursday to demonstrate against an assault March 25 against two gay students. Spectrum Co-President Billy Price (left) and Miami President David Hodge (bottom) spoke to attendees about uniting the community.The University of Cincinnati also held a rally Thursday.

Lauren Ceronie EDITOR IN CHIEF

Miami University may be rivals with the University of Cincinnati (UC), but students from the two schools put their differences aside and joined together Thursday to demonstrate against the attack of two gay students. At the event attendees chanted, “two, four, six, eight, no more violence, no more hate” and, “no hate on my campus” and held hands to symbolically support the two men who were assaulted. Miami students held their rally at the Phi Delta Theta Gates while UC students met at the corner of Dr. Martin Luther King Drive and Clifton Avenue in Cincinnati. Miami junior Michael Bustin, one of the students attacked March 25, said he was “humbled” by the show of support from students at the two universities. “I’m really humbled about how the school, the community [and] UC has stepped up and pushed against

what happened,” Bustin said. The rally began with speeches from Miami President David Hodge, Dean of Students Susan Mosley-Howard and Oxford Mayor Richard Keebler. “Violence has no place in our society and no place in our city,” Keebler said in an interview before his speech. “You can disagree with someone, but violence and hatred has no place here.” In his speech Keebler said, “violence is out and acceptance is in.” Speakers and students alike called their reason for gathering unfortunate. “It’s a shame that two men are safer walking alone than together,” Mark Noviski, co-president of Spectrum, Miami’s LGBTQ association said. Mosley-Howard agreed with this sentiment. “It’s unfortunate we have to gather under these circumstances,” MosleyHoward said. “When one of us is assaulted, all of us are assaulted.” In an interview after his speech, Hodge called on the community to

come together against hate. “What’s so incredible about this is how constructive the approach is,” Hodge said. “There is no excuse for violence of any kind and the fact that it’s targeted makes it the worst. But this is an opportunity for the community to be reminded to step up and do the right thing.” Members of the Miami and Oxford community also united in rallies after a student was attacked outside Spectrum’s drag show in April 2010. Bustin said the night of the attack he met a student from UC at Spectrum’s drag show and decided to walk him home to make sure he got there safely. When the two men were walking on East Church Street a few strangers saw them holding hands and called them “fags.” Bustin said he and his friend kept walking but the strangers approached them and began to punch the UC student. Bustin said he stepped between the assailant and his friend to stop the fight but was punched in the face several times. Another attacker began to punch Bustin and his friend when five

or six students came up and broke up the fight, according to Bustin. Oxford Police Department’s (OPD) Sgt. Jon Varley said the attack was marked as criminal with hate bias, meaning if the attackers are caught they could face harsher penalties and longer jail sentences. Billy Price, co-president of Spectrum, said the organization is working with OPD, the Miami University Police Department (MUPD), Miami administrators and UC students to raise awareness about hate bias violence. “Unfortunately we’re still in a place where people think it’s appropriate to attack people based on their sexual orientation,” Price said. “This is unacceptable and shouldn’t happen on Miami’s campus. But, the outpouring of support shows the campus has come a long way.” Bustin echoed Price’s sentiment. “My whole goal was just to tell my story and let people know this wasn’t alright to happen,” Bustin said. “I think it [acceptance on campus] has gotten better though. I didn’t come

out until this past year but people are becoming more understanding.” Bustin said he was especially touched by the support shown from people he does not know well. “I’ve been humbled; people who I haven’t talked to in ages sent me Facebook messages and emails asking me if they could do anything,” he said. Varley said OPD would be happy to provide extra security at the drag shows if their presence was requested. “We’ll respect the wishes of those attending [the show],” Varley said. “Sometimes they don’t want the police around but we’re more than happy to make sure everyone is safe and has a good time.” Bustin said he hopes his attack will raise awareness about this sort of violence. “I hope this serves as a message for the future to stop hate no matter what it is over, whether it’s sexual orientation, gender, religion, race [or] whatever,” he said. “We need to stop it.”

