INDEX
Emory Events Calendar, Page 2
Staff Editorial, Page 6
Police Record, Page 2
Arts & Entertainment, Page 9
Crossword Puzzle, Page 8
On Fire, Page 11
THE EMORY WHEEL Since 1919
The Independent Student Newspaper of Emory University www.emorywheel.com
Tuesday, October 29, 2013 STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Volume 95, Issue 16 Every Tuesday and Friday
EVENT
EVENT
Maulik Pancholy Coming to CC Event
SGA Alters Ballots, Funds ICE Diwali By Rupsha Basu Asst. News Editor
By Dustin Slade News Co-Editor
The 47th Legislature of the Student Government Association (SGA) voted unanimously to fund a new interface for electronic elections ballots presented by the Elections Reform Task Force, as well as the annual Diwali event hosted by the Indian Cultural Exchange (ICE). SGA commissioned the Elections Reform Task Force to address concerns about past controversies during University-wide elections and to unify elections among all the divisional councils of the University under a single code. The first problem the force addressed is the fact that ballots correspond to students’ class standing by credit hours instead of graduation year, according to the bill. The updated balloting system will now correspond to graduation year. The system also randomizes the order of the candidates for each student, according to SGA President and College senior Raj Patel. He added that this is because he believes research suggests that the sequence has an effect on election results. The task force requested $3,300 to modify the University Technology Services (UTS) electronic ballot. This money comes from the Fee Interest Contingency Account (FIC), which
See STUDENT, Page 4
believe that women don’t commit sexual assault,” in discussing hardships the survivor went through in seeking support. Tissues were passed around the crowd and staff from Emory’s counseling center as well as SAPA members stood by for emotional support as accounts were read both anonymously by volunteers and by the survivors themselves. College sophomore Elyssa Hausman read a student’s story and recounted how hard it was to feel that she was not doing the survivor justice in her reading, and the intense emotion that arose with her realization that this story may belong to someone she knows.
Comedian and actor Maulik Pancholy will be the special guest for the College Council’s (CC) Culture Shock event on Nov. 9, multiple sources within CC, who wished to remain anonymous, have confirmed with the Wheel. The event will Maulik take place in the Woodruff Health Pancholy, Sciences Center an actor who Administration played roles Building. The Wheel in television first announced shows “30 Pancholy’s visit on its Facebook Rock” and page last week “Weeds,” will after confirming be visiting his visit with two Emory. College Council members. Although Pancholy’s participation in Culture Shock is only one aspect of the event, CC leaders declined to comment on both Pancholy’s involvement in the event as well as the rest of the event’s specifics. Pancholy is most recogniz-
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See COLLEGE, Page 5
James Crissman/Photography Editor
President Wagner presented the story of a sexual assault survivor at the Respect Program’s and the Alliance for Sexual Assault Prevention’s “Take Back The Night”
Survivors Reveal Stories at ‘Take Back The Night’ By Naomi Maisel Staff Writer Emory students, staff and faculty gathered on the Dobbs University Center (DUC) Terraces yesterday evening for “Take Back the Night,” an event centered around giving a voice to survivors of sexual assault. The annual event is held during Domestic Violence Awareness month, according to Alliance for Sexual Assault Prevention (ASAP) member and College junior Nikki Pendleton. Student groups ASAP and Sexual Assault Peer Advocates (SAPA) worked in conjunction with Emory’s Respect Program to make this event happen, Pendleton said. According to Pendleton, the event
is held each year to give survivors of sexual assault the chance to share their stories. The hope, she said, is that this event will show people that sexual assault does happen but can be prevented. The event was introduced by ASAP presidents College seniors Leah Regenbaum and Lauren Weinberg. The latter said the Respect Program acts as “agents of positive transformation and change.” They then asked the audience to show respect for participants by keeping the stories shared confidential and confined to the safe space created by the event. Students, faculty and staff stood as one large group in a moment of silence for the survivors led by Lauren Bernstein, Emory’s coordina-
tor of sexual and relationship violence prevention education and response. Audience members filled the eight rows of approximately 10 chairs set up for the event while a larger crowd gathered around the terraces and on the DUC stairs to find a better view of the speakers at the podium. University President James W. Wagner and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair read the first two in a series of stories of anonymous students and their accounts of their sexual assault experiences. Nair read an anonymous student’s story that argued that “love shouldn’t hurt like that,” referring to abuse and sexual assault. Another anonymous story read by Scott Rausch, director of residence life, claimed that “most people
NURSING SCHOOL
EMORY WELCOMES PARENTS
Nursing School Launches Two New Degree Programs By Lydia O’Neal Staff Writer
Bahar Amalfard/Contributor
A
ndy Wilson, senior associate dean of Campus Life external relations, spoke to parents at the Family Weekend reception with University President James W. Wagner. The students’ parents and siblings visited campus for Emory’s annual Family Weekend. Events gave families a taste of life at Emory, including a showcase of Emory’s performance groups, open houses and panel discussions.
