STAFF EDITORIAL | CONSIDER SOME CHANGES | SEE FORUM, PAGE 4
STUDENT LIFE
THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER OF WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS SINCE 1878 VOLUME 129, NO. 37
WWW.STUDLIFE.COM
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 2007
WU accepts bid for Vice Presidential debate
Medical school Internet project helps reduce risk of cancer
v Wash. U. chosen as debate site for fifth time BY PERRY STEIN
BY GREGG RE
CONTRIBUTING REPORTER
CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Once again, the University is filled with excitement after the announcement that Washington University will host a presidential debate for an unprecedented five consecutive times. The Commission on Presidential Debates announced that the University will host the vice presidential debate on Oct. 2, 2008. “It is a privilege to play an important role in the American electoral process and to be chosen from among 19 applicants to be one of the hosts,” said Chancellor Mark Wrighton at a press conference announcing the debate. The University of Mississippi at Oxford, Belmont University in Nashville and Hofstra University in New York were chosen to host the three presidential debates. According to an Associated Press report, Washington University was offered the debate after Washington State University declined the offer to host the vicepresidential debate. “We had an offer to host the vice presidential debate,” said Vice President of Equity and Diversity Michael Tate at Washington State. “But we decided, with the focus we had right from the beginning of getting one of the three presidential debates, that
THE “GOLD STANDARD” History of Debates Washington University has hosted three presidential debates and has been selected in five consecutive election cycles, leading Commission on Presidential Debate executive director Janet Brown to name the University the “gold standard” for debate sites. In 1992, the University was chosen as an alternate site and received the debate on one week’s notice. The debate on Oct. 11 was the first nationally televised three-person presidential debate, between President George H. W. Bush, thengovernor Bill Clinton and independent candidate Ross Perot. In 1996 the University was selected as a debate site; however, then-President Bill Clinton pulled out of the debate because of a disagreement about which candidates would be included in the event. In 2000, the third presidential debate between Vice President Al Gore and then-Governor George Bush was held at the University. On Oct. 17 the two candidates discussed questions posed by undecided voters in a town-hall style. In 2004, the third debate at Wash. U. featured President George W. Bush and Senator John Kerry. Like the 2000 debate, the Oct. 8 event was held in a town-hall style. —Sam Guzik
SCOTT BRESSLER | STUDENT LIFE
Chancellor Wrighton, flanked by Jennifer Sisto, Speaker of CS40, and Neil Patel, Student Union President, announces that the University will host the 2008 Vice Presidential Debate. Wash. U. has hosted three presidential debates and has been selected in five consecutive election cycles. we were just not in the position to accept the vice presidential debate.” According to Steve Givens, executive director of university communications, the University is in the preliminary stages of
preparations and has started to create a steering committee that will oversee the planning of the debate. Givens, who served as the committees chair the last two debates, said the committee is
Fire breaks out in medical school science building BY PUNEET KOLLIPARA SENIOR STAFF REPORTER A fire broke out on Monday morning in a lab on the School of Medicine’s campus, prompting an evacuation of the building and causing minor structural damage. No one was injured. According to John Ursch, director of protective services at the School of Medicine, the fire started at approximately 8:53 a.m. in room 361 of the McDon-
nell Science Building when a contract welder’s acetylene tank fell over and ignited, engulfing the room in flames. The worker began fighting the fire with a dry chemical fire extinguisher but soon evacuated and pulled the fire alarm. A protective services dispatcher called 911, and protective services used fire extinguishers to control the flames until help could arrive.
See FIRE, page 2
Hindi minor to be offered next fall BY DAVID SONG NEWS EDITOR Students taking Hindi will be able to declare it as a minor beginning next fall. The Arts & Sciences Curriculum Committee approved the Hindi minor last Monday. For Mohammad Warsi, lecturer in South Asian languages, who initiated the conception of the Hindi minor, the approval marks an expansion of the study of foreign language and literature at Washington University. Currently, the University offers 100- and 200-level courses in Hindi, but will offer 300-level courses in advanced Hindi along
Once upon a time... Evil queens, princes, princesses. Return to a fantasy land of Disney princesses in a new movie combining both animated and live action cinema. Cadenza, Page 8
with the minor next semester. The minor will be comprised of 18 credits, twelve of which will come from language courses. “The rest [of the credits] would be from courses in politics, religion, music—courses taught in the history department, the international area studies department,” explained Warsi. The inspiration for creating a minor at the University stemmed from Warsi’s previous work at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and the University of California at Berkeley. According to Warsi, there has been a growing demand among
See HINDI, page 3
comprised of faculty that represent different aspects of the University and student representatives. “We try to keep the students
See VP DEBATE, page 3
A new online tool developed by the Washington University School of Medicine is now helping users identify and reduce their disease risk. Professor Graham Colditz of the Siteman Cancer Center at the School of Medicine developed the site at the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention. Colditz moved to the University in 2006, and the tool has continued to develop under his direction. A team of six University staff and researchers maintain the site. In 2000, researchers called the project Your Cancer Risk because it assessed users’ risk for 12 different types of cancer, including prostate cancer, melanoma and breast cancer. Four years later, the team added additional functionality to the tool by allowing users to assess their risk of diseases, stroke, diabetes and osteoporosis. The project was renamed Your Disease Risk. Hank Dart, the project leader for Your Disease Risk, says the transition has been seamless and the project is progressing well at the University. “We’re very excited about the future of the site and the support and feedback we’ve gotten
from Siteman and the larger University,” he said. Dart explained that the team that developed the tool used established medical findings and literature to identify probable risk factors for each of the diseases on the site. Because new research is in the field always ongoing, Dart said the team will regularly update the site every 18 months. “In between the detailed reviews, we also keep a close eye on the science and make updates as needed,” said Dart. The site first asks users to identify an area of concern; options include cancer, diabetes, heart disease, osteoporosis or stroke. Then, users input basic information such as their height, weight and cholesterol level. A questionnaire follows, asking users multiple-choice questions about their diet, smoking habits and family history of disease. Once this short questionnaire is completed, users are presented with a graph indicating their risk of cancer relative to a typical individual of their age. The site also provides suggestions for how to lessen the user’s risk of the disease, and even praises positive habits that users indicated on the question-
See INTERNET PROJECT, page 2
Romney and Obama lead fundraising within University WU Donations to Political Campaigns Employees
Board of Trustees
(Total Donations: $15,437.64)
(Total Donations: $54,400.00)
Romney (13.0 %)
Tancredo (0.1 %)
Giuliani (14.5 %) Clinton (22.4 %) McCain (17.3 %)
McCain (21.7 %)
Obama (6.4 %) Dodd (4.2 %) Richardson (4.2 %) Obama (50.2 %)
Edwards (15.1 %)
Romney (30.9 %)
RACHEL NOCCIOLI | STUDENT LIFE
BY TEDDY WHITE CONTRIBUTING REPORTER Campaign donation records show that Washington University employees financially support Barack Obama while the Board of Trustees back Mitt Romney. University employees have donated more than $15,000 to presidential campaigns in the last year—almost half to the Obama campaign. Members of the Board of Trustees have contributed more than $54,000
Fantastic five-hundred Basketball coach Nancy Fahey celebrated her 500th career victory after the WUKenyon game. See more on Fahey tomorrow online in @ Press. Sports, Page 8
with Romney receiving the most from among the Republican candidates and Hillary Clinton receiving the most of the Democratic candidates. The donations from members of the University community are a part of $372,517,276 that has been donated nationwide and more than $2.7 million in the state of Missouri. Campaign donation information is publicly available from the Federal Election Commission (FEC) and is regularly released online.
