1.17.2013

20
Senior Mary Kate Interrante wasn’t shocked when the university Student Health center gave her a prescription for Vicodin. After all, it was the fourth time she had re- ceived a controlled narcotic from Student Health Services. Interrante was suffering from an ear infec- tion, and though she was in pain, the Vico- din prescription seemed extreme. “It hurt, but I was functioning,” Interrante said. “I didn’t think I needed the Vicodin, but I wasn’t going to complain.” Vicodin is a high-strength painkiller, the most widely prescribed class of medication in the U.S. While the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has categorized most prescription painkillers, like Percocet and Oxycontin, in the highly restricted Schedule II category, Vicodin is one of the few that falls under the less regulated Schedule III class. Due to its lower status, Vicodin is the easiest painkiller to prescribe, though it’s no less addictive than its Schedule II counter- parts. e prevalence of prescription pain- killers has been on the rise, aided in part by ease of access to Vicodin. According to a recent Center for Disease Control (CDC) press release, sales of prescription painkillers to health care providers increased more than 300 percent since 1999. While Cecil Price, director of the univer- sity’s Student Health Services, acknowledges the growing trend in overprescribing pre- scription painkillers, he maintains that Stu- dent Health is prudent in its use of Vicodin. “e majority of what we do for pain is ibuprofen and other anti-inflammatory medication, but we look at the circum- stance,” Price said. “If a student tells us those medicines aren’t helping, then we would think about using a narcotic.” But Price is also aware of the dangers of narcotic abuse, especially the combination of alcohol and painkillers — a dangerous problem on a national scale. e CDC has Many seniors are anxious about landing a job after graduation, and while the economy is certainly not booming, things are begin- ning to look up. “I have seen some reason for cautious op- timism,” Patrick Sullivan, assistant director of career education and counseling at the Office of Personal and Career Development, said. According to the Bureau of Labor Statis- tics, the unemployment rate for those with a bachelor’s degree or higher was only 3.8 percent in October of last year, down from 4.4 percent in October 2011. As a prime example, Sullivan said that Red Ventures, a marketing company located in Charlotte, N.C., held on-campus interviews in Octo- ber and then returned in November to hold more interviews, citing that their hiring needs had since doubled. “In pockets, things are improving,” Sullivan said. THURSDAY, JANUARY 17, 2013 VOL. 96, NO. 16 WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY oldgoldandblack.com Job market slowly inches forward LIFE NEWS SPORTS OPINION Program brings faculty to students Page 4 Museum celebrates 50th anniversary Page 7 Overkilling the pain Demon Deacs in the Dominican Republic Page 12 College football bowl advertising Page 12 How to keep New Year’s resolutions Page 16 Recapping the Golden Globes Page 19 Where do we go after the Newtown shootings ? Page 10 Getting the most out of college Page 9 See Drugs, Page 7 Despite market upswings, students still face rigorous job search in senior year Controlled narcotics are often prescribed by SHS despite serious risks of overdose & OLD GOLD BLACK Clare Stanton/Old Gold & Black The Office of Personal and Career Development aims to facili- tate the job search with Deacon Source and onsite interviews. BLOGS Emma Lingan: Boehner tested by his own party oldgoldandblack.com Julie Huggins/Old Gold & Black The CDC has reported that prescription narcotics abuse is rising, a trend that includes college cam- puses, where the risks of abuse and misuse are high because of the prevalence of binge drinking. BY MARY HARBOUR Contributing Writer [email protected] See Jobs, Page 4 BY LAURA MAZURACK Contributing Writer [email protected]

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Page 1: 1.17.2013

Senior Mary Kate Interrante wasn’t shocked when the university Student Health center gave her a prescription for Vicodin. After all, it was the fourth time she had re-ceived a controlled narcotic from Student Health Services.

Interrante was suffering from an ear infec-tion, and though she was in pain, the Vico-din prescription seemed extreme.

“It hurt, but I was functioning,” Interrante said. “I didn’t think I needed the Vicodin, but I wasn’t going to complain.”

Vicodin is a high-strength painkiller, the most widely prescribed class of medication in the U.S. While the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) has categorized most prescription painkillers, like Percocet and Oxycontin, in the highly restricted Schedule II category, Vicodin is one of the few that falls under the less regulated Schedule III class. Due to its lower status, Vicodin is the easiest painkiller to prescribe, though it’s no less addictive than its Schedule II counter-parts. The prevalence of prescription pain-killers has been on the rise, aided in part by ease of access to Vicodin. According to a recent Center for Disease Control (CDC) press release, sales of prescription painkillers

to health care providers increased more than 300 percent since 1999.

While Cecil Price, director of the univer-sity’s Student Health Services, acknowledges the growing trend in overprescribing pre-scription painkillers, he maintains that Stu-dent Health is prudent in its use of Vicodin.

“The majority of what we do for pain is ibuprofen and other anti-inflammatory medication, but we look at the circum-stance,” Price said. “If a student tells us those medicines aren’t helping, then we would think about using a narcotic.”

But Price is also aware of the dangers of narcotic abuse, especially the combination of alcohol and painkillers — a dangerous problem on a national scale. The CDC has

Many seniors are anxious about landing a job after graduation, and while the economy is certainly not booming, things are begin-ning to look up.

“I have seen some reason for cautious op-timism,” Patrick Sullivan, assistant director of career education and counseling at the Office of Personal and Career Development, said.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statis-tics, the unemployment rate for those with a bachelor’s degree or higher was only 3.8 percent in October of last year, down from 4.4 percent in October 2011. As a prime example, Sullivan said that Red Ventures,

a marketing company located in Charlotte, N.C., held on-campus interviews in Octo-ber and then returned in November to hold more interviews, citing that their hiring

needs had since doubled. “In pockets, things are improving,” Sullivan said.

T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3V O L . 9 6 , N O . 1 6

W A K E F O R E S T U N I V E R S I T Yo l d g o l d a n d b l a c k . c o m

Job market slowly inches forward

LIFE

NEW

SSP

ORTS

OPIN

ION

Program brings faculty to studentsPage 4

Museum celebrates 50th anniversaryPage 7

Overkilling the pain

Demon Deacs in the Dominican RepublicPage 12

College football bowl advertisingPage 12

How to keep New Year’s resolutionsPage 16

Recapping the Golden GlobesPage 19

Where do we go after the Newtown shootings ?Page 10

Getting the most out of collegePage 9

See Drugs, Page 7

Despite market upswings, students still face rigorous job search in senior year

Controlled narcotics are often prescribed by SHS despite serious risks of overdose

&OLD GOLD BLACK

Clare Stanton/Old Gold & BlackThe Office of Personal and Career Development aims to facili-tate the job search with Deacon Source and onsite interviews.

BLOG

S

Emma Lingan: Boehner tested by his own partyoldgoldandblack.com

Julie Huggins/Old Gold & BlackThe CDC has reported that prescription narcotics abuse is rising, a trend that includes college cam-puses, where the risks of abuse and misuse are high because of the prevalence of binge drinking.

BY MARY HARBOURContributing [email protected]

See Jobs, Page 4

BY LAURA MAZURACKContributing [email protected]

Page 2: 1.17.2013

OGBWhile the national debate on the over-

prescription of narcotic drugs ensues, our campus has joined in as it deals with its own questions about the nature of students’ access to these substances.

Concern has arisen over whether Student Health’s prescription of painkillers, such as Vicodin and Codeine to students has become too liberal and whether or not it should be further regulated.

In dealing with sensitive issues such as this one, it is pertinent to evaluate them from a cost-benefit standpoint.

On the one hand, many individuals do suffer from chronic, unbearable pain, and sometimes a strong sedative is the best and fastest solution to whatever problem they are dealing with.

People suffering from certain conditions, such as cancer, osteoarthritis, severe burns and severe migraines are usually justified

in their desire for and use of prescription painkillers.

On the other hand, the threat of abuse is real and should not be ignored. In addition, patients and doctors occasionally encounter difficulties with communicating the true nature and severity of the pain the patients are experiencing. College students, in particular, are no exception to that rule.

Moreover, with the equally troubling prevalence of binge drinking on college campuses, university students are probably the demographic of which it is most beneficial for them to have the least access to these substances.

Upon evaluating these points, the earlier question of whether or not Student Health’s actions should be further regulated rises again.

After all, narcotic pain killers do exist for a reason, and they are effective and relatively harmless when taken responsibly.

The first step Student Health should take is to reevaluate its criteria for prescribing pain killers.

Which is the bigger priority, the pain itself or the cause of that pain? How severe must a headache, or any “ache” for that matter, become before it warrants the use of something stronger than Tylenol? These and other similar questions should not be ignored by our campus’s most trusted medical professionals.

Additionally, it might not be a bad idea for our Student Health officials to mirror the activities of their national counterparts.

For instance, some law enforcement now requires the use of triplicate prescriptions for pain killers, in which one copy remains with the physician, one copy goes to the pharmacist administering the drug, and the final copy is sent to the Drug Enforcement Agency.

While such measures may appear extreme now, they may help to avoid potential accusations against our Student Health officials of being “script” doctors, who only prescribe such medications for profit, or as of being “well-intentioned” doctors who are naive or out-of-touch with the medical community.

The OGB staff acknowledges the reality that some students do require and benefit from the use of prescription painkillers, but we also support a healthy well-being and quality of life that does not encourage an abusive and unstable campus culture.

Student Health’s overprescription of narcotics raises concernThis column represents the views of the Old Gold & Black Editorial Board.

&OLD GOLD BLACKTHE STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF

WAKE FOREST UNIVERSIT Y S INCE 1916MEENU [email protected]

PETER SIDEROVSKIBUSINESS MANAGER

[email protected]

RENEE SLAWSKYMANAGING [email protected]

MATT POPPEMANAGING EDITOR

[email protected]

>>NEWS Executive Editor: Ian Rutledge, [email protected]: Julie Huggins, [email protected] Schwindt, [email protected]

>>SUBMISSIONSThe OGB welcomes submissions in the form of story tips, columns and letters to the editor. Letters should be fewer than 300 words and columns should be around 500 words. Send yours via e-mail to [email protected] the Monday before publication. We reserve the right to edit all letters for length and clarity. No anonymous letters will be printed.

