Oct. 10, 2012 issue of The Chronicle

Page 1

T H E I N D E P E N D E N T D A I LY AT D U K E U N I V E R S I T Y

The Chronicle

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2012

ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH YEAR, ISSUE 35

WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM

Sen. McCain Web presence may impact admissions stumps for Romney According to a study, about 25 percent of admission officers use Google or Facebook to evaluate applicants. And 35 percent of them say they discovered information that could negatively impact the student’s chances.

by Elise Zhang THE CHRONICLE

Cary, N.C. — Former presidential candidate John McCain advocated veterans to support Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential campaign. The Arizona senator addressed the role of foreign policy and the military in the upcoming elections to a crowd of veterans and military families Tuesday morning. McCain, the 2008 GOP presidential nominee who lost to President Barack Obama, emphasized the importance of North Carolina, noting that it is one out of six or seven states that will determine this election. He lost the battleground state to Obama in 2008 by about 14,000 votes. “We must win North Carolina,” McCain said. “There are 800,000 veterans, family members, active duty and spouses in the state of North Carolina. That can more than make a difference in this upcoming election.” McCain, joined by Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., emphasized the need for SEE MCCAIN ON PAGE 5

CHRONICLE GRAPHIC BY THU NGUYEN AND RITA LO

Bon Appetit relies on Campus Farm produce

by Georgia Parke THE CHRONICLE

Admissions officers at universities nationwide have been tapping into the Internet to garner information on applicants, but prospective Duke applicants should not expect to be scrutinized. According to a 2012 survey by Kaplan Test Prep, 35 percent of the college admissions officers who looked at applicants on Facebook and Google—about 25 percent of all those surveyed—discovered material detrimental to an application, compared to 12 percent in 2011. But Duke undergraduate admissions officers do not put much stock in information about an applicant found online about, said Christoph Guttentag, dean of undergraduate admissions. Although Duke admissions officers are not prohibited from exploring applicants via Internet, they do not actively seek out negative information, Guttentag noted. The officers are not allowed to friend an applicant on Facebook. “We don’t prohibit the use of publicly available info,” Guttentag noted. “But we also don’t spend hours on Facebook.... We simply don’t have the time.” Of the 15 percent of admissions officers surveyed who have official guidelines concerning the use of social networking profiles, 69 percent are prohibited from visiting applicants’ pages, 17 percent are permitted to visit applicants’ sites with some guidelines or restrictions and 15 percent are permitted to visit applicants’ sites, with no restrictions. SEE ADMISSIONS ON PAGE 16

New LGBT Center given more space

by Raisa Chowdhury

SOPHIA PALENBERG/THE CHRONICLE

Bon Appetit Management Company tries to include local produce in its Marketplace and Great Hall options, including food from the Duke Campus Farm.

THE CHRONICLE

from Staff Reports

Bon Appetit is keeping its student food options close to home. Providing food in the Marketplace and Great Hall, Bon Appetit Management Company attempts to use local and sustainable produce in on-campus dining hall food. Some of that food comes from the Duke Campus Farm, which is located on a 12-acre plot near the Duke Forest and is operated by Duke students and alumni. The Duke Campus Farm, founded in early spring 2011, has an agreement with Duke Dining that everything that is grown is provided to the Marketplace on East Campus and Great Hall on West Campus, Sloss said. “We meet at the beginning of every

THE CHRONICLE

Botox can solve bladder problems, Page 2

SEE FOOD ON PAGE 6

The long battle to provide more space for the new Center for LGBT Life ended Tuesday night, as administrators approved the center’s expansion. The new center, which will be located in the space currently occupied by University Center Activities and Events in the Bryan Center, will expand from 3,275 sq.-ft. to 3,388 sq.-ft. The additional 113 sq.-ft.—taken from space previously allocated to the Office of Student Affairs—will go toward creating an office for an assistant director, said Blue Devils United President Denzell Faison, a junior. The new blueprint proposal also includes the addition of a discreet entrance, gender-neutral bathrooms on

ONTHERECORD

“First, how much are we supposed to give? Second, has Israel taken American support for granted?” —Michael Shammas in No, I love Israel more! See column page 14

the second floor of the Bryan Center and retractable walls that will expand available programming space by 800 sq.-ft. The new expansion follows a Duke Student Government proposal supporting the center’s demands and discussions between students and Vice President for Student Affairs Larry Moneta. LGBT alumni also pushed for more space by writing letters of concern to Moneta. “The wide range of support from our LGBT alum community, DSG and the LGBT task force brought the administration back to the table to reconsider the plans,” Faison said. Moving forward, BDU will work to SEE LGBT ON PAGE 16

Journalist Coll on Exxon Mobil, Page 2


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