9.17.13

Page 1

INDEX

Emory Events Calendar, Page 2

Arts & Entertainment, 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 95, Issue 6

www.emorywheel.com

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Every Tuesday and Friday

GREEK LIFE

HEALTHCARE

Emory Healthcare Cuts 100 Employees Job Cuts Due to Restructuring By Rupsha Basu Staff Writer

Elsayed Hagar/ Contributor

With Greek Week underway, Emory fraternities and sororities are preparing for the various competitive events ahead. Some of this year’s events include a trivia competition, a “powder puff” football game and the “Greek God” competition.

Greek Week Returns, Aims to Establish Tradition By Lydia O’Neal Staff Writer After a one-year hiatus, Greek Week has returned to Emory’s campus. This week, six teams consisting of one Intersorority Council (ISC) chapter, two Interfraternity Council (IFC) chapters and at least one Multicultural Greek Council (MCG) or National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) chapter will compete for the title of Greek Week Champion in this year’s “Survivor”-themed competitions. Scheduling conflicts and divisions among the four Greek Life councils prevented Greek Week last year, but event planners hope to make the friendly competition an annual tradition from now on. “It’s a great way to make friends and make Greek Life visible on campus,” Gamma Phi Beta sister and College sophomore Ashley Stumvoll

said. She added that allowing nonGreeks to come to the events is “a great way to bring the campus together,” as “a lot of people feel isolated from the Greek community.” Following Monday’s banner contest, in which administrators judge contestants on their artistic renditions of the “Survivor” theme and their creativity in choosing a clever hanging location, each team will send 20 members to a Trivia Quizbowl at BurgerFi Tuesday night. Greeks will dominate Asbury circle on Wonderful Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Each chapter will set up its own table, welcoming anyone with questions or interest. Along with the King of Pops, carnival-style food, a fire blower, a tattoo artist and a bounce house, signups for a Sept. 25 Red Cross Blood Drive will be available. The women of each team will go head to head at a Powder Puff football tournament Thursday night on

NURSING SCHOOL

SCIENCE

McDonough Field. The male team members, after coaching and cheering for the girls on Thursday evening, will compete for the title of “Greek God” at a Strongman contest on sorority lawn Friday at 4 p.m. The fun and games comes to an end on Saturday, Sept. 21 at an Eagle Row Block Party complete with a DJ, games, rides and free food from 2 to 5 p.m. At 3:30 p.m., the Greek Week Champions will be awarded “a huge trophy and bragging rights,” according to ISC president and Goizueta Business School senior Lauren Browning. Last year, however, Browning and IFC president and College senior Jason Stern planned to hold the week long event during the spring to coincide with underclassmen rush. “Between recruitment, Spring Break and Dooley’s Ball, we couldn’t find a good time to do it,” Stern said. He added that, though the event wasn’t held during the 2010-11 aca-

GREEK WEEK SCHEDULE Tuesday Trivia Quizbowl at BurgerFi, 7:30-10 p.m.

Thursday Greek Wonderful Wednesday Asbury Circle, 10-4 p.m.

Friday ‘Greek God’ competition Sorority Lawn, 4 p.m.

Saturday Block Party Eagle Row, 2-5 p.m. demic year either, “Greek Week used to be a fun tradition that all the Greek organizations would get excit-

See GREEK, Page 4

More than 100 Emory Healthcare employees will lose their jobs, effective Nov. 15, due to a restructuring of the company’s neuropsychology unit at the Wesley Woods Geriatric Hospital. The restructuring includes the renovation of two neuropsychiatry units at Wesley Woods Geriatric Hospital, which is located on Clifton Rd., and downsizing the hospital from three to two units, Mark Rapaport, chairman and chief of psychiatric services at Emory University School of Medicine, wrote in an email to the Wheel. The reason for the restructuring, Rapaport wrote, is to provide a teambased approach for patients, family care and training. “State of the art care for patients with dementia is best done in the location that the patient is living — nursing home, assisted living, or private residence since relocating them to a hospital is disorienting and frightening and does not usually take care of the environmental stressor causing the initial problem,” he wrote. The company plans to launch an adult and geriatric psychiatry program for mood disorders, psychosis and other psychiatric disorders in November, according to Vincent Dollard, Emory Healthcare’s vice president of communications. Emory Healthcare employs over 16,000 people, according to President and CEO of Emory Healthcare John Fox. The company decided the fairest approach was to open up the new positions to only existing employees, and they encouraged those affected to apply for these position, Rapaport wrote. “We want to keep them as Emory employees, we have invested a great deal of time in ongoing training and competency assessments,” he explained to the Wheel. “They are

very valuable people to have working at Emory, thus we are providing each employee with HR personnel to work with and help guide them through the application process for jobs in psychiatry and in other parts of Emory Healthcare.” When WSB-TV, an Atlanta news station, reported the story, the news organization said the layoffs were due to the Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama’s health care reform bill. The Wheel reported last week that Emory Healthcare recently underwent a rebranding, including a new logo, slogan and ad campaign. Fox said that the rebranding was not in response to the Affordable Care Act. Fox also wrote in an email on Monday afternoon to the staff and physicians of Emory Healthcare denying the link between the displaced employees and the health care bill. Dollard confirmed that neither the rebranding nor the layoffs are related to the Affordable Care Act. “The most important point here is that we would be making these changes even if the Affordable Care Act had never been passed,” Dollard said. According to Dollard, the healthcare reform bill had been briefly mentioned at the meeting to discuss the layoffs, but the information was misinterpreted. Dollard denied that the purpose of the layoffs were to cut costs for Emory Healthcare. He also said that he did not know whether the layoffs saved Emory Healthcare any money. “No one is happy about what we have to do — we know we are disrupting people’s lives, and this is very sad, and we want to help everyone that we can find employment within our system,” Rapaport concluded in his email.

