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The art of enjoying cheap wine

30 Dec 2011, Posted by Hong Zhu in News, 0 Comments


Special to The Chronicle

When it comes to wine, stingy college students might just be right going the Franzia route. As it turns out, the average college student’s love affair with cheap wine can actually be backed by science.

As a recent slate article points out, “piles of studies” have shown that taste-testers cannot distinguish cheap wine from expensive wine. According to a paper from the American Association of Wine Economists (yes, this is apparently a real organization), individuals do not enjoy expensive wine more in blind taste-tests. In fact, the average person enjoys expensive wines slightly less.

If it’s not how much a wine costs, then what does determine how much people enjoy their wine? A paper published by The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Of the United States of America, or PNAS, provides a possible answer to this question. (yes, the official journal of the National Academy of Sciences decided that wine tasting was worth studying). According to the PNAS paper, people report better flavors in wine when they think it costs more.

When it comes to judging wine quality, the psychological effect of how we perceive the wine hugely impacts how much we enjoy it. If we can trick ourselves into think that we are drinking good wine, the wine will actually taste better. Unless you’re an expert wine connoisseur, believing that cheap wine tastes good is a self-fulfilling prophesy.

So to all of the college students out there who pale at the thought of actually spending large sums of money for alcohol: fear not and drink up your cheap wine. (But only if you’re 21, of course).

Politics roundup: Iowa and New Hampshire primary preview

30 Dec 2011, Posted by Walker Schiff in News, 0 Comments


Sophia Palenberg/The Chronicle

Since polling for the Republican primary began, Mitt Romney, Michele Bachmann, Rick Perry, Herman Cain and Newt Gingrich have all experienced what it is like to be the “frontrunner,” though their reigns at the front of the pack were all rather short.

The first two and perhaps most famous state primaries, Iowa and New Hampshire, will both take place before the spring semester starts (Iowa on the 3rd and New Hampshire of the 10th). These primaries hold the most weight in determining the winner simply because they are before all the other primaries and they give the candidates a chance to gain momentum going into the big primary election days. Also, impressive performances in early primary states are a great fundraising boost for candidates.

These primaries have a history of picking the eventual winners. In 2008, President Barack Obama won Iowa and John McCain won New Hampshire. Iowa has picked the eventual winners for the Democrats the past four elections, including an unopposed victory for Bill Clinton’s reelection bid. Before 2008, Iowa had picked the eventual Republican nominee four times in a row, including unopposed reelection victories for both George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush. In the last nine Democratic primary elections, New Hampshire has picked the eventual nominee six times. In the last 11 Republican primary elections, New Hampshire has picked the eventual nominee nine times.

That being said, the results of these primaries aren’t final. In 2008, McCain finished fourth in Iowa. In 1992, Clinton also finished fourth in Iowa, only garnering 4 percent of the vote (he was running against Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin). In 2008, Obama just barely lost to Hilary Clinton despite poll numbers showing an easy victory for Obama.

Having said all that, let’s look forward to this cycle’s primaries, starting in Iowa. Right now, all of the Republican primary candidates, except Jon Huntsman, are campaigning in Iowa. Huntsman is in New Hampshire because he has decided to ignore Iowa and focus all of his resources on New Hampshire.

Looking at the polling coming out of Iowa, there seem to be two tiers of candidates. On the top tier are Mitt Romney and Ron Paul, who are both polling around 20 percent. The second tier consists of Michele Bachmann, Rick Santorum and Rick Perry, who are all polling around 10 percent. In between these tiers is Newt Gingrich, who was a clear frontrunner a couple weeks ago but has now plunged well below the top tier and is quickly headed towards the second tier.

In New Hampshire, predicting the outcome is much easier. Romney has never trailed in polls coming out of the state and no candidate has even posed a serious threat. The fight in New Hampshire is for second place. Gingrich and Paul have similar poll numbers right now, though Gingrich’s numbers are on the decline and Paul’s are on the rise.

The one person to watch in New Hampshire is Jon Huntsman. The fate of Huntsman’s campaign depends on New Hampshire. Since mid-October, Huntsman’s numbers have been steadily yet slowly rising in the state, though he stills trails Gingrich and Paul. Although all the candidates are in Iowa, he is still focusing on New Hampshire so there is a good chance he might put up some surprising numbers when the votes are counted in a couple weeks.

For those that are wondering, Gingrich, who has fallen quickly after rising to frontrunner status earlier in December, is still leading the national race, though his lead is slim now and he is still falling. His campaign is hoping to hang on until the January 21st South Carolina primary where his poll numbers are still good. Whether or not his campaign can withstand two primary losses and another month of campaigning is yet to be seen.

