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VoLUME 74 No. 28 · wAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY/ WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY/ MAY 3/ 1991
Eri<Rice
Judicial Board Declares Mistrial In Meroney Case
BY JAY WOODRUFF
AssociATE MANAGINO BorroR
The faculty advisors of the Judicial Board dismissed a trial to hear charges brought against the editor of The Wake Forest Critic, an independent student magazine, declaring a mistrial.
The Judicial Board convened 8 p.m. Thursday in Benson University Center 401 to try sophomore John Meroney on charges of "disorderly conduct."
The Student Government constitution says mistrials are determined by a majority vote of the faculty advisors. It also says, "Two mistrials shall result in the charges being dropped."
Senior David Stradley, Meroney's counsel and a former student defender, said he plans to appeal the procedures of the Judicial Board before the judicial Council, the governing body of the judicial system.
Senior Merry Schilling, co-chairman of the Judicial Board and the judge for the bearing, said the case will now be handled through the interim judicial process.
According to the SG constitution, a student may request a hearing before a five-person panel appointed by the dean of the college at any time "during which the normal Honor Council, Judicial Board, or Case Referral Panel are unavailable." The Judicial Board cannot hear cases when classes are not in session.
Council Dismisses Lying Charge Due. to Statute of Limitations
BY JAY WOODRUFF
AsSOCIATE MANAGINO EDIToR
. T'lJ Judicial Council, the governing body of the judicial system, dismissed a charge oflying brought
· against the editor of The Wake F orestCritic because. the charge was made after the five-day statute of limitations for reporting honor system violatio.ns had expired.
·. •.,,
The alleged violation occurred during a con- . frontation between sophomore John Meroney, the Critic editor, and junior MaJC Dalton, the president ~" · of the Black Student Alliance , pver Meroney's · presence at an emergency meeting of the BSA April 4. Meroney allegedly lied to Dalton in an attempt to gain access to the meeting, which was for BSA members only.
S~nior David Stradley, defender for sophomore John Meroney, and seniors Merry Schilling and Bill Horton, the· co-chairs of the Judicial Board, confer during the open hearing Thursday. ·
Charges were brought against Meroney because he See Mistrial, Page 4
According to Dalton, Meroney said he bad received permission from Ernest Wade, the director See Judicial, Page 4
·:Nation's First Black Governor to Deliver Commencement Address '
.. Ri JuLiE BoiriWiii.i. · ond-most .fi~P.~iiti::~~--~·~ ¥AN~_OJNO EDITOR . . . . '. '. . . • •·· .. ' . . state m Lawrence Dougla8 'Wilder, the governor of body. ,. .
, Virginia arid the United States' first elected Wilder, whose black governor, will present the c9mmence- grandparents were ment address. Commencement ceremonies slaves, is "the quinteswill begin at 9:30a.m. May 20 on the Quad. sential Southern
Throughout the year, faculty, students and gentleman," said Beth administrators are encouraged to nomimite }{opkins, an assistant persons to speak at commencement, said university counsel, who Douglas Wilder Sandra Boyette, the vice president of public has known him since affairs. childhood.
Wilder was invited to speak after a few Wilder speaks Latin and French and he nominations by different people, she said. quotes Shakespeare and Shelley off the top of
Boyette said, not only is Wilder considered his head, she said. a likely Democratic candidate for the presi- He received a Bronze Star for heroism in dency, but many felt it was appropriate for ground combat during the Korean War. Wilder to speak because Virginia is the see- Hopkins, whose parents went to school
Committee Recommends ~hanges to ARA Service
BY STEPH MOHL Nsw:; BorroR
The special food service committee ap. pointed by President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. . has completed the first phase of its evaluation of food services, said Ken Zick, the vice president for student life and instruc~
· tional resources and the chairinan of the committee.
As a result of the study, the C9mmittee haS recommended a one~year probation period for ARA. The committee's report
I·· says, ARA will be expected to meet the daily operational standards and the long
·. term goals set by the committee. . The committee met with food service
. consultants, visited six other college campuses, had discussions with representatives of food service companies and consulted
. )Vith two schools that operate their own :: food program, Zick said. : : :The executive director of the National · Jl.ssociation ofCollegeand University Food · ~ervice and past officers of the association &Ssisted in developing guidelines for the study; the reports says.
Zick said Harry Tafe, a food service marketing consultant for ARA, was called to evaluate the university's food services.
After Tafe conducted interviews with students, faculty and staff members, toured ~niversity dining facilities and visited local alternatives to campus dining, such as K&W
,, : Cafeteria, he recommended a change in · ARA management, Zick said.
As a result, Duane Clark was appointed · interim director of ARA as a "trouble shooter" March 27, Zick said.
· Zick said ARA has also conducted an internal study of food services. A management team from ARA was sent to review operations, such a8 marketing and person-
..., ·l
'
nel. He said the committee has been "really quite pleased with ARA's response."
He said the committee had discussed changing vendors but decided instead to put ARA on probation because of its quick response to probiems ..
Since his arrival on campus, Clark has implemented a six-week "Action Plan" for the Spring semester that has included the addition of Krispy Kreme dougriuts to the Benson Food c;:ourt; an expanded breakfast program in the Pit; extensive employee training; and publication of a food service newsletter and other information fliers. ARA also repeated a satisfaction survey that was first conducted last semester.
The survey of200customers in April found that "significant progress has been made" since the last survey in December, the report says.
According to statistics for overall performance, 24 percent rated the Pit as "good" in December; in April, this percentage had in· creased to 55 percent.
ARA has also planned other changes for the dining program to be implemented in the falL
Scott Ownby, the former director of dining services at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tenn., has been appainted the new director of dining services, Zick said.
Zick said Ownby is very receptive to student comments and complaints and always "has his ear to the ground." Ownby actively participated in campus activities, such as Habitat for Humanity, while at Rhodes, Zick said.
A full-time marketing manager will be hired who will be responsible for improving communication with customerS, assessing consumer attitudes and responding to student concerns. In addition, Zick said ARA plans to hire a student manager. ·
·• ,, ..
~vJiji \V~lder, litY,ited him to speak at Wake Fore5t~Afthongli1Iopkins was born irr Petersburg, Va., her mother grew up in Richmond, Wilder's hometown.
"His personality is addictive. Once you walk into a room where he is, you know someone powerful is in the room. He has that kind of aura. Everyone in Virginia knew Doug Wilder. He was always out in the forefront," Hopkins said.
The summer before Wilder was elected as governor, Hopkins was the co-chairwoman of a statewide fund-raiser in North Carolina to help towards his campaign. "We raised $50,000, which is significant for someone not running in North Carolina," she said.
After serving in the army in 1952-1953, Wilder graduated from Virginia Union Uni-
See Food
versity with a bachelor's ~egree in cherilistiy and from Howard University School of Law.
After practicing law in Virginia, Wilder served in the Virginia Senate from 1969-1985 as the state's first black senator. In November of 1985, he was elected as lieutenant governor of Virginia.
According to Wilder's press office, some of his major legislation as a Virginia senator include: prohibiting or regulating the possession, sale or distribution of drug paraphernalia; bringing sickle. cell anemia under State Health Department regulations; requiring comP.ulsory school attendance; establishing a state holiday for Martin Luther King, Jr.; increasing the penalty for escape from prison or jail from a misdemeanor to a felony; and doubling thetimecapital murderers must spend
Bred Mattson
Freshman Josh Young proudly displays his lunch for all to see.
behind oars before beirig eligible for jlaro1e. Wilder is- a' niembei Of"the. American Bar
Association, Virginia State Bar, American· Trial Lawyers Association and National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Brian Eckert, the director of media relations, said Wilder has not announced the title of his address, because he will probably speak on current issues, which are likely to change between now and May 20.
Wilder will be presented with an honorary doctor of law degree during the ceremony.
In the event of rain, commencement will be moved to Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum. The change will be announced after 7 a.m. on local radio and television stations and on the university weather line (759-5935).
SAA Sponsors Third Annual Demonstration
BY KELLY BLVE OLD UOLD AND BLACK REroRTER
Students Against Apartheid sponsored its third annual anti-apartheid rally April 25 on the steps of Wait Chapel.
Members of theW ake Forest Gospel Choir opened the ceremony with two songs, "Praise
·Him" and "Ain't Gonna Let Nobody." Alpheus Mabitsela, a native of South Af
rica who has attended the University of North Carolina at Greensboro for the past year, spoke about the similarities between SoutH Africa and the United States. ·
Although Mabitsela said he considers the two countries similar in many ways, the greatest difference between the two are attitudes between blacks and whites.
Mabitsela said he came to the United States to pursue his education because it is difficult for blacks to receive the same education as whites in South Africa.
He said, "While the ratio of black people white people in South Africa is 5-l, there See SAA, Page 2
Vigilante£ Senior Rick McFarland foils a tr.lme.
news/page2
,&.rts and Entertainment ........... ; ••••••••••• 1 o Brief!y .... ; ................................ ; ............. 2 ClaSsified$ ....... '" ........ ;; ....................... 11 Cc;mling Atiiil'i:tions ......... ;.;.;;.; ............ 11 ' Editorials .; ............... .: ........................... ; 6 Peri~es ..... : ................ ; ......... ; ... ;.;: .. 5
., p~~Ol( ; •• ~··"!""••••••uu•~··••••; .. ; ..... ;,,.l! Secur~ty Beat .••..•.. : ... .: .......... ".~ . .: •.• ; •••••• ~ SportS untttun••;•e.:.~•••u•u•••~••••uu•••~•: ..... ~.~8 Verteb~te Theatre •• " .......... ; ••• ; ........... 11 Woitdwid~ .:".-h.:.~ .......• ,_ ...... " .......... 4.·
2 Ol.oGoLDANoBLACK FRIDAY,MAv3,1991
,;.=~~:;~=~==~~~~--::--:~~---NEws--------------------Race Relations Commission Proposes Changes
• Schools Sponsor Ceremonies
Bowman Gray School of Medicine, the Babcock Graduate School of Management and the School of Law will hold hooding ceremonies du1ing commencement weekend, May 18-19, which will feature speakers from the legal, business and medical fields.
Winston-Salem physician Larry D. Hopkins will address graduates of the School of Medicine at 4:45p.m. May 19 in Wait Chapel. Hopkins, an alumnus of the college and the medical school, is a member of the university's board of trustees.
G. Allen Mebane, chairman of the board of Unifi, Inc., will present his remarks to graduates of Wake Forest's three MBA programs: fulltime, executive and evening. He will speak at 7 p.m. May 19 in Wait Chapel.
N. Carlton Tilley, a U.S. District Court judge for the middle judicial district of North Carolina, will speak to the School of Law graduates at 1 :45 p.m. May 19 in Wait Chapel. Tilley is an alumnus of the college and law school.
• Parking Lots to Be Closed
Campus parking lots will be closed and traffic detours posted during commencement activities. The temporary parking and traffic changes should improve transportation on campus during the high-traffic-volume activities.
Lot M (between Davis and Taylor houses) and Lot N (between Poteat and Kitchin houses) will close from midnight May 19 until after commencement. During the same time, three lots will be reserved for faculty only. They are Lots A and P (both sides ofWait Chapel) and Lot C (in front of Benson University Center).
On the morning of commencement, May 20, most traffic entering campus will be detoured into various parking areas, both to facilitate parking and to discourage through traffic. Detours will be in effect from 7 a.m. until after commencement exercises.
Vehicles parked in the closed or unauthorized areas will be towed.
• Student Defenders Appointed
The student defenders for the 1991-92 school year have been appointed.
Sophomore Scott Beatty has been chosen to succeed senior Chris Nichols as the coordinator of student defenders. Beatty has one year of experience as a student defender and has defended students before the Honor Council and Judicial Board.
Current student defenders who have been reappointed are juniors Ed Bodnarn and Michelle Hale and sophomore Julie Young.
Newly appointed student defenders are juniors Jenna Fruechtenicht, Cheri Tysinger and Bradley Woods; sophomores Joshua Else, Jill Middlemas and Lisa Shannon; and freshmen Erik Godwin, Jeffrey Joseph, and Tonnye White.
_ _sophomore Catherine Finch will be the alternate.
• Professors Awarded Grants
Two Wake Forest faculty members have received National Science Foundation grants to fund research projects.
Huw M. L. Davies, an associate professor of chemistry, has received $66,080 for his research on "Viny!carbenoids in Organic Synthesis."The project involves the development of new strategies for the preparation of complex three-dimensional structures.
Mark Welker, an assistant professor of chemistry, has been awarded an additional $40,500 to continue his research on "Transition Metal Disulfur Monoxide (S20) Complexes: Their Synthesis and Reaction Chemistry," The project is aimed at preparing molecules which contain sulfur-sulfur bonds that may possess biological activity as antifungal agents or agricultural chemicals.
• Video-conference to Be Held
A video-conference titled "Out of the Red: Economic Transition in Eastern Europe," from the Hoover Institution at Stanford University will be shown from 12-2 p.m. May 10 in Scales Fine Arts Center204A. Panelists include Milton Friedman, George P. Shultz, George J. Stigler and senior government officials from Eastern Europe. This video-conference is sponsored by the School ofB usiness and Accouniancy and the departments of economics, history, international studies and politics. The event is free and open to the public.
• MBA Professor Writes Book
Charles R. Kennedy Jr., an associate professor of management for the MBA program, examines risks involved in international business in his new book, Managing the International Business Environment: Cases in Political and Country Risk (Prentice Hall, Inc. 1991).
Chapters and cases in the book address various fo~s ?frisk including political instability, expropnauon, export controls, international negotiations, legal disputes, questionable payments, industrial policies and debt repayment.
Kennedy is also the author of another book, Political Risk Management: International Lending and Investing Under Environmental Uncertainty (Quorum Books, 1987).
B Museum Holds May Sale
The museum shop at Wake Forest's Museum of Anthropology will hold its annual May Sale May 1-21.
Wake Forest students, faculty and staff receive a 10 percent discount during the sale, and members of the museum's Friends Organization get 20 percent discounts.
Shop hours are 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. MondayFriday and 2-4 p.m. weekends.
Ocn GoLD AND BLAcK STAFF REPORT
A special commission of students, faculty and administrators appointed by President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. has issued its report after a year-long study of race relations at Wake Forest.
black students. The committee also made an appeal for individual commitment to multicultural ac-ceptance and tolerance. .
Gladding said. "Our conclusion is that the biggest problem is differing perceptions of each other between whites and blacks."
studentse!Vicesandacommission co~hairman, said the group was designed to be a cross-section of
. students, faculty and admiriistra-· tors. Members were required to make a commitment to work on the year-long effort before their
attempted to assess the campus racial environment systematically, evaluating the impact of a diversified student body and opportunities for non-whites.
The 18-member panel found that improvement is needed. It recommended a list of specific ac!ions in eight areas of campus life to promote better relations, particularly between white and
"All is not well, but there IS
hope," said Samuel Gladding, the assistant to the president for special projects and a co-chairman of the commission.
"We looked at race relations as reported on the national scene, and looked for parallels here. We looked into racial incidents that ha:ve taken place on campus,"
"Human dignity is the issue &nd we are all, in the campus community, involved in promoting dignity and justice. If change is to come to campus, it must involve everyone. We are appealing to the hearts and minds of every Wake Forest person to promote the common good," he said.
appointments. , The commission met 20 times
during the academic year, interviewing 35 people, conducting an open forum and receiving comments from interested members of the university community. It
The most important problel\1 is · perception and understanding between races, Gladding said. · .
"We are not a totally divided campus," he said. . ·
"But there are differing perceptions of how racist we are. nien; are some misperceptions on. all
Harold Holmes, the dean of See Race, Page 3 -
Light in April? Sophomore Norm Archer reads Faulkner on the wall in frontbf the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity house.
Student Catches Two Thieves Who Stole Purse From Woman
BY KIM GRIFFING
OLD GoLD AND BLACK REroRTl'.R
On the afternoon of April 23 senior Rick McFarland ran through backyards and jumped fences to catch an alleged purse snatcher.
McFarland said he was leaving Raycliff's Hallmark Center in the Robinhood Road shopping center when he heard a woman yelling for help because two teenage boys had just stolen her purse.
o\fter hearing the woman's call, McFarland ran behind the back of the shopping center, but the two boys had already left the shopping center area.
Another bystander told McFarland that she saw the boys jumping a fence behind TJ Max. He then drove behind the shopping center and saw
SAA From Page 1
four black universities and 21 white universities."
Blacks are not allowed to attend white universities unless their parents are very rich, he said.
He said the concern of outside countries, including the United States, is partly responsible for the progress made against the apartheid, such as the freeing of Nelson Mandela, the dissolution of some restrictive laws, and the decision of some white universities to admit black students.
Debra Boyd-B uggs, an assistant professor of romance languages, was the rally's second speaker. Boyd-Buggs spent last summer traveling throughout Africa, from Mali to Senegal.
Boyd-Buggs read poems written by South Africans because she said the writers of every society "have apolitical and social function."
Alton B. Pollard ill, an assistant profe~sor of religion who traveled in South Africa last summer, also spoke.
Pollard said, "Although segregation has been a part of the South African landscape for more than 340 years, people can not be (suppressed) when they know what freedom is."
one of the boys in the woods. McFarland got out of his car and walked towards him. The boy then took off running, so McFarland chased him.
After running in and out of the woods and backyards, the boy eventually came upon a creek bed which kept him from going any further.
The boy did not have the purse with him but had dropped it somewhere in the woods, McFarland said. McFarland then tried to convince the boy that he could not get away.
McFarland prevented the boy from running away until the police arrived.
The woman's purse was found in the woods, but the. other boy had apparently taken the money, McFarland said.
He said, "It just felt good to really get involved and help out a little bit."
Fire Sale
Wake Forest Alumni· Serve, in South Korea[
BY STEPH MoHL NEWsEoiTOR
;S:: \,-
Guard PostCo/lier,Demilitafized Zone, Korea. The forward obsiber for Second Platoon takes a snapshot with his 35 mm Cannon camera with 2,000 mm lens. Th!! picture is of a North Korean patrol carrying auto· maticweapons,anarmisticeviolation.
Realizing the sensitive nature of the situation, Lieutenant Chadwick W. Clark, the Second Platoon leader, dispatches a special courier to take the film to the Third Brigade headquarters for analyzation by Military loud screams and chased them 1,000 Intelligence personnel. ' meters back across the border. I think
Thirty minutes later, the classified we scared them half to death with our film is delivered to Lieutenant Alex J. audacity." Parasci of the Third Brigade for de· As battlefield information coordiveloping and analysis. Afte.r: deter- nator for the 3rd Brigade, Parasci is mining the extreme sensitive nature responsibleforestablishing, updating,
·of th.e incriminatory photographs, and maintaining the status of the enParasci briefs the Third Brigade emythreatinordertobriefthebrigade 1 commander. commander in case of war.
