Jan 18, 2011 | The Miami Student

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

VOLUME 138 NO. 31

MIAMI UNIVERSITY OXFORD, OHIO

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

In 1972, The Miami Student reported a powerline overload caused a blackout in some parts of Oxford, leaving some residents without heat in freezing weather for three hours.

Select classes add service learning fee By Thomasina Johnson News Editor

Starting this semester, certain service learning (SL) designated courses at Miami University will cost students an extra $50. The added fee was approved by the board of trustees to offer the services provided by Miami’s Office of Community Engagement and Service (OCE&S) and to expand the office, according to Monica Ways, director of the OCE&S. “SL is a new formal initiative that was started in 2009,” Ways said. “There was no designated funding for SL courses, and they show a lot of promise.” Only courses that use OCE&S resources will add the $50 fee. Most of the SL-designated courses do not require the fee because

Brewer’s course works with the Talbert the professors who teach the courses do not House in Cincinnati, a social service nonneed the coordination, support or transportaprofit organization. The tion services of the office, students create a public Ways said. “I understand times relations plan, which has Ways said the fee may are tough, but the been successful with each be waived for students who cannot afford the price. university shouldn’t client the capstone has According to Ways, worked with. charge people SL is a learning approach “I understand why people to volunteer.” that takes students out of are doing it, but I was a little the classroom and into surprised,” Brewer said of KELLY HARRINGTON the fee. the community. Students SENIOR Brewer said he received work at volunteer projects an e-mail toward the end of that are selected for their fall semester telling professors teaching SL educational impact. classes the fee would be implemented for The public relations in strategic and mass OCE&S courses. He has received no comcommunications capstone, taught by Clinical plaints from students regarding the cost. Faculty Member Bill Brewer, is one of the “This is not a question about the courses affected by the new fee.

importance of service learning,” Brewer said. “The question is how do we fund it?” For some students, the added cost to use the facilities of the OCE&S for an SL course is not an issue. Miami senior Kelly Harrington took Ted Wagenaar’s sociology capstone during the fall semester. She worked at Oxford’s Community Choice Pantry for part of the class. “If I hadn’t had taken the class, I wouldn’t have volunteered, it was a great experience and I still continue working there,” she said. Harrington said she was shocked by the added fee. “Fifty dollars is steep for the office’s services,” she said. “They didn’t provide me with a list of hours that I worked and

wSee SERVICE, page 11

COMMUNITY

City to hold forum about semi traffic By Jenni Wiener

Senior Staff Writer

MICHAEL GRIGGS The Miami Student

The RedHawks battle in a a winning game against Bowling Green State University Friday at the Goggin Ice Center.

SPORTS

NEXT GAME: 7:35 p.m. Friday at Michigan State

Reichard denies Falcons in weekend sweep By Alex Butler Staff Writer

A thunderous thump echoed around Miami University’s Goggin Ice Center Saturday as a puck pelted the padding of goalkeeper Cody Reichard. Reichard earned his second straight start in what is usually a goalkeeping timeshare with Connor Knapp in a weekend sweep over the Bowling Green State University Falcons concluding with a 3-1 win Saturday. In the victory Reichard had a team season-high 30 saves. “He was great,” Miami Head Coach Enrico Blasi said. “He knew and we knew they were going to come out hard, that they might throw everything at the net and they did. He had some big saves and he’s part of the team. We need that.”

BY THE NUMBERS Team season-high number of saves by Cody Reichard:

30

Known for keeping the goalkeeping timeshare in rotation, Blasi hinted Reichard’s starting nod Saturday could mean more time between the pipes. “We didn’t split them this weekend, so that might answer the question,” Blasi said. The ’Hawks (13-8-3, 10-6-2-1 Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA)) entered the weekend on a three-game sour skid and hope that the broom sweeping can turn things around. “We definitely needed it,” sophomore Reilly Smith said. “We came out and let up a goal and we weren’t organized. We came back with urgency, and it’s definitely

Are you sick of almost being hit by traffic while walking across High Street to class? The public is invited to review and comment on a new proposal to re-route traffic on U.S. Route 27 to avoid Miami University’s campus and the uptown portion of High Street.