INSIDE: Forum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Sports. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Cadenza . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Sudoku . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
As a result of the FEC’s efforts to make campaign financial records more easily accessible, viewing how much money a specific person has contributed to the various presidential campaigns is no more difficult than checking e-mail. Federal law provides that individuals can donate up to $2,300 per candidate per election cycle; additional money may be donated to the national committee for each political
See FUNDRAISING, page 2
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Senior News Editor / Sam Guzik / news@studlife.com
STUDENT LIFE | NEWS
STUDENT LIFE One Brookings Drive #1039 #42 Women’s Building Saint Louis, MO 63130-4899 News: (314) 935-5995 Advertising: (314) 935-6713 Fax: (314) 935-5938 e-mail: editor@studlife.com www.studlife.com Copyright 2007 Editor in Chief: Erin Fults Executive Editor: David Brody Managing Editors: Shweta Murthi, Mallory Wilder Senior News Editor: Sam Guzik Senior Forum Editor: Nathan Everly Senior Cadenza Editor: Brian Stitt Senior Scene Editor: Felicia Baskin Senior Sports Editor: Trisha Wolf Senior Photo Editor: David Hartstein Senior Graphics Editor: Rachel Harris News Editors: Josh Hantz, David Song, Andrea Winter Forum Editors: Tess Croner, Jill Strominger, Christian Sherden, Dennis Sweeney Cadenza Editors: Elizabeth Ochoa, David Kaminsky, Cecilia Razak, Michelle Stein Scene Editors: Lana Goldsmith, Indu Chandrasekhar Sports Editors: Andrei Berman, Unaiz Kabani, Allie Wieczorek Photo Editors: Lucy Moore, Lionel Sobehart, Jenny Shao Online Editor: Scott Bressler Design Chief: Anna Dinndorf Copy Chiefs: Willie Mendelson, Indu Chandrasekhar Copy Editors: Elyse Kallen, Jeff Lesser, Stephanie Spera Designers: Jamie Reed, Kate Ehrlich, Kim Yeh, Dennis Sweeney, Susan Hall, Liz Klein, Zoe Scharf, Niki Dankner, Brittany Meyer, Alyssa Anzalone-Newman, Sophia Agapova, Evan Freedman, Jay Gross General Manager: Andrew O’Dell Advertising Manager: Sara Judd Copyright 2007 Washington University Student Media, Inc. (WUSMI). Student Life is the financially and editorially independent, student-run newspaper serving the Washington University community. First copy of each publication is free; all additional copies are 50 cents. Subscriptions may be purchased for $80.00 by calling (314) 935-6713. Student Life is a publication of WUSMI and does not necessarily represent, in whole or in part, the views of the Washington University administration, faculty or students. All Student Life articles, photos and graphics are the property of WUSMI and may not be reproduced or published without the express written consent of the General Manager. Pictures and graphics printed in Student Life are available for purchase; e-mail editor@studlife.com for more information. Student Life reserves the right to edit all submissions for style, grammar, length and accuracy. The intent of submissions will not be altered. Student Life reserves the right not to publish all submissions. If you’d like to place an ad, please contact the Advertising Department at (314) 935-6713. If you wish to report an error or request a clarification, e-mail editor@studlife.com.
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
Washingtong University prepares for emergency situations
INTERNET PROJECT v FROM PAGE 1
BY JOHN SCOTT CONTRIBUTING REPORTER The Washington University Environmental Health and Safety Department is responsible for making sure that the University makes every effort to avoid an emergency, or, if an emergency does occur, that the University is prepared to deal with it. Mark Bagby, the University disaster coordinator, said that the department has several procedures regarding emergency situations that could occur at the University. In order to communicate the procedures to students, the department utilizes postings, on-campus publications, the Internet and the Public Affairs Office. Bagby is also working with each school in the University to review emergency plans and make sure they are able to communicate them to students. Safety in the labs is also addressed. According to Bruce Backus, assistant vice chancellor of Environmental Health and Safety, the labs on campus also require attention to be safe. “There are a number of laboratory safety and clinical safety procedures and guidelines for the lab occupants,” said Backus. “Specifically, for the labs we do have an inspection process, so we get out and inspect those areas anywhere from two to up
to six times per year depending on the materials that are out there.” The Disaster Preparedness Planning Group is meeting to review plans and procedures on a regular basis, according to Backus. Its current focus has been to develop a strategic plan to improve the campus’s overall disaster preparedness. Bagby said that there are many things that students can do to make sure these plans work, especially with fi re safety. “In regards to what can students do and what they should be doing, one, try to keep the amount of clutter down to a minimum, not blocking doorways, exit stairs, things along those lines,” he said. “We’ve got multiple policies out there [regarding] no use of candles, incense [or] cooking in the dorms.” Bagby added that planning safety for a university campus is different than other situations because people live on the campus at all times. According to Bagby, the University relies heavily on the campus smoke and fi re alarm systems and the Washington University Police Department (WUPD) foot patrols to make sure the campus is safe, especially at night. “It really just comes down to all the individuals on campus being aware of things like this
and doing their duty of when they see that, call the campus police so they can get the fi re department there [and] get out of the building to their assembly point,” said Bagby. One difficulty faced by the University is that it is spread out between six different locations and falls into five jurisdictions. According to Bagby, this results in differences in the code that must be considered. “We try to keep it as consistent as possible. We just look at the different functional areas. [The North Campus] is all offices and administrative, so it’s a little bit different than when we look at the dorms. At the dorms, we have fi re drills once a semester instead of once a year like we would in an office building,” said Bagby. Each building has a designated assembly area, which, according to Backus will soon be more obvious. “[We are] looking at standardized signage for buildings to help more clearly identify where those assembly points are,” said Backus. According to Bagby, the University has many resources at its disposal in order to deal with various types of emergencies on each campus. The Danforth Campus is served by WUPD and the facilities staff and Emergency Support Team are capable of responding.
The Medical Campus utilizes protective services, which is similar to WUPD. The Environmental Health and Safety Department provides assistance in cases that involve chemical spills and radiological or biological emergencies. In general, students said that they felt confident that the University can respond to emergencies. However, freshman Nicole Gong expressed concern about not feeling as safe in some areas of the campus. “People [coming from the Medical School] make a point to go to the Skinker metro stop rather than Big Bend because Big Bend is not well lit,” said Gong. “I feel safer walking on campus.” A committee on campus is responsible for examining areas to make sure the campus is well lit and to reduce personal safety risks. Backus said that emergency preparedness takes cooperation between several departments on campus. “There’s a whole team, actually, that responds,” he said. “It ranges from Residential Life, human resources, public affairs, police, Protective Services, Environmental Health and Safety, health services, information systems and transportation. We actually have a team that’s designated to help come and respond.”
naire. Though the tool is especially useful for older individuals who are more at risk for diabetes, stroke and disease, Your Disease Risk also allows young adults to assess their risk factors for potential complications. The site also offers advice for how to remain healthy, a calendar of events and health classes available to the community and long-term programs for quitting smoking and eating right. “Leading a healthy lifestyle as a young adult and keeping up those habits through the years can have big health payoffs,” said Dart. Dart added that regardless of a person’s age, regular exercise, protection from the sun and a diet rich in fruits, vegetables and grains are easy and effective ways to reduce the risk of developing a disease. He also urged young people and adults to avoid smoking and to seek regular health screenings. Dart mentioned that the team is currently working on another version of the site aimed specifically at young adults. The current version of Your Disease Risk is also continuing to develop. “We’re looking to provide more online tools to better help people take the next step and actually make healthy changes to their lives,” he said. The questionnaire is now available online at www.yourdiseaserisk.wustl.edu.
aged pneumatic line and water damage to floors, walls and the ceiling. The third floor of the building currently has a heat-triggered sprinkler system. Ursch said that at the time of the incident, many ceiling tiles were not installed, and as a result, the opening in the ceiling prevented a buildup of heat sufficient enough to trigger the sprinkler heads. “Had the ceiling tiles been in place it may very well have set the sprinklers off, but it also may have caused a much bigger fire, because the ceiling tiles would have also ignited and the fire would have started to spread much quicker,” said Ursch. Interface Construction Company (ICC), a general contractor, has been working on the McDonnell third floor renovation. ICC Project Manager Carl Turek said that the welder who was working in the lab room and who
took initial safety measures to fight the fire was a mechanical subcontractor installing piping in the room. According to Turek, workers with the company receive extensive safety training, including regular meetings to cover important safety topics. Additionally, at the start of each project, the company holds a safety orientation meeting with all workers to review safety measures and to distribute important phone numbers in the event of an emergency. “Everybody involved with the project gets the same information and knows ground rules before they begin working,” said Turek. Turek said that the company held a debriefing Tuesday to discuss the incident, and he said that the safety measures that were in place worked properly. “The fire marshal had compliments for the way the con-
tractor and Wash. U. reacted to the event,” said Turek. “I can’t say there was a good thing about a fire, but what happened yesterday proved that the system in place worked to a ‘T’.” Ursch said that the situation could have been worse, but thanks to the actions by the worker, the protective service officials’ response and the quick arrival and large presence of the fire department, the fire’s effects were minimal, and the fire probably looked worse than it actually was. “When you put it all together, we were probably very lucky in that regard,” said Ursch. “All and all, despite the smoke and despite the consternation, it was still a relatively minor fire.” “A lot of factors have to be in place for [the fire] to have ended up as good as it did,” said Turek. “Everyone involved…worked together to get it contained and brought under control.”