This may look like an excerpt from Since the 3rd Brigade has a unit on a suspense J;lOVel, but these events the DMZ year round, Parasci deals happened to two Wake Forest gradu- with top secret information on a daily ates now stationed in South Korea basis. and were related to the Old Gold and Parasci says in the letter: "Day to Black in a letter written by Clark. day we could be in a war situation. Clark and Parasci, '89, are Distin- The United States is in Korea to guished Military Graduates from the augment the Republic of Korea's ROTC program. · forces against the fourth largest army
Clark is an infantry platoon leader in the world (North Korea)." on his second assignment andParasci "As the cold war comes to an end, is on his ftrst assignment as a military North Korea is still hard-line (Comintelligenceofficer.Botharemembers munist), which poses a threat to: the of the 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Di- balanceofpowerintheEast,"hesays. vision. It has the mission of patrolling Clark has been promoted and will and defending the American portion begin his third duty assignment in of the demilitarized zone. May with the 24th Infantry Divisionl
The DMZ was established in 1953 in Ft. Stewart, Ga. bythesigningofanarmisticebetween Parasci will also leave Korea in
- North Korea, SouthKorea and the. -Mayforanassignment.with-the82nd United States. The U.S. is responsible Airbonte Division. for patrolling a 25 square kilometer As Clark ·llft!i .. Parasci prep~ .tp. section of the border. leave Korea, they both say their tours:
Clark says in his letter that the pa- of duty in Korea have given them: trolling unit's main focus is to protect "years of experience that (they)· South Korea from North Korean in- couldn't have gotten anywhere else": flltrators. Its secondary mission is to and "a great appreciation for; provide 24-hoursurveillanceofNorth America." Korea and report any armistice vio- Clark is a graduate of the Army: lations, he says. AirborneSchoolandtheAnny Ranger:
"The threat on the DMZ is real. School; an honor graduate from the; Daily you come face-to-face with an Infantry Officers Basic Course, the· enemythatwouldn'tthinktwiceabout Air Assault School and Infantry: exploiting a mistake," Clark says. Mortar Platoon Course; and a veterrui
He has beenstationedneartheDMZ of Operation: Just Cause in Panama,.; since February, and he has been on He has received the Army Service· patrols into North Korea, taken top Ribbon, the Armed Forces Expedi-: secret pictures of North Korean tionary Medal, the National Defense: weapons systems and spotted North f\iedal, the Overseas Ribbon, the; Korean infiltrators. - Army Achievement Medal, the Army·
He says: "One night we were . Accommodation Medal and thi coming back from an ambush when Combat Infantry Men's Badge. we saw some figures in the distance. Parasci is a graauate of the Army; Being aware of the threat, we pro- . Airborne School and the Army Mili-; ceeded with caution. Because of the tary Intelligence Basic Course. political nature of the DMZ we were He is a recipient of the Army Serf not able to 'lock and load.' Once we vice Ribbon, the National Defense; got close enough to recognize them as Medal~ the Overseas Medal, and theNorth Koreans, we just let out with ···Army Accommodation Medal. -
Brad Matl\lon "The South African government re
fused to acknowledge that hatred in any form is destined to be defeated," Pollard said.
The university photography staff held Its first annual surplus print sale Wednesday.
.1
'• ,, ,,
the campus ;tematically, t of a divernd opponu-
t proble~ is >tanding be~ said. ·. illy divided
ring percep~ are. There, ions on.iul
• lflt .. ·.
rea:
them 1,000 rder. I think tth with our
ion coordi-'• Parasci is g, updating, s of the en'the brigade 1 ~·-as a unit on ~rasci deals nona daily
~r: "Day to r situation. ' Korea to )f Korea's trgestarmy l)." >to an end, Line (Cornlreat to: the ;t,"hesays. m and will gnment in y Division~
: Korea in lb.the82nd
prep~.t9.
their tours: iven them· 1at (they): 1here else": ation for;
the Army: my Ranger: ~from the: :ourse, the· L Infantry: daveteran: nPanama: 11y Service: :s Expedi-: il. Defense: bbon, the· ,theArmy: . and the: :tdge. the Army: .rmy Mili-: 1rse. \rmy Serf I Defense: 11, and the· :dal. .
Malhon
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.·
. 1
OLD GJw AND BLACK FRIDAY, Mw 3,1991 3 ------------------------~----------------N~------------------------------._._._.__.__. Examination-related Stress Takes Toll on Study-minded Students
. .
.BY STEPH MOHL
Do you have a headache? Is your stomach ·upset? Have you been irritable and depressed lately? If your answer to these questions is yes .then you are"probably suffering from too much stress~ more specifically, exam-time stress. :; . · Mary Ann Taylor, the director of the Student
,; Health Service, said more students suffer from illness during exams than during any other period.
Taylor said· she believes stress-related illnesses are the reason more students are treated during exams, although the health service
!·.·catch!
does not have statisti1s about the p1"Qblem. · Examples of stres -related illnesses are
stomach complaints, ausea, diarrhea, headaches and insomnia, 'taylor said.
Other problems inc~de skin rashes, consti- · pation and breathing · gularities. .
Taylor also said stu ents ar~ more susc.eptibletocolds, the flu an othersimilarillnesses, because they are not g tting enough sleep and, consequently, their b ies are "run down."
Taylor also talked a out the body's physiological response to s~ss.
When the autonomi nervous system is put into "overdrive" it cau es an increase in heart rate and blood pressu , a decrease in body temperature, faster breathing and a dry mouth,
she said. Alan Cameron, a counselor at the couns,eling center, defined stress as a person's response to any kind of change. He said everyone has different kinds of stressors and reacts differently to them.
Cameron said there is no "quick answer" for dealing with stress.
"The best answer to alleviating stress is to prevent it before it can get too bad," he said.
Taylor said she agreed that keeping up with work is the best way for students to prevent stress.
However, fo~many students it is too late in the semester for this advice, so Taylor and Cameron suggested ways to help students overcome exam-time stress.
Race FromPage2.
Taylor recommended four practices: eat healthy foods, exercise regularly, use relaxation techniques and avoid alcohol.
Cameron also said it is important to eat nutritious foods and get enough physical exercise.
·"(Exercise) is important because {it) uses up the extra energy generated by stress," he said.
Taylor particularly urged students to practice relaxation exercises, such as the relaxation-response technique and the visualizeto-relaxation technique, or to at least set aside some time for quiet meditation.
"Relaxation techniques are particularly helpful right before an exam because they
help you to clear away the 'cobwebs' an~ enable you to focus better," she said.
Cameron said it is also necessacy to get :a reasonable amount of sleep.
Taylor said students should avoid large amounts. of caffeine and over-the-counter stimulants such as No-Doz. ·
"We see at least one person each semester who has had problems as a result ofNo-Doz/' she said.
Cameron also stressed the importance <!f time management, especially during exatT!time. He recommended that students actually schedule tbeirtime, at least for the next week, in order to ensure that normally wasted min-utes are used. ·
Gladding said the commission believes that the report is comprehensive. The commission also agreed on the two most important goals: developing a new university creed which speaks affirmatively to race relations and cultural diversity, and creating a comprehensive longrange plan for promoting positive race relations, he said.
Thecommissioncalledfora "grass-rootseffonaimedat the promotion of human dignity and the celebration of diversity" in its report.
sides because of a lack of contact. We have not fully integrated because of a lack of mixing outside the classroom."
It asks tJ;tat financial support for such an effort be given "highest priority." ·
Holmes said the commission believes its recommendations will work.
"I see optimism from people on the commission," he said. "They feel much more informed, energized and hopeful about improving race relations."
The commission listed eight areas requiring attention. These ~ include: institutional statements; student, faculty and administrative initiatives; curriculum development; orientation; recruitment an~ employment; athletics; international students; and long-range planning. ·
Junior Mark Brucker throws a baseball on the Quad.
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The Old Gold and Black would like to congratulate all graduating seniors and wish them the best of luck while hunting for jobs in this economically repressed nation of. ours.
Why not go home, kick back, and ride this baby out? Mom and Dad won"t mind, you've already forced them to take out that third mortgage for your college education! Take a short vacation before heading out into the real world.
WANTED: INDIVIDUALS WITH INFECTIONS OF THE SKIN If you have one of the following and are not currently being treated with an
antibiotic, you may qualify for a research study being developed for the treatment of skin infections.: . ·
*open, draining sores* *a wound, (surgical or accidental) that has not healed or is becoming worse*
*boils* · · r:
*other reddened, swollen and tender areas not due to burns* Patients who do qualify will receive a free physical examination, blood/ diagnostic testing and treatment. In addition, patients will be compensated up to $50.00
fqi their participation. Females must not be pregnant or nursing.
URINARY TRACT INFECTION Piedmont Research Associates is currently conducting a
research study of urinary tract infections. · , , If you are 13 years or older and experiencing pain on urination,
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• U.S. Seeks War Reparations
NEW YORK- U.S. officials are seeking war reparations of up to 50 percent of Iraqi's oil profits if the United Nations approves Baghdad • s request to export oil. This would allow the Security Council to clairr $500 million in Iraq • s first postwar oil export.
The U.S. mentioned the 50 percent figure in a sanctions committee meeting Tuesday. All Iraqi oil exports without Security Council approval were prohibited under the cease-fire resolution.
• Cyclone Strikes Bangladesh
DHAKA, Bangladesh - A cyclone with 145 m.p.h. windsand20-foottidal waves killed 12,000 people and left millions homeless in Bangladesh. The stonn raged for seven hours Monday night and forced the evacuation of three million people from their homes.
II Iranian Leader Denied Visa
Fonner Iranian president Abvolhassan BaniSadr was denied a U.S. visa Wednesday by the State Department. He was scheduled to arrive Thursday to promote his book, My Turn to Speak: iran, the Revolution & Secret Deals with the U.S., that criticizes U.S. officials.
• Ireland Holds Peace Talks
GREAT BRITAIN · - British officials brought together Northern Ireland's Protestant and Catholic leaders for landmark peace talks Tuesday. British officials said it was the best chance in decades of achieving a seulement. Over the last 22 years there have been 2,800 deaths and several failed peace initiatives. The talks could lead to restoring government in Northern Ireland.
• Bush TalkE Trade With China
WASHINGTON-President Bush is considering renewing trade benefits to China, despite human rights abuses. China's most favored nation status expires in June. Bush said he has tried to make clear his concern about human rights abuses, particularly those occurring in Tianamen Square, but hurting China economically is not the way to effect change.
• Mining Banned in Antarctica
SPAIN - Diplomats from 39 nations met and agreed to ban mining in Antarctica for 50 years.
Britain and the United States had wanted to keep mining options open for exploration but gave-in during the six-hour meeting.
Andrew Davis, a spokesman for Greenpeace, said Antarctica is "the last relatively pristine wilderness."
Judicial From Page 1
Both accusations were heard before the Case Referral Panel April 24. The accusations against Dalton were dismissed. The CRP referred Meroney's case to the Judicial Council, which declared a mistrial during a hearing Thurs-day. .
of minority affairs, to attend the meeting. Wade said he never spoke to Meroney about the meeting.
According to Meroney, he told Dalton he knew Wade, not that he had received permission from Wade to attend the meeting.
Stradley said in an interview after the Judicial Board hearing Thursday that Dalton and Beverly Wright, an asso. ciate professor of sociology, who attended the BSA meeting and testified during the CRP hearing, are accusing Meroney of lying during the CRP hearing.
Meroney said Bill Hamilton, an associate dean of the college, told him Wednesday that charges were being filed.
Meroney and senior David Stradley, Meroney's undergraduate representative and a fanner member ~f .the stude~t defenders, requested a hearing before the Judicial Council because the alleged violation occurred April4, but was not reported until April 17, nine school days after th~ in~ident.
According to the Student Government Consutuuon, an honor system violation must be reported within five school days of the incident, while a violation of university rules and regulations must be reported within 10 school days.
Dalton would not discuss the case, and Wright could not be reached.
John Earle, the chainnan of the Judicial Council and a professor of sociology, said he cannot discuss any specific cases.
Earle said decisions made by the Judicial Council cannot be applied to every case. He said decisions are made on a case to case basis, not necessarily with regards to precedents.
Harold Holmes, the dean of student services, said it has been the practice of the office of student services to apply the 10-day statute of limitations to the honor sys~em w~en_an honor system violation is discovered durin$ an I_nvesugauon of an incident involving violations of umversity rules and regulations.
Holmes said he had not been officially notified of the Judicial Council's decision, but it will not affect the way the office of student services receives, investigates and routes the case.
Patricia Johansson, an associate dean of the college, reviewed Meroney's statement of the incident, which _she received April 5, and sent it to the office of student services April 10. Holmes investigated the incident, and he charged Dalton of physical abuse and the threat of physical abuse and Meroney of disturbing the peace. He notified them of the accusations in a memo dated Aprill5.
Holmes said the practice of using the I 0-day statute was in place when he assumed the position three years ago. He said, because of the university hierarchy that incident reports go through before reaching him, if he had to operate under the five-day statute, then most honor system violations would be "dead-on-arrival."
He said the 10-day statute is more fair because five days will not allow enough time to process the incident reports and notify the appropriate students.
Mistrial From Page 1
had refused to leave an emergency meeting of the Black Student Alliance April 4, after Mane Dalton, the BSA president, told him it was a closed forum for the BSA members to discuss their concerns over recent racial incidents. Meroney was escorted away from the meeting by security.
Harold Holmes, the dean of student services, reported possible violations of the university rules and regulations totheCaseReferralPanel April15. The panel referred Meroney's case to the Judicial Board and the accusations against Dalton for physical abuse and threat of physical abuse were dismissed after a closed hearing April24.
Stradley requested a continuance of theJ udicial Board proceedings because John Cranfill, a security officer, was not present to testify.
Schilling said Cranfill had been excused from the hearing because of a close friend's death. She said there was not a precedent for the Judicial Board to grant continuances of trials. She said he could request a mistrial, which he did.
After the Judicial Board was seques-
tered, the faculty advisors heard a threeminute presentation from Stradley to justify his request for a mistrial.
The faculty advisors are Doug Beets, an assistant professor of business and accountancy, John Litches, a professor of education, and Kathy Smith, an associate professor of politics.
Stradley said he was notified by senior Bill Horton, a co-chainnan of the Judicial Board, at 4:12p.m. Thursday that Cranfill would not be testifying. He · said he did not have enough time to modify his defense. He said Cranfill was the only impartial observer, and his' testimony was imperative to corroborate Meroney's story.
He also said in an interview after the hearing that he was suspicious of Cranfill's absence. He said Cranfill's connection to a race relations incident in October 1989 may have affected the officer's actions in this case.
Cranfill was one of the officers that removed John McClemore, a black student in the School of Law, from Reynolds gymnasium and had him arrested for obstructing and delaying an officer Oct. 27, 1989. Those charges were later dropped. McClemore said security officers practiced discrimination by only checking certain students for identification.
Stradley said the incident may have
made Cranfill "gun-shy" to perform his job properly. Cranfill may have become hypersensitive to incidents involving race relations, he said.
The faculty advisors asked Stradley and junior Charles Lambert, the case investigator andaJ udicia!Board member, several questions concerning the significance of Cranfill • s testimony.
Stradley said Cranfill was the only witness who could confirm certain conversations with Meroney on the night of the BSA meeting. He said the defense had planned to call Cranfill, Meroney and sophomore Paxton Helms to testify.
Lambert said Cranfill had not submitted a written report or statement of the incident. He said the prosecution had five witnesses and a written statement from a faculty member.
Horton said the members of the J udicial Board cannot comment on any case outside the hearing because they are bound to silence by the SG constitution for both open and closed hearings. The SG constitution states a student may request either an open or closed hearing.
The hearing, which was open to all members of the campus community, was the first open judicial proceeding since the Tim Bell Honor Council trial in November 1989.
• Thieves Target Tribble Hall
People reported several thefts that occurred in Tribble Hall during the week of April22-28.
Three offices were broken into and items ranging from cash to office supplies were reported missing. An investigation f01~nd that similar incidents have occurred in various offices all semester but have not been reported.
A housekeeping employee reported that her set of keys to the Admissions and University Welcome Center was taken from the night office while she was on duty in Tribble. The housekeeper works part-time at the welcome center.
Thefts of cash and valuables were reported at two residence halls. In Kitchin House, two wallets were reported stolen in separate incidents. In both cases, the rooms were unlocked, providing access to the rooms. The wallets were later discovered with cash missing.
In South Hall, a $600 pearl necklace and $50 in cash we reported missing by a resident The resident reported that her room was unlocked at the time of theft
A 15-speed mountain bicycle was stolen from Taylor House.
Two local high school students were apprehended at Z. Smith Reynolds Library after triggering an alarm at the check-out desk. Security recovered five books that the two had concealed, two of which had been damaged in an apparent attempt to remove security labels hidden in the covers. The students were questioned, given written trespass warnings and released in the custody of their parents. Further actions against the students are pending.
A number of vehicles parked on campus were broken into or damaged by vandals. Among items stolen were a radar detector and stereo equipment In separate incidents, the passenger-side parking mirrors were broken off of three cars, and a convertible top was slashed.
Vandalsstruckagainatthenewsb.JdioofWFDD radio. A beer bottle was pitched through the storm door on the front of the building. However, no extra monetary damage was done because the glass in the door had not been replaced after a similar incident
Vandalism created inconveniences for students in Efird Residence Hall. Telephone lines and other electrical connections in the building were disconnected. Telephone service to Efird was interrupted, as well as cable TV and electronic card access to the front door.
TheSigmaPhiEpsilon fraternity tower in Poteat House was also damaged by vandals. The upper lounge was sprayed with paint, and a fire extinguisher was discharged in the lower lounge and a third-floor suite.
Security resl)9nded to 72 c~l~~uring the week.
TEXTBOOK BUY BACK COLLEGE BOOKSTORE
MAY 6 through MAY 15 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. and 2 p.m.-5 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m.-12:30 p.m. NOTE: ON THE LAST DAY OF EXAMS WE WILL REMAIN OPEN FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE UNTIL 6 P.M. (TUES., MAY 14).
The Natural life History of a Textbook
The textbook is a unique animal in the world of books.
It is many things to many people.
It comes off the presses a robust and happy infant, adored by its author and praised to the skies by its publisher.
It was conceived of Scholarship and Patience and nurtured by Effort. However, its future is brief and full oi ups and downs.
As an infant, it's worth it's weight in diamonds, but the day comes when the publisher won't give a dime for his own offspring!
Spanking new, this infant's price outrages students who buy it over the counter.
The new baby matures fast in a world of hard knocks. By turns, it is used and misused. It is handled and mishandled. It is talked about, talked over, talked up and talked down.
By turns, it is a friend and a foe. It is taken to dinner and kept up all night. It gets picked up, patted and praised. It gets discussed, cussed, and kicked across the room.
It gets dog-eared and dog-tired. It gets rained on and sat on. It is thumbed through and flipped through and flopped over.
It knows many owners. It is bickedred over, bargained for, derided and disowned.
