2.1.13

Page 1

INDEX

Emory Events Calendar, Page 2

Horoscopes, Page 9

Crossword Puzzle, Page 8

Staff Editorial, Page 6

Police Record, Page 2

On Fire, Page 11

THE EMORY WHEEL Since 1919

The Independent Student Newspaper of Emory University

Volume 94, Issue 30

www.emorywheel.com

Friday, February 1, 2013

Every Tuesday and Friday

VIBRANT VOCALIST

ADMINISTRATION

GREEK LIFE

Task Force Subdivisions Focus on Protests

Sororities See Surge In Bid Numbers

By Dustin Slade Staff Writer

SDT Inactive Until Fall 2013

The Task Force on Dissent, Protest and Community will form three new subcommittees in an effort to better address issues of open expression on campus, according to a Jan. 18 University press release. The focus of the subcommittees will be on education, policy and administration. University President James W. Wagner created the task force of students, faculty and staff members after student arrests during an April 2011 protest against Emory’s food service provider Sodexo. The members will seek to address and make recommendations to the University administrators by April of this year. The subcommittees were formed to achieve the goals of the task force more efficiently, Committee Co-Chair, Senior Vice President and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair wrote in an email to the Wheel. Ed Lee, chair of the education subcommittee and the director of debate for the Barkley Forum, said his committee strives to get community input on their issues of concern. “We want to discover what are the ways in which we can make sure there is a diverse and balanced set of people who are participating in the conversation at large in restructuring this particular set of policies,”

See EACH, Page 5

By Jordan Friedman Associate Editor

Liqi Shu/Staff

A

packed house welcomed both Asian-American top-subscribed YouTube vocalists Clara C (pictured) and Jason Chen. The Emory Asian Student Organization brought the artists for their concert on Thursday night at Glenn Memorial Auditorium. Opening acts for the concert included College freshman MacKenzie Wyatt, hip-hop group TrickaNomeTry (TNT), Inonnim and David Kim.

ACADEMICS

Guest Lecture Courses Focus on Violence, Labor By Elizabeth Howell Associate Editor Emory’s Center for Faculty Development and Excellence increased the number of University Courses they offer from one to three this semester in order to promote discussion among students and faculty on topics such as violence, networks and labor. These courses, which are open to both undergraduate and graduate students, explore a particular topic

in depth. Each time a class meets, different guest lecturers from various schools of the University teach students to approach a topic from a variety of disciplines. The University is offering “Violence: A Multidisciplinary Inquiry,” “Network Science: Theory, Method and Applications” and “Labor, Development and Democracy,” the University announced in a Jan. 28 press release. Previously, the Center for Faculty Development and Excellence has

only offered one University course each spring since 2011, according to Associate Director of the Center for Faculty Development and Excellence Donna Troka. However, Troka said offering three classes at once this semester has been a successful endeavor so far. Fifteen to 20 students are enrolled in each class, and many faculty members have volunteered to guest lecture this semester, according to Troka. While the lecturers change every time the classes meet, the conveners,

or faculty members who proposed the course topics, attend each session during the semester, according to the Center for Faculty Development and Excellence web site. Director for the Center for Injury Control, Associate Professor at the School of Medicine and Rollins School of Public Health and one of the course conveners of “Violence: A Multidisciplinary Inquiry” Deb Houry said the class will be heavily

nity, together to experience great movies on a big screen in the traditional commercial format of 35mm,” Bernstein said. Bernstein calls himself and other faculty in Film and Media Studies “cinephiles.” Bernstein, for example, travels to Bologna, Italy every June to attend a week-long film festival that features old, restored and rediscovered films from major archives around the world. “With the Emory Cinematheque, we want to kindle and share that passion with our students, colleagues and neighbors,” Bernstein explained. Along with the Universal Picture series, Emory will also be showing “Under African Skies,” a documentary about Paul Simon’s return to South Africa 25 years after making the Graceland album on Feb. 6. “It is a fascinating look at ... how he created that landmark album, and the many difficulties, practical and political of doing so before the end of the apartheid regime,” Bernstein said. Akira Kurosawa’s adventure film “The Hidden Fortress,” which is the basis for the first “Star Wars” film, will also be shown on Feb. 20. University Distinguished Professor Salman Rushdie suggested this viewing. A week later, Rushdie’s adaptation of his novel, Midnight’s Children, will be shown off-campus with its Oscar-nominated director Deepa Mehta in attendance. Next year, the department plans to organize a film comedy series to introduce another flavor of the entertainment industry.

— Contact Shivangi Singh at shivangi.singh@emory.edu

See SORORITIES, Page 5

Emory Hosts Universal Studios Series By Shivangi Singh Contributing Writer

Emily Lin/Photography Editor

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unior Christine Hines joins other Emory students as they peruse the various fresh, local produce at the weekly Tuesday Farmers Market on the Cox Hall Bridge. The market offers meats, bread, cheese, honey and more as well as the opportunity to interact with Georgia farmers.