FIRE v FROM PAGE 1 According to Kim Bacon, public information officer for the St. Louis Fire Department (SLFD), a 911 call was received a few minutes after 9 a.m. reporting the fire. The fire was confined solely to the lab room. Firefighters with SLFD arrived on the scene and extinguished the fire by 9:10 a.m., said Bacon. “Visually inspecting it, the room was well scorched,” said Ursch. “In terms of the bigger picture…the damage was minimal.” According to Joni Westerhouse, executive director for medical communications, McDonnell 361 is currently an
unoccupied laboratory. The building’s third floor has been undergoing renovations and, according to Ursch, the affected room will house a new pharamacology lab. The building, located at 4566 Scott Ave., and the surrounding area were evacuated for safety purposes. Because the floor was under renovation, the lab room where the fire occurred was essentially barren and the damage was mostly structural. According to an e-mail sent out by Bruce Backus, assistant vice chancellor for environmental health and safety, damages included a burnt cart, a dam-
FUNDRAISING v FROM PAGE 1 party—for example, the Democratic National Committee or the Republican National Committee. Student Life made use of data made available directly from the FEC and aggregated data from the New York Times Web site. The FEC data showed 22 faculty members making donations since the official start of the election cycle earlier this year. There were also 22 donors recorded amongst the 55 members of the board of trustees. University employees have contributed nearly $8,000 to Obama’s campaign. While this amount seems insignificant, due to strict campaign finance laws that limit individual donations, financial support for Obama is by far the
strongest amongst the candidates. The biggest fundraiser after Obama is John McCain, who has received around $3,500. “I believe Barack Obama has the character, intelligence, judgment and leadership skills to move this country in a positive direction again after the foreign and domestic disasters of the current administration, and to make our country once again respected throughout the world,” said Claude Bernard, a professor of physics who is among the largest contributors to the Obama campaign. Nationally, Obama has the second highest level of fundraising, raising $79.4 million. He trails Clinton by almost $10 million.
In terms of campaign donations, however, Board of Trustees members are significantly less fond of Obama. According to the records, the Board has donated the least to Obama, $3,500, but has contributed almost $17,000 to Romney. Even so, trustees donate to Democrats and Republicans alike. President and co-Vice President of the Board of Trustees were both among the contributors to the Mitt Romney campaign, however the declined to comment on their reasons for supporting the Massachusetts governor. Nationally, Romney has raised the most of any Republican candidate, weighing in at $61.6 million.
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Senior News Editor / Sam Guzik / news@studlife.com
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
HINDI v FROM PAGE 1 students for the minor because of India’s recent increase in economic activity, which is comparable to the growing international interest in China. “Recently it has been seen that there are growing business and technology in India,” he said. “There are people eager to learn the language and go there not only for education and research, but also for business purposes. It is one of the major factors in the demand for the language.” The students who study Hindu come from a variety of academic backgrounds. “Some of them are in the business school, are engineers, in the social sciences, in history and international area studies. So there really is a growing interest in these courses we have. It’s a mixed set of students,” said Warsi. Students taking Hindi will also learn Urdu. “In most universities Hindi and Urdu are taught together. Basically, the grammar and the structure are
the same. As you go higher and higher toward Hindi, you are going to become more proficient in Urdu,” said Warsi. Beata Grant, professor and general administrator in Arts & Sciences, stated that in past years students often had difficulty Mohammad Warsi finding opportunities to study Hindi. “Hindi was offered several times through University College, but it was sporadic,” said Grant. “It wasn’t every year and not connected to the University. Students had been asking for Hindi for years, and we’ve had mixed results with having people to teach. Finally, we’ve gotten Dr. Warsi since 2006 and we’re hoping to build up from there.” Neehar Garg, a sophomore and prospective Hindi minor, said that his older sister, class of 2006, took Hindi, but had to create her own minor—Hindi lan-
guage and culture studies. Now, however, Garg is able to take courses in Hindi and graduate with a standardized minor. “For me, it shows that they’ve been speaking about expansion of the program, and this seems like a clear demonstration of it,” he said. “[Hindi] is a language spoken by an enormous number of people, and U.S. trade with India has been getting bigger and bigger. It’s a great idea for the University.” While there are no immediate plans to initiate a major in Hindi, Grant said the minor will serve as a starting point for the creation of a major. “As soon as we have enough variety of courses, then certainly,” said Grant. “But for all of our languages in this department, there is that literature component. We don’t have that; we have history now, but we don’t really have someone who does culture and literature courses. I have great hopes for it.”
VP DEBATE v FROM PAGE 1 involved by having their representatives involved,” he said. Givens said he anticipates the planning to run smoothly because many of the steering committee members have worked on the committee for previous debates. “The great thing about this is that we have a great number of people here that have been through this numerous times. That doesn’t mean it’s not different, but we have been through this enough that we know what we have to do and if there are changes that we have to do, it is easier for us to adapt to changes,” he said. The steering committee, according to Givens, can be considered partially responsible for the Commission on Public Debates (CPD) choosing the University for an unprecedented five consecutive times. “We have a strong team which is certainly why the commission chose us again. They know our team,” said Givens. In order to host these debates, the University paid a $1.35 million fee up front to the CPD, who then uses this money for the operating costs of the actual debate. Based on past experiences, the University anticipates spending an additional $500,000 on miscellaneous expenses such as
facilities upkeep and amenities. According to Givens, the University hopes to do the same as in past debates and partially raise these funds through donations by local corporations. “We always felt like it’s a worthwhile investment in bringing this to the University. We think it’s a tremendous opportunity for our students to see an event of historic significance right here on campus,” he said. Although this is a vice presidential debate, Professor of Political Science Randall Calvert said that because of the tremendous amount of power that Vice President Dick Cheney has had during his two terms, the debate will likely garner more public attention than usual. “Cheney has played an unprecedented role in this administration so I would assume people are going to take an interest in the vice presidential role as a result of that,” said Calvert. “People have a whole new idea of what a vice presidential role will and can do. I think the questions that they will ask the vice president will reflect that.” All three debates that have taken place at the University—and the vice presidential debate that will take place next year—have occurred in the Field House. Senior Ian Pearson was on
campus for the 2004 presidential debates and said that it is an opportunity that students should take advantage of. “Don’t watch it on TV, [but] actually go and live it,” said Pearson. “It was probably the most politically active I’ve seen people on campus.” Underclassmen are also looking forward to the prospect of being part of such a highly publicized event. “It will definitely raise my awareness about the presidential election and the issues that the candidates are handling,” said freshman Jerry Porter. Despite the anticipation, only three hundred students will be able to attend the debates. Similar to the previous debates, tickets will be distributed through a lottery system for which students register online. Even though Washington University was not chosen for a presidential debate, Givens said the University is excited to host the vice presidential debate. “The fact that it was a vicepresidential event and not a presidential debate did not dampen our excitement at all,” said Givens. “At the end of the day it’s not just the debate that happens on campus; it’s all the excitement that leads up to it.” —With additional reporting by Sam Guzik
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STUDENT LIFE | FORUM
FORUM
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
Our daily Forum editors: Monday: Jillian Strominger Wednesday: Christian Sherden Friday: Tess Croner jlstromi@artsci.wustl.edu ctsherde@artsci.wustl.edu tacroner@wustl.edu To ensure that we have time to fully evaluate your submissions, guest columns should be e-mailed to the next issue’s editor or forwarded to forum@studlife.com by no later than 5 p.m. two days before publication. Late pieces will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis. We welcome your submissions and thank you for your consideration.
STAFF EDITORIAL
Focus pressure on holding down college costs
Consider some changes L
ast week, we celebrated the Thanksgiving holiday by mentioning what we were thankful for. Now that classes are back in full swing, we believe that an appropriate continuation of last week’s staff editorial would be for members of the Student Life editorial board to mention what could be improved at Washington University. Admittedly, some of our suggestions are focused on very minor problems. Some of them, however, touch upon very serious issues that this campus needs to address. David Brody Executive Editor
1. Tuition that rises every year at a rate significantly higher than inflation, with little justification. 2. A lack of diversity, especially socioeconomic diversity, amongst the University community. 3. An apathetic student body
that won’t take action until someone holds a gun to their GPA. Trisha Wolf Senior Sports Editor 1. The lack of school spirit. The fact that the Athletic Department could not find enough students to fill a free bus going to volleyball nationals was really telling. 2. The uneven distribution of tampons in women’s restrooms on campus. While all have pads, only some have tampons. 3. The fact that classes start seven minutes after their scheduled time. They should end seven minutes early to teach promptness. Jill Strominger Forum Editor 1. The strict printing policy in the Arts & Sciences computer lab. 2. The parking situation on campus.