And its short unhappy end comes when the book buyer announces a new baby brother back at the publisher with a birth mark that reads "New Edition, • or "The Book Will No Longer Be Used On Campus."
What we can pay for your books is determined by the demand for that title elsewhere and by the condition of the book and if and when it will be adopted again on this campus.
IMPORTANT: PLEASE NOTE: Due to the large number of Book changes we have tried to compile a partial listing of books that have either been dropped, new editions are due, or Academic Depts. are undecided on. We have indicated the approx. wholesale price, if any, beside each title. Where no wholesale price is offered we have indicated with "NV." Unfortunately, it was impossible to compile a complete list! Only Books most recently used could be listed.
We hope this will help you to decide on Books NOT to bring to the Bookstore to try and sell. THIS LIST IS ON DISPLAY IN ONE OF OUR SHOW WINDOWS. PLEASE LOOK IT OVER BEFORE SELLING YOUR BOOKS. THIS WILL SAVE US ALL TIME AND EFFORT.
SPECIAL NOTE: PLEASE BE CAREFUL DURING THIS TIME OF THE YEAR ABOUT LEAVING YOUR BOOKS UNATIENDED: MANY BOOKS ARE STOLEN DURING. EXAMS AND THE BOOK BUY PERIOD!!! DO NOT LEAVE BOOKS OUTSIDE OF THE EXAM CLASSROOMS OR IN THE PIT. MOST BOOKS REPORTED STOLEN HAVE BEEN FROM THOSE AREAS. IF YOU HAVE A BOOK(S) STOLEN, REPORT THE INFORMATION TO MR. DYER AT THE BOOKSTORE ON A 3x5 CARD GIVING TITLE OF BOOK AND COURSE, ANY SPECIAL UNIQUE IDENTIFYING MARKINGS OR NOTES, YOUR NAME, ADDRESS AND PHONE NUMBER. IT IS A GOOD IDEA TO CODE YOUR BOOKS ON A SINGLE COMMON PAGE IN THE SPINE SIDE MARGIN! YOUR NAME ON THE COVER, FRONT INSIDE OR FLY PAGE WILL SELDOM BE FOUND WHEN BEING SOLD!
GENERAL INFORMATION Please be advised that the Bookstore has NO CONTROL WHATSOEVER over the use (adoption) of textbooks! Each Academic Department and/or Professor is FREE to decide on the books to be used. Publishers control new editions. Wholesale Book Dealers set prices on books not in use here, not the Bookstore I Be ASSURED we will BUY your BOOKs at the HIGHEST possible price. We must depend on information supplied us by academic departments, publishers, and wholesalers. We will often suggest that you hold a book until additional information is given to us. If a department is undecided or has not turned in information we can only assume the book will not be u~ed and pay accordingly unless you wish to wait-usually until the next buy back period. We dislike many of the changes as much as you do. On a campus, however, where academic freedom is practiced, book changs are frequent. Many books, unfortunately, will have no cash value. This means that a new edition is out or due soon or a demand for that book no longer exists nationally. PLEASE SELL ONLY YOUR BOOKS, NO ONE ELSE'S!! PLEASE SHOW YOUR I. D. CARD. SELL EARLY AND AVOID THE RUSH. PAPERBACK BOOKS HAVE LITTLE OR NO WHOLESALE VALUE.
CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATES! College Bookstores "On the Campus" Owned and Operated by the University for the Convenience of Students, Faculty, and Staff.
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OLD GoLD AND BLACK ERSPECTIVES FRIDAY,MAY3, 1991 5
, In the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time
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Nature of the Job Market Formal Job Market . '
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War, Recession Make Companies Hesitant to Hire New Graduates
,.,,JillHlB K" ' B' '·'.' ., , .... ,. _.,, .... '- Y RISTEN ARGERON- ' . .. -
F inding a job right out of college has never been easy. The feeling among graduating seniors, however, is that
this year is particularly tough. William C. Currin, the director of the
office of career planning and placement, said the recession and the war in the Persian Gulf in the same year made companies cautious in their hiring.
"This has been an outstanding senior class. They have encountered obstacles that other classes have not had to deal with. It's
. very rare to have a shaky economy and a war at the same time," Currin said.
Currin said that he thought the recession alone would not have affected the job market to the degree that both a war and a recession did. He said the added uncertainty of war made employers, who were already uneasy because of the recession, pull back from hiring.
Currin said, due to the war, the schedule for hiring has been pushed back several months.
"We still have students in the interview process, which is almost never the case at this time of year," Currin said. "Some c~mpanies have told m~ that they are waiting until the June numbers are in to make decisions about employment"
Economists Predict Improvement n
Gary L. Shoesffiith, an assistant professor in the Babcock Graduate School of Management, said the general feeling among economists is that the economy is improving.
"I expect that the economy will be turning up within the next few months, if it has not already," Shoesmith said. "There is very little risk that the economy will get worse."
"The seniors will fmd it easier to place themselves within two to three months. It should look more like a typic31 job market," he said.
Currin said he has noticed a slight f,lurry of activity recently in the CPP office.
"The good news is that we are beginning to get some job offers in," Currin said. "We've been getting them in all along but not with the same intensity."
Currin also said salary offers have actually been higher this year.
He said he does not believe the recent firing of employess by companies necessarily provides students with a more competitive job market
"We've actually had companies recruit· ing students while the headlines were talking about the same companies firing people," Currin said. "It's a different
· precinct. Just because companies are laying off at the top to middle doesn't mean that they are not hiring at the entry level, though they may not be hiring as many."
focusing on after graduation. He gave examples of the formal comw·
nent of the job market such as campus recruiting, want ads and employment agencies. He advised students to avoid . using agencies for permanent employmf!nt, because they do not deal with many en lilylevel positions.
Currin said graduates will now need i ' focus on the informal component of the job market. He identified three main steps f searching for jobs: targeting, networkin and following-up. ·
Targeting involves researching certaip industries and companies, and concent$ting on finding jobs in those areas. '
"Research brings about focus," Currih said.
Currin discourages seniors from sending out blanket cover letters and resumes without first investigating the industry.
Currin said networking within the targeted industries is an extremely im~rtant part of job hunting.
"Individuals are ultimately what bri*gs about jobs," Currin said.
Currin said students should use wh;Uever contacts they have, including family, friends and Wake Forest alumni. He ali vises students to use the Alumni Career Assistance Program in the CPP office. AC:}P is a notebook with information on alumni who have agreed to help Wake Forest studpnts in their search for internships and jobs.
Currin said seniors should not overJook friends who are recent graduates from college ..
"A lot of times (recent graduates) \jlill be more aware of entry-level positions than an executive would be," Currin said.
Clirrin said that while he does not~ave any definite statistics, professionals ften say about 20 percent of jobs come fr m the formal process, and about 80 percent of jobs are found through the informal process.
Seniors Keep Options Open
Currin said another alternative is t:b accept a job in which you may be overqualified in a company that you know you want to work for, and then try to move up internally.
He said that option is not for everyone, but may be a good idea if you are sure you want to work for a certain company
iobs . ..o. .• ·.;; •• :;· •
"People are talking now like 'Well, I'll . have to settle for lesd'lfhave to wait tables for three or four months until I find a job.' People wertm't saying that at the beginning of the year," Strauss said.
Senior David Culpepper, an economics major, said he is keeping his options open.
"I am planning to go to Charlotte because my degree is more valuable in North
·Carolina than anywhere else," Culpepper said. "I've still got some contacts in Charlotte. If nothing pans out, I'll wait tables at night and look for a job, and/or wait tables and go to graduate school next year." .
Currin said that although CPP will have no numbers on the job placements of the senior class until the fall, he thinks more students are applying to graduate school.
Strauss agreed: "People are considering graduate school more seriously because of the lack of jobs. They think, 'Why not go
. into debt now and come out of school when the recession is over?"'
Culpepper said the interview process could provide students with false hope.
"A lot of companies interview, and even second-interview, but have no intention of hiring- and they neglect to tell you this," Culpepper said.
Currin said that while there were fewer job offers this year, recruiter activity was actually higher. ·
Students Should Stay Optimistic
Currin urges students to be patient and not to be discouraged.
"The rule of thumb is that they should give themselves six to nine months to fmd a job," Currin said. "This is a strong class, and they are going to get jobs; it's just a matter of time."
Shoesmith agrees. "I think the seniors will be able to place themselves. There may be more effort involved," he said.
Shoesmith said that in the normal job search process, leads wear out after several months, and students should accept an offer rather than looking for something better for an extended period of time.
Shoesmith said that this year, however, the benefits of long-term job hunting will be greater, because of the unusual job market.
Currin agreed: "Students who interviewed with a company on campus and were not offered a job should not consider that a final no. They should work through the personnel office of that company in case something opens up this summer."
Currin encourages seniors to continue to use the resources of CPP.
"As far as we are concerned, these seniors don't graduate in May," Currin said. "The office will be open all summer. Students can call or come by, if they are in the area."
Currin differentiated between the type of job searching most seniors have been involved in at Wake Forest and-the more·
• : ~ informal process which they will be
Senior Stephanie Strauss, a psychology major, s:Pd students are having to be flexible in their future plans in order to find
Culpepper offered a final word of encouragement to his classmates: "The key thing about this job process is that you can't let it get you down. As long as you know you're doing the best you can, you should be satisfied."
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Other
Informal Job Market Approaches
Advertisements
Agencies
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OLD GoLD AND BLACK The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University
Founded in 1916
EDITORIALS
The Good, the Bad and The Simply Ridiculous
Alas, the end of the year is here, and, in honor of the ocassion, we decided to publish a year-end wrap up of sorts. Nota"What'sHot, What'sNot" list- that would be too trendy. A summary of the year's lefthand columns did not strike a harmonious chord in anyone, either.
We wanted to give readers something positive but realistic, something critical but promising. Complaints are fine and, occasionally. effective, but sometimes we concentrate so much on the bad we forget to mention the good. With this in mind, we present the 1991 Old Gold and Black "Cheers and Jeers."
Cheers to the administration for building the lavish, $13 million Benson University Center - truly our cup runneth over. Jeers for not spending a few extra bucks to construct a drainage system between Benson and the Magnolia Court (Lake Benson is no substitute for the dying Lake Katharine).
Cheers to the university for providing us with such brilliant lighting atop Wait Chapel every night; jeers for not maintaining other sources of illumination around campus with the same diligence.
Cheers to ARA Food Services. Weappreciatethegreater variety this year, but jeers for raising the prices so high we could sorely afford to take advantage of the choices.
Cheers to the ad hoc Judicial Reform Committee, which offered yet another proposal this spring; jeers for submitting a plan that snatches away students' rights to an open trial and maintains the still inefficient bifurcated system.
Cheers to Residence Life and Housing forattemptingto make housing registration easier for us all with a computer system; jeers for not reassigning the rooms correctly when the computer failed Gust because a machine messed up, humans do not have to take the same cue).
Cheers to the Tocqueville Forum for bringing the topic of multiculturalism to the forefront of campus discussion; jeers to whatever forces conspired to make two of the seven speakers unable to attend, leaving the forum heavily weighted in favor of the "Great Books" curriculum.
Mark Russell (too bad it cost almost as much as a ticket to see the Evander Hollifield and George Foreman fight in At· lantic City); jeers for the con· spicuous absence of big name entertainment in the fall- we really missed it.
Cheers to security. They fi. nally made a copy of the secu· rity policy available for an} curious or concerned student. Jeers for keeping it under lod and key (even the original copy of the U.S. Constitution is on public display).
Cheers to the Physical Plan~ for keeping the lawns on the; Quad lush and bright; jeers fo~ reducing the expanse of othe~ lawns to a few tufts of grassl especially on the Magnolii Court. They are quickly bein converted into unsightly mu pits.
Cheers to the Delphi society forwithdrawingfrom the De~ Days competitions, sponso by the Sigma Chi fraterni because of its degradation ~ women; jeers to othersocietie and sororities that might n realize they could make a posi tive, perceptible impact on 1 campus by tackling pertine t womens' issues as a unifi group (aside from the issues qf colors and symbols, truly significant in the big picture). ·
Cheers to Clifton Benso?, CEO of Pepsico and benefaqtor to us all; jeers to the tastt less tribute to his corporatior outside Pugh Auditorium -. names on doors are one thin*; autographed pictures ~f Michael J. Fox and Micha 1 Jacksonareinanothercatego ..
Cheers to the department of athletics for building the neiN soccerstadium-itlooks et -· but jeers for not realizi g that soccer players and arti .I
cial turf, which does an~g but cushion a fall, do not m.if.
Cheers to the administrati'n for holding the Heritage ~d Promise Campaign to r~~~e funds for scholarships and f~ulty salaries; jeers for raisi g tuition and soliciting fac donations to the campaign at the same time.
And finally, cheers to all the renovations in Reynolda-tbe Green Room has never loold more regal. Theonlythingj rs is for placing chains on e doors, banning student m tings from the room and tellibg students that, if they go thete, they cannot touch the tab~.
Cheers to the Student Union, which once again invited great talent to campus this spring, this time in political humorist
compress the cushions or breathe the air. Excuse ourpk'esumption that the unive~ty belongs to all of us.
OLD GoLD AND BLACK Rocky Lantz Editor in Chief
Julie Boutwell Managing Editor
Associate Managing Editor: Jay Woodruff
Mike McKinley Business Manager
News: Steph Mohl, editor; Brian Brach, associate editor; Cherry Chevy, Worldwide editor.
Editorials: Stephanie Spellers, editor; Elliot Berke,associateeditor;Nicola Dawldns, production assistant.
Perspectives: Kristen Bargeron, editor.
Sports: Scott Sullivan and Mike Fitzgerald, editors; Jay Beddow and Jay Red~ck, assistant editors.
Arts and Entertainment: Jennie Vaughn, editor; Sara Harrington, assi~tant editor.
Copy Editing; Eric Williams, head copy editor; Kathy Kaden and Michelle Mullen, copy editors. ·
Graphics: Michael Peil, editor.
Ad Production: Jay Womack, managers; Sarahnell Lee, production assistant.
Photography: Eric Rice, editor.
Advertising: Steve Combs, manager; Lori Woods, classified manager.
The Old Gold a1ld BU.Ck COlCO'.ngcs members of lhe W U.e Foit:Sl ccrnmunity to addtes.s turrent Usut:s through let!C!S 10 !he editor. We do not accept public thank-you notes.
All letters must include the author's name and phone number, although anonymity in print may be requested. Submissions should be typcwritlal and double-spaced.
We 8"'111Y appreciate contributions submitted on Macinto5h·compatiblc disks or the univtml.y's Macintosh networlc.
The Old Gold and Black :racrvcs the right to edi~ wilhout prior notice, all copy for grunmotical or typographical cm>lll, and abo to cut letlel> as needed to moc:t llyout requirements. ThedeadlineforthoFridayissueis the p!CViousTucsday atS p.m.
The Old Gold""" BWk Is publislled each Friday during the school year, except during examlnloti<lns, summer, and hollday periods by Newspaper • •ers Inc. of Winston-Salem, N.C.
Oplnlonl expreued in this MWtpaporare th01e o. the edltorialll.df or contribute:: to the popet and donotneceuarllyn:DecttheopinJonsoftheah.ld.entbody,faculty,:atalforadmlnlshationofW•keforest Unlvenlty.
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Lake Katharine's Fate Demands Attention
T helatestenviroiunentalbuzz words ~nclude Earth Day, recychng and global
awareness. But the university community has neglected another familiar slogan: "Think globally; act locally."
Although students and faculty have started collecting cans and using recycled. paper this year, they continue to ignore the fate of our own Lake Katharine in Reynolda Gardens, once a 14-acre pond large enough for boating and water-skiing. But the lake hosted more than recreation.
In the past four years, a large turtle and duck population has diminished because the shrinking puddle can no longer support its once active wildlife.
John Anderson, the vice-president for planning and administration, has a standard answer for questions about the disappearing lake: he says a planning committee is studying what should be done.
However, he has given the same vague answer for at least four years, while the lake continues to fill up with silt.
The committee must decide whether to dredge the lake or let it fill in. Of course, the university's greatest concern is the expense of dredging 14 acres.
If students and faculty want the
Kelly Greene Student Columnist
lake and its wildlife to survive, they must speed up efforts of Anderson's committee and increase awareness of the eutrophication that is killing the lake. What better time to broach the issue than in a time of increasing concern for the environment?
Seniors mightremember how many more creatures lived in and around Lake Katharine four years ago, but the majority of freshmen do not even realize "that "Swamp Katharine" oncehostedacongregationofwildlife, where students could escape from the pressures of academia.
We must recall the role the lake has played in our campus' pastas a dumping place fornewly-pinned fraternity brothers, as a respite from. dorm life and as a serene haven for reflection in a hectic four (or five): years of growth. :
When we do so,.the financial sac-·. rifice needed to dredge the lake: seems relatively minute.
Lake Katharine has enhanced both: the university's heritage and the: campus environment. Without our· help, the former showpiece will be: buried by silt - the side effect or: construction upstream for our fu- : ture.
After Four Years, Time to Give Thanks Where Due
W ell, the end of my college days is finally here. Wake Forest has been very good to me, despite its preoc
cupation with normalcy. At this time, I think I owe the school some
humble thanks, if not for the way it has treated me, then as a humble attempt to make up for all those nasty columns that I have submitted over the last two years.
I would like to thank:
Beaumont Vance Student Columnist
again will I arrogantly label another university inferior after seeing the total incompe· tence of our institution. -The owners of BMWs, Saabs and Audis with Grateful Dead and "Peace" stickers on the windows. I never knew the central message of the hippie movement included capi· talism and yuppie-ism until I came here. -All the people out th~re who strike you in the back of the head with a piei::e of wood as soon as you run out of money. They speak for themselves.
-The board of trustees for ignoring that nagging little voice of conscience and faithfully raising tuition every single year, even in the midst of a recession. Without them, my father might have forgotten what it was like to be poor. -University security for managing to ticket us every single time we violated parking regulations, while allowing people to break into half of the cars on campus. Without them, I might have spent that $200 in ticket money on something foolish - like food. -The people who broke into my car to scrape a decal off my rear window. They saved me the trouble of having to do it myself. - Speaking of intelligence, thanks to all the people who got into Wake Forest for reasons other than academic merit- having you around made the rest of us who worked to get in here feel truly brilliant.
proving that incoherent essays and poor cognitive skills have no correlation with education .:..... The administration for spending $30 million on buildings and next to nothing on career planning and placement. Seniors who have not yet received a job should take comfort in the fact that, although they might not ever be able to pay off their college loans, at least there is a Pizza Hut on campus. Why would anyone choose a job over bread sticks anyway? - The administration, again, for stopping the beer and pizza competition during Greek Week. Being treated like a five-year-old is one of the most endearing aspects of life at Wake Forest, and it has really prepared us for the real world. - Wachovia for reminding me of the importance of balancing my checkbook. Without their helpful $18 fines I would not understand what a heinous crime it is to be 23 cents overdrawn. - The people in charge of keeping the chapel clock set to the correct time. They gave me a great excuse for being late to class. They also helped to instill a sense of humility in me. Never
-The Wake Forest Critic for putting morality back into the concept of war. I am sure you wouldalsoreceivethanksfrom the 100,000 dead Iraqis and their families, the Kurds, the Shiites and everyone and everything that is going to die because of the environmental impact of 500 burning oil wells and three billion gallons of raw sewage dumped by troops in Kuwait. - Last, but certainly not least, all of those people who took all of my columns seriously and attempted to make the world a safer place by writing those witty letters to the editor against me.