’Hawk swimmers head to Olympic Trials University awaits governor’s student trustee selection By Brian Gallagher Sports Editor

In less than three months, the best swimmers in the United States will converge upon Omaha, Neb. for the fastest swim meet in the world. Fans will surround the two 50-meter pools set up inside the Qwest Center and watch as over 1,500 athletes attempt to realize their Olympic dreams. Among those swimmers will be a contingent of Miami University athelets, including junior Bekka Westrick, junior Maegan O’Connor, junior Leah Thornton and freshman diver Lacey Houser, as well as Megan Brunn, a 2011 Miami graduate. After leading Miami to a thirdplace finish at the Mid-American Conference (MAC) Championships in February, the end of the season was still in the distance for these RedHawks and there was little time for rest as their sights honed in on the week of June 25-July 2. “After MACs it just happened so fast, we were back in the

water after just three days off, we didn’t have time to lose focus,” Thornton said. “But we all knew this was the goal going in, so we didn’t have to adjust that much.” However, only Westrick had a trials standard at the time after qualifying this past summer in the 100-meter butterfly with a time of 1:01.87, which was under the qualifier of 1:01.99. She then added a second qualification to her resume with a swim of 26.26 seconds in the 50-meter freestyle at the Central Zone Speedo Sectional Championships March 22 just sneaking under the standard of 26.39. “The public thinks if you go to the trials you go to the Olympics, and while that’s not the case it’s still exciting to qualify,” Westrick said. “It’s a natural progression though; you go from nationals to the trials, and it’s often something that happens only once in your swimming career.” The sectionals proved to be a harbinger of success for the ’Hawks as Thornton and O’Connor also grabbed

qualification times at the meet. Thornton punched her ticket with a swim of 1:03.17 in the 100-meter backstroke, passing under the standard of 1:03.99, and then came back three days later to qualify in the 200-meter backstroke in 2:17.93 to squeak under the qualifying time of 2:17.99. Not to be outdone, O’Connor swam 1:01.31 to qualify in the 100-meter butterfly and will join Westrick in that event in Omaha. “Four years ago I had this in my vision and really put work into it and tried to go after it, and now that I’ve made it to the trials it’s really exciting,” O’Connor said. “I’m going to have fun and enjoy the experience.” Like O’Connor, many kids dream of making the Olympics, whether it be in swimming or another sport. However, though many get to dream, few get the chance to realize those dreams and even fewer get to enjoy that

OLYMPIC TRIALS, SEE PAGE 3

By Jenn Smola Campus Editor

The finalists for Miami University’s student trustee position have been chosen by Associated Student Government (ASG) and forwarded to Ohio Gov. John Kasich for final selection. Out of 15 applicants, three were chosen by ASG and sent to the governor over winter break, according to Nick Miller, ASG secretary to the executive cabinet. Miller was in charge of the applicant search, developing the application and conducting interviews. The three candidates chosen by ASG include sophomore Molly Rzepka, sophomore Arianne Wilt and first-year Lance Sterle. “I think all three of [the final applicants] are outstanding,” Miller said. “We felt comfortable with either three of them being chosen as the next student trustee.” Now the university must wait until the governor makes his selec-

tion. During the 2010-2011 school year, ASG sent in the finalists to Kasich in December 2010 and no trustee was announced until October 2011. The long wait may have been because it was Kasich’s first year in office and a budget year, Miller said. Former Miami Student Body President and Student Trustee Heath Ingram said he was disappointed to hear Kasich’s office is once again dragging its feet about making a decision. When Ingram applied to be a student trustee in fall 2007, he said he found out he got the position by the beginning of February 2008. “It’s frustrating because the trustees — the whole board — relies very heavily on the student trustee’s opinion,” Ingram said. “It’s frustrating because the trustees will lose valuable insight into how students perceive the decisions that

TRUSTEE, SEE PAGE 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
April 6, 2012 | The Miami Student by The Miami Student - Issuu