3. The administration’s lack of responsiveness to student and faculty concerns. At times, Brookings Hall really does seem like an ivory tower that locks the administration away from the school. Sam Guzik Senior News Editor 1. Being politically active and aware on campus should not distinguish students, it should be the norm. 2. Lighting in the sophomore suites; the built-in lighting leaves most of the room dark. 3. Needing to fly in order to get home. The midwest isn’t perfect. Altin Sila Senior Staff Columnist 1. Lazy professors. 2. My enormous amount of debt. 3. Having to go to class on the Monday and Tuesday before Thanksgiving break.
Shweta Murthi Managing Editor 1. The high crime rate, especially near off-campus apartments. 2. The low level of school pride at Wash. U. 3. The lack of on-campus eateries that are open at night.
T
Brian Stitt Senior Cadenza Editor 1. Midnight bicycle rides on Forest Park Parkway without a posted route with uninformed volunteers who rudely give the wrong directions as to how I should drive around it. 2. Student’s general ignorance of, and apathy toward, the few cool things that this city does offer. 3. No on-campus bar; happy hour is great, and I can’t wait for the Battle of the Bands but that is not enough over-21-on-campus-intoxication for me.
SAM WASHBURN | EDITORIAL CARTOON
“We need to take these lyrics to heart, though, and redouble our efforts to convince the Wash. U. administration to make attending school here more affordable. ”
You know you want me
S
ometimes it is hard, even for a good-looking stud such as myself, to meet a suitable woman. I’ll go to parties and fi nd that my well-timed witticisms land on less than cultured ears. Or sometimes, girls with their heads buried in books at the library want nothing to do with me. I even tried eharmony.com, but they removed me from their server for supposed “lewd mis- Christian conduct,” whatever that means. So I’ve decided to abuse my position of Forum Editor (you hear that ladies? That’s right, editor. That means power. That’s sexy, right?) to place an extended personal ad that is sure to make it to the presses. I’ll start with me. Currently, I am unemployed, which allows me enough free time to lavish the right woman with as much (or more) attention as she could possibly want. As to my future plans, I have none. You could say that I am a dead beat with nothing to look forward to, but I like to think
positively: My life is wide open to possibilities and whatever may come my way. I assume that at this point, most of you young women are dying for a physical description. On a good day, I am six feet tall, 185 pounds, rippling with muscles, sporting 17-inch biceps. On a bad day, I am 5’ 9’’, 166 pounds and skinny like Screech from Saved By the Sherden Bell (I have a lot of bad days). You know what? All you need to do is look at my picture that accompanies this article. Even though it was taken almost four years ago before I even started college, it is dead on. So please try to keep it together ladies. I enjoy long walks (mostly because I don’t have a car…so I’m saving the environment) to the comic book store, where we can have long discussions about who would win in an unprecedented Marvel/DC crossover: Superman or the Silver Surfer. (This is actually a trick question; they are both pretty much invincible, so it’s a
draw). As for hobbies, I would like to say that I am the best Super Smash Bros. player in my entire fraternity (that’s right, it’s a challenge to whoever dares confront me). Impressed yet? I think it is important for two people to have similar backgrounds. Religiously, I am a militant, spiritual atheist. I am tolerant of all religions, though they are all a sin in my eyes, and secretly I will think less of you for your beliefs. Politically, I believe in the status quo because if it ain’t broke, don’t fi x it, right? Ethically, I’m a ‘do whatever feels good’ kind of guy. If you want to sit on the couch in bright red hot pants drinking bourbon and watching whatever comes on the CW while scratching yourself, that’s great. That’s what I do too. As far as what I am looking for in a potential partner, I don’t care too much about looks. Any old gal will do. However, I have two stipulations: no bayonet wounds or napalm burns. There’s just too much bad history involved there. I do like a girl who is willing to color coordinate all her outfits
according to what I am wearing though. I think it’s cute to know that two people are a couple based solely on their matching purple and orange pantaloons. But what I really need is a woman who is independent, or at least independent enough so that she will pay for most (if not all) dates. Strong women who pay for things are sexy (especially when your bank account has approximately negative thirty dollars). I want a woman who will defend me to the end, especially when I am wrong. If I am arguing with a police officer over what is and is not indecent exposure, I want my girl right there spraying said officer in the face with her concealed can of mace. I don’t think that this is too much to ask for. If you are intrigued and willing (and I know you are) you know where to find me. I’ll be at the local peep show, begging the bartender to extend my tab just a little further. Christian is a senior in Arts & Sciences and a Forum editor. He can be reached via e-mail at forum@studlife.com.
other students who struggle ake this, haters. fi nancially even after receivTh-th-that that don’t ing Wash. U. scholarships kill me, can only and those who depend on make me stronger. outside scholarships with I need you to hurry up now fi xed awards in order to cause I can’t wait much attend Wash. U. Rolling the longer.” technology fee into room Man, that Kanye West can and board is a good start, write a catchy song. We need but it doesn’t completely to take these lyrics to heart, though, and redouble our ef- solve the fi nancial problems that face many students. forts to convince the Wash. Since it always seems U. administration to make like we’re surrounded by attending school here more affordable. There are several students who can easily afford their education, it’s ways the administration easy to forget that there are has failed to make Wash. lots of prospective students U. more fi nancially acceswho couldn’t attend Wash. sible to the vast majority of U. because they couldn’t students, but as students we afford it even with their have protested some of the fi nancial aid packages. I had smaller price increases in a friend in high school who the hope that we could have was extremely interested in at least some influence over attending either Wash. U. the cost of our education. or Stanford. He was admitAt the beginning of the ted to both schools, school year, we but even after long protested a policy phone conversathat forced stutions with fi nancial dents to purchase aid officers at both Internet access (an schools, he could academic necesnot fi nd a way to afsity) with cable (a luxury), a move by ford either of them. the administraHe was fortunate tion that sharply enough to be able to increased the cost attend Kansas UniJill Strominger versity instead. of living on campus for many stuAs an educadents. Recently, tional institution, students were sent an e-mail we should be able to clearly from Student Technology see that we are dangerously Services (STS) telling us that close to making a Washingthe Internet/cable bundling ton University education out and price increases will go of reach for some prospecinto effect next semester tive students. This should not imply that there aren’t any Wash. U. students who make sacrifices in order to attend this institution, but it does mean that some qualified students will have to look elsewhere for fi nancial reasons. And while Wash. U. certainly offers fi nancial aid packages to many students, it hasn’t taken all the steps it could to ensure that it doesn’t outprice itself for students. Reworking the policy of bundling Cable television and the Internet will obviously not solve the (this notice can be found at deeper problems associated http://sts.wustl.edu/fi les/ with ensuring affordable student_tech_costs_exeducation. But it is one step plained_07.pdf). Future toward worsening those costs are still in the process problems, and it, along with of being determined. the other tuition, food and Currently, STS plans to other fee increases, needs to have students pay a 240 dolbe treated as such. It’s part lar technology fee that covof an institutional mindset ers both cable and Internet that tacking on fees doesn’t and will eliminate the techmatter that much. For this nology fee beginning in the reason, despite essentially fall of 2008. This will likely losing the bundling battle, be accompanied by a price we need to keep applying increase in residential houspressure to keep costs down ing rates, but there is no as Wash. U. evaluates how specific information yet on technology should influence how eliminating the techhousing fees and as it implenology fee will affect them. ments future fee increases. STS says that information If we continue to remind will be announced somethe administration how imtime after winter break. We portant a seemingly small will have to evaluate the fee increase can be towards price increase when it is aninfluencing the larger nounced, but we should confi nancial picture of attendtinue to apply pressure to ing Wash. U., we can make a the University, even though difference. the original protest against Listen to us Wash. U., we the extra fees seems to have “need ya right now. Don’t act been mostly unsuccessful. like [we] neva told ya.” The decision to roll the technology fee into housing Jill is a junior in Arts & costs provides some help Sciences and a Forum editor. to students who pay their She can be reached via eroom and board with scholmail at forum@studlife.com. arships, but it fails to help
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Senior Sports Editor / Trisha Wolf / sports@studlife.com
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
STUDENT LIFE | SPORTS
5
SPORTS
WOMEN’S BASKETBALL
Bears take thrillers v Fahey Wins 500th and 501st of career BY JOHANN QUA HIANSEN SPORTS REPORTER The seventh annual McWilliams Classic ended with a blast as no. 9 Washington University (4-1) beat Carleton College for the title, while Head Coach Nancy Fahey celebrated over 500 career wins. It was a rocky road to the championship as the Bears fought off the Kenyon College Ladies (2-3) in two overtimes on Saturday night and nearly went into overtime again as the Carleton College Knights (1-1) tied the game at 46 with 7:06 left in the second half. In both games, the Bears had double digit leads before their opponents fought back to tie the game in the second period. “We need to develop a killer instinct,” said junior guard Jill Brandt. “We need to learn to put things away.”
