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10 weddings and a carpool

21 Oct 2011, Posted by Minshu Deng in News, 0 Comments


Being green is about to get a little easier. The German carpooling network, Carpooling.com, is getting ready to launch in the U.S.

Special to The Chronicle: a screenshot of Rebecca Black's "Friday"

The way the website works is that its users who are looking for transportation to a certain destination and drivers who are hoping to save a bit of money on gas can find one another and then negotiate a price for the ride. The site generates revenue by taking a portion of each fare. The system has demonstrated widespread success in Europe, having already expanded to 5,000 cities and 45 countries.

According to the website, 630,000 tons of carbon emissions have been saved, a figure the U.S should also aspire to as the greatest emitter of greenhouse gases among industrialized nations.

Although on a much smaller scale, Duke Parking and Transportation Services also provide a carpooling service available to all Duke staff, faculty and students who own a vehicle and live off-campus. The program includes incentives like free parking for groups consisting of 4 or more people.

With enough publicity, Duke students may likely take advantage of the Carpooling system. Some already employ the same general practices: in a Facebook group consisting of Duke students, a girl recently posted, “Anyone driving to New York for Thanksgiving and can give me a ride? Willing to pay for gas.”

Whether Carpooling will actually experience the same degree of success stateside remains to be seen.

“It is going to work,” says a company exec, ”I don’t think the wealth of America is so great they don’t need to save money.”

As if the prospects of saving some money and the environment weren’t enough, Carpooling’s website also brings in users by advertising the fact that “thousands of friendships [have been] made on the road (+10 weddings!)”

Case in point, in response to the girl’s post in the Facebook group, many of the responses weren’t even in direct relation to her request for a ride. Rather, there were several proposals for making stops along the way to visit friends and having reunions. So, even if you’re just looking for some love, carpooling might be the thing for you. What they say might actually be true: in the end it’s the journey that counts.

Devils need their wings

20 Oct 2011, Posted by Kristie Kim in News, 0 Comments


Nicole Savage/The Chronicle

There are a lot of things college students are in short supply of: food points, time, sleep and especially energy. And that’s what Red Bull is for. Or, was for.

University of New Hampshire has committed to becoming the “healthiest campus community in the country by 2020” and in an effort to reach that goal, they have banned the sale of energy drinks on campus late September, according to an Oct. 1 2009 press release. The university cited the dangers of mixing the drinks with alcohol as its primary reasons for the new measure.

The announcement elicited a large buzz from the student body. The New Hampshire, the student newspaper of UNH, in an editorial denounced the proposed ban, calling it irrational, hypocritical, foolish and an overreaction. Within four days of declaring its ban of the sale of energy drinks, UNH abandoned the plan altogether.

Energy drinks, like Full Throttle, Red Bull, and NOS, have long been aggressively marketed to college students. Today, it is a multibillion-dollar industry. According to Mintel, a market research group, from 2010 to 2011, sales of energy drinks have grown 15.4 percent.

Energy drinks have also been targeted for its possibly harmful effects on the body. Last November, the Food and Drug Administration banned commercial alcoholic energy drinks. This action was in response to the hospitalization of several college students after drinking Four Loko. According to the National Institute on Alchohol Abuse and Alcoholism, a standard serving of a mixed alcohol drink contains up to four times the amount of caffeine as a standard serving of mixed alcohol and soda drink.

Scott Swartzwelder, a professor of psychology who studies substance abuse, agreed that the interaction between alcohol and energy drinks can only culminate into trouble. Consumption of both caffeine and alcohol at the same time is especially detrimental to the health and performance of Duke students, he added.

“The problem in mixing the two [beverages] comes into play when students do not realize how impaired they actually are and are, then, inclined to drive and do other things they shouldn’t [be doing],” said James Lane, research professor of behavioral psychiatry.

In response to the proposed ban at UNH, Swartzwelder was ambivalent about the university’s approach to creating a healthier campus.

“If you were to line up all the harmful ingredients that college students put in their bodies, energy drinks would be towards the bottom,” Swartzwelder said.

He instead suggested educating students about the harmful effects of energy drinks. Swartzwelder is in his thirteenth year of teaching Psychology 110, Alcohol: Brain, Individual and Society, a course that was built on the dual rationale that alcohol is a good lens to teach students about the brain and behavior and to educate students about the effects of alcohol.

“Universities are in the business of educating people, and so the logical answer would be to make this an educational issue,“ Swartzwelder said.

But, without mixed with any alcohol, how bad are energy drinks for you? This answer depends on who you ask.

“Most energy drinks have less caffeine than a cup of coffee,” Lane said. “So, a student will get more caffeine from a small cup of coffee at the Perk than from Red Bull.”

Lane, who has studied the effects of caffeine for over 25 years at Duke, added that a proposed ban on energy drinks would be ineffective as long as the university maintained the selling and provision of unlimited coffee in dining halls and in restaurants.

Freshman Clair Hong believed that there were negative health benefits to drinking energy drinks, but that this fact has not deterred many of her friends from resorting to these drinks, especially during midterm weeks.

“A possible ban would not stop students from drinking, but it would create quite an uproar,” Hong said. “Whether it’s healthy or not, students should have a right to choose what they consume.”

