The Miami Student | March 6, 2018

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ESTABLISHED 1826 — OLDEST COLLEGE NEWSPAPER WEST OF THE ALLEGHENIES

TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 2018

Volume 146 No. 20

Miami University — Oxford, Ohio

SUSPENSIONS LIFTED FOR 12 FRATERNITY CHAPTERS GREEK LIFE

EMILY WILLIAMS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Students marched across campus to celebrate diversity for Miami’s annual Unity Day March. Read more about this year’s Diversity Week events on Page 2. Jugal Jain Photo Editor

STUDENT BODY PRES CANDIDATES DEBATE MU ISSUES

IN SECOND SEMESTER ON CAMPUS, HAVEN CONTINUES TO EXPAND New programs, sober housing now offered

EVENT

ANDREW TILBE

THE MIAMI STUDENT MENTAL HEALTH

Three of Miami’s student leaders discussed dining issues and the university’s approach to combating sexual assault, among other issues, at Monday’s Associated Student Government (ASG) Presidential Debate. ASG hosted the debate at 7:30 p.m. in the Armstrong Student Center Pavilion. Juniors Meaghan Murtagh, James Gale and Alex Boster are all vying for the position of Student Body President. The debate commenced with opening statements from the candidates. Each student had one minute to present their personal background, describe past leadership experience and give a brief overview of their platforms. Murtagh is a marketing major in the Farmer School of Business from Boston, MA. Her vice presidential candidate is junior Vincent Smith. She was a senator in ASG her freshman year and, for the past two years, has worked as a Secretary for Advancement and Alumni Affairs Gale is a double major in urban and regional planning and economics. He is seeking election alongside vice presidential candidate junior Courtney Rose. In his opening statement, he expressed the campaign’s platform as “come together.” Gale expressed interest in uniting students from different backgrounds. Boster is a double major in comparative reli-

When they started working to establish a substance abuse outpatient center at Miami, Sherrie Kleinholz and Janae Arno were shocked at how much the process dragged. There was the physical set-up, of course, as they needed to transform the second floor of the Interfaith Center into a combined study hangout and clinical office. But, on top of that, there were medical record systems that needed to be launched, programming that had to be organized, staff to be hired and state regulations to navigate. It took several months before they were able to start operating and serving the needs of Miami students struggling with drug and alcohol abuse. Now entering its sixth month in Oxford, Miami’s chapter of the Haven at College is running like a well-oiled machine. It is even being used as a model to help train new chapters around the country, such as the recently announced outpatient center and recovery housing opening at the University of Maryland. Arno, the student care manager at the Haven, points to the center’s flexibility and openness as the root of its success. Free from the rigid rules

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DEVON SHUMAN MANAGING EDITOR

A week and a half after Miami’s Interfraternity Council (IFC) announced a sweeping social suspension due to hazing allegations, 12 chapters are now cleared to operate as usual. The suspensions were lifted from chapters that did not have allegations of hazing against them, said IFC president Stephen Golonka. The 12 chapters are: Beta Theta Pi (Beta), Alpha Chi Rho, Delta Tau Delta (Delt), Delta Sigma Phi (Delta Sig), Chi Psi, Delta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon (Sig Ep), Delta Upsilon (DU), Alpha Epsilon Pi, Lambda Chi Alpha (Lambda Chi), Sigma Alpha Mu (Sammy) and Pi Kappa Phi (Pi Kapp). The chapters were told on either Thursday or Friday of last week that their suspensions had been lifted, Golonka said. Suspensions are being lifted on an individual basis, but there is no timetable for the length of the suspensions on Miami’s 12 other recognized fraternities. On Tuesday, Feb. 20, IFC announced that all fraternity activities were prohibited due to multi-

Miami to particpate in Parkland protests ACTIVISM

KIERRA SONDEREKER THE MIAMI STUDENT

PROFILE

CÉILÍ DOYLE

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

NEWS P.3

COWBOY, TEACHER, SCHOLAR Music professor Tammy Kernodle has surpassed all of her dreams.

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Three Oxford third graders have a lofty goal: ending white supremacy. Watch the video at miamistudent.net/passion. Jugal Jain Photo Editor

Kip Alishio retires after 33 years at Miami A little over 40 years ago, Kip Alishio spent his days walking through Earlham College’s campus, in Richmond, IN, listening to The Moody Blues, his favorite band. And up until last week, he wandered Miami’s campus, working as an administrator and a counselor rather than a student. Kip, Miami’s director of Student Counseling Services for the past 26 years, retired from Miami March 1. Nights in white satin/never reaching the end/letters I’ve written/never meaning to send At Earlham, Kip spent a lot of time listening and thinking deeply about what kind of career he wanted to pursue, but also, more importantly, about what kind of life he wanted to lead after graduation. “My own time in college was a difficult

ple reports of hazing. Chapters were also required to end their new member period early and initiate their newly recruited members by 5 p.m. that Friday, Feb. 23. The 12 chapters which remain under suspension include the six which had cease-and-desist orders filed against them by their national organizations: Alpha Delta Phi (AD Phi), Alpha Sigma Phi (Alpha Sig), Phi Delta Theta (Phi Delt), Phi Gamma Delta (Fiji), Sigma Alpha Epsilon (SAE) and Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE). These orders prohibit fraternities from holding events, parties or membership activities while the representatives from the national organizations investigate the chapters. These chapters were also prohibited from initiating their new members. In addition to investigations made by national fraternity organizations, Miami’s Office of Ethics and Student Conflict Resolution (OESCR) has been investigating the reports of hazing. Since early February, 16 Greek organizations have been named in reports, said OESCR director Susan Vaughn. The office called in outside help last week to assist

A RECEPTION FOR KIP ALISHIO WAS HOSTED IN SHRIVER TO CELEBRATE HIS RETIREMENT. ERIK CRAIGO THE MIAMI STUDENT

time in some ways, and that in itself led me to psychology,” Kip said. “My interests have always been in the development of late adolescents and young adults. That was my specialty in college.” Kip graduated from Earlham in 1976 and earned a doctoral degree in clinical psychology from Miami University’s psychology department nine years later. “I came from a family that struggled

emotionally and that complicated my ability to do well emotionally in college,” Kip said. “I did seek out counseling when I was an undergraduate, and it helped a lot. I remembered that when I was doing my doctorate work and developing an interest in families in particular and in that particular age range of late adolescents and early adulthood.” CONTINUED ON PAGE 11

CULTURE P.5

EDITORIAL P. 12

SPORTS P.14

OXFORD STUCK ON MAPLE SYRUP

PEACE. LOVE. PASSION.

BASKETBALL ADVANCES IN TOURNAMENT

For the past 52 years, Hueston Woods has celebrated syrup.

What we learned about activism from three local 9-year-olds.

MU’s men’s and women’s teams move on to the second round.

Miami University students plan to add their voices in the upcoming demonstrations in response to the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. School walkouts and marches, organized by students across the nation, will peacefully for an end gun violence. A walkout has been planned for Friday, April 20 in which high school and college students will abruptly leave their classrooms. Charles Kennick, president of College Democrats, believes Miami will show its largest display on solidarity during this walkout. “By then, the situation will have had time to simmer in the political discourse,” Kennick said. This walkout also falls on a Friday and on the anniversary of the Columbine shooting, all things CONTINUED ON PAGE 9

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The Miami Student | March 6, 2018 by The Miami Student - Issuu