The Baylor Lariat WE’RE THERE WHEN YOU CAN’T BE
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TUESDAY | OCTOBER 4, 2011 *
A&E Page 6
Real world to big screen
“Moneyball” is the true story of the Oakland A’s general manager who risks everything to fight for what he believes
NEWS Page 4
SPORTS Page 6
News of an offensively named hunting camp leased by the Perry family has many in an uproar
Baylor’s dreams of going 4-0 this year were crushed in Saturday’s game against Kansas State
Making enemies
Crushed dreams
Vol. 112 No. 20
© 2011, Baylor University
In Print >> Giving to Baylor
The Sue Margaret Hughes Library Internship Fund will increase the number of endowed internships the fund sponsors.
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>> A big win
The win against Kansas on Saturday earned Baylor volleyball its first Big 12 win of the season with a dramatic comeback.
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>> Chapel concert
The rising Christian worship band Gungor put on a show wrapped with a message when they performed in Chapel on Monday.
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On the Web
Dangerous chemicals Tuesday’s chemical plant fire in Waxahachie caused a plume of smoke seen more than 60 miles away in Waco. See more photos on
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Viewpoints “Whether [affirmative action policies] have merit is another debate that is certainly worth having, but there is no reasonable argument to be made that policies that discriminate based on race are not … well, discriminatory.” Page 2
Bear Briefs The place to go to know the places to go
Give to save Save lives by giving blood at the Baylor University Alpha Phi Omega blood drive with Carter BloodCare. The drive will run daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. until Friday at Fountain Mall and the Baptist Student Ministries building. Donors must be at least 17 years old or 16 years old with a parent’s consent.
Fire sparks chemical plant evacuation By Daniel C. Houston Staff Writer
WAXAHACHIE— Fire engulfed a Waxahachie chemicalmixing facility Monday, destroying the complex and emitting a cloud of smoke that could be seen clearly on the horizon more than 60 miles away in Waco. Waxahachie fire chief and Baylor graduate David Hudgins said fire authorities were able to bring the blaze under control by mid-afternoon but were not able to salvage any significant part of the facility. Associated Press reported Monday that Magnablend spokesman Donald Golden told WFAATV that 25 to 30 employees were inside the plant’s 100,000-squarefoot warehouse but no employees or emergency personnel were injured. “Our fire department responded as did many agencies from the surrounding cities, and I think when we got here there were flames coming out the back of the building,” Amy Hollywood, public information officer for the city of Waxahachie, said. “Within just no time it was fully involved with multiple explosions.” A spokesman for Magnablend Inc., the chemical-mixing company whose facility was destroyed,
Associated Press
A frame grab provided by WFAA.com shows black smoke billowing from a fire at the Magnablend Chemical Plant on Monday in Waxahachie. The fire, which started from mixed chemicals, prompted an area school and other buildings to evacuate students.
was not available by Monday’s deadline to speak on the cause of the fire. Hudgins said the fire could have been caused by an electrical malfunction, a bad chemical mixture or a host of other possibilities that may never be completely known.
“All we know is that they were mixing chemicals and they had some kind of reaction that was not normal,” Hudgins said. “It was almost like steam or something like that that was coming out of this large vat, thousands of gallons, and at that point they decided to go ahead and start the
evacuation.” While the chemical smoke produced by the fire could be seen for miles, air tests gathered by the Environmental Protection Agency did not reveal particles that would be dangerous to inhale, Hollywood said. “The EPA has been doing air
testing. They’ve had fly overs and they’ve taken samples and they found no particulates, no harmful particles in the air and no what they refer to as an ‘action-level’ [threat],” Hollywood said. “So at this point, the results show no SEE
FIRE, page 8
Cherry Award finalist talks heroes of Cold War By Jade Mardirosian Staff Writer
The first of three finalists for the Robert Foster Cherry Award, which honors outstanding professors, presented a lecture on Monday downplaying President Ronald Reagan’s role in the Cold War. Dr. Allen Matusow, the W.G. Tw yman professor of history and associate director for academic programs at the James A. Baker III Matusow Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, presented “Did Ronald Reagan Win the Cold War?”
