ESTABLISHED 1826 — OLDEST COLLEGE NEWSPAPER WEST OF THE ALLEGHENIES
Volume 152 No. 11
Miami university — Oxford, Ohio
FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 2024
Two tickets prepare for student Not just escapism: body president election Literature and
environment course teaches the importance of art in crisis SARAH KENNEL STAFF WRITER
SPENCER MANDZAK AND PATRICK HOULIHAN (LEFT) WILL RUN AGAINST WILL BRINLEY AND BABS DWYER (RIGHT) IN THE STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT ELECTION. PHOTOS PROVIDED BY PATRICK HOULIHAN AND BABS DWYER
KASEY TURMAN CAMPUS & COMMUNITY EDITOR Spencer Mandzak, a junior public administration major, and Patrick Houlihan, a junior political science major, have officially announced their campaign for student body president and vice president following a review by both Associated Student Government’s (ASG) Judicial Council and Elections committee. The pair will run against Will Brinley, a junior marketing major, and Babs Dwyer, a junior sports communication and media major, in
In this issue
CAMPUS & COMMUNITY
The world of tarot and how one Miami academic adviser navigates it - page 5
OXFORD
From Luxembourg to the Oxford Farmer’s Market: Miami Merger operates popup bakery - page 6
an election on March 18-20. Students will be able to vote through The Hub. The announcement came after Speaker of the Senate Tia Bakshi said that Mandzak and Houlihan may not be eligible for the ballot because of how they gathered their signatures. “If both Spencer and Patrick had 150 signatures, the committee would have had to review some other information that we were given regarding a potential violation,” Bakshi said during a Judicial Council meeting. Houlihan and Mandzak both denied the violations after the Judicial Council meeting. Mandzak said that
their signature gathering was not the only one in question. Houlihan confirmed the violations as level two violations as described in the ASG bylaws. Houlihan said that the violations were “clerical errors” within the signatures. “We aren't aware of the violation,” Houlihan said. “Not only that, but there's a couple different allegations against the other ticket’s violations,” Mandzak said after the Judicial Council meeting. Current Student Body President Nyah Smith said that while she and Vice President Jules Jefferson are not involved with the review of vio-
lations in the current election, they have faith in the system put in place to conduct a fair election. “We trust that [ASG’s Elections Committee] are following the bylaws and doing everything in their power to ensure that this is a fair and equitable process,” Smith wrote in an email statement. Following the committee’s Feb. 26 meeting, Mandzak and Houlihan were barred from campaigning for 92 hours following violations found in their collected signatures. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
Miami Memories: Alumni’s children’s book spotlights Miami stories LILY WAHL SENIOR STAFF WRITER Picture this: You’re new parents to twin boys. It’s time to put them to bed, and they demand a bedtime story before you can have some peace and quiet for the night. As your adorable children kick and scream, all you can remember to tell them about are your days at your alma mater, before children permanently altered your sleep schedule. Miami University alumni Jody and Ian O’Neil, class of 2011, decided to find a way to combine two important periods of their lives. “Miami
Memories A-Z” is a children’s book featuring 27 watercolor images that each align with an aspect of Miami life and culture, with one for each letter of the alphabet. As Miami Mergers that didn’t meet until after graduation, Jody JODY AND IAN O'NEIL DEPICTED MIAMI UNIVERSITY IN and Ian drew on their THEIR NEW CHILDREN'S BOOK. PHOTO PROVIDED BY own Miami memories PATRICK GEYSER while writing their chilgic because it was such a great expedren’s book. “Whenever we talk about Miami rience for both of us,” Jody said. or think about Miami, we feel nostalCONTINUED ON PAGE 12
Painted robes exhibit highlights Myaamia art revitalization STELLA POWERS
STYLE
Oxford’s newest hair and beauty salon offers a fresh look to students - page 11
PHOTO
Sylvester Stallone spotted shooting new film, ‘Alarum,’ in Oxford
- page 18
ASST. CAMPUS & COMMUNITY EDITOR
AUSTIN SMITH
ASST. CAMPUS & COMMUNITY EDITOR The Myaamia people have been burdened with a series of forced removals, leaving behind their traditions, artwork and land. The “Reclaiming Stories” project is working to change that. The “Reclaiming Stories” project, which began in 2020, is a team of Peewaalia (Peoria Tribe), Myaamia (Miami Tribe) and non-Native scholars working to reconnect to and reclaim the art of hide painting. Through hosting several workshops,
THE PAINTED ROBES ARE ON DISPLAY IN THE ART MUSEUM UNTIL JUNE 8. PHOTO BY AUSTIN SMITH
the team has created a collection of painted robes and other artworks now on display at Miami University’s Richard and Carole Cocks Art Museum until June 8.
“We call it reclaiming stories because for us, seeing and being with and thinking about the robes and the contemporary art being made, gives CONTINUED ON PAGE 5
On a stormy night, an undergraduate student named Rachel Carson read Tennyson’s poem “Locksley Hall” and knew her future was tied to the natural world. She went on to write “Silent Spring,” the book that helped begin the American environmental movement and led to the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency. Michele Navakas, professor of English and Affiliate of the Institute for the Environment and Sustainability at Miami University, hopes students in her literature and environment course, IES/ENG 264, can also use literature to find their place in the world. Navakas believes the role of literature is frequently misunderstood and reduced to an irrelevant secondary study or escapism. To her, it is so much more. “There’s nothing like it for helping us make meaning,” Navakas said. In her class, the ability of literature to help one speculate imaginatively, connect seemingly unrelated information and analyze their role in the world is applied to environmental studies. The climate crisis is most commonly communicated through data tables and scientific studies, where it is easy to lose sight of how literature can be applied to these findings. In response to this, Navakas points to scientists like Carson, and even Charles Darwin who greatly valued literature. CONTINUED ON PAGE 3
ZYNs are buzzing: The rise of nicotine pouches at Miami JOEY SKOLNY THE MIAMI STUDENT It’s not often that the average Miami University student takes a look at the university’s policy on tobacco and other related products. Doing so brings up a page that lists all of the different kinds of tobacco or nicotine products — except for one. ZYN nicotine pouches, or “Zyns” as they are referred to, are the newest craze in the world of nicotine delivery, and Miami students have developed a taste for the small white pouches. Zyns come in an array of flavors ranging from cool mint to citrus, and the main difference between packs is the amount of nicotine each pouch contains. The company offers either 3 milligrams or 6 milligrams of nicotine options that come in small plastic tins, just like chewing tobacco. Users take one, sometimes two or three, of the quarter-sized pouches and place them between their gums and lips. After a few minutes, the nicotine flows into their bloodstream. Addiction to nicotine is proven to have some sort of impact on someone’s physical and mental health. Quitting is no easy task either. A person going through the process of quitting will usually suffer from CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
RECEPTION AND STUDENT GALLERY TALKS Join us at the Richard and Carole Cocks Art WED, MAR 13 | 5-7 PM Museum in celebrating the Senior Art History ART & ARCHITECTURE HISTORY CAPSTONE EXHIBITION
Capstone class as they celebrate their work on the 13th Annual Art History Capstone exhibition: Landscape In and Around Us.