The Eagle — April 8, 2010

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OFFICE HUMOR Despite casting two comedy superstars, ‘Date Night’ loses laughs amid a dramatic plot. SCENE page 5

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the EAGLE

APRIL 8, 2010 VOLUME 84 n ISSUE 45

WWW.THEEAGLEONLINE.COM

NEWS BUCK STARTS HERE SPA student wins Truman Scholarship for graduate degree in public service page 4

EDITORIAL

TAX FOR HIPSTERS Following the bag tax’s example, Ian Hosking proposes a tax on hipsters page 3

SCENE CITY SECRETS ‘City Island’ takes apart the pieces of a Bronx family with much to hide page 5

SPORTS STREAKING Lax keeps up their winning ways on Saturday page 8

BUILDING BLOCKS Women’s b-ball team looks to improve on last season’s success page 8

TODAY’S WEATHER

HI 85° LO 51° Possible thunder storms throughout the day FRIDAY HI 59° n LO 41°

SATURDAY HI 64° n LO 44°

the EAGLE 252 Mary Graydon Center 4400 Massachusetts Ave. N.W. Washington, D.C. 20016 Newsroom: 202-885-1402 Advertising: 202-885-1414, x3 Fax: 202-885-1428 E-mail: editor@theeagleonline.com Classifieds: adbox@theeagleonline.com

AUID-SmarTrip program expands By NICOLE GLASS Eagle Staff Writer Housing and Dining Programs will start issuing SmarTrip-enabled student IDs this Monday, allowing students to partake in a pilot program to get data on student Metro ridership. Housing and Dining will distribute 300 of these hybrid cards on a first-come, first-served basis. All non-graduating students are eligible to participate in the program by picking up an AUIDSmarTrip combo card on Monday, Wednesday or Friday of the week of April 12 from the main office in Anderson Hall, according to a press release from the Student Government. SG has worked with the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority since last June to provide a Metro discount for AU students. The pilot program will provide data on student ridership that is necessary to determine the cost of subsidizing a possible student discount. The pilot program will be in effect from April until October, according to SG President Andy MacCracken.

A 20-card pilot program has already taken place to make sure the cards work, he said. “We’ve so far had a 100 percent success rate,” he said. “We’re moving forward with an expanded pilot program.” MacCracken said that the sixmonth pilot program will provide valuable ridership data that includes usage during final exams, summer and the first few months of school. “We’re looking at very diverse types of usage and that will, all combined, bring us one step forward — and hopefully a large step forward — toward the Metro discount,” he said. AU is debating whether or not to provide these cards to the incoming class of 2014 in August — an idea MacCracken opposes. “If 1,500 cards suddenly stop working for whatever reason, which we didn’t catch originally, [it will be a disaster],” he said. “So that’s why we’re doing it with this expanded pilot program for the next several months.” Another issue of debate is finding someone to subsidize the cost of the discount. WMATA cannot prioritize groups, Mac-

Cracken said. All current Metro discounts are subsidized from sources other than the WMATA. Federal funding covers senior citizens’ discounts and the D.C. government subsidizes public school discounts. “If we wanted to subsidize the [Metro fare] by 25 percent and every AU undergrad bought into it, it would cost roughly $300,000 to do,” MacCracken said. “That’s a large amount of money.” Although AU may cover the costs of the subsidy, some question whether AU should be spending money on a discount, MacCracken said. “Is that money best invested in a discount for the Metro, or should we be using that to bring in more tenured faculty or to invest into the classroom or more academic programs?” he said. “We need to build new residence halls — is that where the money should be going? It’s just an issue of priorities as an institution.” Anyone other than WMATA can subsidize the costs of the discount, including wealthy individuals. “If someone who is really rich and really excited about getting

Four charges added for one AU protestor By ASHLEY DEJEAN Eagle Contributing Writer Matthew Halbe’s charge of crossing a police line was dropped on Tuesday, while Michael Dranove faces four new charges in addition to defacing government property. Halbe, a junior in the School of International Service, and Dranove, a freshman in the College of Arts and Sciences, attended their court appointments this week for the charges stemming from their arrest at the “Funk the War: Bad Romance Street Party” protest on March 19. Halbe’s court hearing was Wednesday. Dranove’s hearing is currently scheduled for May 5, though he attended his arraignment on Tuesday. Halbe arrived at the D.C. courthouse at 8:30 a.m. and waited half an hour before the doors opened, he said. When the time came to process his

paperwork, he caught a break. “[The clerk] said that the police didn’t submit any paperwork for me,” Halbe said. “My case was completely dismissed, [and] they’re not prosecuting me.” He said this made him feel both relieved and validated. “If the police felt strongly enough about my infraction, then they would have done the work just to process the paperwork,” Halbe said. Dranove had a different experience at his arraignment. The charges the clerk read him included three counts of assaulting a police officer, one count of carrying a weapon and one count of destroying government property. “They told me [before] that defacing government property was my one charge, and I get there and the clerk couldn’t believe it either. [She said] ‘You’re charged with one, no wait two, no three accounts of assault of a police

