TUESDAY
THURSDAY
OUTREACH
P2
Ohio State students bring firsthand bug science experience to community third-graders.
COLUMBUS’ OWN
P4
Local rock band looks to bring highenergy performances to Columbus area.
J.T. BARRETT
P8
The OSU quarterback will start his final game at Ohio Stadium after an unfathomable career.
BASKETBALL
P8
Ohio State battles Texas Southern Thursday night for a third-straight win.
The student voice of the Ohio State University
Thursday, November 16, 2017
thelantern.com
@TheLantern
Year 137, Issue No. 50
Michael Caligiuri resigns as James Cancer Hospital CEO KEVIN STANKIEWICZ Editor-in-Chief stankiewicz.16@osu.edu SUMMER CARTWRIGHT Campus Editor cartwright.117@osu.edu Dr. Michael Caligiuri, the CEO of the James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute, resigned Wednesday, less than two weeks after Ohio State announced in a press release he would continue on with his role. The Nov. 3 release from the university announced that Caligiuri would remain CEO despite stepping down as director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center, a role he had held for 20 years. University President Michael Drake sent a letter to medical center staff Wednesday announcing Caligiuri’s resignation and that Dr. Raphael Pollock’s interim role
as director of the Comprehensive Cancer Center will be permanent.
“Dr. Caligiuri has been an integral part of the success of our cancer program and our efforts to advance the care we provide to patients and their families in our community, across the nation and around the world.” Michael Drake Ohio State University President
The letter also said Pollock, who was named interim director in the Nov. 3 release, will be “convening a transition team for oversight of day-to-day operaCEO CONTINUES ON 2
OhA[?]o State-Apple partnership to bring updates to campus
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY JACK WESTERHEIDE | PHOTO EDITOR
The initiative, announced Oct. 4, will bring iPad Pros to every incoming freshman beginning Autumn 2018. JAKE RAHE Lantern reporter rahe.21@osu.edu Seeing freshmen on campus with a brand-new iPad is not the only thing to expect from the recent partnership between Ohio State and Apple. The initiative, announced Oct. 4, will bring iPad Pros to every incoming freshman beginning Autumn 2018. With the new technology, students will also experience changes in the types of computers they will see on campus, a new place to learn coding and
iPad-enhanced classrooms. “We are really working with the community to understand what the needs are as we get ready to launch the Digital Flagship Initiative,” said Liv Gjestvang, associate vice president of learning technology for the Office of Distance Education and eLearning, said. She said her office is also figuring out how to build a cohesive coding program to support students with and without iPads. Traditional computer labs on campus will not be reduced, said IPADS CONTINUES ON 3
MATT DORSEY | ENGAGEMENT EDITOR
Sophie Aller, a fourth-year in zoology, places a millipede in an Innis Elementary thirdgrader’s hands at Tuesday’s UResearch outreach event. | ON PAGE 2
Fostering scientific curiosity
Chi Omega sorority sisters take therapy dog dispute to court OWEN DAUGHERTY Assistant Campus Editor daugherty.260@osu.edu Apparently the only bond stronger than sisterhood is the bond between a girl and her dog. Madeleine Entine, a second-year in psychology, and her therapy dog, Cory, were told by Ohio State they had to move out of the Chi Omega sorority house after her roommate complained of severe allergies to dogs. According to court documents, Entine said she suffers from panic attacks that, when severe enough, restrict her breathing and render her immobile. Her certified therapy dog is trained to lay on her stomach when she suffers a panic attack. Entine then sued Ohio State under the Americans with Disabilities Act and received a temporary restraining order Oct. 26 against the university allowing her to stay in the house for the time being. A federal judge heard her case last week and will decide whether or not she can stay in the house. Chi Omega sorority sister Carly Goldman, a second-year in marketing, said the dog living in the house triggered her allergies, which then aggravated her Crohn’s disease, an inflammatory bowel ailment. Goldman first notified the private landlord of the sorority house, who pointed her toward Ohio State’s ADA coordinator, L. Scott Lissner, because he had granted Entine the waiver to live in the house with an assistance animal. Though the Chi Omega house typically has a no-animal policy, it modified that policy to allow Maddie to have Cory in the house and they moved in together at the end of August before the semester started. But because of Goldman’s Crohn’s disease, she, too, was protected under the ADA, setting up a standoff between the two sorority sisters. Ohio State offered each of the two girls alternative housing options, but both declined. In court documents, Entine said other university living options are not suitable. “Living in the Chi Omega house is important to Maddie,” her complaint states. “It has different qualities from university-owned housing. For example, it facilitates close social relationships between soror-
COURTESY OF MADELEINE ENTINE
Madeleine Entine, a second-year in psychology and her therapy dog, Cory.
ity members and provides additional and different living spaces and dining experiences not available in campus housing. Further, Maddie has attained the position of Chi Omega chapter vice president. This position requires the holder to reside in the Chi Omega house. Thus, a housing option outside of the Chi Omega house is not a reasonable equivalent to living in the house.” Lissner said the university would not use the disabilities as a factor in the decision. He said Ohio State “may not pick or choose which disability is more severe,” according to the documents. When both sorority sisters decided not to move out, and with both protected under ADA, Ohio State decided whomever was in the house first had the right to stay. With Goldman signing the lease first, Lissner decided she got to stay. Entine was told either she or the 8-year-old Cavalier King Charles spaniel Cory had to go. An Ohio State spokesman declined to comment, citing the pending litigation. This week, U.S. District Judge Algenon L. Marbley will rule on Entine’s injunction request and decide whether her dog can stay in the house.