— Contact Rupsha Basu at rupsha.basu@emory.edu

SERVICE

Emory Study Links Rollins To Receive Testicle Size to Nurturing $500K CDC Grant By Stephen Fowler Contributing Writer

By Kyle Arbuckle Contributing Writer The Hubert Department of Global Health in Emory’s Rollins School of Public Health received a five-year $500,000 grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to establish a center for complex humanitarian emergencies studies, according to a Sept. 10 University press release. The center — which will be called the Emory Center for Public Health Training in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies — was part of an initiative led by Carlos Del Rio, Rollins professor and chair of the Hubert Department of Global Health in the Rollins School. Del Rio said a complex humanitarian crisis refers to a natural or man-made disaster, whether it be the Haitian earthquake, the South Pacific tsunami and sometimes war. This program, he said, will be an asset to those suffering through these

See EMORY, Page 3

Men with smaller testicles are more likely to be involved with the care of their toddlers, according to a recent study conducted by Emory anthropologists. The study was authored by Postdoctoral Fellow Jennifer Mascaro, Project Coordinator Patrick Hackett and Laboratory for Darwinian Neuroscience Director James Rilling of the University’s Laboratory for Darwinian Neuroscience. The report added that the data the researchers collected indicated a correlation between larger testes size and decreased paternal involvement in direct caregiving. The findings support a hypothesis derived from a branch of evolutionary theory known as Life History Theory, which says that the more a male has sex, the less investment is made in parenting, Rilling wrote in an email to the Wheel. “We use testes size as an indirect measure of mating effort for three reasons,” Rilling wrote. “It is difficult to get accurate information by simply asking them, men with larger testes produce more sperm and data shows those males tend to mate more.” Rilling added that previous studies had shown that children with

NEWS STUDENT GOVT. MCDONOUGH STAGE REPAIRS ... PAGE 3 FUNDS

more involved fathers have better social, psychological and educational outcomes. The study is not the first of its kind but is unique because it is “the first to investigative whether anatomy and brain function explain parent involvement,” Rilling wrote. Rilling explained the study included 70 biological fathers who had a child between the ages of one and three and who lived with both the child and the biological mother. During the course of several sessions, the men participated in the study in multiple ways, including interviews of both parents and providing information about hands-on tasks regarding child care such as changing diapers, feeding and bathing a child, staying home to care for a sick child and taking the child to the doctor. Researchers took multiple measurements after the interviews, including testosterone levels, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and structural MRI to measure testicular volume, according to Rilling. The study does acknowledge that many factors — such as economic, social and cultural status — tie into fatherhood as well as their findings

See CORRELATION, Page 4

OP-EDS GERRYMANDERING HURTS REPUBLICANS ... PAGE 7

Andy Kim/Contributor

Students participated in the annual 9/11 Day of Unity this past weekend in remembrance of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. Students attended a candlelight vigil following a social justice dialogue on Tuesday.

Emory Holds 9/11 Day of Service By Joe Toledano Contributing Writer

Conflict Resolution Event

Emory University held a series of events last week in remembrance of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center. The events included a discussion on conflict resolution, a Day of Service and a candlelight vigil. The memorial events sought to “remember those lost in 9/11 and to reflect on the value of life,” Program Coordinator Rachel Cawkwell wrote in an email to the Wheel.

Titled the Social Justice Dialogues (SJD), the service consisted of six individual student monologues performed by several members of the Emory Issues Troupe. Organized by College sophomore Emilia Truluck, approximately 30 students attended the discussion. “This year, we decided to have a series of monologues read at the beginning of the dialogue to highlight the diversity of people affected by 9/11 and its repercussions,” Truluck

A&E

SPORTS VOLLYBALL

LOOKING FORWARD TO MUSIC MIDTOWN ... PAGE 9

FINISHES SECOND AT

CLASSIC ...

EMORY BACK PAGE

wrote in an email to the Wheel. “My goal was to expose the attendees of the event to voices that they might not otherwise hear.” Among the monologues were a BBC interview with a fire-captain who was in the World Trade Center; a poem by an Arab-American poet, Naomi Shihab Nye, called “Letter to Any Would-Be Terrorist” and a poem called “Albanza: In Praise of the Local 100” by Martin Espada about the undocumented, primar-

See INTERRELIGIOUS, Page 4

NEXT ISSUE STUDENT CREATES COMPUTER APPLICATION ... Friday


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
9.17.13 by The Emory Wheel - Issuu