WU 78 w KENYON 75 With only 21 seconds left and two points behind, Kenyon fouled Wash. U. four times to prevent the Bears from killing time. The Ladies were able to force the game into overtime with a layup that tied the game at 61 points. The Bears put more points on the board in the first overtime, and the Ladies answered back with an equal amount. With only a few seconds left in the first overtime and the score tied at 65, junior guard Halsey Ward, who had moments before fell into the bleachers hard to save the ball, had an opportunity for a three. Her shot hit the rim as the buzzer sounded to end the overtime. Junior forward Jaimie McFarlin won the tip-off in the second overtime and buried a jumper. Coming out of a timeout with only a second left on the shot
clock, McFarlin fought off a defender and nailed the first three pointer of her career. The Ladies responded to tie up the game. A jumper from inside the paint by sophomore forward Zoë Unruh was the game winning shot. “I don’t even think about it,” said Unruh. “I just have to take it.” With the score at 76-75, Ward was fouled. She made both of her free throw shots for added insurance to put the score at 78-75. “I missed the shot in the first overtime so I had to make it,” said Ward. Kenyon was not out of it yet and nearly made a three pointer that hit the rim. Unruh grabbed the rebound and held onto the ball for the win. After the game, the team presented Fahey with a bouquet of red flowers wrapped in green paper. “She’s going to go down in history,” said Brandt. “She has a great legacy at Wash. U.” With 501 wins and only 86 losses, Fahey has the fourth highest winning percentage in NCAA women’s basketball history in all divisions. Fahey is only the ninth coach in Division III history to achieve the 500th victory milestone. “This really is just a statement to the many players that have played over the last 22 years,” said Fahey. “It’s more my thank you to them.”
WU 58 w CARLETON 51 It was a tooth and nail fight throughout with the first half ending 23-19 in favor of the Red and Green after sophomore guard Laura Lane-Steele hit a three pointer with three seconds left. For several minutes in the second stanza, the only Bear
DAVID HARTSTEIN | STUDENT LIFE
Coach Nancy Fahey waves to the crowd as her team cheers her 500th career victory. For more on Coach Fahey, see tomorrow’s edition of @Press online at www.studlife.com.
Around the WU: THIS WEEK IN SPORTS MEN’S BASKETBALL Lopata Classic at the Fieldhouse
FRIDAY 6 PM Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges vs. Babson College 8 PM Earlham College vs. Washington University
SATURDAY 6 PM Consolation Game 8 PM Championship Game
Recent Top Performers DAVID HARTSTEIN | STUDENT LIFE
Junior Jaimie McFarlin battles for a jump ball call Saturday afternoon in the Bears’ first round game against Kenyon College in the seventh annual McWilliams Classic. The Bears won the game in the second overtime and went on to defeat Carleton College on Sunday to win the tournament. points came from junior guard Shanna-Lei Dacanay, who drilled a three pointer, drew a foul and nailed the free throw. Minutes later, Dacanay added another three points. “I was glad I finally contributed offensively,” said Dacanay, still in the process of coming back from an ACL tear last season. “It came when we needed it.” But several Bears contributed points and intense defense in the team effort. “My teammates are all awesome, day in and day out,” said freshman forward Kelsey Robb. McFarlin pitched in the game winning point with a free throw. A combination of three points from McFarlin, a lay-up by Unruh and two free throw shots at the end by Ward sealed the deal with Wash. U. prevailing 58-51. Unruh and McFarlin were named to the Seventh Annual McWilliams Classic All-Tournament Team with McFarlin garnering Most Valuable Player accolades. “It is an honor,” said Unruh. “I couldn’t have done it without anyone else.” Unruh and McFarlin were consistently penetrating the de-
fense and making points from the paint. “[They] made a big difference for us,” said center senior Sarah Tibesar. “I’m glad we came out on top.” The Bears will now travel to Ohio to play Denison University on Dec. 1st followed by Capital University on Dec. 2. “There’s no rest for us,” said Fahey. “Game after game, they’re going to have to come out and play.” “It’s going to bring out the best in us,” said McFarlin.
Jaimie McFarlin, Basketball
Tyler Nading, Basketball
The junior forward set a new career high, scoring 28 points against Kenyon College in the Bears’ 78-75 overtime victory Saturday. In the same game, she had 18 rebounds, recording her second double-double of the season, four blocked shots and the fi rst three-pointer of her career. In the McWilliams Classic championship match against Carleton, she recorded ten points, seven rebounds and three blocked shots, again helping to lead her team to a 58-51 victory. Her strong performance was rewarded as she was named MVP of the tournament and UAA Athlete of the Week.
The junior swingman led his team this weekend at the Washington U./Webster tournament. In a 66-60 loss to Augustana College, he recorded his fi rst double-double of the season with 20 points and 12 rebounds. He went on to set a career high, scoring 31 points as the Bears defeated the University of Wisconsin-Platteville 87-76 Sunday. He also tied a school record with seven steals in the same game and grabbed eight rebounds. For his efforts, he was named UAA Player of the Week.
SLAM DUNK FOR BEARS
Running club competes for the first time BY BRITTANY BERNACCHI SPORTS REPORTER For the fi rst time in Washington University’s running club history, team members participated in regional and national cross country competitions, with the club sending six runners to regionals and three runners to nationals. The team’s membership has skyrocketed over the past few years. When junior Lee Cordova fi rst joined the club in his freshmen year, team runs “practically stopped in winter, so we’ve defi nitely come a long way.” The club is relatively new and started only four years ago, but more and more members are joining because the team has a “great atmosphere for providing competition for people who might not want to do varsity sports.” Contributing to this atmosphere is the combination of events that the runners participate in, from the regional and national championships to local scavenger hunts and fun runs. According to Cordova, the team has an “interesting mix of people who are super-competitive and train to race and…people are doing it for fun and to
run with others.” Last year the team had a mismatched tights run, and everyone “wore their ugliest 1980s bright, fluorescent tights.” Although the club always makes an effort to have fun runs, it also focuses on stepping up the level of competition. “[It has a] good dynamic of fun team spirit with good work ethic, while still satisfying the people who want to be competitive,” said Cordova. The team’s entrance in the regional and nationals competitions this year reflects the new focus on the team’s increased competitiveness. What was different about entering these regional and national competitions was any one could compete. Performances at regionals did not determine whether or not a runner could participate in the national championship. “Right now, anyone can go to nationals. That’s what’s so much fun about this club,” said Cordova. Ball State University hosted the regional competition. Cordova described the atmosphere as competitive but very supportive. “[There was] a sense of competition, but when we got there
the night before, we met up with another team. We knew everyone on their team, and we were cheering each other on throughout the day. Everyone was really supportive,” he said. Although the team was disappointed with their regionals results, they faced stiff competition from Big 10 schools that could field much deeper squads. Only three runners could attend the National Intercollegiate Running Club Association’s (NIRCA) national championships at Indiana University. Though they needed five runners to actually be able to score, it was still a fun experience. 31 clubs from 15 states competed in the championships, with Oregon winning both the men’s and women’s races. What also sets this club apart from other Wash. U. sports is its connection to the St. Louis community. The team runs not only in intercollegiate races but also in local races in St. Louis. The St. Louis runs are particularly interesting because runners of all ages and from all areas compete. “Running isn’t just a sport for high school or college students,” said Cordova. “It’s really a lifelong passion.”
LIONEL SOBEHART | STUDENT LIFE
Senior Troy Ruths dunks the ball during the March 3 game vs. Whitworth. The team will have their first home game of the season Nov. 30 at the annual Lopata Classic.