But seriously, folks, life here is actually fun once you learn to avoid the powers that be. And you might even find the rare individuals who make college worthwhile for you.
- The BSA for handing out blanket accusations that made all of us whites realize we are truly racist whether we are aware of it or not. - The people responsible for the ubiquitous construction on campus. Without the roar of heavy machinery obliterating the voice of my professors, I might have had to learn something. - David Broyles, a professor of politics, for
My last message to the administration is this: five years from now, when you are enlisting droves of student volunteers to beg alumni for money so that you can build a tiddly-wink parlor or some such center of instruction, save yourselves thephonecharges.
Mother Wake Forest was never really a good mom to me, so don't expect me to express my gratitude in dollar signs.
Broken Promises In the midst of the fervor of the
Heritage and Promise campaign, a development has occurred that threatens both theheritageofouruniversity and the promise it holds for many new and existing students.
allow for the stressing of certain importantcampusissuessuchasracism, sexism and substance abuse.
ics range from roommate problems to registration to Greek life versus independent life.
However, the formation of values and morals cannot be accomplished in a three-day campsite setting. The main focus of discussion atPre-school is not these particular issues, nor any topic, but the formation of community spirit. The personal attention of their peers, combined with the influence of faculty, campus ministers and administrators, provides strong, trusting relationships from which the new students will benefit for their four years at Wake Forest and beyond.
through providing positive experi· ences both for the incoming students and returning leaders.
We would like to express gl\ltitude for the willingness of admin· istrators to work with our existing system and to allow for our con· cerrts to be expressed. We are also grateful for the guarantee that Pre· school for next Fall will remain unchanged. Wearestillconcemed, however, for the future of the Preschool experience.
For three months, we, the Preschool 1991 Planning Committee, have been meeting to organize and implementthe36thannualPre-school program, sponsored by Campus Ministries.
Earlier this week, it was brought to our attention that the Student Life Subcommittee of the board of trustees and the Executive Committee of the university have passed a proposal for an alternate pre-orientation program thatmay ultimately defeat much of the original intent of the existing Pre-school program, or eliminate it altogether. . .
Future plans for thepre-onentauon program include a multiplecampsite setting and an increased emphasis placed on attendance for incoming freshmen. There is a possibility that theprogmm wouldeventuallyrequire attendance.
Although the proposal has already been made, the reasons for changing the program, and what those changes would mean remains unclear.
Inarecentmeeting,PresidentHearn promised that the current Pre-school program would remain as-is in the structure of the new pre-orientation program. Despite this promise, the information on the nature of the new system is continually changing, and we are continually reassessing our response to this information.
We understand that the program would be expanded in size and would
Although we agree with the importance of these issues, we feel that the existing Pre-school already addresses these issues and that the implementation of an experimental new system would not justify the loss of this living tradition.
The Campus Ministries Pre-school experience has always been heavily based on volunteer student participation. The program was designed by students and has been planned and executed by students for the past 35 years, in contrast to the new program, designed for students by the administration.
There is never a shortage of student leaders willing to pay their own fees for the three-day conference. The 50 discussion group leaders are from many backgrounds and participate in diverse areas of the Wake Forest community.
Student Union, Student Government, Honor Council, Black Student Alliance, Greeks, independents, Campus Ministry groups and those who do not affiliate with a religious group are all represented in the discussion group leaders. Most of these leaders were once Pre-schoolers themselves, repeatedly supporting the Pre-school experience.
Under the influence of Campus Ministry, the Pre-school conference has encouraged the moral, ethical and spiritual development of incoming freshmen. This ethical encouragement well represents the traditional Wake Forest values, such as liberal education and honor, and provides a forum for the open discussion of such topics as racism and substance abuse. Top-
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The voluntary nature of the system for incoming students allows for informal and honest discussion. The effects of a mandatory system can be seen with the orientation system, in which attendance must be taken to encourage participation.
For Pre-school, any additional attendance requirements would inhibit the receptivity and participation of the students involved.
The current voluntary system also allows for the preservation of Preschool's traditional religious nature, one of the few remaining indications of Wake Forest's Christian heritage. Campus Ministries is able to promote certain values and morals honestly in the perspective of this Christian tradition, without mandating their acceptance.
The Pre-school experience cannot be defined in terms of a program. Much of the time is spent in open recreation, campfires, worship, "wink" games and other experiences that help to break down walls and preconceived notions of the university, not through programming, but
To the administrators and others who have sought to replace this experience, we urge you to recon· · sider this decision and to evaluate : both the system you are threaten- , ing and the system you seek to · create.
To students, faculty, alumni and : friends whose lives have been . touched by the unique opportuni- : ties offered at Pre-school, we urge · you to have a concerned aware- ·. ness of this change in policy. Any : calls, letters and prayers would be greatly appreciated.
Preschool Planning Committee .
Hazing Exposed Do not be fooled. Do not be
fooled into thinking that hazing is going out of style amongst the Greek organizations on this campus. We are two "brothers," and we have watched pledge classes com~ and go in our fraternity. Hazing was prevalent when we entered our fraternity as pledges it is still prevalent today, and it seems to us that it will continue in the future.
Why is hazing such an integral f
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OLD GoLD AND BLACK
Seniors Impart Final Thoughts and Wisdom of the Ages Until America Admits Its Rich Heritage Includes
More Than West, Nation Will Not Be Home for All
A round the globe America represents liberty, democracy and cultural harmony. However, amongst all of these representations I stand and
find myself asking the question, "Where am I?"
TonjaDamon
Colloquium Essayist
which accept the masculine Euro-American views as the appropriate ideal.
Foundations of Liberal Arts Tradition in Jeopardy
Sure, I am an American. I have certain rights guaranteed to me by the Constitution that governs this great land. However, as a pan of this liberated and culturally harmonious environment, I cannot attend a prestigious university such. as Wake Forest without being characterized as a member of "the quota."
I cannot raise my hand to address a question without assuming the role of spokesperson for all AfricanAmerican students. I cannot sit in the Pit with other African-American students without accusations of separatism.
I, however, am not one of those ingredients. There is something wrong with an ideal that encourages an educational system that can label students as academically slow and proceed to track them out of higher educational and_employment opportunities, while blaming a child's sp~h patterns and cultural environment for his inability to learn without questioning the teacher or the teaching method.
W hen I first visited Wake Forest in the summer of 1986 as a prospective
freshman, I remember how the huge elms lining the Quad impressed me. They conveyed the feeling that Wake Forest University was a school firmly entrenched in the long tradition of its past and firmly dedicated to growth in the institution's future.
As a freshman, I, along with many of my classmates, became enchanted with the simple beauty and strength of our elms. Amid the sweltering heat of orientation, I would languish in their cool shade, shielded momentarily from the mad rush of life.
Autumn approached delicately our freshmen year, turning one, several, and then - it happened. almost overnight - thousands of leaves pumpkin orange and fire red. The magnificent display changed daily as I walked to Reynolda Station or class through the blowing leaves that foreshadowed the approach of winter.
I stayed in my room at school that Thanksgiving, unable to return horne for the short holiday. Friday morning I woke to the hollow echo of chain saws and watched, alone, as several men under a cold grey sky slowly dismembered each elm, transforming our once green Quad into a surrealistic battlefield on which the dead lay scattered where they were felled.
Students were told that the trees had been dying for years from Dutch elm disease. The administration assured us that plans to remove the dying elms had been made several
Chris Nichols Colloquium Essayist
years ago and further assuJl us that hardier trees would be plant~d in the grave-like holes ringing th~ei Quad.
We walked that empty uad all winter, watching as the ve spirit of the university drained awaEyrough thegapingholeswheretheo proud elms stood. Then, one day i spring, saplings appeared where gi t trees had once reigned.
These leafless sticks weq: hardly strong enough to support a ~~gle roll of toilet paper after a W Forest athletic victory. Yet, the bite ash would someday stand as s ong and as proudly as our elms on had.
. Wemustremembertheex pleof the diseased elms, WakeFo est, for a more sinister affliction has infected the very roots of our li ral arts education.
Across the nation, colleg I urns similar to ours have a
· the traditional liberal arts ucation to become research institut s where soon the undergraduate e erience of a liberal arts college w II be no different from the experiepce at a scientific research institute.
1•
Even more dismaying f11an the change ofthecharacterofth university is the rapidity with hich the change has occurred. Aim· st overnight we have abandoned d condemned the traditional valu of our Western heritage in favor o a politically neutral, heterogeneou~diatribe.
Our elms suffered from an ailment' for over 20 years before we finally replaced them, yet with little considerationsomecollegeshavediagnosed a disease they call classic liberal arts education and have ordered the infected parts amputated before contemplating whether a problem actually exists.
We must resist this temptation to abandon long-held values and ideals infavorofsomenotionofeducational diversity and cultural relativism. I do not assen that we should ignore all criticisms ofWestem thought and blatantly disregard the notable contributions of other societies. We should approach the problem in the same careful manner in which we treated our diseased Elm trees.
As you stroll around the Quad today, surrounded by the young healthy trees that represent the graduating class of 1991, we must remember the lesson these trees demonstrate. Wake Forest must continue to address decisions rationally, allowing time for logical contemplation.
If we must change, our steps should be gradual, adjusting in the same manner with which we adjusted to these young trees four years ago.
If we subscribe to this course of action, we will ensure that Wake Forest continues to grow strong and prosper, as the young trees will also continue to grow, eventually shading the Quad with their leaves above and their roots below, firmly anchored in the tradition of liberal education at Wake Forest University.
Why is that? For 22 years I have lived a lifestyle and adopted a culture that is not true to my nature. I have been subjected to a history that is exclusive of peP.ple who look like me. I am well read in those works that speak of the heroics of Julius Caesar and George Washington; however, I have only limited exposure to the great military conquest of Hannibal and the political prowess of Shirley Chisholm.
Yet, when I attempt to seek and question the reasons behind the obvious exclusion of my person, I find myself accused of being a racist. Is it so wrong that I want to know myself before I attempt to know others? I think not. If I am a racist, I am so "in the way a violinist loves the violin ora songstress loves to sing." I, too, love my self and my people. ',
An even greater injustice has been done to this society. America is plagued with the exclusive ideals of the Emu-American male, and, as an African-American female, I am nowhere to be found .
It is this type of cultural exclusion that has limited opportunities not just of those persons of the female or non-Euro-Arn~rican persuasion, but also the opportunities of this society, so rich with the unique ingredients that compose this melting pot of culture. Although certain rights and privileges are guaranteed to all who participate in this recipe, they were established under the premise that all Americans would think like our "founding fathers" and look like them, as well. In refusing to acknowledge the differences existing among the various ingredients of the melting pot, America's ideals become a tale of hypocrisy.
The American hypocrisy begins with the suggestion that this country reverences the idea of a melting pot. Within this society exists, not a melting pot where all cultures and characters mesh, but instead a tossed salad where Euro-American males compose the lettuce and others make up the bacon bits, cucumbers and tomatoes, ingredients that are often picked out according to likes and dislikes. Those ingredients remaining are those
There is something wrong when a young woman who has been violently assaulted is accused of provoking the attacker or' inventing the incident.
Furthermore, there is something wrong when the leaders of this country can decide within a few months to wage war for peace and liberty while ignoring the years of racial injustice and violence in South Africa. My leaders, who go by such names as Stalling, Jackson, Farrakhan and Mandela, are accused of being racists and separatists; while my young sisters and brothers are led to believe that Bo really does know everything, and it is always "Han1mer-time."
Somewhere the American society confused integration with segregation. My female Afrocentric nature has yet to be included in the American recipe. I still have to perform twice as well as others to be considered average. I must tailor my non-standard African-American linguistics to prevent being labeled as intellectually and socially inferior. I must straighten my hair, lighten my skin and thin my lips and nose to be a beautiful woman. To be well-read I must study the works of Dickens and Thoreau.
These are not the spices that make me a tasty ingredient. I am the intellectual genius of W.E.B. DuBois. I am the phenomenal woman of Maya Angelou and the ego of Nikki Giovanni. I am the melodies of Aretha Franklin and Leontyn Price. I am the faith of Nelson and Winnie Mandela. I am the persistence of Jesse Jackson and the frustration of Louis Farrakhan. I am all of these things. America is all of these things. Yet it attempts to exclude these ingredients from the recipe.
Not until America acknowledges that who I am is a vital part of what this country represents will it be able to enjoy the flavors of the melting pot. Perhaps then when asked, "Where am I ?" I can reply, "I am home."
Fell ow Seniors: Never Lose Sense of Harmony Within an.d 13 eyond Self in World of Discordance . . ' '• '
It f-.,...,.. ' . ' ,· ...... ,
T hou st~ll ,unravish' d bride of quietness, Thou foster-child of silence and slow
time,
renee. Furthermore, I could not explain Penn Perry feeling projected outward and injected in
ward at the same time. Colloquium Essayist Instead, I read poetry voraciously, hoping
.' Yet I' also believe . that we all. pos.sess some sense of the wondrous depth that is the human soul. This "sense of the soul" surfaces most noticeably in the Christian notion of the divine/human connection within each human being- that each of us possesses some spark of the divine crying for recognition.
you felt both taken out of yourself_ WJd transported deep within yourself: A moment of pure harmony.
Sylvan historian, who canst thus express A flowery tale more sweetly tlumour rhyme: What leaf-fring' d legend haunts about thy
shape Of deities or mortals, or of both, In Tempe or the dales of Arcady? What men or gods are these? What maid
ens loth? What mad pursuit? What struggle to es
cape?
fortherightcombinationofmood and words to transform me. And the feeling occurred
them, did not care f.o. and thought only of moreoften-notallofit,notallatonetime reciting them as f~ as possible in order to - but small fractions of it that only sug-obtain a good grad'i. gested its full power. The apparent paradox
Three years ago I again studied Keats, of the feeling first confounded, then as-and, that time, thesh memorized lines took tounded me. mesomewhere-s~mewherefarawayout- You see, I believe all humans have a side the bounds of,existence and yet deep desiretoescapethelinearboundsofhistory.
Whatever one names it, this essence that makes a human more than just a body, this essence that can be tapped into, explored and cradled, calls us to seek a better understanding of ourselves.
I believe poetry provides the easiest access to this feeling. You may have some other means of access-art, music, math or science - but, if it provides you with this feeling, I call it a valid doorway, and I encourage you to hold it open in the years to come.
Too many people close that door, or never discover it at all, and wander through their lives accompanied only by a vague sense of discontent or unfulfillment. within my being. Within our primal beings, we possess a fear
What pipes and timbrels? What wild ecstasy?
Ode on a Grecian Urn John Keats
I remember memorizing these lines of poetry in 'the ninth grade. I did not understand
Of course, I had~o idea what the words of this time line that stands behind and "transcendent" an "immanent" meant at beforeusandwillmarchonwithorwithout the time, only a vag e notion that they were , us. This fear manifests itself in our notion of antonyms. Careful ntdy of the sensation of a God that exists outside of time, far away transcendence and immanence was diffi- from us, and who may or may not allow us cult, as I could not plan or force its occur- to escape the shackles of our confinement.
Thus, all humans have the desire both for transcendence and for immanence. These two desires -to escape ourselves and to discover ourselves- are reconciled in the transforn1ing emotion of which I speak. Surely each of you has had some experience, some moment, when all is right, when
If the doorway stands open, we can remain within the bounds ofhistory, doing the things that history requires us. We can also escape, once in a while, into the limitlessness that is within and preserve the hope of something more, something beyond.