BUSINESS SCHOOL

BBA Council Amends Constitution By Gabrielle Loudermilk Contributing Writer The Goizueta Business School’s BBA Council has made amendments to its constitution that aim to address ambiguities in its legislation and executive appointment procedures. In light of recent conflicts with Emory College’s Student Government Association (SGA), members of the Council hope that the changes will address concerns about election transparency. The amendments passed in December last semester.

With regards to voting, the amendment now requires that SGA representatives of the BBA Council be elected instead of appointed. Elections will be online in conjunction with SGA elections. The amendment also eliminated positions and voting procedures that council members deemed unnecessary. Members of the Council hope that the amendment will reduce tensions with College Council (CC) and SGA. Tensions came to a head last spring when SGA introduced legislation that would put the Council under its

NEWS SORORITY PRESIDENTS REACT TO RISE IN BID NUMBERS

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jurisdiction. Patrick McBride, B-School junior and the chairman of Undergraduate Business School Leadership Conference for the BBA Council, said that at the time SGA was critical of the Council’s unclear election guidelines. B-School senior and BBA Council Treasurer Gregory Borofsky, one of the co-authors of the amendment, hopes that the changes will promote better relations with the various governing bodies in the College.

See AMBIGUOUS, Page 5

OP-EDS ISRAELI DEFENSE FORCE: NO DIFFERENT PAGE 6 THAN US ...

Emory will be the only venue in the Southeast to host a Universal Pictures film series of free 35mm screenings to celebrate the studio’s 100 years of history. The Emory Cinematheque Film Series will take place every Wednesday from now until Apr. 24 at 7:30 p.m. in White Hall 205. UCLA Film and Television Archive and American Express approached Emory’s Film and Media Studies department for the series. The screenings feature iconic titles such as “Dracula”, Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds”, “Back to the Future” and “The 40 Year Old Virgin.” To compile the list of films, the department pooled many genres — including technicolor fantasies, melodramas, horror, science fiction, comedies and westerns. Emory started hosting such special Wednesday night screenings about a decade ago at the suggestion and with the support of former College Dean Steve Sanderson. They are “a chance to take stock of what one studio has produced in a century,” Matthew Bernstein, department of film and media studies chair, wrote in an e-mail to the Wheel. “It allows us ... to learn more about the innately rich nature of film history and film art.” Bernstein believes that screenings like these create a sense of community, similar to that of a theater or music concert. “Our department believes firmly in the value of screenings that bring the Emory campus community, and even the Atlanta cinephile commu-

Implications of Rising Numbers For many members of sororities, the large turnout for rush impacted the process and has implications for Greek life at Emory. With SDT gone for now, rushees this semester were left with only six options during recruitment. According to College senior and Delta Delta Delta (TriDelt) President Blair Hunt, the sorority had 62 new pledges this spring, a significant increase from last year’s 38. “We had more girls per round, more rounds, and less space,” Hunt said, adding that she was told to except about 45 new pledges. Hunt added that the influx of new pledges made the rush process a bit more challenging, and although the sorority was unprepared for bid day, members “made it work.” One College senior, who requested anonymity because she’s in a sorority, said “every single sorority is going to be completely overwhelmed with this immediate transition.” “It compromises the transition,” she said, noting that it may be difficult to pair “littles” and “bigs” together with so many incoming members. She added that on bid day, some sororities didn’t have enough apparel for all the pledges. Michelle Wang, a Goizueta Business School senior and member of Kappa Alpha Theta, said the major rise makes it more difficult for sisters to get to know each other. “It makes it that much more awkward when you can’t remember your sisters’ names,” Wang said. While the influx of new pledges may have made the rush and pledge process more difficult, others have also expressed excitement in the growth of sorority life. College junior and Gamma Phi Beta President Anna Gordan wrote in an email to the Wheel that while the sorority will now need to adjust event planning to reflect the rise in numbers, “each member will add something positive to our organization.” “We can’t wait to see how they help our sorority flourish,” Gordan wrote. And even though Hunt said the

See PROF, Page 5

ARTS

TUESDAY TREATS

Because of the small size of its chapter, Emory’s Sigma Delta Tau (SDT) sorority became inactive this semester and will remain so until fall 2013. In turn, the elimination of SDT as a rush option contributed to the nearly 50-percent rise in the number of offered bids, a change that took many by surprise. The fact that SDT did not participate in rush was one factor that led to an increase in the recommended bid quota for each sorority. According to a Jan. 28 Wheel article, a larger freshman class and the elimination of Alpha Epsilon Phi as a sorority option since its removal in 2011 also caused the surge in offered bids. Even though sororities were warned beforehand about the increase in numbers, “it was even more than we were anticipating,” according to Megan Janasiewicz, the director of the Office of Sorority and Fraternity Life.

STUDENT LIFE A

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