The Wash. U./Webster Tournament Results #5 Augustana College 66 w #1 Wash. U. 60 #1 Wash. U. 87 w #53 University of Wisconsin-Platteville 76 Wash. U. is now 8, Augustana 4, and Platteville 44.
6
Senior Cadenza Editor / Brian Stitt / cadenza@studlife.com
STUDENT LIFE | CADENZA
CADEN Z A
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
n. a technically brilliant, sometimes improvised solo passage toward the close of a concerto, an exceptionally brilliant part of an artistic work
arts & entertainment
MUSIC REVIEW
Where are you then?
Nights Like These: ‘Sunlight At Secondhand’
‘I’m Not There’ explores Bob Dylan’s music through film
BY STEVE HARDY CADENZA REPORTER
material, of research of what I used to conceive of and write the stories. And there’s so much great stuff I could share with them, starting with the music. I made mix CDs for each one tailored to their story or character, then I gave them all the still images and collage books, and then I gave them all the fi lms…. All actors make a great use of that concrete source material, but everyone does it in their own way. We never wanted to do outright impersonations of Dylan from the outside in, but I think these materials and the conversations we had encourage the actor to work from the inside out but still have a lot of concrete references to incorporate.
BY BRADFORD YATES CADENZA REPORTER Cadenza interviews Todd Haynes, director and cowriter of “I’m Not There,” a new fi lm on Bob Dylan. Dylan was reported to have a relationship with a model, which was symbolized in the movie, and we had trouble fi guring that out, if that was Charlotte Gainsborough or who that was… Well, Edie Sedgwick was a famous model of the underground ’60s scene in New York, and yes, there’s been a lot of mythology and speculation about their relationship. They knew each other, they spent time together, and the extent of that relationship will remain a mystery, but many of Dylan’s songs from the ’65-’66 years have been interpreted as having something to do with her, and I wanted that evoked in the fi lm.
Why did you choose Christian Bale to represent two phases of Dylan, both the protest singer and the born-again Christian?
How did you work with so many actors, each evoking different aspects of the same man? With all the actors in the fi lm, I shared my own source
MCT
The real Bob Dylan
The reason I put the two characters together, two very different phases of his life, is because I found a lot of similarities in the kind of moral and ethical searching, and solution-fi nding that characterize both the civilrights period and later his Christian era. In both of these times in his life, he felt he had the answer to social issues and also his personal perspective on the world, and this became incorporated into his music and also into the kind of followings that would manifest in each era. And yet, he would reject those answers, or any way those answers get consolidated into movements or political or religious convention… but I found that [combining the characters] was a way to convey some surprising similarities. Why did Dylan withdraw from public life in the late
‘60s? He was less enigmatic, less ambivalent; he simply seemed to pull away. I think that’s a good way of describing it. I think he reached a creative point of, um, danger, to the degree that he immersed himself in the fi rst half of the ‘60s era, that reached a critical mass in ’66 with the electric period. And it’s one of the most amazing parts of his life creatively, but he was also pushing himself physically and there was a great deal of famous, um, antagonism and hostility that surrounded him which kept going until it peaked with this [motorcycle] crash, which many people think saved his life. And I think this forced a new phase of life, not necessarily ‘reflective’ but a more radical shift in his creative and personal life, and basically he just checked out of public life, and in my view of modern life, for many years there. He stayed in Woodstock, raised a family, he went to the basement with the band and went back to the roots of American music which have always been a source of nourishment for him as a creative person. And he literally looked like he was living in the past in those photos. And all the references were being taken from American folklore, and I felt that all this needed to be in the fi lm. And in many ways, Dylan continues to live in this semi-accessible way in public, it’s still on his own terms. Those people familiar with Dylan’s actual biography may be confused or frustrated by artistic license you take in mixing fact with fi ction. Obviously none of the fi lm follows the exact biographical events of
Dylan’s life in any objective or literal way. It takes the emotional through-line and makes that the narrative component of each of the stories, which is really what
Todd Haynes
MCT
all biopics do too. They blend fact with fiction all [the] time. And in most cases in this fi lm, we do it in broad daylight. You know that Dylan wasn’t a little black kid named Woodie. But that serves to make a point about what Dylan was doing at that time. I paid as much attention to his songs and his creative imagination as I did to his actual biographical data, and the fi lm tries to use only things where the two marry. What has Bob Dylan’s reaction to the fi lm been? He has not been involved in the details. Back in 2000, I sent off my concept and some DVDs of fi lms I’ve done, and I had no expectation he would say yes, he never had before, but he did. He granted life and music rights, but from that point on Dylan is being Dylan. All we know now is that he has a copy of it in his suitcase on tour. We don’t know if he’s watched it.
Relentless. Nights Like These’s second album, “Sunlight at Secondhand,” can best be described as relentlessly rocking. Though their crunch guitars and screamalong vocals will turn off non-metal listeners, fans of the genre should check out this up-and-coming band. The group delivers a fairly solid album. While rhythm driven, Nights Like These does not bring the quadruple-time frenzy typical of many metalcore bands. They may count themselves as a newer breed of rock known as Sludge. The title, and all the heavy, viscous and consciously disgusting connotations which accompany it, aptly describe this band. To get a sense of their sound, try to imagine a combination of Sabbath, The Acacia Strain and Mastodon. Though basically competent, the ensemble still has a ways to go before they can count themselves as members of this echelon. Perhaps I’m just old-fashioned, but the band has a few too many death marches on “Sunlight.” This is not to say that there are not highoctane rockers, just that the low-tempo stuff at times becomes overwhelming. They pull off the simultaneous angry and brooding sonorous assault well, yet the glimpses of melody make me want more. Unlike much of death metal, this group places some melodic riffs but is still not quite heavy enough to sate that crowd of metal
MOVIE REVIEW
Experimental approach benefits Dylan biopic BY BRADFORD YATES CADENZA REPORTER Todd Haynes has got a lot riding on this one. After seven years of toil, it has come to this. Has he done it? Has he succeeded in summing up the man and the myth that is Bob Dylan? In any complete sense, no. The mystery remains. Not that that’s a bad thing. Anyone expecting the ‘full story’ is going to be waiting for a train that just isn’t coming. And as Robert Sullivan noted in his recent New York Times Magazine cover story, this film is as much about Todd Haynes ‘the filmmaker’ as it is about Bob Dylan. In the case of “I’m Not There,” Dylan is the subject, Haynes is the artist. Rather than taking the “Walk the Line” or “Ray” approach of choosing one actor to represent ‘childhood,’ and then one star to carry on with the highs and lows of life as a unique musical genius, Haynes has chosen a fragmented, non-linear, I would say musical approach. This is a wise choice, considering the enigmatic and shape-shifting nature of his subject. In order to approach whatever the ‘essence’ of Dylan might be, Haynes
has fractured one man into many; six to be precise. And he’s given himself some rules. Strict ones. For instance, the words ‘Bob’ and ‘Dylan’ are never uttered. Each incarnation has a different moniker (the little black boy representing Dylan’s childhood has the guts to call himself Woody Guthrie), and his true voice, guitar and harmonica remain relegated to the soundtrack. All this is in the service of evocation. The film, like Dylan, operates intuitively, its poetic logic allowing for repetition, jumps in time, unanswered questions and uncalled-for answers. Anything is allowed if it rings true. And don’t expect to ‘get it’ all right away. I still don’t. Why does Haynes flash the six ‘Dylans’ still photos back to back with six gunshots ringing out on the soundtrack, as if each were a bullet from a revolver? Why does Haynes create Riddle, Mo., a town with no apparent economy save for a zoo and a Halloween store, as the site of the ‘reclusive’ period? Did Dylan really do all the things these characters are doing? Perhaps these are questions I should direct towards my dad, who had the luck of
being a college student the first time around. Outside Haynes’ grand vision of his brilliant and willfully contradictory subject, he is still dependent on the real world (i.e. actors, budgets, production schedules) in order to realize his dream. I would say he’s pulled off quite the feat, albeit not without hitches and flaws. Cate Blanchett is ideal as the drug-fueled, cynical and paradoxical ‘Dylan’ of the swinging sixties, doing his/ her best to keep the press guessing while avoiding the sorrows that threaten from the inside and out. This is the Dylan at the apogee of hype, and Blanchett performs like a true star, giving an undeniably ‘Dylanesque’ performance. Although this is a loaded statement, the person we think we know is only what has been recorded, kept and recycled from that era, something that Haynes foregrounds by employing vintage black and white film stock for these sequences. Richard Gere plays the recluse, the ‘Dylan’ we don’t know. As such, I was frustrated with his performance and yearned to get back to the more exciting highs and lows of the career as such.