>>ONLINE MEDIAWeb: oldgoldandblack.comFacebook: facebook.com/ogb1916Twitter: @wfu_ogbYouTube: youtube.com/ogb1916

>>SPORTSEditors: Ty Kraniak, [email protected] Wohlmuth, [email protected]

>>OPINIONEditors: Ade Ilesanmi, [email protected] Kolb, [email protected]

>>LIFEEditors: Amber Burton, [email protected] Dutmers, [email protected]

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>>GRAPHICSElizabeth Ropp and Lauren Lukacsko

>>POLICIES The Old Gold & Black is published Thursdays during the school year, except during examinations, summer and holiday periods, by Triangle Printing of Durham. The OGB is advised by Justin Catanoso.To subscribe, please send $75 to P.O. Box 7569, Winston-Salem, NC 27109. © 2012 WFU Media Board. All rights reserved. The views expressed in all editorials and advertisements contained within this publication do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the OGB. As part of our commitment to reporting news fairly and accurately, we will not remove any previously published content — including but not limited to, feature stories, story comments, opinion columns, editorials, letters to the editor, photographs, or illustrations — in either our written or online issues. If an error in either our online or print content is brought to our attention, we will revise the originally published article with an appended correction. In order to facilitate thoughtful and appropriate debate, profane, vulgar or inflammatory comments on our website are not allowed and will be deleted. For more information on our commenting policy, please see our website.

After all, narcotic pain killers do exist for a reason, and they are effective and relatively harmless when taken responsibly.

Page 3: 1.17.2013

Mark Welker, currently the William L. Poteat Professor of Chemistry, has previously served as Associate Provost for Research and Vice Provost in addition to holding the posi-tion of Interim Provost last year.

Welker received his Bachelors of Science Degree in Chemistry from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and his Ph.D. in Chemistry from Florida State University.

After post-doctoral work at the University of California at Berkeley, Welker joined the fac-ulty in 1987. Last November, a treatment for prostate cancer developed by Welker, George Kulik, professor of cancer biology and Fred Salsbury, professor of physics, along with their student co-workers, was featured on the cover of the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.

You were the Interim Provost last year. What was that experience like?

On the whole, very positive. I got to

work with an even broader group of Wake Forest people both inside and outside the university. I like working with our faculty and staff and helping them do their jobs. In education, we started our first online degree programs and hosted two big conferences, “Words Awake!” and “Rethinking Success.”

In diversity, we admitted our most diverse class yet and established an LGBTQ Cen-ter. We continued our emphasis on inter-disciplinary work and iPLACe [Interdisci-plinary Performance and the Liberal Arts Center] has now been established.

What was most challenging about it?

Most challenging is that as an interim

your job is largely to keep the ship headed in the right direction rather than develop-ing new directions.

Most humans don’t like uncertainty, and most of the people you work with are un-certain about who they will work for the next year so staying calm and focused in the face of uncertainty is a challenge.

You have been working with Dr. Kulik and Dr. Salsbury on a treatment for pros-tate cancer. What has your research un-covered?

We’ve made some enzyme inhibitors (ki-nase inhibitors) that bind an enzyme in-

volved in triggering apoptosis (programmed cell death), and then we targeted these in-hibitors to prostate cells specifically by at-taching a protein sequence to them which is recognized and cleaved by a prostate cell specific enzyme (a protease) called prostate specific antigen (PSA).

This compound we made is called a pro-drug because it has to be converted into the active drug by a protein hydrolysis (cleav-age) reaction that happens at prostate cells. Once that prodrug is cleaved into drug in-hibitor and peptide by PSA the drug is at the prostate cells.

According to your best estimate, how long will it take for the treatment to go to pre-clinical and clinical trials?

Right now George Kulik’s lab has proven that the prodrug works in prostate cells and does not affect breast cells so that is a good result in cells. But it needs to work in whole animals next, and we need grant money to pay for those whole animal studies.

Moving into your background, why did you come to Wake Forest?

Wake wanted to build its chemistry pro-

gram, and it was attractive to me to be in-volved in and help lead that process. I knew

I liked teaching from graduate school and I wanted to be at a place where I could teach and do research. I grew up in North Caro-lina but had lived in Florida, Georgia and California after undergraduate school so I knew I liked North Carolina also.

As an undergraduate, why did you choose to study chemistry?

Like a lot of people, probably because of

a good teacher in high school. I took two years of chemistry in high school from a strong teacher, so I knew I liked it and I was good at it before I came to college. I knew I liked math and I found I liked economics a lot. When I started college, I ended up taking all the classes you needed to major in chemistry or economics up through the spring of my sophomore year when I had to pick a major. I distinctly remember think-ing that if I majored in economics, I would end up in a job where I had to wear a tie every day so I picked chemistry instead.

That just goes to show that the mind of a 19 year-old male is sometimes a very scary place! No regrets though, chemistry has been a good choice for me.

You have taught at Wake Forest for over 25 years. What has been your favorite class to teach at the university?

I would say I like teaching the undergrad-uate organic chemistry course because it is something that is important to understand for students who are interested in going into the health professions, particularly if they have any interest in molecular medi-cine areas.

At the senior and graduate student level, I like teaching a class in transition metal organic chemistry because it’s an area of chemistry that modern organic chemists need to understand to be successful in their field.

When you are not working, researching or teaching, what do you like to do?

For the last few years I have tried to run a half marathon each spring and each fall, so I try to run several times a week with a group here on campus and one organized by the Fleet Feet store here in town. I like to work outside with plants, and I have five beehives so I try to keep those girls happy so they will help our fruit trees and bushes.

My grandfather and father were good woodworkers, and I am decent at it. So in addition to building some things for myself, I volunteer with the Home Repair Program that the Shepherd’s Center runs here in town, and I serve on their Board of Direc-tors.

Deacon Profile: Mark WelkerBY DANIEL SCHWINDTNews [email protected]

Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 3News | Old Gold & Black

Photo courtesy of Ken Bennett/ Wake Forest University

Miscellaneous

• University Police responded to a call in reference to a suspicious person near Winston Hall.

Officers made contact with the individual and it was determined that the offender had previously trespassed on university property.

The offender was cited for second degree trespassing. The report was filed at 3:43 p.m. Jan. 8.

POLICE BEAT• University Police was contacted by the Winston-Salem

Police Department to help find two individuals who had fled and had entered campus.

One of the individuals was apprehended by university officers.

The report was filed at 8:32 p.m. Jan. 10.• Unknown subject(s) entered an unsecured room in

Babcock and removed money. The report was filed at 10:41 p.m. Jan. 13.

Scan this code to visit police.wfu.edu

Page 4: 1.17.2013

said. Aaron Green, a senior business major who has already accepted a position with the management consulting firm Accenture in Dallas, Texas, agrees with Sullivan.

“I think that the market is slowly start-ing to recover,” Green said. “If people from Wake work hard, they’re qualified enough to get jobs.”

Green landed his job this summer after interning with Accenture. Students agree that it takes considerable hard work and dedication to land a job after graduation.

“It’s very time consuming, whether it’s studying or preparing for interviews,” Paige Emerson, a senior communications major, said. “I would say it takes more time than a class.” Emerson recently accepted a job with AlphaSights, an information services firm, through on-campus recruiting.

John Clark, a senior economics major, added that the job search is also quite stress-ful.

“I remember the internship search last se-mester being overwhelming,” Clark said. “I

am not excited to look for a full time job.” Many students also believe that graduate school is being used by some seniors as a way to avoid entering the job market.

Emerson said she thinks many seniors who struggle to find a job before gradua-tion apply to Wake Forest’s master’s degree in management program.

“I feel like a lot of people use when they get to a point where they don’t know what to do,” Emerson said.

Green said that more students are going to graduate school when they don’t have the necessary qualifications to get the jobs they want. “It gives them a chance to bol-ster their resume and delay entering the job market,” Green said.

However, Sullivan warns that considering graduate school in an attempt to avoid ap-plying for jobs is risky.

“Going to graduate school in order not to enter the job market is not a good idea,” Sullivan said.

Xizi Liao, a senior business and enterprise management major, says that the decision to attend graduate school is, for many, a way to try to avoid reality. Liao adds that

going to graduate school on the premise of a weak economy is risky because you still “might not know what you want to do with that second degree.”

Peter Gauss, a senior political science major, thinks that undergrad-uates are catching on to the idea that gradu-ate school is not the best answer. “I think people are really ques-tioning the benefit of these degrees,” Gauss said. According to the university factbook, 38.5 percent of stu-dents from the class of 2009 went to graduate schools. This number fell to 31.7 percent for the Class of 2011. Regardless of how many university students apply to graduate schools, there are always more students applying for full-time jobs. “One of the things I’ve been telling

students is that you genuinely have to work at this,” Sullivan said. “You have to take the time to learn about yourself and the fields you want to pursue.”

As an academic institution, the university seeks to “embrace the teacher-scholar ideal and, above all else, student-faculty engage-ment,” according to a statement on the school’s website. Recent developments have indicated that the university seeks to take the relationship between students and fac-ulty to the next level, beyond the classroom entirely. Beginning next semester, the uni-versity will launch the Faculty Fellows pro-gram in which each freshman residence hall will be assigned three non-residential fac-ulty members. The program is designed for faculty and students to foster more mean-ingful relationships through interactions within an informal and stress-free setting.

“Many students didn’t feel that they had a solid relationship with a faculty member until they elected a major,” Jennifer Col-lins, associate provost for academic initia-tives, said. The Faculty in the Fellows pro-

gram would serve as a more immediate and personal source of support for students as opposed to other organizations such as the Office of Academic Advising or the Univer-sity Counseling Center. Specifically, plac-ing faculty in the freshmen residence halls could help first year students adjust more smoothly to the struggle of assimilating into college life.

“I think if first year students know faculty on a more informal basis and interact with them in numerous ways — recreational, academic, cultural and such — many mi-nor but significant problems that arise can be resolved before they grow into major and significant problems,” Sam Gladding, chair of the counseling department and a prospective Fellow, said. Despite the fact that most students were unaware that the program was going to be introduced next fall, reactions to the news were generally positive.

“I think that this program would definite-ly make faculty more accessible and easier to get in contact with,” senior Matthew Murphy said.

“I hope that this program will be more like the resident adviser program and less like the academic adviser program,” sopho-more Laura Flynn said. Not only could stu-dents benefit from the program through a

built-in support system, but faculty could as well by learning more about the students.

“The experience will hopefully inform [faculty’s] teaching and make the classroom experience even better for students,” Col-lins said. The university has also established a programming budget to fund for events including guest speakers in order to further facilitate the interaction between students and faculty. Faculty Fellows will cooperate with RAs to see to the success and involve-ment of these hall events. Programs that use residence halls to bring students and faculty

together have been around for more than a century, and currently schools like Vander-bilt, Yale, Rice and NYU are yielding posi-tive results using this approach. Student concerns centered on whether bringing faculty into the residence halls would in-trude on upon student privacy. Although the program will not create a residential college system where faculty live with the students, the administration, led by Provost Rogan Kersh, has been considering at that possibility. “It could happen at some point in the future,” Collins said.