part of the pledging process? In our ferent degrees of hazing, an~, in our elusive to the select few they choose. immaturity among the student body different ways by many different about the advantages of understand-opinions, there are three principal eyes at least, the different degrees Rivalries between different orga- at a liberal arts university such as authors these days. If he cannot un- ingothercultures,mostofthernmean reasons for the enduring nature of have not affected their perf~rrnance nizations are played up as healthy, Wake Forest. There are so many derstand me, he might understand that they think this will broaden their hazing. as brothers. friendly competition, but at the root, better ways to meet interesting people one of the speakers at the understanding of how to live as free
The reason espoused by many The above arguments fal~ apart if there is something more dangerous. and discover real culture outside of Tocqueville Forum. I believe the and civilized men should live. They Greeks concerns the need for an one contemplates the basic process The reality of these divisions is mani- this, and a Greek social organization unwillingness to listen is explained often talk the same language as initiation process that bonds the .of hazing: the dehumaniz~t of an- fested in incidents that are blown off is not a good place to search for an by the desire to avoid painful Schoonmaker and his friends, and pledges, first amongst themselves, ·other human being. We beli ve there as exceptions to the rule. identity. thoughts. the professors take advantage of this. and later with the brotherhood or are many Greeks who do no support Many a weekend in the last four The Greek social system, besides The pain Schoonmaker wants to Butthe professors do not mean the sisterhood. This line of reasoning hazing; however, we are all ¢aught in years I have witnessed the pathetic the occasional token service projects, avoid is experienced when one has same thing. Their use of politics becomes a defense of hazing be- a dilemma of choice. Shou* we, by spectacle of two drunks from rival is a total waste of the university to admit that the centralist politics shows they prefer centralism. They cause many of its advocates believe opposing and/or exposing azing in fraternities squaring off to fight for community's time and energy. Its so dear to "politically correct" fac- tell us the Constitution needs radical that the more difficult the pledge our Greek organizations, thr~aten the not-even-God-knows what reason. inherent dishonesty is not worth any ulty members cannot be reconciled revision of its basic principles as process, the tighter the bonding pro- survival of an organization that has Their respective "brothers," uni- good that comes of it. with our American constitutional- history moves us to the dawning of a cess. otherwise had a positive im~act upon formed by the Greek letters on their I am not proposing that it be abol- ism. It is necessary to give up one or new day, when a wholly new set of
Amore subtle justification ofhaz- us? chests, prepare for a gang fight, re- ished, because studentshavetheright the other. And many professors who politics and morals will come to pre-ing results indirectly from the elit- Reform is necessary. H?pefully, gardless of who was right or wrong to create whatever inane groups they share the delusion that centralist vail. ism that Greek life can promote. this reform willoccurasmoreGreeks between the two individuals in the like, but I challenge those indepen- politics will transform human na- They prefer that the decisive fea-With this elitism comes the feeling realize the stupidity of hazi~g rather first place. Taken to an extreme, it is dents who are considering Greek rush ture and bring in the millennium do tures of the new (more humane?) that anyone who wishes to join a than as a result of the dCfith of a this kind ofblind patriotism and aile- in the future to think seriously about in fact give up one alternative. They society be determined by an intellec-certain Greek organization must first pledge in a hazing incident. giance to a mere symbol that could finding your niche in life elsewhere. deny that the Constitution is just, tual elite that can judge what are, as prove himself/herself worthy of ad- lead us into World War ill. and they teach instead that it is "rae- they say, the necessary "precondi-mittance. Of course, the more strin- Anopymous Wake Forest does a fine job of Robert Kelleher ist" or "materialist" or fundamen- tions" of freedom. gent the admissions process, the
Greek Elitisim recruiting a wide variety of students World of Fantasy
tally defective in some other way. For Schoonmaker and his ideo-easier it will be to weed out the "bad with diverse talents. Greek social To admit that the Constitution is logical friends, the purpose of study-apples." organizations in tum recruit mem- hostile to the politics oftoday's ideo- ing other cultures is to develop a
Finally, and perhaps most in- As I have read the numerous let- hers from the student body and con- Don Schoonmaker, a professor of logues is to admit that these ideo- "science" of multicultural centralist grained in the minds of hazing advo- ters and columns in recent teeks of sequently claim diversity in their politics, emerges from two decades logues are at odds with the general, values. That has been the purpose cates, is the need to uphold the tradi- the Old Gold and Black COl)lCerning membership. The tendency, with of silence on the subject to make a mainstream American voters who today's political science and com-tions upon which the Greek organi- racism and other problems between some fortunate exceptions, is for a statement on cultural relativism in still support the Constitution. And it parative government since it estab-zations were founded. From this various groups on campus, some- person to get lost in the group con- the Old Gold and Black. means admitting, too, something that lished itself at Columbia University notion comes the almost subcon- thing has occurred to me. cept. Instead of giving an argument, teachers are very reluctant to admit around 1900. scious idea that, for the Greek orga- Much of the tension is ~esulting Joe Schmoe is no longer "Joe however, he portrays a fantasy world - that they are at odds with their Cultural arrogance is the worst nization to survive, its traditions (in- from the factionalism among stu- Schmoe," but rather he is an "Alpha ofhis own imagining. In this fantasy students. possible sin, especially if it prefers eluding hazing) must continue. dents caused by groups th~t do not Beta Whatever," a name with some world, be is in continuing debate So, to avoid this, we witness the America, which still loves its free-
The combination of the aforemen- directly or overtly promo!~ the elit- stigma attached, whether it actually with me, and I am a confused, igno- strange phenomenon of faculty dom without preconditions. The truth tioned reasons leads many Greeks ism that necessarily exists' therein. applies to Joe as an individual or not. rant and willful opponent. He, on the members claiming that they are in is that the faculty who increasingly to believe that, without some sort of Namely: the Greek social $ystem. One cannot find true friends in a rush other hand, is on the side of students the mainstream of political and are taking over the teaching hazing, their organization might fall No institution on this J campus period of a couple of weeks. and holds a moderate and informed moral opinion when it is clear to curriculum of "diversity" are prey to "undesirables." keeps alive the primitive ldea that Those who rush and do not get a position. everybody else that they are ex- to this "science" and not to
The fact that Greek organizations some people are superior ~o others bid should not lose self-esteem. Re- Schoonmaker professes to be con- tremists. Either they make this claim, can constitutionalism. Neither cannot come up with ano!her way to more blatantly than that Qf Greek joice! Your individuality has nar- fused about the charges I am bring- or they claim that tl1eir opinion is the:·loyal to America's students initiate pledges into their member- social organizations. Ofcoqrse, they rowlymissedbeingdrownedbywhat ing against cultural relativism. Such just "value" and does not prejudice -.iheir parents. ship is a sad commentary upon the do not openly claim to fo~ter such amounts to a glorified clique. confusion can only arise fro .. , a per- the "fact" they teach. system as a whole. We have watched ideas, but rather propagate the ide- I erroneously thought there would sistent unwillingness to listen, since The important thing to observe is different pledge classes receive dif- als of brotherhood/sisterhpoo, ex:- be no such vestiges of high school these charges are ex:plained in many that when American students talk
. \ ~ .
/
,.. ., -' · ....
Ow Gow AND BLACK SPORTS -· .•.. ~ ,. ........ ! ';
-. .· '.
' ; ' :8 FruoAY, MAY 3, 1991 ------------------------~----~--------------~--~~~--~-.. ~---~--~~~~--~~~~
~··.·Powell Leads Track Teams in Strong Performance· at 97th Perin Relays . . .. . . I
BY MIKE FITZGERALD
SPORTS Emma
Highlighted by Mary Powell's ·NCAA provisional qualifying run in the 10,000 meters, Wake Forest had an impressive showing at last weekend's 97th Penn Relays at Franklin Field in Philadelphia.
Despite suffering from leg cramps duringherrace,Powellrana34:35.33
to finish third and earn a provisional spot in the NCAA championships May 31-Junel in Eugene, Ore.
Powell is the third Wake Forest runner to qualify, along with Ben Schoonover in the 10,000 meters and Steve Brown in the 11 0-meter hurdles.
"We were very pleased with Mary's provisional qualifying time and we think it has a real good chance of holding up," said Head Coach John
GCJOdiidge. "We hope that's a real positive breakthrough and confidence booster for her."
Brown, the defending Penn Relays champion in the 110 hurdles, finished fifth this weekend in 13.98 seconds,
: while Schoonover took eighth place in the,IO,OOO.meters with 29:22.6, his secciriMastest time ever,
JohnSence,alsorunningthe 10,000 meters, established a. new personal . . .
record with a tiine of29:43.1. _ · 'diJeganrana3:15.36, whilethe4x800 · Inthe5,000meters,StuartBumham team of Shennan, Weik, Guegan and
set a personal best to fmish third ii;I DrewHayesrana7:28.02. The4x800 14:29.22, while Eric Lorenz set his team placed first in the college diviown personal mark with a time of sion of the meet 14:33.19 to come in fifth. . . . . The women's 4x800-meter relay
Two men 'srelay teams broke school team of!'violly Pancake, Kelly Clarke, records this weekend in the 4x400- Brooke Wimbush and. Heather meter and the 4x8()().meter teams. ··Turnquist ran a 9:12.5 to finish fifth.
The4x400teamofPatKelley, Terry The meet was divided into two di-Weik, Warren Sherman and Mike visions~ tPe_~()llege division, for col-
Iegiateathletes only, and the Olympic development division, which included both college and post-college r(ln-ners. _
All Wake Forest competitors com-peted in the coll~ge division. ·
".This. was definitely the best performance that Wake Forest has ever ·had at the Penn Relays. Almost every athlete seta personal best," Goodridge said.
Baseball Team ·Blanks Liberty, P~l!~ds Davidson Demon Deacons Top -Si;hoql~Record with'36th Victory
BY JAY REDDICK
The winningestDemon Deacons' baseball squad in history begins the most important weekend of its season on a roll.
After winning three out of four gru:nes this week, the team entered its showdown with Georgia Tech in Atlanta Thursday. Results of that contest were unavailable at press time.
hits in fiv.e innings,of relief pitching. The Demon Deacons got. on the board
with two runs·in the third inning. A double by Deroo Weston, one of his two on the day, drove in both runs. '
In the fifth, third baseman Chris Kowilcik's '19th home ~n of the season, a thre'e-run shot, aecoiinted for the remainder of thes~ofing; ·· ·
Kowilcik, who leads. the team with a .389 batting aver3ge; is· nationally ranked in two categories in this week's NCAA
Wake Forest rallies to defeat Duke 7-3
The Duke Biue Devils halted a sevengame Wake Forest winning streak Saturday afternoon. at Jack Coombs Field in Durham, scoring seven runs in the flfStinning and going on to defeat the Demon Deacons 13-8.
Wake Forest scored four runs in the top of the first, highlighted by Coghill's tworun double, one of six Wake Forest doubles on the afternoon. WakeForestdefeatedDukeApril26 7-
3 before falling to the Blue Devils on Saturday 13-8. They then crushed Davidson 12-4 on Sunday and shut down Liberty 5-0 on Tuesday.
' Division 1 statistical leaders. · · His home rim tOtal .ranks him 21st in the
nation in hom.ers pe~ game, while his 24 doubles rank seventh in per-game totals.
Duke then recover:ed to send 12 men to. \ the pllite in the bottom of the inning to take a 7-4lead.
A double by Mark Melito keyed a tworun rally for the Demon Deacons .in the second.
Wake Forest enters this week with a record of36-16. Those 36 victories are the most in school history, swpassing the 35 wins in each of the previous two seasons.
This weekend's series at Georgia Tech, withgamesThursday;todayandSaturday, has a large bearing on the Demon Deacons' seeding for the upcoming Atlantic Coast Conference tournament.
His offensive out})ut has led the Demon Deacons to an average of8.21 runs a game, the 19th-best average nationally.
Demon Deacons crush Davidson 12-4
However, a single run in the second and four in the third, inclpding David Norman's · fourth homer in three games, staked the Blue Devils to an insurmountable 12-6
Wake Forest and Georgia Techenterthe · series with identical 10-8 conf~rence records, tied for second in the ACC.
Therefore, the team that wins two or ·more of this final weekend's games will earn the second seed.
Sunday afternoon at Wildcat Park in cushion. Davidson,N.C.,theDemonDeaconsbroke Saturday at Hooks Stadium, the Demon a 3-3 tie with three runs in the sixtP inning Deacons broke a 3-3 tie in the eighth with and went on to defeat Davidson 12-4. six straight hits to defeat Duke 7-3.
Kowilcik opened the inning with a walk, Wake Forest jumped to a 3-1 lead in the and Jake Austin hit a single to move him to fifth on a Kowilcikhomer, but Duke scored seeond: . . two in the seventh, keyed by Norman's
A sacrifice fly by George Coghlll moved second homer of the game, to tie the score the runners to second and third. at 3-3. !
With frrstbase open, the Wildcats inten- In the eighth, the Demon Deacons put Wake Forest pitchers shut out Liberty. tionally walked Matt Riggs to load the together their rally, which included three
. pase.s~ _ . . _ . . . . . . . _ . straight infield singles, and was capped off · The record-breaking Victory f?f jbe D7:. , ,. :::·· 9f.?~e~:~qs~·;~~~\pcsio P,opped up: fo~· -· by a C?ghill ~a~es-l~aded delftble." ,. · · :
mon Deaco~s came Tuesday ~rrernoon a~/·'· ih~' ~~~-. ~~t ... ~.~t- fi~f,ra~co:.: the ~ex~ · , .t • Ke:v'-n J~1s me~ ~is r~m:d to 7 ~2, Hooks StadiUil'l~ when four pitchers com~ '11 'biftfet, IaibCICetl m'lill.llii'ee runners w1th a pitching eight and two-thirds mmngs and binedonasix-hitshutoutin WakeForest's · double· down 1ile left fi.eld line. · striking out 11 Blue Devils en route to the 5-0 victory over Liberty. Five runs in the· next two innings put the victory.
Steve DeFranco picked up his fourth game out of Davidson's reach. Reliever Jenkins recorded the fmal ~ul victory of the season, allowing four hits in Dwayne Webster pitched six and two- for his 14th save of the season. . four innings of work. thirds innings for the win, and Robbins That total is the highest in one season 1n
Pitcher Kevin Jarvis delivers a pitch in a game at Gene Hooks Stadium. Jarvis improved his record to 7-2 on the season in Wake Forest's 7-3 win against Duke last Saturday.
MikeBuddie,JasonRobbinsandBuddy finished off the Wildcats for his first save· the history oftheACCandtieshim forfqs1 Jenkins combined efforts toallowjusttwo of the season.· · in the nation in that category.
·Freshman Collins Leads Men's Golf ' .
:To Fourth Place at Cavalier Classic BY JAY BEDDOW
Ass!STA.Vf SPORTS EonuR
, Bobby Collins' one-under par 71 in the final two days of competition led Wake Forest's men's golf team to a fourth place fmish in the 1991 Cavalier Classic atBirdwood Golf Course in Charlottesville, Va., last weekend.
Georgia Tech won the three-day event with a tournament-team record score of 863. The Rambling Wreck finished nine strokes ahead of second-place North Carolina State and 10 strokes ahead of Clemson. Wake Forest IrnJtsm:u one stroke behind Clemson in capturing fourth.
with a 90 I total in the· event. Old Dominion's Jon Hurst won the event with a total of
210 strokes. Hurst was tied with N.C. State's Steve Isley after regular play, but won in a playoff. Three others including Georgia Tech's David Duval tied for third.
Collins opened with a 74 before closing with two 71s to grab a tie for eighth place with five others at 216 strokes. ·
Kevin Kemp fmished only two. strokes behind Collins with rounds of 73, 72 and 73, but finished in a four-way tie for 14th place;· · . · ·
Hans Albertsson opened with a 73 and a 72 before struggling slightly in the fmalround with a 75. Albertsson was a quarterfinalist at last summer's U.S. Amateur.
Hans Edberg and Mark Strickland fmished tied for 36th place with four other players after finishing with a total of 223 strokes in 'the event. Edberg shot 74, 74, and 75 while
Atlantic Coast Conference rival and host Virginia fin- Strickland shot a 76 and a 74 before closing with a strong sixth with 879 strokes while Maryland finished 15th • round of 73.
The Demon Deacons were in second place going into final round of the tournament, but faltered with 292
strokes the final day as Clemson and N.C. State passed
n Year in Review: Ruts, Runners, Records - '
The year 1990-91 saw the continued growth of Forest athletics. The men's cross-country
won its second consecutive ACC title, the Jvutvu Deacon basketball squad saw a return to
.... P''v"""''""'~• "''1uthe baseball team seta school fo~ The following is a sport-by-
review of every Wake Forest athletic team, by the Old Gold and Black spans staff.
Wake Forest's football team finished 3-8last fall three_ non-conference victories. The program's
mark m the league was its frrst since 1982. The Deacons beat Appalachian State Army
Vanderbilt. ' Head Coach Bill Dooley reached a mtlestone in career by recording his !50th win.
"We had some good wins last season, but overall have to say it was adisappointingyear," Dooley "I feel, however, that we have a good nucleus
players returning. They want to win and enough them were around when we had winning years
and 1988) that they know what it will take to that level again."
Two Demon Deacons made the all-conference AIJ-ACC tight-end John Henry Mills caught
to rank third in the conference while
touchdowns to take a 14-91ead. For a moment, it looked as if the Demon Deacons might upset the nation's number-one team, but Virginia charged back to a 49-14 victory .
That loss typified the season and is the type of game Wake Forest hopes to avoid 11ext season; '
Men's Cross Country
four freshmen on his national team and two juniors, Eric Lorenz and John Sence. The only member of the team not returning is Ben Schoonover.
Should Goodridge find a replacement for him in the junior varsity ranks, the Demon Deacons should make a run for their frrst national title.
Women's Cross-Country
After winning its rust ACC Championship and'~ · Mary Powell was the dominant nmner on the placing third at the NCAA ChampioJ1Ships in 1989,. women's cross-country team, which was plagued the men's cross country team had a lot to live up to with injuries all season long. Poweij was the top· in 1990.Despiteincluding freshmeilasthreeofthe Ainisher for Wake Forest in all six of the team's top seven runners the Demon Deacons had another ·meets, and won the Tar Heel Invitational Sept. 8. outstanding year.' Jennifer ~innegan, a top recruit for the Demon
The regular season was highlighted by a cham- Deacons,missedallbutthefirstmeetoftheseason pionship in the Wake Forest Invitational Sept. 22, because of injuries, while Carrie Powers and Kim where the Demon Deacons scored 57 points to take Many were able to rebound from injuries to run the title. · much of the season.
In th::, h.CC Championships in Charlottesville, At the ACC Championships Oct. 27, _Powell V~ .• WakeForestedgedN.C. State by six points to .. earn~~l-ACCstatusforthesec?n.dyearmarow wm their second consecutive title. by firushmg seventh. The team fmished fifth.
Ben Schoonover and Stuart Burnham and Kyle At the District III Championships in Greenville, Armentrout were named All-ACC for finishing in S.C., the team finished 13th with Powell finishing tile top ten. 18th and Powers finishing 47th.
The team placed fourth at the District 1II If Head Coach Francie Goodridge is able to ChampionshipsatFurman Universitytoadvanceto keep her runners healthy, the Demon Deacons the NCAA finals in Knoxville Tenn. could wind up competing in the national champi-
John Sence was the top fini;her for the Demon onships in the next few years.
• • • and Rodney
Williams rushed for 866 yards and finin the nation in kickoff returns.
v;,o-;";"came to Groves Stadium ranked number in the nation Oct.20. The Cavaliers scored field
on their frrst three possessions to take a 9-0 Wake Forest came back and scored two quick
Deacons as they finished 18th. In the final cross countrypollsofthe season, Wake Forest was ranked Indoor Track 16th.
E<kll~e
' The rise to national prominence should continue The hi~hlight of the indoor track season was the
next season as' Head Coach John Goodridge used See Review, Page 9 · Junior Anthony Williams led the Demon Deacons in rushing in 1990 wit}l 866 yards. Williams also averaged 25.5 yards on kickoff returns. -
I·
II
Goodridge
•'
'·'
M ~-· MO·------·---·~ ·-··-· ~~ ... . . . . ---
OLDGoLDANDBLACK FRIDAY,MAY3, 1991 9
----------------------------------------~rn----------------------------------~-----
. I
• Davis Quits Basketball Team
Beth Davis, a junior on the women's basketball team, confirmed to the Old Gold and Black that she would not return to the basketball team for the 1991-1992 season for undisclosed reasons.
Davis finished this season as the team's second highest scorer and reboundeqt.veraging 15. 0 points per game and 5.4 rebounds per game.
Baseball .. May 11-17 at the Atlantic Coast Conference
Tournament Greenville, S.C.
Track May 11 at Appalachian State Invitational
Boone
May 18 Wolfpack Twilight · Raleigh
May 29-June 1 NCAA Outdoor Championships Eugene, Ore.
Men's Golf May 17-19 at Atlantic Coast "Conference
Tournament Rocky Mount
May 23-25 at NCAA East Regionals New Haven, Ct.
If it's all Greek to you ...
Come study the ancient languages with those who will help you apply them to today's contemporary issues.
BrOWfl~ Lane Receive Top Honors at Sports Banquets Bv M1p FITZGERALD
Highlightingtheathl~ic awards banquets, senior Steve Brown received the Arhold Palmer Award as the outstanding male athlete Monday night, and senior Tina Lane was named Outstanding Women's Athlete Tuesday night.
The MVP of the football team was Anthony Williams, a junior tailback who finished fifth in the con~erence !n rushing with 866 yards and ranked 11th n~tlOpal!y m kickoff returns with 25.5 yards a runback. Mtke Smtth, a senior defensive lineman, was given the Bill George Award as the top lineman on the squad.
