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
FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 2013
ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTH YEAR, ISSUE 81
WWW.DUKECHRONICLE.COM
Loop to replace Dillo in West Union shuffle
Duke rallies in second half to beat Georgia Tech
by Jack Mercola THE CHRONICLE
The competition has been settled for limited food vendor space on West Campus. The Loop Pizza Grill was chosen from a group of competing vendors to take over the space now occupied by Armadillo Grill when the West Union
Building—one of the main campus dining hubs—closes for major renovations in July. Armadillo Grill will leave campus, the Loop will move there from the West Union and the remaining West Union eateries—the Great Hall, Alpine Bagels, Plate SEE FOOD ON PAGE 5
SOPHIA DURAND/THE CHRONICLE
Seth Curry scored 16 of his game-high 24 points in the second half as the Blue Devils overcame a halftime deficit to win 7357. See story on page 6.
College enrollment falls with economy by Lucy Hicks THE CHRONICLE
A higher percentage of universities in the United States will see decreased enrollment and tuition revenue in the 2013 fiscal year, according to a survey released in January by Moody’s Investors Service. Of the nearly 300 universities surveyed, nearly half reported enrollment declines for Fall 2012. One-third expected net tuition revenue growth below the 2 percent national inflation rate in the coming year. Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Christoph Guttentag does not feel, however, that Duke has experienced the conditions listed in the report. “For the purposes of this report, we are not the sort of institution that they are talking about,” Guttentag said. “However, our job is to make sure that
Duke Tennis kicks off the Spring season, Pages 6 & 7
we remain in a position where these sort of things don’t effect us.” The survey indicated that these trends are not universal but differential for higher education institutions across the nation. Smaller, tuition-dependent universities with a more regional applicant pool are more vulnerable than those with high financial and academic rankings and a broad applicant base. Jacob Vigdor, professor of public policy and economics, said the economic downturn in 2008 affected some schools more than others based on a university’s location and size. “If you break down the U.S. into regions, some areas are doing awfully,” Vigdor said. “If you are running a small private college in Michigan, the fact that the economy is really hurting is SEE ENROLLMENT ON PAGE 4
CHRONICLE FILE PHOTO
As the West Union Building renovations get underway, the Loop Pizza Grill will move to the Bryan Center, replacing Armadillo Grill.
Despite information, myth of ‘death panels’ persists by Maggie Spini THE CHRONICLE
Myths can be hard to debunk—particularly when centered on contentious issues like access to and affordability of health care. Marketing and public policy professor Peter Ubel, along with colleagues Brendan Nyhan of Dartmouth College and Jason Reifler of Georgia State University, researched how Americans continue to think about the “death panel” myth. The term was coined by Sarah Palin in 2009 to characterize a part of the Affordable Care Act that would create a group of government officials to decide who receives health care. The researchers found that some Palin supporters, when presented with corrections to the myth, were actually more likely to strengthen their belief in death panels rather than accept con-
ONTHERECORD
“We treat Time like it has real power, like it’s the reason we succeed...” —Ashley Camano in ‘Brand new, resolute you.’ See column page 11
tradictory evidence. The findings, entitled “The Hazards of Correcting Myths about Health Care Reform” will be published in the journal Medical Care in February. “The death panel myth—people have been debunking it forever,” Ubel said. “We can’t expect fact checking alone to work. We need to be very strategic in how we go after the truth.” The researchers’ experiment centered around giving groups of people a news article on health care reform. The article one group received included a correction by nonpartisan health care experts explaining that there is no evidence to support the existence of a death panel provision in the Affordable Care Act. Palin’s more politically savvy supporters were found to be more likely SEE PANEL ON PAGE 4
Class of 2017 admissions breakdown, Page 2