Jobs: Falling unemployment fuels optimism

Kersh has helped create a new program that will assign faculty to a freshman residence hall to develop student programming.

Continued from Page 1

Page 4 | Thursday, January 17, 2013 Old Gold & Black | News

University launches Faculty Fellows programInitiative aims to facilitate faculty-student relationship beyond the classroomBY JACKSON SOULEContributing [email protected]

BRIEFLIES

From Jan. 17 through Feb. 21 the Hanes Art Gallery will be presenting “Faculty [III] 13,” a new exhibit of university faculty art.

Works of art from Leigh Ann Hallberg, lecturer of art, Greg Murr, visiting professor of art, and Joel Tauber, as-sistant professor of art, will be a part of the new exhibition.

The Hanes Art Gallery will also be holding a reception from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. Feb. 21. For more information, contact Marcus Keely at [email protected].

Hanes Art Gallery to present new 2013 faculty exhibitions

Center for International Studies hosting study abroad fair Jan. 29

From 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Jan. 29 in Room 401 in Benson, the Center for International Studies will be host-ing a study abroad fair.

Representatives from both affiliate and university study abroad programs will be on campus to share information and answer questions about their programs.

For more information, contact Nancy Metcalf, adminis-trative assistant for the Center for International Studies, at [email protected].

Chelsea Tamura/Old Gold & Black

Museum of Anthropology to open new international exhibit

Sept. 2010

Recent College Graduate Unemployment Rate

Sept. 2011 Sept. 2012

9.4% 8.3% 6.3%

From 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Jan. 22, the Museum of Anthropology will be opening a new exhibit featuring the photography of Robert Radin, a renowned photographer and world traveler.

The collection contains images of the people and land-scapes of six continents, a presentation of Radin’s life work selected from more than 6,000 photos. Admission is free.

For more information, contact Sara Cromwell at [email protected].

Information courtesy of Bureau of Labor StatisticsGraphic by Daniel Schwindt/Old Gold & Black

Page 5: 1.17.2013

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declared that deaths from painkiller overdoses are at epidemic

proportions, an an-nouncement that wor-

ries Price. In particular, Price focused on the dangers of mixing narcotics with al-cohol. “Any medicine that’s sedating, we would say ab-

solutely don’t use it with alcohol.” Price

said. “I would hope that some-

one would tell you that.”According to Price, Student Health

may prescribe a narcotic to a student with a painful case of strep throat, sinusitis or another bacterial infection since it takes antibiotics a couple of days to start working.

“If someone looks miserable, that’s a time when you’re very happy to prescribe a nar-cotic that’s going to help someone feel bet-ter,” Price said. “That’s just part of our prac-tice style.”

Senior Masin Couture remembered one night as a sophomore when she went to stu-dent health for an excruciating case of strep throat.

“I thought I wasn’t going to be able to sleep,” she said. “Right when I got there I started crying.”

Couture was prescribed a bottle of 10 pills of Vicodin by a nurse, who told her not to give away any of the medicine.

“In the moment I was relieved but then I thought, ‘Oh wow, that’s aggressive,’” Cou-ture said.

“It seemed odd to me. They probably could have just given me Tylenol.”

Compared to Wake Forest, other student health centers across the country have dif-ferent approaches to the prescription of painkillers.

“The school has an informal policy that does not usually prescribe prescription painkillers,” Jane Reno-Munro, College of Charleston’s director of Student Health Ser-vices, said.

“Giving a patient Vicodin for strep throat or an earache would almost never happen within the medical community.”

The University of Missouri only prescribes controlled medicines, such as Vicodin, to its students for chronic conditions, accord-

ing to a Student Health Services’ employee at the school. Otherwise, those controlled substances are kept out of the hands of the general student body.

In those instances, students sign a con-tract to indicate their understanding of the prescription’s terms.

Debra Howenstine, an assistant profes-sor of family and community medicine at the University of Missouri, said that she has never prescribed a controlled substance for strep throat or other bacterial infections in over 20 years of practicing medicine.

“That’s not the standard of care for the physicians I practice with,” Howenstine said. “That’s probably way outside standard care in general.”

Howenstine understands that there is a push in the medical community to ensure that pain is controlled, but she cautions against overprescribing.

“Prescription painkillers need to be used very judiciously and very cautiously,” How-enstine said.

“Especially with the student population, because there’s more risk for abuse and shar-ing of medication.”

Despite the differences between the uni-versity’s Student Health Services’ prescrip-tion policies and those of other universities, Price agrees with Howenstine’s assessment of the painkiller problem.

“It’s better to not use prescription pain-killers at all if you can,” Price said. “Or at least to try and minimize their use.”

Sitting behind the Miller Center is an un-assuming brick building, with only a sign to identify it. Most students pass it by with-out a thought, but inside the building lies a unique fixture at the university: the Mu-seum of Anthropology, the only anthropo-logical museum in North Carolina to focus on global cultures.

This year, the museum is celebrating its 50th anniversary with multiple events and special exhibits. A student-curated exhibit of the museum’s history, “Celebrating 50 Years of the Museum of Anthropology,” is currently on display and will remain until Oct. 26 of this year.

Two university students, junior Demone Jackson and senior Kathryn Rohlwing, worked under Kyle Bryner, registrar and collections manager, to develop the exhibit. Both Jackson and Rohlwing also serve as in-terns with the museum.

The pair researched in the museum’s in-stitutional archives to choose artifacts to feature, selected and scanned photographs, composed the text for the exhibit and, fi-nally, created the layout. The exhibit gives a timeline of the museum, featuring his-torical photographs from the archives along with artifacts from the different exhibits showcased over the years.

“The Museum of Anthropology has seen a lot of tough times, but still continued to

make great strides towards excellence,” Jack-son said. “Although formally established in 1963 under E.P. Banks, the history of the museum can be traced back to the efforts of a single student who arranged for the dona-tion of a used display case to show prehis-toric Indian artifacts in 1957.”

Since opening, the museum has had over 60 short term exhibits, including one on Queen Anne’s Revenge, the flagship of Blackbeard the pirate. The curators of the museum have worked with many different departments on campus to create interest-ing and interdisciplinary exhibits for stu-dents to enjoy.

“Any class that you are taking, you can find a resource in the museum for the cur-riculum,” Bryner said. “If we don’t have an artifact on display, students can easily find it in our virtual collections.”

The museum has served over 618,000 pa-trons since opening, and usually sees about 1,000 university students per year, accord-ing to Bryner and Sara Cromwell, the mar-keting and membership coordinator for the museum.

Called the “Museum of Man” when it first opened in the basement of Tribble in 1963 under the guidance of E. Pendleton Banks, the chair of what was then the department of sociology and anthropology, the museum has grown and changed significantly over the years.

The initial product was a small collection of artifacts used for the department to edu-cate students of the importance of anthro-pological studies.

Twelve years later, the museum moved to Reynolda Village and dedicated itself to educating not just the Wake Forest commu-nity but also the general public through ed-ucation programs tailored to local schools.

These programs still remain and have served over 320,000 students to date.

In 1987, the museum completed the move to its current location and re-opened as the Museum of Anthropology. Since then, the permanent collections have grown and now

feature over 29,000 artifacts, all of which are now available online.

“It is important that we preserve these objects for the greater community,” Bryner said. “We’re stewards of these artifacts for future generations.”

Anthropology museum celebrates 50 yearsThursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 7News | Old Gold & Black

Since its 1963 opening, the museum has seen over 618,000 visitors and 60 exhibits

If someone looks miserable, that’s a time when you’re very happy to pre-scribe a narcotic.

Cecil PriceDirector of Student Health Services

BY JULIE HUGGINSNews [email protected]

Clare Stanton/Old Gold & BlackSenior Holly Hinshelwood and Salem College student Victoria Smith view the student-curated anniversary exhibit at the museum.

Drugs: Students question prescription practicesContinued from Page 1

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Page 8: 1.17.2013

During the winter break, as I wandered around southern Florida, I noticed some-thing that bothered me a bit. Everywhere I went, the people and the signs always said, “Happy Holidays,” or something to that extent.

Very rarely did I see or hear anything about Christmas, Hanukkah or any other religious-related holiday wishes.

It has become a rule, implied or stated, that one does not mention a specific holi-

day in order to keep others from feeling of-fended.

While I do understand respecting the be-liefs of others, I do not understand how say-ing the word “Christmas” offends people.

Christmas was started as, and is supposed to be, a religious holiday, but there are many people who celebrate Christmas in a merely commercial way; they do the presents, the tree, the cookies and the eggnog, but they do not attend a church service or read the Bible.

I am a Christian and absolutely love Christmas, but if someone came up to me and said, “Happy Hanukkah!” then I would simply reply “Happy Hanukkah to you, too!” and genuinely mean it.

I understand that to that person, Hanuk-kah means something to them and that they would like to share the joy they feel over the holiday with me. I am not offended by the word “Hanukkah” or the fact that it is a Jewish holiday.

It is not about trying to push your beliefs at someone or hitting them over the head with a Bible or a menorah; it is just a way of wishing someone well and expressing

your desire that they enjoy themselves. I say “Merry Christmas” because that is what I celebrate, but I am not assuming that who-ever I say it to also celebrates it. For me, December means Christmas, so that is what I say. I am telling others that I celebrate Christmas and that I hope they have a won-derful time, no matter what they do. One of the reasons the United States is a country that people want to come to and in which Americans take pride is the freedom.

We have religious freedom, so we can de-cide for ourselves what we want to believe; we have the freedom of speech, so we can say what we want to say (with some limi-tations, but that’s really a violence/danger thing).

So why shouldn’t we be allowed to say “Merry Christmas”? A declaration was signed, and a war was fought so that we could say exactly that or something entirely

different. We have that freedom, and others have the freedom to respond to it in any way they want.

Other countries do not give their people that right. Some people are persecuted, thrown in jail, or killed for what they choose to believe. We have the right to think what-ever the heck we want to and be vocal about it if we so choose.

I am not saying that the word “Christ-mas” should be everywhere with pictures of the baby Jesus plastered on walls and bill-boards; however, people should not be re-stricted from saying what they want to say. Each person should get to choose.

If you want to say, “Happy Holidays,” then go for it. If you want to say, “Merry Christmas,” then please do. If you just want to say, “Screw you!” then say it loud and proud. It is, after all, a free country.

So the next time someone remarks to ward you, “Happy fill-in-the-blank,” just respond with a smile or a thank you, or you can even reciprocate with whatever holiday you celebrate. Don’t be offended; be flat-tered that they are putting forth the effort to wish you happiness and leave it at that.