The cross-country MVPs werefreshmanStuartBurnham and junior Mary Powell. Burnham was Wake Forest's top finisherin four of the six meets he ran in, while Powell was the top finisher for the Demon Deacons in all six meets, including an individual championship in the Tar Heel Invitational.
Civitan Club to the athlete who makes the greatest overall contribution to the school.
The indoor track awards were given to senior Mike Guegan, who advanced to the national finals in the 800 meters, and Carrie Powers, who was the leading miler for the women's team.
Junior Jorge Sedeno, who played number-one singles for most of the season was named men's tennis MVP, while sophomore Dianne McKeon, who compiled a 22-2 record at number-four singles won the women's tennis award. Brown, a wide rece;· 'er on the football team and hur
dleron the track team, h won three ACC championships in his career and finish second in the 11 0-meter hurdles at last year's NCAA championships. He is also the seventh-leading receiv'r in Wake Forest history.
Lane, a sprinter on t~ track team, has set eight school records in her career, il'cluding marks in the 100 meters, 200 meters and 100-m ter hurdles this season.
The men's recipient f the ACC Award for Excellence in Scholarship and A~etics was given to pitcher Kevin Jarvis. Jarvis, a senior, has a 7-2 record this season and has a 3.3 GPA with s double-major in chemistry and
USA World Cup team member Neil Covonewas named soccer MVP, while the field hockey award was given to Tracy Stickney, a senior who became the second athlete in Wake Forest history to be named All-Deep South for four years.
Junior point guard Derrick McQueen, who averaged 6. 7 points and4.9 assists a game, was named men's basketball MVP, while senior Jenny Mitchell was named women's basketball MVP. Mitchell is the first player from Wake Forest to be named first-team All-ACC.
The Marge Crisp A ward, which goes to the outstanding women's golfer, was given to sophomore Kim Tyrer, who was the Demon Deacons' low scorer in seven of the 1 0 tournaments and will compete in the NCAA championships. The men's golfMVP was freshman Bobby Collins, who finished second in the Golf Digest Invitational.
Senior pitcher Buddy Jenkins, whoisamongstthenation's leaders in saves, was given the MVP in baseball. Jenkins is the ACC's all-time saves leader.
biology. · The women's recipibnt was field hockey player Ellen.
Bailey, a four-time letterwinner who has a 3.6 GPA in French and Health an4 Sports Science.
',
Senior basketball player Robert Siler was presented the Murray Greason A ward, which is given by the Piedmont
The women's outdoor track award was given to Tina Lane, while the men's MVP award was given to Terry Weik, a sophomore who finished fourth in the ACC in the 800 meters and ran on the 4x400- and 4x800-meter relay teams.
Review FromPage8
ACC championship~ in Johnson City, Tenn. Both the men's ~d women's teams fmished sixth. The ~omen were led by third-place fmishes frOm Carrie Powers in the mile and Mary Powell in the 5,000.
The men's results ~ere highlighted by Steve Brown's championship in the 55-meter hurdles and.th~ 4x800-meter relay team's championship. Members of that team include Warrep Sherman, Jimmy Clarke, Terr)' Weik 8f!d Mike Guegan.
Guegan also ran in the 800 meters, finishingthirdattheAC meetandadvancing to the national ch pionships in Indianapolis, Ind. Brown also advanced, but was forced to scrat due to an injury. Guegan won his heat and advanced to the fmal, where he finis ed eighth.
Outdoor Track
Demon Deacons added three more wins to their record, including a 9-0 smashing of Salem. They lost to Davidson twice in the tournament, 0-1 and 1-5.
Forward Tracy Stickney was named first-team all-Deep South for the fourth time in her career. Back Kerri Gallipoli was also named to the firstteam. Forwards Nancy Havlick and Jane Armstrong and goalie Carey Berkoski were named to the second-team all-Deep South squad.
Soccer
The men's soccer team wound up their regular season with a 10-7-4 record and received another berth to the NCAA tournament.
In the regular season the team went 9-5-3, including a 1-4-1 record in the ACC. Their lone conference victory was a 2-1 victory over N.C. State, which was ranked seventh in the nation at the time.
· In the first round of the ACC tournament in Durham, Wake Forest upset host Duke in a thrilling 2-1 overtime victory. Their semifinal match the following day was equally exciting, with the Demon
The track progranl at Wake Forest saw Deacons falling 4-2 to Virginia in a tremendous growth this year with the shootout after a scoreless regulation and completion of the trapk facility at Campus overtime period. Stadium.TheteamshpstedtheWakeForest In their opening NCAA tournament Invitational and the 'Wake Forest Relays. game, Wake Forest went up against North
The WFUinvitatiqnal March 23 saw the Carolina in Chapel Hill, and fell2-1. women'steambreal(sevenschoolrecords, Defensive player Craig Conger was including four by Tina Lane and two by named first-team All-ACC and secondMolly Pancake. The men's t~ scored team all-South, while Raimo de Vries was five victories in the meet, including the named second-team All-ACC. 4x400 and 4xl 00 refuys, Schoonover,won . . , . . the5,000; Guegan won the400; and George Basketball Yorhling won the 4W hurdles.
. The university h9sted the Wake Forest The 1990-91 Wake Forest men's bas-Relays April~· an~ the Demon Deacons ketball team posted the program's best put up a domm~t ~~~rformance. Pancake mark since 1984, going 19-11 and adanchored four wuupng relay teams, and vancingtothesecondroundoftheNCAA Lane won the 100 meters. M~ Powell Tournament. also took the 3.0<jl~-meter title, while The Demon Deacons finished 8-6 in Guegan won the qnle, Brown took the the ACC race, right behind Final Four 110-meterhurdles,ti"d~~am.the5,000. participants Duke and North Carolina.
At the ACC c p10nsh1ps m Chapel That conference mark was also the Hill, the men sco the most points in program's best effort since the watershed their history, to fi ish sixth, while the yearof1984 whenWakeForestwent7-women finished i~ eventh place. 7 in the ACC.
Threerunnersw ~~entWakeForest Along the way to their best mark in ~t the NCAA cham tons~ps: Schoonover seven years, the Demon Deacons beat m the 10,000, B wn m the 110-meter several NCAA Tournament participants,
Field Hockey
The Wake Forqst field hockey team logged an impres~ive 13-5 record this season and were qanted the Deep South tournament runneTj'-up.
After starting thq season 3-2, the Demon Deacons went on ~ seven-game winning streak that included six shutouts before falling to Radford'in the season finale.
In the Deep Soyth Tournament, which Wake Forest hosted for the first time, the
including Richmond, Georgia Tech, Virginia and N.C. State.
The highlight of the season, undoubtedly, was Wake Forest's 86-77 victory overtheeventualnationalchampionDuke Feb. 16 at Lawrence Joel Coliseum. The Demon Deacons led from start to finish.
The Demon Deacons played consistently enough throughout the regular season to warrant a fifth seed in the NCAA Tournament's Southeastern Regional.
Wake Forest defeated Louisiana Tech in the First Round, but lost to Alabama in
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the second, despite shooting 59 percent. Next season, Demon Deacon fans have
even more to look forward to, with the core of this year's team returning. The ACC and national Rookie of the Year Rodney Rogers, along with King, will return. Rock-solid point guard Derrick McQueen and swingman Anthony Tucker also return, as does the league's next best freshman (to Rogers), Randolph Childress. Add to that the ACC Coach of the Year, Dave Odom, and the 1991-92 Wake Forest basketball team may continue to build on the solid foundation it built this year.
Women's Tennis
The Wake Forest women's tennis team hadoneofthebestseasonsintheprogram's history, garnering a national ranking (25th) on the way to a 17-9 record. The team boltedouttoa 14-3 record, before injuries and a tough schedule took its toll on the young squad.
The team drew its strength from the bottom singles positions and from its talented but young players.
At the four, five and six slots, sophomoreDianeMcKeon, freshman Liz Barker and sophomore Tracy Zawacki played like seasoned veterans, registering victories almost every time on the court.
McKeon, playing with a bad back late in the season, compiled a 22-2 record at fourth singles, while Barker amassed a 21-4 mark this season. Zawacki was just as proficient at sixth singles, where she posted a 21-5 record.
The top-three singles -slots. were also buoyed by youthful counterparts. Sophomore Celine Toumant, ranked 53rd in the nation last year, overcame injury to provide Wake Forest with consistent play. Freshman Celine Menain, who like Tournant hails from France, had some fine perfonnances at first singles for the Demon Deacons until she was beset by an ankle injury in March and April.
The team's only senior, Karin Dallwitz, will be missed by the team. Dallwitz's gutty play at third singles resulted in several upsets of ranked opponents.
However, Coach Lew Gerrard's troops will be bolstered by the return of the rest of this year's squad, which could make the 1991-92 the best seson ever in the history of Wake Forest women's tennis.
Men's Tennis
The men's tennis team finished up their season with an 11-18 record, including a 3-4 slate in the ACC. In the ACC Tournament sixth seed Wake Forest fell to Duke, 5-4, to end their season.
Jorge Sedeno spent most of the season in the number one singles position, and finished the season with a 16-12 record. The number-two spot was most often held
by Siegmar Degler, who compiled a 7-13 mark. ·
Guhl was usually in the third spot went 11-6, while the fourth position held primarily by Brian Powell, who · 12-16 this season. The fifth slate was Mii=ha·el Dilworth who had a tough year, going 3-1 The sixth singles position was shared Lawrence Kiey, who went 12-9, and· Athey, who logged an S-1 0 record.
Women's Golf
The women's golf team garnered top-1 finishes in 10 tournaments and finished the top five four times. Sophomore Tyrer was Wake Forest's highest finisher seven tournaments and won the Yale Intercollegiate in late September. Led top-ten finishes by all five golfers, the scored a 624 two-day total to win the
In the spring the team opened up with impressive fourth-place finish in Spalding/Peggy Kirk Bell Invitational Oviedo, Fla. Comtney Cuff shot a thit~d-<iav 71 to finish tied for second place in tournament.
The Demon Deacons also finished place in the LSU-Fairwood ~~.i;~~~?~~~:!: Baton Rouge, La., fifth in the Earl Lady Mustang Invitational in Da1las, and seventh in the Woodbridge [nvitationtal in Kings Mountain.
Men's Golf
Once again Wake Forest's men's team suffered from youth and ine:~tpe:rieJilCe
··Seniors ·Mark Strickland and were the only contributing upi>erc:lassm•et on the team. ,
Ironically, much of the Demon Deacons success last year came in the surnm•er Sophomore Hans Albertsson won the England Amateur, and was a n""'""''rfin,.li"' in the United States Amateur.
The Demon Deacons look am:ioutsly very successful future.As~;ociiateHead C:::O~LCl Jack Lewis labeled current Wake freshman Bobby Collins the nation's freshman this year. Collins proved he served that praise by finishing second at spring's Golf Digest Invitational behind nation's best amateurplayer,
Freshmen Kevin Kemp and Ron andsophomoresHansEdbergand n"'" r•sn ..
signal a bright future for the Demon De::tco:m
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OLD 'GOLD AND BLACK 10 FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1991
~tinnovative Concert Displays Dancers' Skill University Orchestra Performs Brilliantly Student Pianist Waddill Steals ihe Show With Superior Rac}ln;zaninoff Concerto
. . . . . .
Six dancers perform Handel, an innovative combination of classical and modern dance, during the Spring Dance Concert April 25 in the Mainstage Theatre.
BY KRISTIN ZEIER
OLD GOLD AND l3LAC'K REPORTER
The twisting, the twirling, the ribbons. the tutus-! wish I had stayed in ballet. The hushed auditorium with all
· eyes tuned to the dainty dancers was · every little girl's dream come true.
For the members of the Wake Forest Dance Company, the spring performance April 25, 26 and 27 was the culmination of much long and hard work. It was work, however, that paid
. off in seemingly effortless style. I twas a delight to this viewer who could only
' · sjt and watch and write. ' · · The performance opened with a ',bright and frolicking folk dance, ' ·Napoli. This piece featured a duo of
dancers accompanied by tambourine '· players and clapping little girls from
the Winston-Salemcommunity.It was a dance full of merriment, enticing the audience to join in the fun. Although
· tllis piece, as well as the other classical selection in the concert, A Gift of the
; ,Moon. were certainly well done, these . ·dances were overshadowed by the
more modern selections. In her solo. Song of the Earth,
sophomore Blain Fitz-Simmons de- mance. In sizzling pinks and purples, parted from traditional dance style. it was a dance for a hot and steamy Hers was an innovative illustration, night. The six dancers moved to the not quite a dance, of the natural beauty syncopation of jazz accompaniment of the human figure in movement. It insensualandsomewhateroticmoves, was elegantly simplistic, conjuring indicating a strong feeling for the images of the dawning of jhe earth emotion in the music. when everything was pure anll natural. After the intermission, modem and Howling, ghostly music hannonized classical dance genres were combined perfectly with the grace of Fitz- in a three-part perfonnance entitled Simmons' silhouetted figure. Handel. Nodding and jumping to the
The innovativeness of Song of the sound of the tingling harpsicords, six Earth perhaps went beyond the audi- dancers performed a cute and bouncy ence, resulting in an uncertain, rather piece uncharacteristic of the classical hesitant response. This was npttypical background music. This seeming confor the evening, as the follow/ng piece, trast, however, blended well, espeF ace-Off. choreographed by freshman cially in the second movement in which Orlando Taylor, proved. two dancers- one flowingly classi-
Face-Off received overwhelming cal, the other mechanically modern applause and was definitely the most -joined together. well-liked selection of the evening. A · A second jazz dance followed sensual jazz routine with undulating Handel, and the performance ended rhythms and swaying hips, it show-. . with the more classical Gift of the cased the talent of Taylor and junior · 'Moon. Anna Cooke. In their sleek moves and When the lights came on, the audibalanced togetherness, the two dane- torium was filled with smiling faces. ersweretheessenceofamatchedpair. Yet surely these smiles were not as
Magnolias and Fried Chicken, an brightasthoseoftheballerinasbehind equally successful jazz routine, fol- stage untying their toe shoes after the lowed Face-Off in the Friday perfor- outstanding performance.
BY JENNIE VAUGHN
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR
II perfonnance by the Wake Forest Symphony Orchestra Tuesday was a solid one ovei:all and capped with a number of brilliant solos.
The orchestra was conducted by George Trautwein, the director of instrumental ensembles.
The 70-member group, composed of undergraduates and a liberal dash of faculty and community members, offered energetic and refreshil!g interpretations of three standard orchestral works to an almost filled recital hall, attracting the largest audience of any student ensemble perfonnance this semester.
The first piece performed was Debussy's Prelude a l' a pres d' un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun), featuring sophomore Liz Walsh on solo flute. The work is typical of modern music in that the meters and rhythms are quite tricky. In this work the time signature changes in near! y every measure. This lack of meter makes the music seem timeless and ethereal.
Although the music was exciting for anyone to hear, it was perhaps most exciting to those who knew the intricacies of the work and could appreciate the difficulty of properly executing its complex phrasing and mixed moods. The group overcame these technical difficulties for a near-perfect performance. The notes and phrasing were correct, but the casual listener was prone to overlook these mechanics because the Gestalt of the music- the melodies and hannonies that made up the big picture- carne through brilliantly.
This success was partially due to Trautwein's dramatic yet precise conducting. He offered numer~ ous cues and much rhythmic precision when it was necessary and gave way to fuller, more interpretive conducting during the work's fuller, more intense sections.
Perhaps an even larger factor was the talent of several impressive soloists. Harpist Helen Rifas, an adjunct instructor of music, and concertmaster Jennifer Mills, a junior, each offered important and well-executed solos. But, by far, the most impressive was Walsh's perfonnance. Her tone was pure and piercing, yet wann and beautiful.
Solo work played an even larger factor in the next piece on the program, as senior Karen Waddill joined the orchestra on piano to perfonn the first
movement of Rachmaninoff's Concerto No.2 inc minor, tap. lB.
A music major, Waddill's superior ability has been recogpized on numerous occasions. Most i·ecently, she won a first place award and tied for 11 another in the campus-wide Christopher Giles and l Lucille S. Harris Competitions for Musical Performance in February. Her perfomiance demonstrated that the judges' designations had been no accidept. In short, it was spectacular. ,
Waddill began the piece alone, and in these opening bars she quickly established her command of the keyboard and of the piece at hand. Her musical sophistication was readily apparent. Though her introduction was relatively simple, the piece quickly evolved in difficult runs and complex chords. Yet Waddill did not miss a beat.
Though the orchestra did a·fine job in accompanying Waddill. at times the players became too enthusiastic and overwhelmed the piano notes. During several especially loud sections, audience members could tell that Waddill was playing only because her hands were flying up and down the ·1
. keyboard - the piano was entirely drowned out. This lack of balance was the only drawback in an otherwise fine perfonnance.
Following the intennission, the orchestra came back on stage for the most lengthy portion of the concert- Dvorak's Symphony No.9 in e minor, Op. 95 "From the New World."
While this performance was full of energy, it ~as slightly rough around the edges. The limitations of the ensemble's weekly rehearsal schedule unfortunately appeared here. The notes and phrasing were persistent but the work simply had not had enol!gh time to gel. These loose ends made the perfonnance inconsistent. ·
Despite these problems, however, the concert ~lad numerous bright spots. The brass players - led by sophomore Alex Crowell on French hom, facultyl member Michael Gilbert on trumpet and freshman Edv,rin Ergenzinger on trombone - were, for ~he most part, accurate ali.d their playing was bright and punchy. Percussionists Marty ProvTnceand Julia Sizemore, both faculty members, were also right on target.
Trautwein's conducting was also clear and effective.
Despite the inconsistent second half, the orchestra's concert was lJ. notable success, yet another feather in the cap of this hard-working group.
Choirs Finish Year, Cowles' Interim Tenure, With Strong Concert BY MORGAN SILLS
OLD GOLD AND BLACK REPORTER
Robert Cowles prefaced with a piece of particularly informative concert patter. Sophomore Sarah Phillips, soprano, did an especially nice job on her all-too-brief solo.
Something special happened in Brendle Recital Hall April ]5- the performance of the Wake Forest Univer-
Singers. The 18-memberensembleperformedtheirsetsof a capella pieces quite well, staying on pitch most of the time. The hick of instrumental accompaniment for the Madrigals' numbers effectively heightened the emotional mood of the works.
Following intermission, the Concert Choir performed. The 25-member group began its short set with "Suite de Lorca," an unusual Spanish work that featured the crystal clear voice of senior soprano Susan Webb, along with those of sophomore tenor Scott Beatty and freshman bass Glynn Servy. The group also pefonned "A Hymn to the Virgin" by Britten and a heartfelt "0 sacrum convivum" by Olivier Messian. Though the lyrics to these works were not in English, the choir was obviously aware of their meaning.
. choirs. Audience members obviously knew they were for a treat, because they welcomed the Choral Union
first group to sing) with sustained applause through entrance of the entire 50-member group.
The Choral Union's program was technically more uw.•'-uH than any of their others in recent years. Most of
Choral Union's selections were in foreign languages.