Pop Culture Grid: Weinberg vs. McLeod

10 Dec 2011, Posted by Dylan Peterson in Pop Culture Grid, 0 Comments


Duke women’s soccer made it to the NCAA finals for the first time since 1992 and Duke men’s soccer never fails to make women on campus swoon. But how much do we know about our favorite athletes on campus? The Chronicle’s Dylan Peterson asked Laura Weinberg and Lewis McLeod anything you would ever think to ask a member of a champ soccer team. 

Brittany Zulkiewicz/The Chronicle

 

 

When there’s a will, there’s a way

05 Dec 2011, Posted by Minshu Deng in News, 0 Comments


Special to The Chronicle

Willpower. Such an important quality to have—it is what’s getting me through writing this blog post (I mean, I love the Chronicle, but…), it is what’s going to get us all through finals week and often, it is what gets us through life.

But, saying no to Facebook right now, saying no to going out during reading period or

saying no to spending money on fun vacations in the future when you’re trying to pay back loans—it takes a lot of willpower, and it’s tiring.

Research psychology Roy F. Baumeister and New York Times science columnist John Tierney recently published their book Willpower, and here are the basic takeaways:

1. We all suffer from a lack of self-control. Don’t worry, you’re not alone.

2. Our willpower comes from a single source that we use for all things, not just those related to one another. In other words, saying no to late night eating will make it all that harder to get started on work (i.e. I am stuffing my face with chocolate right now so I can resist doing other things aside from writing this. Is it working? Questionable.)

3. Stick with one New Year’s Resolution. Spreading yourself out too thin only takes away from the willpower you can dedicate to each one.

4. We fuel our willpower at the most basic level with glucose, hence the cravings for chocolate and that awesome pumpkin bread from the Perk.

5. Forget diets. When our world suffers from things like the “Oprah Paradox,” as the authors term it, where a strong-willed person such as Oprah can’t even stick to a diet, what hope do us little people have? Dieting requires willpower, willpower requires eating. Make gradual changes in your habits so that they eventually become second nature, requiring no willpower.

As my people say, a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. Fighting unproductive urges is hard, but next time you’re struggling to write a paper, here’s a first step you can take:

http://nightowlr.com/writtenpuppy/puppytest.html

http://writtenkitten.net/

Get a picture of a cute puppy or kitty (take your pick) with each 100 words you write! Genius.

 

Politics roundup: hello Gingrich, goodbye Cain

05 Dec 2011, Posted by Walker Schiff in News, 0 Comments


Sophia Palenberg/The Chronicle

Gingrich Here to Stay?

If you have been following the GOP Presidential Primary Race this fall, you have seen that Republicans have had trouble sticking to one candidate. Mitt Romney was a clear frontrunner in the summer with Michele Bachmann a close second.

When Rick Perry entered the race, his poll numbers skyrocketed but poor debate performances have seen him fall back into the pack. Herman Cain saw his numbers jump after Perry’s fall, but his campaign has been plagued by scandal and poor responses to questions on foreign affairs.

Now that Cain has fallen off, Newt Gingrich is the new flavor of the month. He has passed Romney, who has been securely in second place almost all fall, in almost every poll. While many analysts saw Gingrich a just another boom-and-bust candidate, there are some signs that Gingrich may have some staying power.

For instance, in Iowa, a key early primary state, Gingrich has double-digit leads over Romney in many polls. That is problematic for Romney, as he just recently committed to winning the state. Early in the race, Romney focused much of his energy and resources on winning New Hampshire and Florida, presumably because he thought that Iowa was inevitably going to go to the favorite Tea Party candidate. Suddenly this week though, Romney had ads running in Iowa, he had New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie campaigning there for him, and his spokesperson said they were trying to win in Iowa.

Perhaps this was Romney’s plan all along or perhaps Gingrich’s sudden momentum caused this shift in strategy. Gingrich had leads over Romney of at least 24 points in all three polls of the primary that came out of Florida this week and polls out of South Carolina are also showing him with a comfortable lead over Romney.

Cain Suspends Campaign

Cain announced this week that he would be suspending his campaign. This doesn’t mean his campaign is over but he is basically out of the running. His poll numbers have plummeted and if you can’t tell, I am tired of writing and reading about him. Goodbye Mr. Cain!

Obama Starts Campaigning

If you watched any satellite television this week, you may have seen President Obama’s first campaign ads. The two ads urge voters to mobilize for his campaign and they can be seen here and here.

His campaign also released a video online, attacking Mitt Romney for what they see as a history of flip-flopping. Watch it here.