Ashley BurdinGuest Columnist

[email protected]

Citizens have the liberty to use holiday greetings of their choosing

So the next time someone says to you, ‘Happy fill-in-the-blank,’ just respond with a smile or a thank you, or even reciprocate.

“Yes. It won’t fix the problem, but neither will unnecessary gun use.”

Jenna Eisenberger (‘14)

Do you believe gun regulation should be stricter to avoid more mass shootings? Why or not?

Word on the Quad

“No. Shootings are more of a mental health issue.”Katie Woodworth (‘15)

“Yes. Assault and hunting rifles should be regulated more.”

Andrew Camp (‘15)

“No. Murder and assault can still occur with other weapons.”

Nick Toebben (‘15)

OPINION PA G E 8O N L I N E A T w w w . o l d g o l d a n d b l a c k . c o m

E D I T O R S : K r i s t o p h e r K o l b , k o l b k l 1 1 @ w f u . e d u ; A d e I l e s a n m i , i l e s a o 1 1 @ w f u . e d u

O L D G O L D & B L A C K

T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3

Ashley Burdin| Bearing the Burdin of Truth

Political correctness is not always a necessity

Political Cartoon | Gun Regulation

Cartoon by Daniel Schwindt/Old Gold & Black

Page 9: 1.17.2013

If you learn nothing else from this col-umn, it’s to put a summary near the top of anything you write because nobody ever reads the entire thing.

“I just heard something cool! I heard a pan-systolic murmur!” I exclaimed to my mother, a nurse, because it was the first time anything I learned had been used in the clinic where I shadowed.

By “shadowing,” I mean I spend 32 hours a week with a physician and give educated guesses on what I think might be wrong with a patient. It is not your typical experi-ence where you are a mouth-less shadow to

an M.D. in order to buff your med school resume. That experience is useless to me because I’m not your typical undergradu-ate student. I’m not even an undergradu-ate student anymore — I’m a white coat bearin’, stethoscope-wearin’, Hippocratic-Oath-swearin’ med student.

Really, I’m barely six months into what may end up being 10 years of training, but that doesn’t prevent me from making cool rhymes about myself.

“You did a lot of [stuff] in college, didn’t you?” were the first words to come out of the mouth of my first interviewer of my first interview day — he didn’t say “stuff” either.

The sentiments didn’t exactly catch me off guard because it was, in fact, true. During the school year, I ran a movie committee, wrote a column, double majored in two sci-ences, picked up a minor in Spanish and had to cut activities to get under the max of 15.

The interviewer’s tone caught me by sur-prise because I was unsure how to interject. Was this a good thing that I was involved in so much? Did he dislike something else on my application? Did the time I got caught stealing a rubber snake out of a toy store when I was five show up on my permanent record?

This was something I thought existed only because I watched Doug growing up.

Was he against me starting my personal statement with the phrase “potty training is the bane of my existence”? I responded with, “That I did.” What an answer.

On the surface, that sounds like arguably the blandest thing anyone could say with-out quoting a romantic dialogue from Star Wars.

It’s the socially awkward cousin of “it is what it is.” It was a throwaway statement that could have been said with sarcasm, but I was able to acknowledge his “point” and imply that I wanted him to move forward with the process. I didn’t try at all, but this just came out organically because I had practiced similar scenarios.

Funny thing when you spend countless hours writing something and practicing spouting back that information in a dif-ferent way that highlights what you want (note: NOT memorizing a phrase), it isn’t hard. Spoiler alert: I didn’t get into that school, but they sure loved my interview.

Mrs. Frizzle taught me at a very young age to “take chances, make mistakes, and get messy.”

It’s why I decided to write a column de-spite thoroughly despising writing anything non-scientific. It’s why I packed up my bags and moved to UVA during my gap year to do research.

Admittedly, these were low-risk things, but it helped me answer the question, “How do you know that you really want to be a doctor?”

If you stopped reading and Googled “pan-systolic murmur” to see why it’s relevant, chances are you’re at least quasi-interested in medicine.

If you get the letters “A,” “N” and “E” in Words with Friends and are excited because there is a good chance you can play a hydro-carbon as a word, you’re probably a chemist.

If you got frustrated with my inane tran-sitions in this column, you’re probably an English major.

Whatever it is, you’ve got a four year ride to do lots of “stuff” in college and figure out what you want to do (or more likely, don’t want to do).

No matter what, you’re going to have some form of an interview to get to the next level, so try and at least figure out what that level is, if not how to get to it.

Students should be willing to take risks

The fiscal cliff causes debate and polarization

Opinion | Old Gold & Black Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 9

Jeremy SteinmanGuest Columnist

[email protected]

Over the course of the next year, there will be a number of significant challenges facing the Obama administration, includ-ing effective tax rates, government spending and possible reforms of entitlement pro-grams.

Assessing these issues leads one to won-der: who will actually take charge and ini-tiate deals that are best for the American people?

The recent fiscal cliff deal has shown that polarization among members of both par-ties is as extreme as it has been in recent memory.

The term “compromise” is a taboo word in Washington nowadays, simply ensuring that members of Congress who work across the aisle will face a primary challenge in their next election.

Ideally, the two parties should have been able to work together to adopt a com-promise that included a combination of spending cuts and tax increases on the very wealthy.

However, what actually transpired re-sulted in much more of a patchwork deal and cop out from Congress, simply putting off some of the major problems facing the nation for a later time.

Our political system operates under an incentive structure that further complicates the many issues tangentially related to the fiscal cliff. Political leaders do not need to take immediate action on these matters be-cause they know that they can wait until the last second to hopefully get something done.

In addition, gridlock and opposition are incentives for parties to get what they want at the expense of what is best for the coun-try.

The American people are looking for leadership and initiative from both parties to solve the problems facing the nation in the coming year.

However, based on the recent fiscal cliff negotiations, it remains to be seen whether

that will actually happen or not. Whether one believes President Obama is doing a good job or not, one must have been at least somewhat disappointed with how he handled the entire fiscal cliff talks. On one hand, there is no doubt that some blame should go to both parties.

Republicans deserve fault for the waf-fling among their leaders regarding the in-come threshold where individuals should be taxed at a higher rate than others. At first, it seemed that Republicans would not agree to any tax increases, even on those making over a $1 million a year.

This line of thought simply will not work for many in the American population, who may be opposed to taxing those who make over $250,000 at a higher rate, but do not have the same thought when it comes to those who pull in over a million dollars a year.

On the other hand, Obama deserves some blame for not taking a more active role in the discussions.

Obama seems to be a political leader who enjoys delegating his power in negotiations with Congress related to tax increases and government spending.

Yes, I personally would not be a person who would enjoy engaging in the back-door dealing and rigorous debate that is required of most political leaders.

But as president, Obama needs to be more assertive and willing to work with

members of Congress, whether he likes do-ing it or not.

Obama seems to be most comfortable and effective when he is on the campaign trail touting the benefits of his proposals while lambasting Republicans for the op-position that he feels is unjustified.

Nonetheless, a time comes when the campaigning needs to end, and where the president actually needs to put his rhetoric into action.

Overall, the many problems that face the nation in the coming year are going to chal-lenge leaders within the Republican and Democratic Party to put ideology aside and make compromises that work for the bet-terment of the American people.

Obama’s first term was marked by an initial two-year period where he got many of the changes that he wanted, while then moving into the next two years which were marked by Republican opposition and po-litical deadlock.

Obama would be most effective in his second term by not trying to operate un-der a “mandate” from the American people and taking a Bill Clinton-type approach to work together with Republicans to get things done.

I remain cautiously optimistic that the parties will be able to work together, but the sheer magnitude of the issues that the na-tion faces may simply be too much for there to be effective reforms over the next year.

The depth, not the breadth of college activities might dictate future success

Legislative and executive branches must adjust their plans to fix the economy

No matter what, you’re going to have some form of an interview to get to the next level, so try and at least figure out what that level is.

Tate’s Plate | Farewell to Bias

Trust Me | I’m (Almost) a Doctor

George Ewing

Senior [email protected]

Overall, the many problems that face the nation in the coming year are going to challenge leaders within [both parties].

Page 10: 1.17.2013

As the nation embarks on a new year and a newfound sense of unity in light of recent tragedies, we as a body may experience the tendency to take on the “do over” or “fresh start” mentality, in which we forget about yesterday’s woes and embrace tomorrow’s opportunities for growth.

While this positive, willing attitude, char-acteristic of every January, is both inspiring and necessary for any group desiring some measure of progress, it is also important to maintain a spirit of refl ection and the ca-pacity to learn from errors of the past rather than to fi le away those experiences into our historical archives.

Progress, after all, weds two notions —that there must be some ideal for which to strive, yes, but that there must also be some failure, some injustice on our part as a na-tion, from which to depart.

Moreover, it was this very tendency to bury the unspeakable, the forbidden and the darkness that remains an undeniable aspect of humanity in holes of secrets and denial that led to the horrors that unfortu-nately capped the previous year in the fi rst place.

� at being said, while I don’t fi nd beating dead horses pleasurable, I feel it is impor-tant to address an issue that every newspa-per article, television broadcast, blog post

and Facebook status has already addressed. I am referring to what I would call the na-tional crisis of mass shootings. I must fi rst disclaim any notion that I am a statistician, an expert on any arms-bearing laws or an expert on mental health (though I do some-day hope to become one).

However, I do possess all fi ve of my senses, as well as a solid general knowledge of the world and an ability to make observations and to refl ect on what they might mean in the grander scheme of things.

� e unfortunate truth is that mass shoot-ings are unpredictable and that they can oc-cur virtually anywhere. No human being, no matter how many rifl es and handguns he or she has stored away in his or her home or back pocket, no matter how many self-defense classes he or she has taken, no mat-ter how piously he or she prays, is immune to the piercing blow of a speeding bullet.

I say this neither to encourage an agora-phobic attitude toward the world nor to ne-gate the importance of securing individual safety and the safety of those in public areas, but we must be realistic. Should today not be the day we fi nally open our eyes?

What can we as a collective, corporate body do to ensure that when — because we must be realistic — another incident like that at Sandy Hook, in Aurora, at Virginia Tech or at Columbine occurs again, we are ready?

Better yet, what can we at least try to do to ensure that this issue is eradicated before future generations must face it?

Just as with any epidemic or pandemic that has reared its ugly head at our country in the past, prevention is better than a cure. We must examine the root cause(s) of these tragedies. Could it very well be the wide-spread availability and the easy accessibility of handguns, as many individuals are argu-ing?

After all, an NPR radio broadcast on Jan. 2 announced that homicide rates have in-creased 7 to 9 percent in states such as Flor-ida that have passed laws allowing the right

to bear arms during altercations outside of the home since the passage of the fi rst of those laws in 2005. Remember Trayvon Martin, anyone?