Their repertoire contained the widest variety of pieces of the three choirs, and the singers handled this variety quite capably. Particularly nice was the soulful, poignant "Mon coeur se recommande a vous." In the slower songs the Madrigals' sound was rich with emotion; in the faster numbers the singers attacked with appropriate capriciousness.
Although translations were provided, any listener fluent in the languages could have understood the song's meaning because the chorus enunciated the lyrics quite clearly.
The two most outstanding selections they sang were "Ave Verurri Corpus" by Mozart and "Old Joe Has Gone Fishing" by Benjamin Britten. The latter was particularly spirited.
Susan Bates accompanied the group on the piano with her typical flair.
1n addition, the group was very well balanced. Each vocal part could be distinctly discerned, though the melody was always prevalent. Most members of this highly selective group have solo-quality voices, so their collective sound is always impressive. The most positive aspect about the Madrigal Singers' performance was that the group made music instead of merely pleasant harmonic sounds.
All three choirs combined to ring the rafters with an emotionally-stirring rendition of Handel's Let Thy Hand Be Strengthened. The combined choirs (backed by a dynamite six-memberfaculty instrumental ensemble) showed good dynamic variation for a group of such magnitude. The final "Alleluia" movement nearly shook the foundations of the recital hall.
The second group to take the stage was the Madrigal The Madrigals' performance was concluded with "Af
ter Spring Sunset,'' an unusual song set which director The person responsible for this high quality musical
event was Robert Cowles, the interim director of choral
llegium Performs Handily Despite Humidity
Although the stom1y weekend and resultsticky level of humidity made tuning ancient-model instruments a nightmare,
members of Collegium Musicum overthese difficulties quite handily and
their best performance in recent years ''"'""v evening in Brendle Recital Hall.
Perhaps eve~ more exciting was the fact many of the students wereperfonning on
ments that· they had only recently to play. Collegium Musicum is a
whose purpose is to perform ancient on period instruments. Most college
have not had the opportunity to play (a stringed instrument analogous to the
nes;ent:-a~tv cello) or a sackbut (a brass in'"<..,,..,, similar to a trombone) before en
ling in the one-credit music course. Collegium Musicum, a collection of sev
chamber instrumental ensembles, was !ir"c't"rl by Stewart Carter, an associate pro
of music. This semester, the ensemble composed of four consorts: viols, record.. Renaissance flutes and sackbuts. Th,, four-member viol consort began the ilC•.-rt - an evening of Franco-Flemish ~ic of the 16th century- with two sets,
with a gu~st soloist. The first set feai1ark Acosta on guitar. The two
in the set were fine pieces of music, because of bad staging it was difficult to
I . )
' hear many of the intricacies and innuendos in Acosta's parts. What was heard instead was simply the back -up music over a muted soloist. While the viols' perfonnance was commendable, this staging error was truly unfortunate because Acosta's past performances have proven he is a fine player.
The second set the viol consort perfonned featured soprano soloist Anne Lineberger, a senior music major. Lineberger's performance, among the best of her many ·solo appearances this year, was one of the highlights of the evening. Her bright, clear, pure voice was perfectly suited to this style of music, and her diction and tuning were topnotch. Especially notable was "Hau, hau,.hau le boys," a drinking song by Claudio de Sermisy that asks God to preserve "this noble French wine."
The next ensemble to take the stage was the Recorder Consort. Many of the consort's nine members were new to the group this semester, and one might have expected to have had to cringe through a mass of poor intonation and missed notes. Happily, this was not the case. The performers did not simply muddle through playing the correct notes; instead they made music. ·
Although all the selections the group perfonned were quite brief (none lasted more than two minutes), members were able to aptly bring out the themes in each work. Thomas Crecquillon's "Alix avoit aux dens lar malerage," with its complex interweav-
I
ing of melodies, was especially enjoyable, as was a set ofthreeAlrnande by Pierre Phalese.
The Renaissance Flute Concert carne next, following a brief intermission. Musically, this was the finest performance of the evening. Two of the three student members plan to be music majors; all the players were quite experienced.
It seems as though the performers switched from the .modem flute over to the wooden Renaissance model with barely a hitch. This group also had the greatest sense of ensemble of any of those performing. The trio of pieces by Tilman Susato that began the set were highlights, especially the fun "Allemande."
The last performance of the evening came from the four members of the Cometto and Sackbut Consort. The group's energetic, punchy sound was the perfect close for an evening of outstanding music.
Carter demonstrated that he is a jack-ofall-trades, as he played with all four groups, sometimes on multiple instruments during a single set. Even,<more impressive than his outstanding musical perfonnance was his knowledge of the period and the vast amount of research he must have undertaken to find music that so aptly and fully spanned the era that was the theme of the concert.
·As is true for·most musical ensembles at Wake Forest, Collegium Musicurn is a solid ensemble that · is quickly becoming quite exceptional.
It is a group to keep an eye on.
I I
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ensembles. He is to be commended on many counts. F&st, he chose music that was unusual, exciting and diffen;nt, with various songs in various languages. This was a refreshing change from the typical concerts of other choral groups who trot out the same classical warhorses to. be sung one more time.
Furthennore, Cowles' conducting gestures were graceful and unobtrusive. All the groups responded well tobis conducting, and a sense of real musicality was evi~ent throughout the concert.
Like all live performances, this concert had a few minor glitches. There were len~thy stage waits whil~ ~.e groups entered and exited. However, the only real cnttcJsm that can made is that the choirs did not perform before a packeq house. Such fine music deserves support from more students, faculty and community members alike.
Editor's note: Cowles has served as interim director of choral ensembles during the last two semesters while Brian Gorelick, the director of choral ensembles, was on sabatical. The April25 concert was Cowles' final perfqrmance at Wake Forest.
Gorelick will return in the fall.
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Courtesy of Paromount P!Crures
Family Ties
AI Paclno stars as : Michael Corleone in :l The Godfather, Part 1//, the final installment of the film trilogy that was a box office smash. The film will be playing this weekend In Pugh Auditorium. Show times are 7 and 10 p.m. today through Sunday.
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Realist F Tues.-Sat May 12, scenes by $2 studen Southeas1 Tues.-Sat May 12, ~ the final Fellowshi children I Student; days and l May 20, ~ lected wo
Music
Choral C rium. The Winston-: works by informatit Ransom Steve~sC NCSA st mance. F< DonHay1 Rose and duo is spc ety. $7; $: NCSAF; Tues., Cr Clarion F piano. $5 Opera St
· Hall, NC: scenes by
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Foxfire: Arts Cot Center. l widow de adults; $' children l
Richard, independt by EricK Annie: 8 May 12·: Theatre, t comic stri for ticket Brigadoo Cultural ( Players 1\ dents, sen: SteelMa1 Western~ Friendso1
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Stallone's I atest Will Never Wm an Oscar Jo/ t ;I
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Realist Painting :F.xbibit: 10 a.m.-5 p.t)l. Tues.-Sat. and 2-5 p.m. Sun., exhibits throu~ May 12, SECCA. Landscapes and nautic;1] scenes by local artist Robert Dance. $3 adults: $2 students, senior citizens. Southeast Seven Exhibit: 10 a.m.-5 P·IU. Tues.-Sat: and 2-5 p.m. Sun., exhibits throu~h May 12, SECCA. Works by the recipient~ of the final SECCAJRJR Southeastern Artl~ts Fellowship. $3 adults; $2 seniors, students: children 12 and under free. Student Art Exhibit: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays and 1-5 p.m. weekends, exhibits throulilh May 20, Scales 'Fine Art Center gallery. Selected works by students. Free.
Music
Choral Concert: 8 p.m. Sat., Hanes Auditorium. The Piedmont Chamber Singers and the Winston-Salem Symphony perform· chota! works by Mozart. Call 721-2702 for more information. "' Ransom Wilson and Friends: 8 p.m. Sa.t., Steve~s Center. Ransom Wilson conducts aud NCSA students and alumni in this perf()rmance. For ticket information call 721-1945. Don Haynie and Sheryl Samuel: 7 p.m. Su1J., Rose and Thistle Restaurant. This folk mu~ic duo is sponsored by the Fiddle & Bow So~:iety. $7; $5 Fiddle &Bow members. NCSA Faculty Chaml!er Concert: 8 P·IJ'l. Tues., Crawford Hall, NCSA. Featuring the Clarion Reed Trio and Bang Won Han 1111 piano. $5 adults; $4 students, senior citizens. Opera Scenes: 8 p.m. May 10-11, Crawford
· Hall, NCSA. Norman Johnson directs opera scenes by Mozart, Massenet and others. Fr(!e,
Theater
Foxfire: 8 p.m. today and Sat., 2 p.m. Su11., Arts Council Theatre, Hanes Community Center. How a good hearted Appalachian widow deals with life's hills and valleys. $9 adults; $7.50 students, senior citizens; $6 children under 13. Richard II: 8 p.m. today, Ring Theatre . .1\n independent project directed and performed by Eric Kershener. Free. Annie: 8 p.m. May 10,11,17 and 18; 3 p.I:J1. May 12·and 19; 2 p.m. May 18, Carolina Theatre, Greensboro. Loosely based on the comic strip of the same name. Call 333-7470 for ticket information. Brigadoon: 8 p.m. today and Sat., Greensboro Cultural Center. Performed by the Livestock Players Musical Theatre. $7 adults; $6 stu- · dents, seniorcitizens. Call373-2974fortickets. Steel Magnolias: 7 p.m. today and Sat., B~st Western Triad Inn, Lexington. Performed by Friends of the Theatre. $15 (includingdinnet).
., ' ' ~ ,.:;.··
Call (704) 249-3981 for reservations. As You Like It: 8 p.m. ~ay 10,11,16 and 18; 2 p.m. May 12, Prosceniu Thrust, Performan~e Place. NCSA studen s will perform th1s Shakespearean play. Ri~hard Easton directs. $5 adults; $4 students, se ior citizens. Call 721-1945 for more informal on. Crossing Delancey: 8 .m. May 10,11,17 and 18, Augsburg Commu ity Center. Perfo~ed by the Theatre Alliancq. Izzy, a youn¥ •. smgle woman living in New York, thinks she ISm love with an author, but her grandmother plays matchmaker and arran$es a date with a local pickle maker. $10 adults; $8 students, senior citizens. Call 725-7181 for more information.
Movies
The Godfather, Part 1~: 7 and 10 p.m. today through Sun., Pugh A ditorium. The awardwinning continuation the classic Godfather. The head of the Family ies to change his ways and makes an alliance w th the pope that becomes decidedly unholy. $2. WillyWonkaandtheChocolateFactory:8p.m. Wed., Pugh Auditoriurh. Willy Wonka offers a lifetime supply of chdcolate and more to the young children who tdur his tasty factory and pass his mysterious te~t. Free.
Dance
NCSA Spring Dance Concert: 8 p.m. May 14-18, Stevens Center, $7 adults; $5 students, senior citizens.
Miscellaneous
WFDD Wine Tasting• 7-9 p.m. today, Stouffer Winston Plaza ballro~b. This event, presented for its fourth year, te~ches participants about the subtle differences Pf wine. A silent auction of donated items will be held. Must be at least 21 years old to buy ti~kets. Call 759-5198 for more information. Art Lecture: 8 p.m~oday, Scales Fines Arts Center Room 102. Te isio Pignatti, a Venetian art historian and the eynolds professor of art, will lecture on the wo k of 16th century Italian painter Titian. Free. Greek Festival: 10~m.-10 p.m. today and Sat., 11 a.m.-8 p.m. S n., The Greek Orthodox Church. The festival ill include Greek food, music, crafts and je elry. Benefits go to the church building fund and Brenner Children's Hospital. Medieval Fair: 1 p.ml Sat., frontlawnofSalem · Academy. Medieval fames, music, decoration and a Maypole danc5: Free. ~ Fieldnotes to Footnotes: 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tues through Sat., 244:30 p.m. Sun., exhibits through Sept. 25, M~seum of Anthropology. An exhibit focusing qn anthropology studies at Wake Forest. Free.
BY STEVE MORGAN
OLD GoLD AND BLAcK REPORTER . Sylvester Stallone's last at
tempt at comedy was in the role of a New York cab drivertumed-countrysingerin 1984's ill-fated Rhinestone. Don't remember it? Not to worry- in a short while, you probably won't remember Stallone's newest comedy, Oscar, either.
That may seem harsh, but, in all, honesty I can say that this movie falls flat on its face.
Based on a French play by noted dramatist Claude Magnier, Oscar lies in the genre of "screwball comedy," like the films from the 1930s. I am sure that kind of comedy, often called farce, could be successful with today's audiences, if done really well. Butthis movie is definitely not the one that will skrt the trend.
Let me say that Stallone is not to blame. Surprisingly, he is a capable actor and could probably do quite well if the right comedy came along. The problem lies in the movie itself. A broad comedy is supposed to be dialogue-driven with a fast pace. Oscar is as slow as a snail, and, I think, the first time I laughed, a good 45 minutes had already passed. I also laughed a couple of times later, but that was just about it. Seriously, I was more inclined to look at my watch-a bad sign.
Director John Landis (Animal House, Three Amigos) and screenwriters Michael Barrie and Jim Mulholland are the culprits of this crime. The movie drags and the lines are just not funny. A good deal of the story is slap-stick humor based on misunderstandings and switched bags containing either jewels, money or underwear. It runs along the lines of a basic Three's Company episode.
On the stage, this kind of scenario would work, and that is probably the bottom line here. The original play on which Oscar is based just does not translate well to film.
The movie begins when the notorious bootlegger Angelo "Snaps" Provolone (Stallone) is summoned to his dying
L _ _, . ..,~-.... 111!:::'..· -"'·';-::-,i;-;l ,:-,.;"':'":-:-: .. -:.-:.-:.:-. --:--:--:--:---:--------:--:----+.-:-. --,,,-."......-.. ;-,. -.::-.:-. -~.,.... ,r:: •. ~., • .,,. father's bedside. In the pres-
Summoned to his dying father's deathbed, notorious bootlegger A_ngelo "Sn~ps" Pr,DV(I•Ioll (Sylvester Stallone, center) is ill-prepared for the old man's las~ w1sh: that h1s son be4Wnte respectable citizen. Stallone is flanked by his goons.Aldo (Peter Riegert, left) and Conniie(~Chl Palminiteri, right), in Touchstone Pictures' slapstick comedy, Oscar.
ence of the family priest, Fa- FerreroandHarryShearer),the not deserve it. The only ther Clemente (Don Ameche ), academician Dr. Poole (Tim that does deserve true the ailing patriarch begs his Curry), an embezzling ac- the set design. The sets · son to go straight and become countant (Vincent Spano), the beautiful, but who goes to an honest man. With remorse, spoiled daughter Lisa (Marisa film just to admire sce:nery.? Snaps reluctantly agrees to Tomei) and the list goes on ltisunfortunatethatStallon obey his father's plea. and on. Unfortunately, so does chose Oscar to test the
The day he is to start his new the movie. of comedy again. If he life, Snaps is bombarded with All of the misunderstand- have picked better material; all kinds of trouble and sur- ings and subplots are too long could easily prove that he rounded by all kinds of pecu- and complex to even attempt the skill to be a successful liar characters and relatives. to describe here. I wouldn't medic actor. With a movie Theseincludemisfitmobsters, wanttowastemytimeoryours Oscar, though, he didn't im~igrant tailors (Martin in even trying. This movie does a chance.
.Studei1t Stages, Directs . Scenes From Richard II .·VERTEBRATE THEATRE. ····.
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BY MIKE NEWBILL
OLD GoLD AND Bu.cK REPoRTER
Those of you who need to be reminded of the university's thriving
' theatrical community should only look io the newest production by junior Eric Kerchner.
In the past, Kerchner has participated in many of the Mainstage productions- most recently, he was the protagonist in The Misanthrope- as
· · well as several independent ventures. This time he has assembled a group of actors to perfmm a slightly unorthodox version of Shakespeare's play
·Richard 11. The performance consists of four
\ scenes from the play, spliced together to fonn a much-abridged but coherent and effective product.
· Kerchner plays Richard in the scenes. Other cast members include seniors Mike Guegan and Curt LaFrance, sophomore Curtis Beech and freshmen Jeremy Kuhn, Ben Tomlin, Mary Renner, Mike Marino and Leslie Ann Huntly.
The actors gave a trial run of the
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production was given for theate:daculty April 25. All the faculty embers present offered tips to im ove the' performance as well as several words of praise.
Cast members had much tc say about Kerchner's role in the production.
"It'~ hard to be an actor and a ~irector, bur Eric has done it beautifully," Kuhn said.
Tollllin said: "He has done a ,great job with the combination of sc¢nes. They tlow just like the sto:ry."
Ker~:hner said he feels his prqduction Was very much a group eff~Jrt.
"In 11rder to improve, you hawe to take some risks, and these peopleiwere willin~ to do this," he said.
"It i~ hard to be both an actor ~nd a directQr because you can't see the scenes obiectivelv. but there is a suecia! quality you get when you do b~th becau~e you can solve many of your own problems by the way you react to others in the scene," Kerchner added.
The final production of Richard II will b~ at 8 p.m. today in the Ring Theatre. Admission is free.
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D.J.- ltoveyoueven ifyouaretoo attached I M.S. and I will always leave the floor space open for your lale nights at the library? I!!
Love, Bear
LYRIC OF THE WEEK: Yes it's dark sometimes when the people are shoving, pushing you into the ground and you cry in thedaylightwlththesun in your eyes even though you know you're not alone and it''s all been felt before. you stareoutthrough your window and wonder if there's gonna be more. It brings you down, il"s like a war, who pays the price, if you want more. -INXS
JOKE OF THE WEEK: What goes Hal Hal! Hal!! Haiii!THUD? Ans. A man laughmg his head off!
AFn.e seri'IG re.e;£c.reD sy HAIItTAr HIIM!tNITY AND 71{/:tli!. SUMMe.e. PR.o. Go:A,I1 OF lJVIWtNG CARPOR.iS IN i!EI'ITR.Ai- A(.Af!JAMA,-TI{Ii.t!i! Moe A t..€
W4S 1-C'A/.!.-'JCk.fl-y,m.:y HME.~--rvr
Friday thru
Sunday
7:00PM 10:00 PM.'