Matusow concluded it was Mikhail Gorbachev, then General Secretary of the Soviet Union, who was the real hero of the Cold War. Matusow began his lecture, presented in the Kayser Auditorium of Baylor’s Hankamer School of Business, by outlining Reagan’s image after he left office, in which he was often regarded as secondrate, including being a secondrate actor and having a secondrate intellect as the president. At the end of his lecture, Matusow concluded that Gorbachev was the indispensable man who made all the concessions in the end. “All [Gorbachev] had to do really in the end was pick up Reagan and carry him kicking and screaming across the finish line to Reagan’s victory. The significance of Ronald Reagan was that
he agreed to be carried. So in the end, you can give to Reagan best supporting actor,” Matusow said, prompting laughter, then applause from the audience. Los Angeles freshman Rachel Gerlach enjoyed the humor most evident in the closing statement of the lecture Matusow injected throughout the presentation. “I enjoyed his lecture. I especially liked how he added the bits of humor into it,” Gerlach said. “I think he gave an interesting perspective on the whole thing whereas a lot of people would say Ronald Reagan had more of a role than Gorbachev, so I thought that was very interesting.” Before Matusow began his lecture, Dr. Michael Thompson, chair of the Robert Foster Cherry SEE
MATUSOW, page 8
Institute for Family Business named entrepreneurship project coordinator By Jennifer Kang Reporter
Baylor has been chosen to collaborate with Babson College in the first global research study on entrepreneurship in family businesses. Babson College has named Baylor’s Institute for Family Business in the Hankamer School of Business as the regional coordinator for the Successful Transgenerational Entrepreneurship Practices Project. The Babson College’s website says The STEP Project is a global applied research initiative that analyzes the entrepreneurial process of family businesses and develops solutions for challenges that threaten them. Dr. Pramodita Sharma, global director of STEP, says more than 40 schools approached Babson to join this project. Babson chose schools based on how well respected they were
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in entrepreneurial family enterprise studies and whether scholars fit the collaborative culture and applied research nature of the program. “For Baylor’s Hankamer Institute for Family Business three factors were found noteworthy in this decision. First, the incredible leadership provided by Prof. Ray Bagby in the field of entrepreneurship over the years, the dedicated work done by the Institute in family business programs in Texas, and the energetic team of scholars, such as Prof. William Worthington, who are eager to join the global networks of scholars interested in studying transgenerational entrepreneurial firms,” Sharma wrote in an email to the Lariat. Dr. William Worthington IV, assistant professor of strategy and family business, said Baylor and Babson College have interacted before at various conferences on family businesses.
“They knew we were involved in family businesses for many, many years,” Worthington said. “They had also seen our recent activities through multiple academic conferences.” Worthington said the Entrepreneurship Practices Project began in 2005 and the project went to Europe to find out how family businesses were successful after staying in families for three or four generations. After STEP launched in Europe, it launched in Latin America, the Asia-Pacific region and now North America. “The entry into North America is where Baylor comes in,” Worthington said. “We’re not just doing qualitative case study work like they did in Europe, but we’re going to add a quantitative research methodology as well.” Dr. Kendall Artz, chairman
TheLariat
SEE
RESEARCH, page 8
Associated Press
Amanda Knox cries following the verdict Monday at the Perugia court in Italy that overturned her conviction and acquits her of murdering her British roomate Meredith Kercher.
Knox acquitted after her four-year ordeal by manuel valdes Associated Press
Once it was clear that Amanda Knox’s Italian murder conviction was overturned, her supporters in Seattle burst into cheers, threw their hands in the air and began to cry in joy. “She’s free,” Tom Rochelle repeated as the translation of the Italian judge’s words came across TV Monday. Surrounded by news cameras, the dozen or so supporters began hugging each other at a downtown hotel suite. The celebration marked four years of uncertainty for friends and supporters of Knox’s family. In its ruling, the Italian appeals court also cleared Knox’s co-defendant, Raffaele Sollecito, of murder in Meredith Kercher’s death. Kercher, 21, shared an apartment with Knox when they were both students in Perugia. She was stabbed to death in her bedroom. Knox and Sollecito, her former boyfriend from Italy, were convicted of murdering Kercher in 2009. Knox was sentenced to 26 years in prison, Sollecito to 25. Also convicted in separate pro-
ceedings was Rudy Hermann Guede, a drifter and native of the Ivory Coast. Knox and Sollecito denied wrongdoing and the appeals court ultimately agreed. Supporters also expressed sympathy for the Kercher family. “This is primarily a sad occasion,” said Tom Wright, one of the main organizers of the Friends of Amanda group, after the verdict. “They lost their daughter. We’ll keep them in our prayers.” Knox grew up in Seattle, attending a private Jesuit high school before going to the University of Washington. Friends of Amanda formed shortly after Knox was arrested for murder in 2007. With Italy nine hours ahead of Seattle, the group rented a suite and waited through the night for the court’s ruling. Friends of Amanda is made up of parents of her high school classmates, her friends from college and high school, and sympathizers from around the country. Some never met the young Seattle woman, including Rochelle, who joined the group two years ago SEE
FREE, page 8
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