Statistics aside, as many homicides as have occurred, many living, breathing individu-als possess handguns and other similar artil-lery and have never felt inclined to use them against another human being.

So what then is the cause of this crazed brutality against the innocent? I am sorry to say that one of the blaring failures of our society is its reluctance to acknowledge the fact that mental health is a real problem that needs to be taken more seriously from as early as when kids start school.

In all honesty, it probably took years of neglect, of misunderstanding, of incompre-hension of whatever pain Adam Lanza was feeling for darkness to invade his mind to the point where he could point a gun at a six-year-old child and pull the trigger, re-peatedly, without hesitation.

I don’t want to assume his actions were without remorse because he did commit suicide in the end, a very powerful demon-stration of guilt. I am not excusing his ac-tions, but we must recognize that this event and its precedents were, to some extent, preventable.

We’ve become so obsessed with curing and preventing the visible signs of illness — cancer, diabetes, HIV/AIDS — that the health of the mind has become less of a pri-ority. Not to say that these causes are not important, but mental health has, without a doubt, fallen to the bottom of the totem pole on which it was never that high to be-gin with.

Where do we begin? We need better fund-ing for research to screen for predispositions to certain mental disorders earlier, as well as

better research for the most eff ective treat-ments, both pharmaceutical and therapeu-tic.

Not to mention better parity laws for these mental health treatments so the peo-ple who need them can actually aff ord them for as long as they need.

Trust me, these reforms would be in ev-eryone’s interest, and the public should be willing to pay for insurance to cover it if they want to protect their lives and that of their progeny.

If we want to scratch the surface of these shooting “epidemics” and give the super-fi cial remedy of better gun control, there’s nothing stopping us. Maybe it will be eff ec-tive for a little while, maybe not. Probably not.

People who are sick, really sick, will still fi nd away to destroy lives.

And, where is the common man’s place in all of this? What little can we do for our brother and our sister on a daily basis? � is is where the “humanity” to which President Hatch referred in his refl ection of the Sandy Hook tragedy plays a role.

� ese shootings were extreme cases, yes, but the people became sick to the point that they are without inhibitions and remorse-less in their actions needed to know from early in life that they were loved, that they were meaningful people, that they were spe-cial and that everything would be okay, not always perfect, but okay.

What does it mean to be “humane” to-ward one another? It is one thing to be patient, another to be kind. However, we must also listen to one another. We mustn’t shy away from the inevitable part of life that is darkness any longer.

We need to share in each other’s pain as well as our joy, not only that of our friends, but that of our enemies as well. We need to decide as a body what it means to live life to the fullest.

After all, when we really come to value our lives, having additional time becomes less important than having quality time.

Nation should reflect after mass shootings

Page 10 | Thursday, January 17, 2013 Old Gold & Black | Opinion

Ade IlesanmiOpinion Editor

[email protected]

Discussion should focus on gun regulation and mental health diagnosis process

“No human being, no matter how many... handguns he or she has stored away... is immune to the piercing blow of a speeding bullet.

LoveJunkie| National Concerns

Moving is the best medicine. Keeping active and losing weight are just two of the ways that you can fight osteoarthritis pain. In fact, for every pound you lose, that’s four pounds less pressure on each knee. For information on managing pain, go to fightarthritispain.org.

Page 11: 1.17.2013

Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 11Advertisement | Old Gold & Black

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Wake Forest was riding high coming into their ACC matchup against Clemson with an impressive two-game winning streak in confer-ence play. However, their streak was abruptly halted Jan. 15 as the Tigers cruised past the Demon Deacons for a 60-44 victory in Littlejohn Coliseum.

The Deacs, who were looking to validate close wins against confer-ence foes Virginia and Boston Col-lege, struggled on the offensive end nearly all night.

Early on the two teams remained close, as Wake took an 11-9 lead seven minutes into play. This would be the last advantage the Deacons would have in the game as the Tigers answered with a 15-2 run, as well as holding Wake without a basket for nearly nine minutes.

Clemson would take control in the remainder of the first half as the Deacs shot a dismal 25 percent from the field. Wake saw just three players score in the half, as the other Deacons went 0-15.

The second half was no better for the Deacons as they continued to struggle in their shooting. The

Tigers also stepped up their defense on Wake, blocking 11 shots, just two shy of a school record in ACC play. The Deacs would come no closer than 10 as Clemson ran away with a 60-44 victory.

The Deacs finished with a 24.6 percent field goal percentage, the lowest since percentage by a Wake team since a 20 percent shooting night in 1964, incidentally also against the Clemson Tigers.

The Deacons only had three assists in the game, but outrebounded the Tigers 42-36.

Wake fell to 9-7 overall on the year, and 2-2 in ACC play.

Junior Travis McKie led the Dea-cons with his third double-double of the season, posting 12 points and

When finals finished last semester, students poured out of

the university with one thing on their mind: relaxation. How-ever, the student athletes of the Wake Forest baseball team used the first half of the winter vacation for something dif-ferent: a trip to the Dominican Republic to play baseball and engage in community service.

The seven-day excursion to the Caribbean nation featured a 3-3-1 record for the Demon Deacons, and a focus on both game play and community service.When the Deacs touched down in the Dominican Repub-

lic, they headed straight for Boca Chica, a port town known for its scenic beaches. However, the Wake ballplayers went straight to work with their first practice on a local field Dec. 16, the same day the team, which was still recovering from jet lag, landed in the country. The Deacons’ practice drew quite a crowd and created a buzz in the local community.After the team’s first practice, Dec. 17 marked Wake’s first

day of competition with a double header against Escogido and the National Police Team of the Dominican Republic. Wake was able to squander a 6-4 victory over the policemen.

SPORTSO L D G O L D & B L A C K

Tostitos Fiesta Bowl highlights the drastic changes affecting the current bowl game landscape

I was one of the lucky ones. Close to $500 tanked, and I had scraped out three nosebleed tickets to the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Jan. 3 between No. 4 Oregon and No. 5 Kansas State.

The thought of just attending the game itself had carried me through final exams, and it was predicted to be an impeccable game with a lot of offense. The atmosphere was electric, and drunken and rowdy Oregon Ducks fans sitting near me made it an inter-esting experience altogether.

It was a close game much of the first half until the “Quack Attack” was unleashed.

However, amid the speedy Oregon Duck offense that obliterated a bewildered Kansas State team 35-17,

College football gone wild

6

{ BY THE NUMBERS }

Doubles wins for Prabhakar and David Hopkins, five more than any other pair

{ DEAC OF THE WEEK }

Thanks to another sparkling performance by senior point guard C.J. Harris, the Deacons sneaked by Boston College with a three point victory.

Harris turned just 13 shots into 29 points, includ-ing a run of 11 straight when the Deacons were down 13-2. He also hit 5-of-6 attempts from the free-throw line.

After being named to the third All-ACC team last season, Harris has continued his reign as the Deacons’ leading scorer.

{DEACON QUOTE }

“I really want to thank our fans. We appreciate their support and I really see a connection beginning to take

place here. ”

- Head Coach Jeff Bzdelik, attribut-

ing Men’s Basketball’s recent suc-cesses to reemerging fan support

Win-streak for senior Amogh Prabhakar, who has a 13-5 record on the season

More losses than wins for the Deacons against nationally ranked opponents

Freshman on the squad, representing half of the entire team

12 311

See Press Box, Page 13

BY TY KRANIAK Sports [email protected]

PA G E 1 2T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3

O N L I N E A T w w w . o l d g o l d a n d b l a c k . c o mE D I T O R S : T y K r a n i a k , k r a n t r 1 1 @ w f u . e d u ;

M a x W o h l m u t h , w o h l m j 1 1 @ w f u . e d u

WAKE FOREST (9-7) CLEMSON (10-6)

Littlejohn Coliseum - Clemson, S.C.

21 23 44 31 29 60

1 2 Final

MEN

’S T

ENN

IS

Deacons push themselves to 2-2 in the ACC

Jeremy Hefter/Old Gold & Black

Harris

See M. Basketball, Page 13

Press Box | NCAA

BY MATT POPPEOnline Managing [email protected]

BY TY KRANIAK Sports [email protected]

Senior C.J. Harris from Winston-Salem led the Deacons in scoring against Boston College Jan. 12 with 29 points.

Deacs in the Dominican Republic

Photo courtesy of WFU Athletic Communications

See Baseball, Page 15

Diamond Deacs find themselves in the heart of one of the biggest producers of baseball talent in the world

Page 13: 1.17.2013

The men’s tennis team started the new year strong, taking second place at the Wake Forest Spring Invitational, which took place Jan.11-13 at the Wake Forest Indoor Tennis Center, and defeating Win-throp 7-0 Jan. 14.

At the Wake Forest Spring Invite, the Demon Deacons reached the singles and doubles finals, with freshman Sam Bloom taking second place in the singles tourna-ment after falling to Hunter Reese of the University of Tennessee.

In the doubles final, freshmen Anthony Delacore and Morgan Mays lost to senior David Hopkins and senior captain Amogh Prabhakar.

“They’re all very hungry and really want to play, and they’ll evolve into great play-ers,” Prabhakar said, when asked about the

freshman players. “They’re very hardwork-ing, and they push us, and that’s great for us and great for them, and I think it’s good for our program overall.”

The Demon Deacons followed their suc-cessful weekend with a 7-0 sweep against Winthrop in their season opener on Jan. 14.

The Demon Deacons won at the No. 1 and No. 2 doubles positions, and contin-ued to win the match in singles with three straight-set wins by Bloom, junior Adam Lee and Prabhakar.

In the doubles matches, Lee and fresh-man Jon Ho had an 8-2 victory over Win-throp players Juan Pablo Boada and Mi-chael Chen.

The No. 1 duo of Hopkins and Prabha-kar finished their match with an 8-4 vic-tory over Dylan Comerford and Steven Patrick, closing out the doubles point for the Deacs.

After his second place win at the Invita-tional, Bloom fell behind early in his No. 5 singles match against Boada, but came back to win 12 straight games to clinch a 6-2, 6-0 victory. Lee won a singles victory at No. 6 against Boada 6-2, 6-2.

Prabhakar, now ranked No. 59 in the na-tion, claimed the win for the Deacons with

an impressive 6-2, 6-0 victory over Peter Nagovnak. The match was tight in the beginning with a 2-2 split, but Prabhakar pulled past Nagovnak to succeed.

“We’re very excited to start off the year right… we’ve got some good guys, a lot of seniors and juniors and some very good freshman,” Prabhakar said. “It’s a good way to start the season, to have something to build off of, and we’re looking forward to the rest of the season.”

In a final two-set match, Hopkins won 6-1, 6-1.