EVENT
Emory Faculty to Review Health Benefit Options By Stephen Fowler Senior Staff Writer Emory University faculty and staff will have the opportunity to review their existing benefits and make changes for the upcoming year from Oct. 18 through Nov. 4. Enrollment will take place through an online self-service portal that is offered through human resources, according to an Oct. 15 University press release. Changes become effective Jan. 1, 2014.
Emory faculty and staff have several packages of benefits as options, ranging from medical benefits such as dental and vision to educational benefits such as the Courtesy Scholarship and tuition reimbursement, according to Erin Long, director of communications for human resources. “For 2014, faculty and staff can select from two medical plan options: the Health Savings Account Plan (HSA) or the Point of Service Plan (POS),” Long wrote in an email to the Wheel. “The HSA plan has a lower monthly contribution but a higher
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deductible, while the POS plan is a more conventional medical plan.” Long said several minor changes to the medical plans will take effect, including a higher deductible, outof-pocket maximum and a change in cost structure. There will be no change in contribution amounts for employee-only coverage. Other possible additions to the benefits include a new increased life insurance benefit and a new adoption benefit that reimburses the cost of adopting a child, according to the
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press release. Another change stems from a 2013 initiative that will lower costs by offering cash incentives to lower medical costs, according to the press release. According to Long, faculty and staff can save money on their individual medical expenses by participating in these “healthy activity” incentives. Such incentives will soon include health screenings, online assessments, a disease management pro-
See FACULTY, Page 3
The Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing has launched two new graduate degree programs, including a dual-degree Master of Arts (MA) in Bioethics and Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) program, as well as a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program. Both majors will start accepting applications this spring and commence at the start of the fall 2014 semester. The DNP degree is for registered nurses seeking a nursing practice degree without the rigorous research component of a standard Ph.D. program. The degree features on-site classes that are taught three weekends per semester, along with online courses that allow students to enhance their careers without disrupting them, according to the Summer 2013 Nursing School Newsletter. The program includes two tracks: health systems leadership and population health. It also requires residency hours, advanced practice curriculum and a capstone project, according to the Nursing School website. Nurses with MSN degrees can complete the Doctor of Nursing Practice program in two years, while Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) graduates can complete the DSN program in four years, according to the Nursing School website. The second new program — an MA in Bioethics and MSN dualdegree offered through the Laney Graduate School and the Nursing School — is the newest of Emory’s five MA-Bioethics dual-degrees, according to Master of Bioethics
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THE BEST MOVIES AND MUSIC OF
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ATHLETES
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EMORY BACK PAGE
NEW NURSING DEGREES Dual-degree Master of Arts in Bioethics and Master of Science in Nursing
Doctor of Nursing Practice For registered nurses seeking nursing practice degree
Application deadline Spring 2014 Program Director Toby Schonfeld. Emory joins Case Western Reserve University and the University of Pennsylvania as the only three universities in the United States offering such a program. “Bioethics itself is an interdisciplinary program,” Schonfeld said. “It seemed natural to integrate it with different programs at Emory, and we knew for a while that we wanted to partner with the School of Nursing.” Schonfeld teaches Classical Issues in Bioethics — the second of the program’s three foundational courses — which deals with standard ethical issues like informed consent and the challenges of end-of-life care. The first foundational course, Bioethical Theory, introduces the language and methodology of bioethics, while the final foundational course, Contemporary Issues in Bioethics, focuses on “whatever contemporary issues there are of the day,” according to Schonfeld. The dual-degree program enhances the clinical care nurses give
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