Students start renters’ rights group, Web site Many are not aware of protections By MITCH ELLMAUER Eagle Contributing Writer A group of students launched a class project, the Students for Renters’ Rights, at the end of March with a mission to educate students about their rights as tenants. The project is for the class HNRS-302 The Politics of Human Rights, an honors colloquium that teaches the theoretical and legal foundations of human rights. The class challenges students to put theory into practice by managing a human rights campaign. The group is composed of seven students: Jon Baker, Ellie Ezzell, Jon Freimark, Brian Goodrich, Jennifer Kim, Aaron Luce and Quinn Pregliasco. The group aims to educate AU students and others about “their rights as renters in Washington D.C.,” according to its Web site. They have published a “Renter’s Bill of Rights,” which outlines some

basic tenants’ rights. These rights include the right to sign a fair lease, the right to negotiate a fair rent and the right not to be discriminated or retaliated against. Students for Renters’ Rights hopes to get 500 students to sign its bill of rights. A week and a half into the campaign, they already had about 150 signatures, according to Goodrich and Pregliasco, who are juniors in the School of Public Affairs. Students for Renters’ Rights will also cooperate with Housing and Dining Programs in compiling a resource guide for students living off campus. The group is in the process of writing a portion of the guide. They hope that the guide will have a lasting effect on the student body, according to Goodrich and Pregliasco. “A lot of students don’t know what their rights are,” Pregliasco said. Students for Renters’ Rights posted a survey that tests students’ knowledge of tenants’ rights. The scores were “really shocking,” according to Goodrich. The average score is a 55 out of 100 points. “I didn’t even get a perfect score when I took the survey,” Goodrich n

see RENTERS on page 4

PHILLIP OCHS / THE EAGLE

HEY, CHECK THIS OUT! — SG President Andy MacCracken has worked tirelessly this year to introduce combination AUID-SmarTrip cards for students. A test program was recently expanded from 20 IDs to 300. Above, MacCracken shows off his own hybrid-card. AU students into the Metro system more, then if they come in and offer the school half a million dollars to create a subsidy, then we would have a Metro discount

You can reach this staff writer at nglass@theeagleonline.com.

CULTURES COME TO CAMPUS

officer,’” Dranove said. Dranove’s lawyer told him that Tuesday’s court date would be procedural, so Dranove was shocked when he heard the charges. “It was actually kind of funny,” Dranove said. “I had no idea that they were charging me with assaulting a police officer. They just keep pulling things out of nowhere.” He said he is considering trying to get a trial by jury because he believes the residents of D.C. will be sympathetic to his case. His first trial date is currently set for May 5. “I’m going to ask at that trial to have [it] postponed until September because I’m going home for summer vacation. My lawyer says that most likely the court will accept that.” You can reach this writer at news@theeagleonline.com.

tomorrow,” he said.

AARON BERKOVICH / THE EAGLE

Jess Warren, student in PR Portfolio Group class who helped organize fundraiserfor Arlington Academy of Hope, places her hand print on sign Wednesday

SG VP still signs the checks, but little else By JULIA RYAN Eagle Staff Writer Student Activities decided last Wednesday that Student Government Vice President Alex Prescott will keep his position in the SG for the rest of April, but his role will be significantly diminished as members of his cabinet take over his primary responsibilities. Prescott was suspended in a vote of 12 to 4 at a meeting of the Undergraduate Senate on March 27 for his failure to plan the Founders’ Day Ball this year, The Eagle previously reported. Prescott said most of his eventplanning responsibilities will now be handled by Senator-at-large Jenny Kim, Eagle Nights Director Riley Fujisaki and other members of his cabinet. Prescott said he will still officially be vice president, and he will retain signing power over expenses, but he will not be allowed in his office except to sign off on expenses. Prescott said he can still guide the members of his cabinet as they try to plan events this month, but he has no power over their decisions. “I’ve offered my aid unofficially,” he said. “But I can’t play any supervisory role.” Student Activities told Prescott

that he would still be compensated for the month of April, despite the cutback in his role as vice president. Student Activities Program Adviser Andrew Toczydlowski said Student Activities stepped in to address the concerns of the four current SG executives about a recently passed SG by-law regarding suspensions. The executives were not sure how to proceed with Prescott’s suspension because the by-law did not give concrete rules about when to give suspensions to SG members, according to Toczydlowski. Student Activities wants to make sure that funds set aside for now-canceled SG events like the Founders’ Day Ball are still used to benefit AU students, Toczydlowski said. “We felt that in both the interest of time and our vast programplanning experience, it would be easier for us to step in and guide the vice president’s cabinet in bringing a lot of fun and exciting events to fruition this month,” he said in an e-mail. Class of 2010 Senator and acting-Speaker of the Undergraduate Senate Steve Dalton said he trusts Student Activities and the Senate in their decisions about the vice president. “While some members of the Senate, myself included, were wor-

ried that Student Activities might step in and start dictating new punishments or overturning old ones I think everyone — including Alex Prescott — has come to terms with what was decided by a threequarters majority of the Senate,” Dalton said. Dalton also said it was best for Student Activities to take over the vice presidential office, rather than current SG Secretary Colin Meiselman, so there is no ambiguity about who is officially in charge of the vice president’s responsibilities. The SG constitution states that if the vice president is unable to serve either through removal or by design, the secretary will temporarily take over as acting vice president. Student Activities chose to overrule the constitution and kept Prescott as vice president. “If Colin Meiselman became the acting vice president, then I think people would wonder why Alex Prescott would still have his signing power,” Dalton said. “However, since Meiselman is not taking that position, then obviously someone needed to have signing power over the account.” Meiselman said he feels that Student Activities did not make the right decision about the redistribution of responsibilities. n

see VP on page 4


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