Playing the only three-set singles match of the night, senior Danny Kreyman won at No. 3 singles against Winthrop player Yuta Hirokawa. Kreyman pushed through a first set loss at 2-6 to an overall win at 2-6, 6-2, 6-4.

“Every match is new, and we have to ap-proach each match as if it is the last one we play. If we play hard, and are focused and dedicated, I think we will do great,” Prabhakar said.

A double header is coming up for the De-mon Deacons, taking place at 10:00 a.m. Jan. 16 against UNC-Charlotte, and 5:00 p.m. against East Tennessee State Univer-sity, both at the Wake Forest Indoor Tennis Center.

Men’s tennis takes second, blanks WinthropSports | Old Gold & Black Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 13

Photo courtesy of WFU Athletic CommunicationsSenior Amogh Prabhakar from Bangalore is 13-5 this season.

there was a different storm brewing. At every TV timeout, advertisements spewed over the general PA system, and there was a Tostitos logo in every direction I looked.

Tostitos even put free samples of chips and salsa at every seat. While this was slightly excessive, I did abso-lutely love the free halftime snack, and hence, will not banter too much on the chips and salsa. Thanks for the food, Tostitos.

With college athletes running the field, corporate America was running the game.

Don’t get me wrong. Although extremely over-priced, the Fiesta Bowl was an incredible experience, and one that I would not trade. Oh wait, I forgot to call it by its real name: the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.

Across all college football games, there is advertising. Money has to pay for coach’s salaries; it has to pay air-lines tickets, and many other expenses associated with college sports.

That’s why college athletic depart-ments charge money for tickets.

Bowl game advertising has gotten out of control. There was a time in which there were just a few bowl games named out of originality such as the Cotton Bowl, Rose Bowl, Peach Bowl etc. The Peach Bowl is now named the Chick-Fil-A Bowl. There is a Meineke Care Car Bowl, a Little Caesar’s Bowl and a Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl.

Corporate identities partner with bowl games to help their PR. How-ever, these partnerships are turning into ownerships.

Even the Rose Bowl, one of the most storied bowls steeped in tradition, fell. It is now the Rose Bowl Game Pre-sented by Vizio. What a shame.

These are still terrific games played by incredible athletes. However, it was the same way in the past without all of the hoopla and “in your face adver-tising” associated with modern day bowl games.

We all know money dominates sports.

It is after all an entertainment indus-try. Yet, the optimist in me believes

there is more to college football. Col-lege football is about, above all, teach-ing lessons to the players themselves. These include hard work, determina-tion, fortitude, discipline, and much more.

To be honest, I don’t mind that NHL boards have advertising, although it does make the rinks look uglier. But, turning college football into a large scale business at the expense of the game is inherently wrong.

Take Oregon. The team is sponsored by Nike, who acts as a Santa Claus to the Ducks. New uniform combi-nations for very game, underwater treadmills, and so on. are bestowed upon Oregon.

You name it, and they have it. Why? Money. While this can be used to nail top-recruits, the influence of money in college football must be kept to a minimum.

To corporate America, pick a differ-ent sport. There are some of us that still believe in the magic of college football.

Plus, didn’t your mother always tell you, money doesn’t buy happiness?

Press Box: Bowl game advertising is out of control

BY JULIET BECKSTRANDContributing [email protected]

Continued from Page 12

M. Basketball: Deacs racking up wins in the ACCof the season, posting 12 points and pulling down 11 rebounds.

Freshman Devin Thomas was the only other double-figure scorer for the Deacs, scoring 11 points and grabbing six rebounds.

Thomas has been key to the Deacons’ rebounding success, averaging over 10 rebounds in the last five games.

The Deacon’s previous game had been a 55-52 nail-biter against the Boston College Eagles, where senior guard C.J.

Harris had led the Deacs with a career-high 29 points on 10-13 shooting.

Harris was unable to mimic his success in the Clemson contest, scoring just eight points.

It was just the third time that the Winston-Salem native was held to less than double digits in scoring this season.

Wake will return to action Jan. 19 as they will again be on the road, traveling to Blacksburg to take on the Virginia Tech Hokies. The Hokies are fresh off an overtime thriller victory over Georiga Tech Jan. 12.

The Deacs look to stay competitive in the ACC with a win over the Hokies. Tipoff is set for 2 p.m. at Cassell Coliseum.

In the first event of the 2013 campaign, the Deacons took second at WFU Spring Invite

Continued from Page 12

Kraniak’s view of the Tostito’s Fiesta Bowl at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Ariz.

The Deacons hope to rebound from their recent loss against Virginia Tech on the road.

Photo courtesy of shakininthesouthland.com

Ty Kraniak/Old Gold & Black

Page 14: 1.17.2013

Page 14 | Thursday, January 17, 2013 Old Gold & Black | Advertisement

Spring Into Style!

s stores.wfu.edu The Deacon Shop 336.758.5606

Page 15: 1.17.2013

Over winter break, Wake Forest played seven games against several ACC foes as well as teams from other conferences. Overall, Wake fared well going 5-2 in this

stretch, improving their record to 9-7, in-cluding a 2-2 conference record. The Dea-cons began their games over break against the Seton Hall Pirates Dec. 8 at the Joel Coliseum with a thrilling 64-63 victory. Wake then traveled to play conference foe Virginia Tech Dec. 22 in Blacksburg, Va., but lost 73-52. The Deacs then rattled off four consecu-

tive wins, defeating Campbell 84-68 Dec. 29 (Joel Coliseum), Nevada 77-54 Dec. 31 (Joel Coliseum), North Carolina State 69-56 Jan. 6 (Joel Coliseum) and Florida State 80-72 Jan. 10 in Tallahassee. However, the winning streak came to end Jan. 13 versus Duke with a 73-44 loss.Wake Forest and Seton Hall exchanged

several lead changes throughout the second half, particularly down the stretch. Begin-ning the game though, the Deacons stopped their trend of slow starts, building a 7-0 lead over the first 3:55 of the game. However, to overcome runs by Seton Hall

like the one starting the second half that gave Seton Hall a 41-40 lead, several Deacons

had to step up. This includes junior Lindsy Wright who had a career-high in rebounds with 12. Asia Williams though, played hero as she sank a free throw with less than a sec-ond remaining to give Wake a 64-63 win.Against Virginia Tech though, Wake was

overmatched by the combination of Hokies Monet Tellier and Uju Ugoka, who togeth-er provided 51 points. The Deacons were put an early hole in the first half, shooting 8-25 (32 percent). The 73-52 loss for Wake was not without positives as senior Lakevia Boykin provided 14 points, which gave her 1,007 points for her career, making her the 20th Deacon to achieve this accomplish-ment.Wake however, proved too strong an oppo-

nent when Campbell came to the Joel Coli-seum Dec. 29 as several Deacons achieved double-digit scoring outputs. While Wake was out rebounded 48-35,

a quick six points to start the second half pushed Wake’s lead to 51-38. This increased offensive efficiency ultimately proved too much for the Campbell defense. In the Deacon’s 84-68 win, sophomore

Dearica Hamby added a career high 25 points, Boykin added 19 points, Williams provided 16 points and junior Chelsea Douglas added 13 points.The strong shooting continued against Ne-

vada who, like Campbell, proved to be over-matched. This time, Douglas led the way

with 22 points. The formula for the win was a season-high 33 turnovers that led to 36 Deacon points. The turnovers helped Wake roll to a 77-54 win.Wake’s first conference victory came against

N.C. State, and once again, Douglas led all Deacs in points, shooting 7-of-13 from the floor and 4-of-6 from behind the arc for 21 points. The game was close until the Dea-cons went on a 12-3 run in the second half that pushed their lead to 14 points with five minutes to play. Wake was able to keep this lead, winning 69-56.During the seven game stretch, Wake’s big-

gest win was an 80-72 upset over No. 18 Florida State in Tallahassee. The Deacs caused Florida State to com-

mit a season-high 23 turnovers, and Boykin scored a career high 34 points. Wake trailed at 36-33 at the half, but

Boykin scored the final 13 points of the half for Wake. The Deacons regained a lead they would never relinquish with a 9-0 run with 13:28 to gain a 47-46 lead.The momentum from the Florida State win ended when Duke traveled to the Joel and won 73-44. Duke used a series of runs and strong shoot-

ing (48 percent) to defeat Wake who only shot 38 percent from the floor. When Wake cut the lead to 19-17, Duke responded with a 13-3 run and kept this comfortable lead.Wake’s next game is Jan. 17 at the Joel Col-

iseum versus Clemson.

Deacs’ four game win streak ends against DukeSports | Old Gold & Black Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 15

Adrian Martino/Old Gold & Black

Forward Dearica Hamby scored 25 points against the Blue Devils.

BY MIKE MCLAUGHLINStaff [email protected]

However, they were unable to muster a run and were blanked by Escogido 2-0.After splitting the double header, the Deacs toured the Colonial Zone Dec. 18, which was the oldest settlement of the Americas, before a game against the National Navy Team that resulted in a tie. After the event, the team headed to Guajabo to paint a house and deliver hygiene packets to many homes in the area.The following day, Dec. 19, Wake Forest fell to an affiliate team of the Kan-sas City Royals 5-2 before posting a 2-0 victory over the National Army team. After the day’s double header, the team

headed to a local Dominican Winter League night game and was able to meet

All-Star second baseman Robinson Cano of the New York Yankees, who serves as a role model to many aspiring ballplayers.On Day 5 (Dec. 20), the Deacons finally got a day off from baseball. However, they were still working hard

with a 7:00 a.m. lower body workout on the beach followed by an excursion to Isla Saona where the team played beach volleyball and relaxed. Even with their demanding schedule, the Deacs still found time to give back to the com-munity by visiting Josiah’s house, which serves as a home for destitute boys.The final day of competition (Dec. 21)

for Wake Forest featured another split. The Deacs squared off against the Na-tional Air Force Team this time around rather than the Army or Navy. In the first game, the Deacs came from behind

to win in 10 innings, and the Air Force took the second game by a score of 5-2. Dec. 22 marked Wake’s final in the

Dominican Republic, and the team used it to host a youth baseball clinic where nearly 100 children were taught technique through a number of baseball drills. As soon as the clinic finished, it was back to the United States for the team. Throughout the week, new talent surfaced for Wake Forest as many fresh-men saw action. It will be interesting to see how the talent in the Dominican Re-public matches up with ACC play. Only time will tell. Yet, no matter what the win-loss column looks like, it is clear head coach Tom Walter has his eyes set on something greater than baseball, de-veloping young men to serve those less fortunate than themselves.

Baseball: Wake’s adventure more than sports

Lauren Eagen/Old Gold & BlackThe Deacs hope to build off their trip to the Dominican Republic this season.

