TUESDAY
PRESIDENT’S PRIZE
THURSDAY
P2
LGBTQ
P5
Two Ohio State students earned funding OSU doctoral candidate’s new for projects combating opioid abuse and children’s book introduces LGBTQ another helping students with disabilities. relationships without stigma.
WOMEN’S HOCKEY
P8
Once a forgotten program, an established culture has brought the Buckeyes to a national title contender.
BASKETBALL
P8
The Buckeyes were supposed to be rebuilding. Now their legitimate Big Ten title contenders.
The student voice of the Ohio State University
Tuesday, January 9, 2018
thelantern.com
@TheLantern
Say it ain’t snow Winter weather greets Buckeyes as classes resume
Year 138, Issue No. 1
TKE chapter suspended for 3 years
OWEN DAUGHERTY | ASSISTANT CAMPUS EDITOR
The view from Ahmed Menevseoglu’s apartment complex of the construction of the Covelli Multi-sport Arena.
JACK WESTERHEIDE | PHOTO EDITOR
The Ohio State Omicron fraternity chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon.
Covelli Arena construction disrupts Buckeye Village residents
OWEN DAUGHERTY Assistant Campus Editor daugherty.260@osu.edu
OWEN DAUGHERTY Assistant Campus Editor daugherty.260@osu.edu The past six months Ahmed Menevseoglu, a doctoral candidate in food science at Ohio State, has been getting up a bit earlier than he would prefer. His 1-yearold son normally wakes him and his wife up by about 8:30 a.m. While all new parents are accustomed to the cries of their child to start the day, Menevseoglu and his wife are now woken up daily at 7:00 a.m. by the sounds of cranes and bulldozers in the backyard of their Buckeye Village home — well before their infant son would normally be stirring. The ringing construction noises last virtually all day, he said, and are not expected to end anytime soon: the building of Covelli Multi-Sport Arena, which began in June, isn’t slated to be completed until spring of 2019. Sam Covelli, franchise owner of hundreds of Panera Bread locations, committed $10 million to Ohio State’s athletic department in 2012 to have his name bestowed on the new arena upon its completion. The $30 million athletic venue that will host volleyball, wrestling and five other sports was initially planned to replace the aging St. John Arena. Those plans eventually faded and a new location was chosen along Olentangy River Road, right next to where Ohio State’s family housing, Buckeye Village, is located. As the location changed, so did construction plans. Instead of being a stand-alone venue, Covelli Arena will now be linked with the Jennings Wrestling Facility, raising construction costs to $49.7 FAMILY HOUSING CONTINUES ON 2
JACK WESTERHEIDE | PHOTO EDITOR
Snow-covered William Oxley Thompson statue located outside of Thompson Library.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Counseling services are more of a work in progress than administration claims BRETT KAPLAN 2017 Ohio State graduate kaplan.188@osu.edu To the editor, “We’re not mad, we are just disappointed.” It’s a phrase most often reserved for tired parents upon finding their 16-year-old child show up 30 minutes late for curfew. Today, it’s a phrase that I’ll borrow to illustrate the love-hate relationship between Ohio State students, and the unpromising but ever so important Counseling and Consultation Services., or CCS for short. It merely takes one glance at The Lantern’s “Letter to the editor” section or a refresh of your Facebook timeline to understand the vast surplus of divisive issues on Ohio State’s campus today — Rob Portman as Autumn Commencement speaker, “Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions” movement, the gender pay gap and meal plan price inflations are a few. In spite of all of these, as finals weighed heavy on the hearts of students and semester grades were submitted, perhaps the biggest overlooked issue is the high incidence rate of mental illness, and the adequacy of counseling services on college campuses, in
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY: RIS TWIGG | ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR
“Let’s Talk” is an alternative to traditional counseling offered by CCS where students can talk one-on-one with a CCS member for a quick 15 to 20-minute consultation without an appointment. this case Ohio State’s. The prominence and importance of this topic certainly wasn’t overlooked by me as I noticed a friend share The Lantern’s August article, “Drake: Ohio State counseling services on par with high demand; contradicts USG.” Facepalm. Click. In an August interview with The Lantern, Drake asserted that you over the phone with a triage clinician within a day, and you
can see someone for an appointment in a week or less. As a student who attempted to utilize CCS’ services twice, I can assure readers this blanket statement is unfortunately false by nature of its blatant overgeneralization. In February, USG rightfully claimed that the waiting period for students was sometimes up to six weeks. I read on and shook my head even more as Drake rhetoriCOUNSELING CONTINUES ON 2
Tau Kappa Epsilon has been suspended from Ohio State’s campus for three years following an investigation into the chapter’s violations of the Code of Student Conduct. The investigation found the fraternity chapter guilty of hazing, endangering behavior and improper use of alcohol. As a result of the suspension, the chapter is no longer recognized as an Ohio State student organization, meaning other student organizations, such as active sororities, are not able to have events with it. Additionally, no recruitment or new member activities will be able to take place for the duration of the suspension. “The safety, education and development of students is central to the mission of the university and the purpose of registered student organizations, including the university’s sororities and fraternities,” Dave Isaacs, spokesman for the Office of Student Life, said in an email statement announcing the suspension. “We hope that Tau Kappa Epsilon will successfully return to Ohio State’s campus following the completion of its suspension and the terms outlined to them.” The chapter can petition to return to campus Spring 2021, but will have an additional year of probation if it is allowed back. Current members of the chapter’s fraternity house will not be forced to move out by the university because the house is owned privately by the national headquarters. TKE is given the opportunity to appeal the suspension if it chooses. Neither chapter president Ian Lawson or the national headquarters for the fraternity have returned a request for comment on SUSPENSION CONTINUES ON 4