BY THE NUMBERS Number of vehicles traveling down High Street per day:

10,000

Pedestrians crossing Campus and High streets during peak hours:

2,500

SCOTT ALLISON The Miami Student

Miami University students show RedHawk pride at the hockey game Friday. done a lot for our confidence as a team. A lot of guys were down just because things weren’t going the way they wanted them to. Hopefully this starts something.” It was the Falcons (7-17-2, 2-14-2-0 CCHA) who started the scoring Saturday. At 5:27 in the opening period, Brett Mohler drilled a one timer off of a Falcon faceoff by Reichard to make it 1-0. The RedHawks roared back as senior Andy Miele pulled the defense and the Falcon net minder to the left before finding Smith on the right side. Smith sent it scorching by the unbalanced keeper with an absolute sizzler. The one timer made it 1-1 at the 6:29 mark. At 7:57, junior Trent Vogelhuber wanted in on the action. Smith spotted skates slipping by the blue line and found the jersey with the long name. Vogelhuber touched the feed out of the reach of the defender and squirted around the left side. Just as the Falcon goalkeeper made his move, Vogelhuber lifted

the puck and backhanded it into the net for what would be the decisive score. “The guys played really good in front of me,” Reichard said. “We bounced back, and that was a big step for us. They are a wellcoached team, so we knew they were going to come hard tonight. They definitely wanted to get one for Berg (Head Coach Chris Bergeron). No doubt about that. They are going to get better.” Miele found Smith again with a beautiful cross-ice pass that Smith hit from the center and into the net for the 3-1 RedHawk lead. Neither team scored in the second and third periods, and the Red and White throttled the Falcons defensively to seal the home sweep. Senior Carter Camper had one assist on the night, but because of Miele’s two helpers the teammates are now tied atop the nation in points. “Hopefully that’s what we needed to jumpstart our energy

wSee HOCKEY, page 11

An open house is being held by the City of Oxford and the Ohio Department of Transportation from 4 to 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 20 in the Talawanda High School auditorium. “The city has been wanting to do this for a long time,” said Jay Hamilton, traffic planning engineer for the Ohio Department of Transportation. He said the city is looking at a couple options for the re-route. Trucks currently take Patterson Avenue to High Street, a high pedestrian area. The study involves looking at running truck traffic down Chestnut Street and then onto Main Street or Locust Street to reconnect with Route 27. Doug Elliott, Oxford city manager, said the study came about through a northwest Butler County transportation study that was looking at connecting

Route 27 with Ohio Route 73. In 2008, however, it was decided the city would look at rerouting instead of connecting the two highways. “Two resolutions were drawn up in 2008,” Elliott said. “One requests re-routing be evaluated for pedestrian safety and traffic flow. The other expands the study area and states that a connector between the two highways should only be considered if the safety study indicates necessary.” The objective is to improve pedestrian safety on High Street, Hamilton said. According to Elliott, 30 percent of traffic in Oxford is traffic that travels through the city and continues outside it. The other 70 percent comes to Oxford for the benefit of the local shops and stores. “High Street has an average of 10,000 vehicles a day travel down it,” Elliott said. “At peak hours, 2,500 pedestrians cross at Campus and High streets and there are 460 crossing at Main and High streets. There are only 60 crossing at Locust Street, which means that re-routing traffic there could be generally safer for pedestrians and vehicles.” The project is estimated to cost between $2 million and $5 million for intersection improvement, road widening and sidewalk installation. Federal earmarks will pay for most of this project, but additional funding will be needed, Elliott said. “There are several options for the funding,” Hamilton said. “We would seek federal and state funding through OKI (Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments) or Ohio Public Works.” The timeline for the project has not been determined, Elliott said. After the Jan. 20 meeting,

wSee FORUM, page 11

ALLISON BACKOVSKI The Miami Student

Semi truck traffic traveling down High Street may soon be re-routed.


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