Deac NotesDiamond Deacs reel in a 12 man recruiting class for 2013 campaign

As part of the 2013 class, baseball head coach Tom Walter announced the signing of 12 recruits.

Four of the players are right-handed pitchers that will devote most of their playing time to the mound. Three other right-handers also make up part of the class, but this group will also spend time in the field.

The remaining five players include two catchers, an infielder, an outfielder and a utility player. The gem of the class is Will Craig, a 6-3 two-way player that was a three time All-Conference selection.

New look ACC impacts Deacons’ schedule in the 2013 season

The recent changes to the landscape of the ACC will affect Wake Forest football as soon as next season.

Now the Demon Deacons will play six oppo-nents in the Atlantic Division and just two in the Coastal. This means Syracuse becomes an annual opponent as the Orangemen have become the Atlantic Division’s seventh member.

Wake will continue to square off against Duke every year while the remaining Coastal Division matchup will rotate amongst the six other teams.

Continued from Page 12

Page 16: 1.17.2013

Year after year, people make New Year’s res-olutions — whether it is to lose weight, eat healthier or work on their personal downfalls. It seems like people make the same resolu-tions year after year, and eventually life takes replaces desire to change yourself. Seeing as though most people lose sight of their resolu-tions, I figured it was better to focus on ones that may be easier to fulfill.

Many people relate their resolutions to health, whether it is to lose weight, work out more, or eat healthier; all three things go hand in hand. People who regularly go to the gym know that at the beginning of the year there are many more people going and as the days, weeks and months go by, they weed out.

So instead of wasting money and time do-ing something you’ll drop in a few weeks, why not just take baby steps instead of huge leaps in lifestyle changes? There are many different ways to be healthier or lose weight without dropping hundreds of dollars on gyms, personal trainers and groceries from Whole Foods.

So many of my friends have made resolu-tions to lose weight. Not to be pessimistic, but you can’t do this easily at a college cam-pus. Everything is working against you! You are drinking, eating unhealthy, constantly snacking on fatty foods and getting little to no exercise.

Your resolution to work out more and lose weight is not going to stick here — I can guar-antee that. So instead of setting something unrealistic, why not make your resolution to just be healthier, even if it is something small. So next time you go to that frat party, do not

eat a lot in order to be able to drink more. Drink less! On top of that, watch what you drink. It’s hard to say you won’t drink, but you can minimize how much and what you’re drinking. Punch? Terrible idea.

You go back home late at night and it’s been about six hours since you’ve eaten so natu-rally you’re hungry. Don’t order Papa John’s because it’s “free.” Just drink water and go to sleep!

Also, at a campus like Wake, I find it ab-surd that so many people still make their resolutions revolve around weight. Have you looked in the mirror lately? You’re so much skinnier than most people. Why are you wasting your time trying to get your bones sticking out? That’s not attractive. Make your resolution deal with happiness instead.

Acknowledge the fact that we go to Work Forest and are not robots. We need to relieve stress, otherwise we’ll just crash and burn.

Instead of spending time refreshing Face-book and going through all the posts on your mini-feed, go hang out with your friends. Spring is on its way and the days are getting longer, so instead of spending so much time locked up in your room or the ZSR, set 30 minutes aside to do something that helps you accomplish your New Year’s resolution or that makes you feel good, happy and gets you out and about.

Making resolutions shouldn’t be about try-ing to do something you can’t do — it’s about improving yourself and what’s important to you.

It’s about reflecting on your past and find-ing small things you can change. So my best advice to those who made big New Year’s res-olutions, whether it deals with weight or not, is to think about this past year and see if your resolution is reasonable.

Another thing you can do is write it down — that’s what my parents always made me do. Things appear more black and white once they are written down.

If you have more than one resolution, don’t try and cram it all in at once. Space it out, what’s the rush?

LIFE PA G E 1 6T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 7 , 2 0 1 3

O N L I N E A T w w w . o l d g o l d a n d b l a c k . c o mE D I T O R S : M o l l y D u t m e r s , d u t m m k 1 1 @ w f u . e d u

A m b e r B u r t o n , b u r t a b 1 1 @ w f u . e d u

O L D G O L D & B L A C K

BY NIKI MAKKINEJADStaff [email protected]

Attacking smaller personal goals can make achieving a New Year’s resolution more realistic

Graphic by Molly Dutmers/Old Gold & Black

NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTIONSkeeping your

Page 17: 1.17.2013

There’s been some rumbling recently about Quentin Tarantino’s latest project Django Unchained and its handling of a number of sensitive topics. Spike Lee spoke his mind on the movie’s supposed racism — and then Mr. Tarantino flipped out when an interviewer questioned him on a possible relationship between violent film (as a cause) and violent behavior (as a result). The truth is that both the narrative and setting of Django do raise these sorts of accusations and questions, and I think that’s the true beauty behind many similar films.

Way back in 1966, the Italian filmmaker, Sergio Leone, directed a spaghetti Western titled The Good, The Bad and the Ugly. The film was initially criticized for a number of perceived shortcomings — a near three-hour runtime and graphic depiction of violence leading many evaluations of the day. Fast forward to now, and any acclaimed films of will show you that what was once harshly critiqued has been overturned as not only a classic example of Western fiction, but also a masterpiece of contemporary cinema.

Mr. Tarantino’s new Western Django Unchained carries both of these features with it. The film clocks in at a rather lengthy two hours and 45 minutes, but it truly feels much shorter than that. It

is also (and I stress this) absurdly violent. It’s no surprise really — he is a filmmaker known for his attachment to somewhat more than vivid representations of violence on screen.

Let’s return to Spike Lee’s comments, which address the film’s handling of slavery. From his Twitter feed: “American Slavery Was Not A Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western. It Was A Holocaust.”

It’s almost as if he and I watched a different film. Mr. Tarantino’s script deals carefully with the most disgusting aspects of slavery.

I actually hesitate to list each one because of the revolting nature of the historical allusions which could certainly compare to Lee’s idea of a “holocaust.”

Truthfully, there is little, if anything, that could hold up as evidence for belittling the idea of slavery.

Like almost every other Tarantino film before Django, there is a river of blood for critics and criticizers alike to sail upon. Two slaves fight to the death, people are shot, exploded and eaten by dogs. It’s violent, but then again it should be clear by now that Mr. Tarantino doesn’t like to pick fights he cannot win.

The brilliance of this and similar motion pictures is the attractive combination of two mutual opposites — humor and violence. He certainly does do everything to exploit the entertaining and sometimes humorous power of violent fiction, and that makes for one heck of a ride.

In honor of the new year, the staff of Wake Radio reveals three of their favorite albums of 2012.

Frank Ocean, Channel Orange

George Orwell once said, “In a time of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” And revolutionary is one of the many words to describe Frank Ocean’s revelatory R&B masterpiece. Part manifesto, part confessional, Ocean’s Channel Orange is not only one of the most brutally self-reflective albums in recent years, it morphs the musical sounds of soul stirring R&B with hip-hop sensibilities and lyrics that create a sound that is completely and uniquely Frank Ocean — destroying all of his peers in his wake.

Perhaps the greatest testament to this album’s staying power is the fact that with each additional listen, something new and wonderful is found behind every corner. There is not much that can be said about this album that has not already been said.

It’s Frank Ocean’s world, and we’re just living in it.

Kendrick Lamar, good kid, m.A.A.d city

Rap has been waiting for its rebirth. This is an era of Drake crying and bragging over the airwaves at the same damn time, while Big Sean & Co. use their verses to tell listeners “I can’t believe I made it, (Mom!)” — leading us to marvel at the exact same thing. However, salvation awaits: six years after the legendary Queens MC Nas titled his album Hip Hop is Dead, Compton rapper Kendrick Lamar releases an instant-classic LP flurried with verbal panoramas as insightful as Biggie’s Ready to Die or Nas’ Illmatic.

Hearkening back to the illustrious storytelling and religious influences of rap’s past, Kendrick issues an allegory of Compton compartmentalized into 12 tracks. The depictions of the dystopic results of unfettered loyalty, teenage naiveté and economic disenfranchisement through the eyes of a mostly well-intentioned youth have led K-Dot to nearly universal approval among his

peers. The result? good kid, m.A.A.d city has put the hip-hop world on Kendrick’s back with the edict to lead a stable of promising youngsters to take the billion dollar genre back into the past — a past where the rhymes outshined the beats and the message overshadowed the rhymes.

Grizzly Bear, Shields

Watch the critics on this one, because far too many of them will be busy attempting to label Shields rather than appreciate it for what it is. What is that exactly? All I know is that with regards to their previous efforts, this creature’s not as primitive as Horn of Plenty, not as hypnotic as Yellow House, and not as easily accommodating as Veckatimest. Perhaps it’s a subtle mixture of all three — a statement that would be high praise considering the masterful compositions that make up their previous works. Regardless, Shields is still an extraordinarily haunting and beautiful addition to the Grizzly Bear catalogue. Nick Reichert, Logan Healy-Tuke and Kory Riemensperger also contributed to this article.

Shit Wake kids say on the first day of class

“I always get lost in Tribble.”

“I can’t believe that professor assigned homework for the first day.”

“Should we write this down?”

“I can’t believe I only get two absences in one of my classes.”

“I hope this class is easy.”

Tarantino delivers another hit

Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 17 Life | Old Gold & Black

hotlistth

eWake Radio’s top albums from 2012Sound Judgement | Top Albums of 2012

The best of Winston

Here are our picks for the top

five places to be pampered in the Dash

1. Van Davis Aveda244 S. Stratford Road

This salon is the perfect place for a hair cut or color.

2. Allure Salon and Day Spa420 Jonestown Road

If you are in need of a day of relaxation, visit this luxurious spa.

3. European Touch Day Spa116 Reynolda Village

Walk over to Reynolda Village and indulge in a mani/pedi at this nearby

spa.

4. Nail Tech 205 Stratford Court

This nail salon offers complimentary champagne to their customers.

5. Escape Salon952 W 4th St # 104

This salon specializes in hair coloring and styling.

Wake Meme

BY KORY RIEMENSPERGERStaff [email protected]

BY YASMIN BENDAASStaff [email protected]

Movie Review | Django Unchained

Director Quentin Tarantino’s latest Western Django Unchained may soon become a cinematic classic

Django Unchained has the trademark violence of Tarantino films, but the violent scenes are artfully blended with humor.

Photo courtesy of news.doddleme.com

Page 18: 1.17.2013

When I first pulled it out, it looked like a glob of brains.

Don’t be alarmed. I’m referring to the spaghetti pasta I made for my RA staff last week to accompany my Murray Bolognese Sauce (a hot Jacuzzi bath in your mouth, I swear).