Huddleston recently issued a statement saying that there was no clear evidence that correlated the relationship between the consumption of energy drinks and alcohol abuse. He concluded that further research would need to be conducted.

On that note, both Swartzwelder and Lane pointed out that both nonalcoholic and alcoholic energy drinks and their effects on the human body are under-studied on the research front.

“This lack of information does not, in any way, mitigate my point that we do have enough information to know that there are negative effects when these drinks are consumed in excess and with alcohol,” Swartzwelder said. “We know enough to caution college students and educate them on how to be safe.”

Delta Lambda Phi—a new kind of frat?

20 Oct 2011, Posted by Katie Hillyer in News, 0 Comments


The University of Iowa seeks to establish a chapter of Delta Lambda Phi, an entirely gay fraternity, on its campus.

Sophia Palenberg/The Chronicle

Delta Lambda Phi was originally founded in 1986 and is a fraternity for gay, bisexual and progressive men.  It is said to provide a niche for gay men in a greek system that otherwise marginalizes that population.  The fraternity currently has 31 chapters in universities nationwide, as well as one in Quebec.

Many Duke students expressed concern that the existence of the fraternity would perpetuate exclusion instead of foster integration.

“It’s great that they’re able to do that, but I hope it’s not because they feel uncomfortable in the existing greek community,” said sophomore Ainsley Mcwilliams, member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. “I have LGBT family members at other colleges that are part of their greek system and accepted for who they are.”

Although general support for the fraternity is expressed, concern that it segregates students instead of uniting them remains prevalent.

“I hope it doesn’t become a really exclusionary thing that divides the LGBT community from the rest of the Greek community,” said sophomore Caitlin Cleaver, member of Alpha Phi. “It would be great if it fosters LGBT awareness on campus and brings that community closer to the Greek system.  I hope this happens and not the divide.”

Some Dukies also empathized with the need for a place that accepts diversity and welcomes individuals who have previously faced discrimination.

“Historically, fraternities and sororities have not been the most open to LGBT individuals so this provides a place for LGBT students to feel welcomed but still Greek affiliated,” remarked sophomore Denzell Faison.

Concerns about the potentially divisionary affects of an entirely gay fraternity are prominent, Duke students also recognize the necessity for a place where all are welcomed, including those LGBT individuals who may have faced discrimination from the very Greek system they now attempt to join.

Who’s teaching you?: Gary Gereffi

19 Oct 2011, Posted by Samantha Brooks in News, Who's teaching you?, 0 Comments


Ever wonder what kind of cool things your professors do when they’re not teaching? Want to know how they became professors at Duke? Watch The Chronicle’s new series, “Who’s Teaching You” as we interview some of the most interesting professors on campus.

This week, Gary Gereffi, professor of sociology, talks about his life and career before, after and during his time at Duke.

Soundoff: Majors Fair

18 Oct 2011, Posted by Emelyn Erickson in News, 0 Comments


Tori Powers/The Chronicle

Freshmen, sophomores and faculty alike flocked to the 2011 Majors Fair in the Bryan Center’s Schaefer Mall Tuesday. The Majors Fair is an annual event sponsored by the Academic Advising Center intended to expose students to the many academic offerings at Duke. The 2011 fair boasted displays and information from more than 80 major departments and programs.  The Chronicle’s Emelyn Erickson spoke with students and faculty about their impressions of this year’s fair.

“It’s wonderful to see the students come in and explore their options. In the Global Health Institute, we tell our students to take a course. We encourage intellectually sampling across campus because that’s the only way to get a feeling for what you want to do. The Majors Fair is just the first step of that process.”

—Sherryl Broverman, associate professor of the practice of biology and director of the Global Health Certificate

“I’m considering a few different majors that I’m interested in and I want to figure out which ones fit—what I want to do. I’m pre-med, but as a physician I’d like to have a broader scope of perspective. I’ve found things in [Neuroscience, Public Policy and Program II] that I think will give me that type of foundation.”

—Anusha Singh, freshman

“I’m on the track to become a Public Policy major. I came to the Majors Fair to figure out what I want to do on top of that. I’m thinking about an education minor because later on I either want to teach or go into child and family policy. Coming to the fair is helpful to figure out logistics and create a plan. I’m getting some good info.”

—Michelle Burrows, sophomore

“I’m considering a Public Policy major, but I’m not completely decided, so it’s a good opportunity to see all the different majors represented. I’m taking a Political Science class right now, and it’s a really strong department. Plus, I’m considering pre-law. The pre-law advising table is also really helpful.”

—Julia Janco, freshman

“It’s a great turn-out this year, and we have more departments represented. We are also doing something new this year. Deans, peer advisors and academic advisors are around for on-spot advising, which is different from past years when students had to navigate the majors fair for themselves.”

—Dean Elizabeth Fox, Director of Academic Advising Center

“I am completely undecided, but I wanted to find out more information about how to mesh my interests. I would like to shape my own path, so I’m looking at a Program II or interdepartmental major in Music and Public Policy.”

—Brandee Branche, sophomore

“It’s really nice to have someone directly answer my questions, mostly about major requirements and career options.”

—Rhea Chitalia, freshman

“This is actually my first Majors Fair. I came to try to recruit future majors in Statistics. I think that it’s a great way to ask lots of different questions and learn about different majors all in one place.”

—Kari Lock, assistant professor of the practice in Statistical Science