But surely Haynes is making a point here: Maybe we don’t know, and wouldn’t even like, all that is Dylan. In sum, “I’m Not There” is ambitious and engaging, not nearly as frustrating or ambiguous as you would think once someone tells you it has ‘no narrative arc’ or that one of the ‘Dylans’ is black boy and one (the best one) is a woman. Its beauty and poetry qualify it as a true ‘art film,’ but I suspect anyone with a curious eye and an open ear could find much to take away from it. And for you contemporary scenesters out there, look out for fantastic cameos from David Cross and Jim James.
I'm Not There Directed by: Todd Haynes Starring: Cate Blanchett, Christian Bale, Richard Gere Playing at: The Tivoli
listeners. As is, the tracks on “Sunlight at Secondhand” are too often comprised of guitar power chords, bass and drums all playing in unison. While this plain style does give many of the songs a strong pulsing feel, it also leaves the listener wanting more. The twin guitars of Derren Saucier and Matt Qualls seem, from the instances when they do play melodically, more capable than the playing displayed on some tracks on this album. That being said, the band’s death marches are more fun on second listen. For metal, there is a sense of shape to several of the songs, which is good and helpful because I can never understand what the hell lead singer Billy Bottom is screaming. Metal listeners raised on an allheavy-all-the-time mentality should see for themselves how musical direction can rock. If you don’t like heavy metal, don’t buy “Sunlight at Secondhand.” If you’re a fan looking to branch out, give Nights Like These a spin, then give it another spin, and see if it grows on you. There are some holes in the melody, and the overall, well, Sludginess of the sound sometimes slows the group down, but they are willing to try taking typical metal music to new places. The simultaneous guitar wail over a death march on “Claw Your Way Out” is of particular note. The band has matured a great deal since their debut, “The Faithless,” and I look forward to seeing where they go next.
Nights Like These Sunlight at Secondhand Rating: ★★★✩✩ For fans of: Mastodon, From a Second Story Window Tracks to download: “Claw Your Way Out,” “Electric Winds”
Senior Cadenza Editor / Brian Stitt / cadenza@studlife.com
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
STUDENT LIFE | CADENZA
7
A conversation with the band: an informal interview with Victoria BY REBECCA KATZ CADENZA REPORTER After arranging a meeting with Victoria through guitar-player and Wash. U. psychology graduate student Chad Rogers, I was excited to see what these guys were like in person, but primarily, I was somewhat speculative as to how I would pick them out of the hustle and bustle of Whispers. Luckily, Chad informed me that he’d be “the guy with the mustache,� and I should look for him around seven. What a guy. Sure enough, the man with the ‘stache sits waiting for me at seven sharp. He begins telling me about how he became involved in music in St. Louis. As a graduate of the University of Florida but a San Diego native, he explained the difficulty of finding communities of people that rock out. “In college I was in, like, five bands,� he said, “and at one point, like, three at the same time.� When Chad got to St. Louis, he was intrigued that a city so alive with rock ‘n’ roll sixty years ago could be so deficient now. He expected more of a burgeoning rock community, but
instead, Chad met drummer David Moore through a Craig’s List advertisement and defied the norm of typecasting local music in St. Louis as dull. At this point, Chad sees David walk into Whispers. He does not, however, motion for him to come sit with us in the booth, but instead decides he will watch David wander aimlessly. Eventually, he summons David, who sits down and joins the conversation. When asked “what’s good here� musically, a typical scene-ster (who may claim to know a lot about the St. Louis music scene) might say “nobody,� according to Chad. David’s eyes bugged out a bit as he burst out with “WHAT?!� Both musicians claimed that not fully understanding or involving yourself in the local music community is a shame; pretentious scene-sters are missing out. At the party this Saturday celebrating the release of their new album “Ghosttown,� three St. Louis groups will perform along with Victoria: The Hibernauts, Jumbling Towers and Berlin Whale. Chad spoke highly of
The Hibernauts as influential to him personally, stating that they have “really, really good jams.� Jumbling Towers reminds him of David Byrne with the Talking Heads, combining with Berlin Whale to create a “decent cross section of what [they] thought was good.� In the beginning, Chad viewed St. Louis as a “ghost town� in regards to music, leaving the legacy of Chuck Berry, Ike Turner and other notable St. Louis native rockers to rot. Their album with that same title seeks to enliven that rock influence. When I asked them delicately whether they are musically pretentious and discriminatory, Chad detailed his primary devotion to punk rock and ska, citing They Might Be Giants as his all-time nerdy rock favorite. He eventually ventured into indie-rock, stating “I have so many guilty pleasures.� David immediately responded with an abrupt “I am.� He told me Chad is more open-minded that he is. In accordance with Victoria’s values, David esteems originality in music. He wants to feel in music “something that is real.�
Naturally, I was tempted to ask what about Victoria he feels is original and valuable to the musically pompous. “Victoria is filtered through our love for older rock ‘n’ roll,â€? said Chad. They experiment with influences from the Beatles to an even more primitive rock sound. “We’re stepping into our originality,â€? continued David. “We try something different‌if we get bored, then why are we doing it?â€? Their sound certainly changes, but in their minds, that is the beauty of creating music. The conversation is delightful. Although they are technically preaching to the choir (or the soloist in my case, maybe?), these guys just love music and want their listeners to live and love it too. “The coolest thing about music,â€? began Chad, “is that when you’re massively stressed, you can forget about everything going on in your life and just totally rock out.â€? You can take your thoughts and “channel them through music. Forget whatever hopes and fears you have and lose yourself in the music.â€?
COURTESY OF STEPHEN SEEBECK
Local band Victoria. From left: Chad Rogers, David Moore, Steve Andrews.
emotional connections with music, and David expressed that he feels listeners should “let a song in [their] lives‌it can be more meaningful than a best friend.â€? A connection with a song can be stronger than a verbal connection with another human being. “There are things songs relate to that no one can speak in person.â€? So will you “let a song in your life?â€? Maybe start with some tracks from “Ghosttown.â€?
“A commonality of all human beings is that we all have a connection with music,� continued David. “We can express ourselves in raw rock ‘n’ roll and hope that it strikes a chord in other people too.� They take full advantage of the lack of rules in rock with an open and liberated sound that reflects not what is formulated, but rock “is what it is� (in the words of David). We finished the Whispers date by discussing our
MUSIC REVIEW
Victoria: ‘Ghosttown’ BY REBECCA KATZ CADENZA REPORTER Educating yourself in the local music scene is always fun, especially when the bands are more than decent, the music is wildly accessible, and it is actually possible that your psychology TA is a member of said bands. You may know them as the kick-ass band that dominated Battle of the Bands last year, or the energetic trio that opened for Ben Kweller at the Gargoyle last semester, but then St. Louis group Victoria is definitely worth a listen (and actually includes a member that is a Wash. U. psychology graduate student). Victoria is a “band of twenty-somethings,� three guys claiming to be “something simple, something true.� Their new album “Ghosttown� undoubtedly reflects just that: Victoria goes
back to classic rock ‘n’ roll. Not Led Zeppelin, not Jimi Hendrix but the originals. The clear influence of rock is reflected in deep guitar riffs, drum accents and backbeats and, remarkably, blues rhythms. In the opening track, “Always Be,� Victoria fullfledgedly introduces us to the album by asking us to “come on and take a ride� with them. The rhythm is repetitive yet catchy with the lyrics that accompany it: “You’ll be free/See some things you’ve never seen.� The track establishes a relationship with the listener, as Victoria advocates an active connection between the music and the listener. On the band’s MySpace page, they write, “When you hear us, we want you to feel as free as we are when we play.� “Always Be� establishes that emotional connection with the listener, as they sing
“You are my everything/in every way/it will always be.â€? They are speaking of the music’s relationship to them as the band, and to you, the music devotee. The rock influence is undeniable in the second track, “Blue.â€? Right off the bat, the increased percussive involvement, and the Billy Preston/Chuck Berry/ Elvis Presley vocal rhythm are apparent. “Holy Roller Derbyâ€? also reflects more of a rock feel, as the entire last section of the track is all intense and intricate guitar playing. The last track, “Thunder,â€? is both the climax and dĂŠnouement of the album: The
drum begins unhurriedly in a melodic striptease, the guitar soon involves itself in the melody and then progressively becomes overpowering. Analogous to a thunderstorm, it winds down at the end of the track, concluding the album with a literal and figurative crash. Though “Ghosttown� is a mere seven track collection, Victoria undoubtedly rebels against the conventional and goes back to the roots of rock, adding simple twists along the way. Their site reads: “We have tremendous respect for our heroes of the past and present, and from them we gleam the courage to show
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naĂŻvetĂŠ one scene-ster at a time. The album will be released officially on Saturday, Dec. 1 at 9 p.m. at The Bluebird. Victoria will perform, along with The Hibernauts, Berlin Whale and Jumbling Towers.