Being the conscientious person that I am, I made sure that all the ingredients that I could control were “gluten-free,” since a member of my staff recently discovered a gluten intolerance in the form of celiac disease.

As I drained the “gluten-free” pasta in the colander, realizing how positively unappetizing it looked, I wondered why people are on such a “gluten-free” craze as of late, especially those who do not have celiac disease.

But then again, I realized that many health-conscious individuals simply follow the latest dieting fads and do not put a lot of thought or research into what they are (or are not) putting into their bodies.

Gluten is a storage protein found in wheat, rye, grains and barley.

Just as yeast is used to make bread rise, gluten is responsible for the elastic, spongy texture of bread as well as for thickening many soups and sauces.

It is also a common additive in foods that are generally low-protein or it can be the groundwork for imitation meats. Perhaps the greatest catalyst for the “gluten-free”

frenzy is the increased diagnoses of not just celiac disease but also non-celiac gluten sensitivity.

Originally believed to be a rare condition, those with celiac disease have an immune reaction to the presence of gluten in the body and treat the substance as an invader.

However, that immune reaction damages the small intestine, causes serious digestive problems and inhibits normal gastrointestinal responses.

Another problem has emerged over the past decade or so that health professionals estimate affects perhaps 20 million people: non-celiac gluten sensitivity.

Although this sensitivity to gluten does

not cause the same damage to the intestines, sufferers experience similar symptoms to those with celiac when ingesting gluten: abdominal cramping, gas, steatorrhea, bloating and anemia. With the sudden discovery of these disorders within the

American population, food companies have pinpointed a brand new market to accommodate these individuals: “gluten-free.”

Companies are not simply using this claim as a means of providing for gluten-intolerant individuals; several naturally grain-free products are now branded with the term “gluten-free” as a competitive marketing strategy to make them appear healthier, according to U.S. News.

And since the FDA does not currently regulate the term “gluten-free” on food products, it may be difficult for consumers to distinguish between what they should or should not (or can and cannot) eat.

Many have jumped on the bandwagon of the “gluten-free” diet as a means of curing conditions other than celiac, or for losing weight, despite a perfectly healthy tolerance for gluten.

However, “gluten-free” is not synonymous with “calorie-free,” “fat-free” or “sugar-free.” According to Shelley Case, a consulting dietitian, author and medical advisory board member for the Celiac Disease Foundation, food manufacturers use fat and sugar to “make the product more palatable” since gluten is not present to bind the food.

This is similar to how frozen food manufacturers add large amounts of sodium for taste to lower-calorie frozen meals.

The reason, Case points out, that some people lose weight while going “gluten-free” is because the significantly more limited food options offered on such a diet limit your calories while simultaneously limiting your tendency to overeat.

However, while a lower-calorie diet may trigger weight loss, several nutrition deficiencies occur as a result. Even patients who are morbidly obese are not recommended to eat below 1,200 calories a day.

If you chose to go “gluten-free” as a means of treating a medical disease or accommodating an intolerance, go for it.

However, if your body can tolerate gluten, there is no overwhelmingly convincing reason why you should go “gluten-free.”

Regardless, it is always best to choose minimally processed foods in your diet (especially those that are naturally “gluten-free”).

Now myself? I limit processed foods as best as I can, but after the brains incident of the corn-based “gluten-free” pasta last week, I think I’ll stick with my whole-grain spaghetti for my pre-run carb-loading for now.

Gluten-free fad floods the health world

Photo courtesy of intestinalgardener.blogspot.com

Health Column | Gluten-Free Fun

Many people live on a gluten-free diet, due either to a gluten allergy or a desire to lose weight

Food companies have begun to market “gluten-free” food to people with allergies.

Page 18 | Thursday, January 17, 2013 Old Gold & Black | Life

Gluten-Free Eating Tips

Bread | Udi’sCereal | Chex cereal (all flavors)Noodles | Schär NoodlesBrownies | Betty CrockerOreos | GlutinoFrozen Dinners | Amy’s Kitchen (they’re vegetarian, too!)Waffles | Nature’s Path Buckwheat Wildberry Frozen Waffles Beer | Harvester Fresh Hop IPA and Dogfish Head Tweason’AleRestaurants | P.F. Chang’s or Brixx

BY CAROLINE MURRAYStaff [email protected]

Page 19: 1.17.2013

Every New Year’s Eve is fraught with the typical resolutions to lose weight, send hand-written letters, and save money, which usually crash and burn within a few months if not a few weeks. It is a time to reflect on the past year and look forward to the new year, including flings you want to forget and upcoming events you can’t wait to experience. In the fashion world, it is also a time to look back on the regrettable trends of the past year that desperately need to fade away and look forward to the new, exciting trends that will color the spring season. As with most other fashion seasons, the forecast for Spring 2013 includes the good, the bad and the unexpected.

The unexpected trends are just that — unexpected, but not necessarily unappreciated. Two trends in particular that are usually reserved for fall and winter, leather and a contrast of black and white, both received an unexpected sponsor from the typically pastel-covered spring runways. Furthermore, leather is no longer reserved for worn motorcycle-inspired jackets and chic bags. Instead, the material has made

its way into every aspect of fashion, from dresses to shirts to pants.

On the other hand, every season also produces some undeniably odd and confusing trends that never quite make it off the runway or out of the magazines and onto the streets, even with the most fashion-forward individuals. For example, this season’s trends are trying to encourage two-toned lipstick. The contrast could be found in top lip versus bottom lip, left side versus right side, or middle versus the outside edges. It doesn’t really matter where or how. It only matters that lips are not made to color-block, especially when the color-blocking trend itself wasn’t even able cross the divide between the years. The peplum, however, has managed to cross the divide. However, the oddly placed ruffles are now traveling all over our bodies and have been renamed as “architectural ruffles.”

This is a trend that could develop into something beautiful, but right now it remains in the confusing category because the general public remains a little wary after watching the original peplum be repeatedly worn into regrettable oblivion.

In other news, remember middle school? I wish I didn’t either. Regardless, Bermuda shorts have returned. The throwback trend made appearances on the runways this season, but it will be interesting to see whether the extra-long shorts will find their way back into mainstream fashion or if they stay locked up on the runways and in

magazine advertisements. The season’s best trends begin with decade-inspired fashion. For a fresh take on silhouettes and patterns, look no further than the ‘50s and the ‘60s. The ‘20s, on the other hand, played a stronger role in the beauty department. Consider the new Great Gatsby movie and the newer seasons of Downton Abbey where the characters proudly wear bobbed finger waves matched with scarlet lips. This is one trend that was classically beautiful almost a century ago and remains so to this day.

Another seemingly timeless trend has also

made a triumphant return: stripes. Don’t worry, J.Crew will still be pumping out the pretty pattern on everything imaginable, because it isn’t going anywhere. Thank goodness. Cutouts have also continued into the New Year, but are now taking a more subtle approach to the bare midriff issue that caused considerable deliberation in 2012 when too many celebrities used the cutout trend far too liberally. This season, expect to see sheer overlay, thick lace, and much more modest silvers allowing for peekaboo midriffs.

With the new year comes new fashions

Stars align for Hollywood’s biggest night

BY ERIN PATTERSONStaff [email protected]

Life | Old Gold & Black Thursday, January 17, 2013 | Page 19

For the first time in three years, the Golden Globes were hosted by new faces. In 2010, 2011 and 2012, British comedian Ricky Gervais hosted the award show. Gervais’ jokes were controversial, crude and politically incorrect, but always funny in a painfully true kind of way. By last year, though, Gervais seemed to be running out of steam and he was criticized for not being funny enough. Gervais declined to host the award show a fourth time, and Amy Poehler (Parks and Recreation) and Tina Fey (30 Rock) were brought in as the new hosts.

They quickly proved themselves a nice change from Gervais’ biting sarcasm. They had written good jokes that, while tamer than Gervais’, were no less funny, and they had an easy, charming charisma that engaged and entertained the audience. After their stints on Saturday Night Live, the two comedians seemed at ease in front of the crowd, and the biggest complaint about the award show seems to be that they were not given enough screen time.

This year’s collection of Golden Globe nominations and wins showed the growing popularity of political dramas in film and on television.

Nominations and wins were given to Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln, Kathryn

Bigelow’s Zero Dark Thirty, the TV movie Game Change, the miniseries Political Animals and the popular television drama, Homeland.

Lincoln received seven nominations including for Best Motion Picture-Drama, Best Screenplay and Best Director, though it only took home one award for Daniel

Day Lewis’ portrayal of Lincoln. Zero Dark Thirty followed with four nominations, but no wins. Game Change took home the television awards for Best Television Movie and Best Actress in a Television Movie, while Homeland received the awards for Best Television Series, and Best Actor and Actress. Political Animals received two

nominations, but no wins. Past favorites at the Emmys and Golden Globes such as Modern Family and Downtown Abbey were passed over in favor of Homeland and HBO’s comedy series Girls.

The biggest win of the evening went to Ben Affleck, who won Best Director for Argo. Affleck was not nominated for an Oscar for Best Director, and many have considered that the biggest snub this year. When Affleck won the Golden Globe, he received a standing ovation.

The best speech of the night was Anne Hathaway’s tribute to Sally Fields after Hathaway was chosen over Fields for Best Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture. She thanked Fields for showing her that an actress can break out of typecasting to take on bolder roles and succeed. Fields started out as the flying nun, while Hathaway became famous for her role in the Princess Diaries. The speech creating the most buzz is Jodie Foster’s acceptance for the Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award. Foster’s dialogue tended to ramble as she gave scathing criticisms of reality television and paparazzi, but it was also funny, nostalgic and a touching tribute to her mother who is suffering from dementia. The controversy over it has come from the fact that it is her first major coming-out speech and that she seemed to be saying that she is retiring from acting for good.

Overall, the award show offered a great night of entertainment, due mainly to Amy Poehler and Tina Fey’s contributions. The Academy Awards on Feb. 24 will have a hard time meeting the high standards set this past Sunday.

BY KATHRYN ROHLWINGStaff [email protected]

Photos courtesy of temptalia.com & okmagazine.com

Spring runway shows have been filled with unexpected trends like leather shirts and Bermuda shorts

Talented actors from both film and television gathered Jan. 13 for the 70th annual Golden Globe Awards

Megan Fox and Amy Poehler demonstrated two popular trends on the red carpet, champagne dresses and plunging necklines.

Trend Alert | Seasonal Style

Although she may be the ugly duckling of the Crawley family, Lady Edith of Downton Abbey has inspired some trends this spring.

Photo courtesy of fanpop.com

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Page 20 | Thursday, January 17, 2013 Old Gold & Black | Advertisement©

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