you what is in our hearts.� While the tracks can be overpowering in the way that the energy spills out repetitively in the melody, Victoria is well on their way to defying the mistaken view that St. Louis has no “scene� and helping us to break that
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STUDENT LIFE | CADENZA
WEDNESDAY | NOVEMBER 28, 2007
MOVIE REVIEWS
‘Enchanted’: a novel take on a classic Disney model abound with all the best overly saccharine Disney kitsch, from cute-as-hell singing animals to love-seeking princesses, to ogre-hunting princes with horses named Destiny. Heavily reminiscent of Barbie in Wonderland, the introduction provides a hilarious, lightly mocking tribute to Disney’s best. Amy Adams is undoubtedly the star of the show. Utterly confused, idealistic and simpleminded, she is truly a princess lost in the real world. Yet somehow, her childish concepts of love and, at times, pure stupidity never feel contrived. Whether she is spontaneously bursting into song or trying to summon pigeons from a Manhattan apartment window, Adams displays an unflinching charm that doesn’t get old. James Marsden plays Prince Edward of Andalasia with similar charisma as he dashes through New York City in full-blown Andalasia regalia in search of his princess. His sonorous singing voice is particularly enjoyable. Sadly for Marsden, he is once again typecast as second best man, as he was in “X-men,” “The Notebook”
BY SHA SHA LU CADENZA REPORTER Disney’s new “Enchanted” captures all the delight of the classic Disney princess movies while deftly moving the genre into the 21st century with modern-day princes, urban settings and wit. When Giselle, an animated character from the land of Andalasia played by Amy Adams, ends up in the real world of downtown Manhattan through the schemes of an evil queen, a lawyer and his young daughter find themselves forced to help this enigmatic stranger. Eventually, she is followed by Prince Edward, the evil queen’s sidekick, and the sorceress herself. The ensuing romp through New York City has some attempting to murder Giselle, some trying to save her and others simply trying to understand her. Meanwhile, she discovers ways of life and love much different from her own. The first 15 minutes are gold. The perfectly illustrated 2-D animations elicit a deep nostalgia for earlier Disney classics such as Snow White and Cinderella. The scenes
and “Superman Returns.” Unfortunately, perhaps overshadowed by their fantastical counterparts, the “real world” characters are not nearly as interesting and sink into timeworn clichés; Patrick Dempsey, newcomer Rachel Covey and Idina Menzel take on the respective roles of the handsome lawyer dad beset by the hackneyed marry-girlfriendor-please-daughter dilemma, a daughter who still believes in fairy tales and the catty disgruntled girlfriend. Keep in mind that this is a Disney movie—a family movie—which comes with all the baggage of fitting into such a role. Yes, it is hindered by relatively simplistic characters, self-solving problems and the necessary happy ending. In fact, the ending comes off as messy and rushed as the writers attempt to tie off each character’s plotline neatly and comfortably. Nevertheless, “Enchanted” manages to capture its audience through pure charm. It doesn’t matter that the plot follows a predictable and unbelievable path—that Giselle arbitrarily gathers a mob-sized
following as she sings and prances through Central Park. The real treat is simply watching these caricatures deal with the real world in their own eccentric ways. “Enchanted” tries to bridge the gap between classic animations of a bygone era and the modern day. For such a novel take on the classical princess model, the film is extremely nostalgic, with many references to beloved Disney classics, bolstered by the sweeping music and syrupy sweet songs of Alan Menken, composer of “The Little Mermaid,” “Beauty and the Beast” and “Aladdin.” For Disney lovers and the young at heart, “Enchanted” brings a warming dose of magic and humor.
Enchanted Rating: ★★★★✩ Directed by: Kevin Lima Starring: Amy Adams, Patrick Dempsey, James Marsden, Susan Sarandon
I WANT WU INTRAMURAL NEWS Intramural Champions Badminton Menʼs Point League Division: Sigma Nu Womenʼs Singles: Elaine Chang Womenʼs Doubles: Charlene Ng/Samantha Peng Menʼs Singles: Jimmy Khaw Menʼs Doubles: Kevin Teng/Jimmy Khaw
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BY CECILIA RAZAK MOVIE EDITOR In today’s world of cynicism, a movie has to work up credit to spend on sap in order to be taken seriously. Without building up this credit—which is usually done by crafting believable characters, plausible story lines or effective human interaction—no sensible movie-goer is given the slightest chance to abandon their disbelief when it is requested of them. Only when the film has done the hard time and stashed up enough ‘oh-please’ points, can it rush headlong into a free-for-all frenzy of heartstring-tugging. Director Kristen Sheridan’s “August Rush,” however, starts out with the free-for-all and never backs down, leaving it no room to work up any points at all. What we’re left with is a near-fairy-tale that is at times exhilarating, but more often exhausting, and completely without credit to burn. Young Evan, alias August Rush, is a musical prodigy whose parents have no idea he exists. He grows up in an orphanage, convinced that if he “follows the music,” he will be reunited with his family, and so travels to New York City, where a world of sound awaits him. Freddie Highmore (the eponymous Charlie from the chocolate factory) is convincingly bedazzled, awed and delighted as August and is endearing enough to carry the movie, but not to save it. He is appropriated by a band of musical miscreants led by the “Wizard” (Robin Williams), who recognize his genius and train him to play the guitar on street corners. Meanwhile, his parents (Keri Russell and John Rhys-Meyers, both fine but unremarkable) are leading their own lives, successes both, but still doleful, 11 years later, over the one that got away. Through twists of fate, they
are brought from opposite coasts to New York, where one can only guess what will happen next. I shan’t spoil it for you. The two most musically talented individuals in this production both happen to be African-American and under the age of twelve. One wonders what happened 12to the rest of the music, since it’s so schmaltzy and overwrought. A film based so heavily on music, which references Mozart and Beethoven in the same breath as its protagonist, would benefit from a topnotch composer, but Mark Mancina seems content to follow Sheridan’s lead and grab for our heartstrings without actually earning them. Accordingly, many of August’s compositions seem rather pop-alternative-y, though for some unfathomable reason, his magnum opus sounds a lot like a film score.
August Rush Rating: ★★✬✩✩ Directed by: Kristen Sheridan Starring: Freddie Highmore, Keri Russell, Robin Williams
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Amy Adams stars in “Enchanted,” from Walt Disney Pictures.
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1-3 BEDROOMS, 2 Bathrooms, beautiful apartments. Dishwasher, stained glass, hardwood floors. Close to WashU, behind Kayaks, aslo available in the Loop. We are filling up NOW for the 2008-2009 school year! $1000-$1995. London Properties. 314-608-2692. 3 BR, 1.5 BATH apartment. Half block from RED line shuttle. Many amenities! For more info www.homeandapar tmentrentals.com Tom 314.409.2733. 3 BR, 2 full bath on blue shuttle, garage and off street parking, new kitchen, many amenities! For more info www.homeandapartmentrentals.com. Tom 314.409.2733 CLAYTON, U. CITY Loop, CWE and Dogtown. Beautiful studios, 1, 2 bed- rooms. Quiet buildings. $410- $900. ByronCompany.com. 7255757.
1-BR IN a 3-BR/2-BA, laundry included, off-street parking, big kitchen, spacious, wood floors, near WU, furnished. If interested, contact mapierce@wustl.edu. FEMALE SUBLETTER NEEDED for spring! Large room in furnished 3-br apratment on North Rosebury (by Kaldi’s, about a 20 min walk from campus). Price negotiable. Tricia: pwittig@wustl.edu.
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BLACK AND WHITE cat lost. Plump black and white cat lost November 10 behind 750 S. Hanley Road in Clayton. Reward. FOUND: ONE SILVER earring with small gemstone. Found near North Brookings. To claim, send description to mwf@wuphys.wustl.edu. LOST: PETZEL HEADLAMP off bike near the football field on Forsyth. Please contact me at stevenwoolley@ wustl.edu or 314-725-7745.
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