$2.00 in_Pugh
·' ' -; : 12 fu Qw AND BI.Acx 1991
~ ' . • ~' o • I >. ~~
We salute the more tha~ 775 Reynolda Campus faculty and sbuf members listed ~low···:ho coriinbuted to the campus drive of the Heritage and Promise campaign. ~eventy-five percent of the Reyridlda Campus~ e.p1ployees made a gift or pledge to the campaig~. Their commitment to the future of }Va~~ Forest a11d i~s stude~ts'·i~ ··greatly appreciated. Because of their generoshy, $1.5 m~llion has been raised for the :.people and programs of Wake Forest. Frank S. Abrams William K .. Ach Donnie L. Adams James L. ,Addison Emmie M. Adkins Helen W. Akinc: Umit Akinc Eva M .. AIIen Nina S. Allen Charles M. Allen, Jr. * ' Martha B. Allman Linda S. Allred Michael G. Amos Carol B. Anderson John P. Anderson Karen M. Anderson Paul R. Anderson John L. Andronic:a J. William Angell Maya Angelou Guy M. Arcuri Johnne W. Armentrout * Halli~ S. Arrington • Bianca M. Artom Charles L. Ashley * Patricia H. Atwood Mary Ann Bailey Robert T. Baker B. Ram Baliga ' E. Pendleton Banks Sarah Barbour Janice B. Bardsley James P. Barefield Daniel C. Barkley Kathy L. Barnard Bernadine Barnes Paul Barnes Richard C. Barnett • Harold Bari'OI!I * Eileen C. Bass Marjorie A. Bass • Nancy B. Baucom John Baxley C.C. (Buck) Bayliff • Bernard L. Beatty H. Kenne!h Bechtel Bettianne S. Beck Robert C. Beck • S. Douglas Beets • Sylvia T. Bell Marion W. Benfield Karen M. Bennen Donald B. Bergey Elizabeth A. Berry Michael J. Berry Shirley G. Berry Daniel J. Bertsos
Deborah L. Best ** Rhoda B. Billings A. Christine Black W. Douglas Bland Helen M. Blount Terry D, Blumenthal Grace Boeringer Susan H. Berwick Sheila A. Bowen Billy W. Bowles Stephen B. Boyd Sandra C. Boyette Anne Boyle Julia W. Bradford Barbara T. Bradley Eleanor B. Brantley Russell H. Brantley, Jr. Beuy B. Brevard Gail P. Brewer • Steven E. Brooks Peggy W. Brookshire • Carolyn L. Browder David G. BI'OI!In Hugh F. Brown M. Lou BI'OI!In Paul H. Brown Carole BI'OI!Ine Robert A. Browne Bryan L. Brunette Dorothy C. Bryan • Shasta M. Bryant Carrie C. Bullock • James R. Bullock Joseph E. Bullock, II J. Russell Burcham James G. Burcham June H. Burcham • Lacy a: Burcham
Lorine C. Burchette * Betty M. Burgess' Mary Nell Burke Peggy L. Burr Julian C. Burroughs, Jr. • Sarah M. Burton • T. Cleve Callison Alan S. Cameron
Marilyn S. Capretta • E. Jay Capron Robert S. Carlson Kenneth L. Carmack
. Richard D. Carmichael ** Christa G. Carollo JoyS. Carr Martha Carr Warren Carr
·Jill G. Carraway Peggy Carroll Wallace Carroll Cqnnie L. Carson * l..ee•C. Caner. Dorothy Casey Wanda B. Cason * Don R. Castleman • David W. Catron Sarah S. Catron Dorothy J. Canle Mikey H. Cauthen * Sharon L. Cave • Sandra C. Chadwick * Rhoda K. Channing Christine M. Chapman Sandra T. Chilton · Cathy B. Chinlund * Edgar D. Christman Anne B. Church Walter S. Chyzowych E. Tylor Claggelt, Jr. James M. Clapper Richard T. Clay Elizabeth A. Clement M. Jean Clifton * Tay Coan Bobbi H. Cobb Mary Louise Cobb Virginia Cocke Julie B. Cole Claudia R. Calhoun Billie W. Collins Bobbie Collins John E. Collins Thomas F. Colton William E. Conner Jule M. ·Connolly Sammy M. Conrad L. Bernice Cook Ronnie G. Cook • Leon P. Cook, Jr. Leon H. Corbett, Jr. Julius H. Corpening Nancy Cbtton * I. Boyce Covington Bonnie L. Cox Kevin P. Cox Irene M. Cranfill Marvin Crater Bernice B. Crawford Yvonne C. Creed Thomas L. Crews, Sr. • Marjorie Crisp Janet B. Cromer ian S. Crookenden Judy K. Cunningham Patricia M. Cunningham James F. Curran William C. Currin Luellen Curry Dale Dagenbach Dianne Dailey Mary M. Dalton Sayeste A. Daser ** Louise R. Davidson Willie I. Davidson * Huw M. Davies Bobby F. Davis Charles L. Davis Cheryl D. Davis Shala E. Davis Barry S. Daye P. Candace Deans Cheryl J. Denmark Ralph E. Dennison Barbara J. Dery Mary K. DeShazer Timothy B. Devoe Arun P. Dewasthali * Beatrice W. Dierks Paul A. Dierks
Ronald V. Dimock, Jr. * R. Kriss Dinkins * J. Gary Dixon * Patricia Dixon * Eleanor B. Dodson Brian L. Dolge Helen D. Doub Carolyn G. Dow Scott K. DuBois · Robert H. Dufort John Dunkelberg John R. Earle
Linda E. Early • Eddie V. Easley J. Allen Easley Lynn E. Eben Brian H. Eckert Kim W. Ellis Leo Ellison. Jr. Thomas M. Elnjore • Paul D. Escott Andrew V. Ettitt • David K. Evans Renate G. Evans Robert H. Evan~ Stephen Ewing David L. Faber Victor Faccinto William M. Faircloth Kurt B. Falkenberg Philippe R. Falkenberg Richard P. Faude Teresa R. Faust Joanne B. Fed~rchuck. * Jack D. Ferner James L. Ferrell •• Toni Finch David T. Finn Jack D. Fleer '•• Walter S. Flocy, Jr. Mrs. Edgar E Folk Laura C. For<! Michael G. F~rd * Mary Anne Forehand Doyle R. Fosso Ralph L. Foster H. Miles Foy * Catherine W. France Ann F. Fran9is * Annette Fraser Ralph Fraser Donald E. Frey Mary L. Friedman * Gloria L. Frost Faye H. Fullt * Vonnie S. G11ge Roger Gagn~o~n Debra N. Gaines Lorenzo A .l. Gallo Troy M. Galloway Narasimhan Ganapathi Robin R. G~:~nzen
Ruth M. G~Jrrison
Vincent E. Gaver Betty J. Gay Cynthia S. Gentry Ivey C. Gentry Christophet Giles John W. Gillon Thomas P. Gilsenan Samuel T. Gladding
oavid M .£lass Charlene . Glasscock Kathleen . Glenn Thomas S. Goho Balkrishna G. Gokhale Louis Goldstein • Bobbie M~ Goodnough Francea N. Goodridge John R. C&oodridge Ronald v.l. Gordon Brian L. Gorelick Louise. y, Gosseu Thomas F. Gosseu Melody A. Graham * Frances ~- Greenlee George E. Greer ** Dennis E. Gregory Diana C. Gregory
Margaret C. Gregory Julie D. Griffin W. Coo~ Griffin Ross A. Griffith • Sandra K. Griggs Karen B. Grogan Teresa 8. Grogan Francis¢ Haber Jesse Haddock David W. Hadley * W. Der!tld Hagen *
Toby AL Hale ** Mark A. Hall • Virginif. ~- Hall Donna H. Hamilton ** Michael E. 'Hamilton * William S. Hamilton * Claire H. Hammond J. Dame! Hammond * E. Willard Hamrick Phillip J. Hamrick * Shirl,ey Hamrick Beve'rly~ H. Hanc~k · James S. Hans 1
Katy J. f:Iarriger • Carl V. Harris ..
Catherine T1 Harris Cathy C. Hti~ris
Frederick H. ·Harris Lucille S. Hams J. Kline -Harri~ Terrie L. Han Ruth H. Hartgrove Christine C. Hartle Anne E. Hartz Joan C. Hatfield • Betty H. Hauser Brenda S. Hauser Harold G. Hauser Sandra M. Hauser 'Elmer K. Hayashi Nancy M. Hayes Michael D. Ha,~n J. Timothy Heames * Thomas K .. Hearn, Jr. Lynne G. Heflin Roger A. Hegstrom Deborah C. Hellman Betty G. Henderson Karen A. Henderson 1. Edwin Hendricks Larry R. Henson Mildred M. Herrin Buddy 0. Herring Marlene S. Hickman Rachel L. Hilbun Arnold W. Hill Leigh Hill Marianne M. Hill Teresa S. Hill * David A .. Hills Kathy J. Hines Willie L. Hinze • Mary Jo Hipple • Alix C. Hitchcock Kay C. Hobson Anne K. Hodges Janet C. Hodges Dorothy L. Holcomb Jean B. Holc()mb Carlos 0. Holder Jeffrey W. H()lleman Harold R. Holmes Jean K. Holmes George M. Holzwarth Natalie A.W. Holzwarth Gene Hooks Jean K. Hooks Beth N. Hopkins Jean B. Hopson Fred L. Horton, Jr. ** William L. Hottinger * Fredric T. Howard Terry G. Howerton Paul F. Huck Anita W. Hughes
. Michael L. Hughes William L. Hughes Noel C. Hunter Susan C. 'Hunter Carole T. Hutton Delmer P. Hylton Sally A. Irvin Katherine B. Isbell Susan C. Jackels * Robert P. Jackson * Thomas F. Jackson John E. Jakob Julie A. James Patricia A. Johansson David J. John Wayne Johnson Zelia D. Johnson Bonnie C. Jones Candide M. Jones LeAnn P. Joyce * G. William Joyner, Jr. Medra Justis John A. Justus Virginia A. Kahn Peter D. Kairoff Patricia P. Kale
Ethel B. Ka.noy Lewis Kanoy James W. Kausch Judith· W. ·Kay Horace 0. Kelly
• Renee J. Kelly - Alonzo W .. Kenion
Ralph Kennedy Char.les R. Kennedy, Jr. William C. Kerr Gwendolyn J. Kimmer Katherine M. Kind Judy F. King · Kerry M. King •• Susan A. King Charles J. Kinlaw Wanda B. Kirby-Smith Olivia Kirchner Ellen E. Kirkman Faith W. Kisel Margaret H. Kiurell • M. Elen Knott •• Robert H" Knott Ellen R. Kovner Anna Krauth Joann D. Kucera Raymond E. Kuhn James Kuzmanovich Kelly B. Kyes Adele LaBrecque Patti A. Ladd Jean Landers Brian E. Lange Brenda Laprade· Brenda A. Latham-Sadler Henry C. Lauerman Page H. Laughlin * Carol N. Lavis Michael S. · Lawlor Regina G. Lawson Lula M. Leake ¥ark R. Leary* Wei-Chin Lee
Win·Chiat Lee Margaret W Leonard David B. Levy Kathryn Levy Ann Lewis Charles M. Lewis * Maureen L. Lister John H. Litcher Ellen C. Lockamy Dan Locklair David A. Logan Debra T. Long * Kay D. Lord Allan Louden * Vicki Love Patricia B. Lowder Gene T. Lucas Dianne B. Luce * Caroline L. Luchsinger • Mark A. Lytal Myrtle L. Lytle Christine Maletta Allen Mandelbaum Milorad Margitic Carolyn B. Marshburn Dale R. Martin Marilyn G. Martin Patricia E. Martin James A. Martin, Jr. Sheila P. Massey George E. Mauhews, Jr. * Cathy B. Maxfield J. Gaylord May * W. Graham May • Leslie C. McCall Lowell W. McClure • Timothy M. McConnell Leah P. McCoy Jerome McDaniel Sandra I. McFadden Dana C. McGuirt Frances S. McHam * John B. McKinnon
HERITAG~PROMISE
The Campaign for Wake Forest· w;>"::J~~- .... ::-;-_;..~ ,, ... ".H: ~ -:lt
]. El: :U. ...
Jill J. McMillan Minta A. iMcNally * Dolly A. McPherson •• Sara F. Mecham J11dith C. Melton Jai;pcr L. Me!IIOry Stephen P. Messier LOretta T. Meyer WilliamK. Meyers 'Linda J: Michalski * 1J, Kendall Middaugh, II • Robert D. Mills Joseph 0. Milner •·. Doris C: Minor Carlton ,T. Mitchell Susan R. Montaquila Beverly C. Moore • Harold S. Moore Nancy S. Moore ·John C. Moorhouse J. Reid Morgan Kathryn M. Morris Carl C. Moses Helen ·p, Moses Brenda G. Mo11ley Eugene Moyer
~· Charles Moye,Thomas E. Mullen Miriam A. Murphy • Barry L. Murray Sonja K. Murray Barbee C. Myers Laura L. Myers Rebecca Myers Peter B. Nachand Wanda S. Nester Gale W. Newport Candelas S, Newton Anne Nicholson James M. Nicholson Linda L. Nielsen . Joan H. Noell Ronald E. Noftle Melanie E. Nuu Joanne F. O'Brien ** G. David Odom Belly T. Olive * Paul N. Orser Gillian R. Overing * F. Jeanne Owen Karen L. Oxendine Alan R. Palmiter Alvine K. Paletta Linda L. Parent Deborah L. Parker J. Wilson, Parker Sylvia L. Parkyn Eugenia W. Patterson Perry L. Patterson * Allen H. Patterson, Jr. Charles W. Patterson, III Peter R. Peacock ** Willie Pearson, Jr. Ralph Peeples John M. Perkins Philip J. Perricone • Margaret R. Perry Percival Perry • .. Marshall E. Pettit
Elizabeth Phillips ** Rory A. Phillips Thomas 0. Phillips ** Margie T. Pleasants Robert J. Plemmons Ann C. Pollard Jessica B. Pollard Alton B. Pollard, III • Thomas R. Poole Cherin C. Poovey · Joseph W. Potter Carolyn G. Potts • Julius R. Potts Michael J. Pratapas * Ronald M. Price Margie V. Priddy Nancy M. Priddy * Gregory D. Pritchard ** Clara W. Pruitt Thomas L. Puryear Bernard H. Quigley
,Janet M. Rachlin ** Katherine G. ~nd "
· Jean B. Ranson Beulah Raynor. • Frances R. Reaves * Patricia Reavis Lloyd K. Rector
Mary Lynn Redmond * Mark H. Reece Shirley P. ~e ,. John F. Reed >
' . '' J. DOn Reeves .W. Jack Rejeski •
Suzanne. Reynolds * Craig· R, .Rhyne * Paul M.-'Ribisl ** Claud H. Richards, Jr. Charle!~, L.:Richman Mary Beth Roberts. * Patricia 1. Roberts Thomas E. Roberts G. Hazel Robey Mary F. Robinson * ; . Paul Robinson • Eva M. Rodtwitt . M: Shirley Rogers • Natasha L.,·Romeo Charles P. Rose, Jr. •• Clarice V. Roth .. William .G. ~land. 'Jr. Debbie K. R!lbin Henry W. Russell !:lrooke·.A. Saladin * Barbara_B. Sal! Joseph c~ Sanchez .Wilmet D. Sanders Ruth D. Sartin. Jack W .. Sawyer • Juanita B. Saylor.,. James Ralph ·Scales Janice N. Scales John D. Scarlett Patricia F. Schell Barry C. Schline Donald Schoonmaker • Marianne A. Schubert Herbert L. Schuene * Brenda H. Scon W. Gregory Scott •• Richard D. Sears Scarlett S. Sears Timothy F. Sellner Michael N. Selmon Pearl M. Sessums Catherine E. Seta Mark S. Sexton Judith Shannon Byjiiiiii G. Sliiw Kurt Shaw Walter. W. Shaw Chester G. Shelf Larry H. Shelf Lillian B. Shelton Myra H. Shelton • Joan c. Sheridan Howard W. Shields * Peter C. Shipman * Mamie M. Shirley Frances H. Shively Robert W. Shively Gary L. Shoesmith Mary Louise Shore David F. Shores * Robert N. Shorter * Wayne L. Silver Ellen L. Simms Michael L. Sinclair Billy J: Sizemore James E. Sizemore Howard G. Skillington, Jr. Yuri Sle~ine Alison rri Smith * J. Howell Smith * Janet G. Smith Kathleel! B. Smith Margaret S. Smith Melrose L:Smith • 1•
Ross K. Smith Ruth Ann Smith Gay E. Snow* Sharon E. Snow * W. Tim Snyder Wesley E. Snyder Cecilia H. Solano Margaret T. 'Southard Julia, C. Spach Patricia A. :Spainhour Laura :J. S~r Richard G. Speas • W. Robert Spinks Lynne M. Sponaugle Thomas D. Sprinkle, Jr. William G. Starling * Jim A. Steeh! ** . Thomas M. Steele Claudia A. Stitt E. Preston Stockton
·' E. Deleon Stokes HenrY Stokes Keith E. Strauss
· Marian V. Strauss Scott A. Street David H. Stroupe Henry Stroupe * Carole. M. Stuart Dorothy A. Sudgen •
Noel H.· Sugg . Colee!) J. Sullivan • Benjamin C. Sutton. Jr. Charles H1 . Talbert ian M: Taplin Doran T. Tate Mary Ann 'Illylor • 'l:hornas C. 'Illylor James. Taylor. Jr. Marie· C. Teague Harold C. Tedford * Lillian Tennant . Claudia N. Thomas • Olive S. Thoroas • · Robert D. Thom~on Carl V. Thompso~ Lisa M. Thompson R .. Bruce Thompson. II Kimmey L. Tilley. Cecilia· L. Tinnell
Hafl'Y B. TitUs, Jr. ** Patricia W .. Toole Todd L. Torgersen * Ralph B. Towe~ . . Barbara Trautwein George Trautwein * Jq!Jy H. Thcker • Ka~n J. l,\Jcker. Joann L. TuJ!le Doris L. Tyson Robert.W.Uiery, Jr. Robert L. Utley, Jr. Cheryl Van Riper Elide M. Vargas • Samuel D. Vernon John E. Via Margaret T. Viglianco Thmara L. Yore Marcellus E. Waddill J. Van Wagstaff Jerry Wainwright Janice P. Walker
Judy G. Wa.lker" Susan G. Wallaee
RObert K. ~~h. ..... J
Rebecca K.• Wllti! Elaine E. Weatherly · Opal Weatherly Royce Weatherly * Mary Parks Weathers David S. Weaver ** Alice J. Webster James M. Webster, Jr. Peter D. Weigl * Kari Weil David Weinstein Mark E. Welker Byron R. We,lls James. G. Welsh, Jr. Larry E. West "' Richard D . .Whisnant ** Kyle White * . Mariiyn M. White
Jeanne P: Whitman Stephen J. Whitmyer C. Monroe W~itt Camilla P, Wilco~t Jack E. Wilkerson, Jr. Alan J. Williams Helen M. Williams * Jean M. Williams Jimmy R. Williams John E. Williams Margaret W. Wi~liams Richard T. Williams * Virginia K. Williams G. P. (Jack) Williams, Jr. ** John G. Williard David C. Wilson * Edwin G. Wilson ** Gail P. Witherspoon Ralph C. Wood * Susanne Wood ·J. Ned Woodall John R. Woodard* Joan C. Worth Beverly H. Wright Ronald F. Wright, Jr. Raymond L. Wyatt * Ruth L. Wyatt Anne L. Yandell
Louise E. Yates Marguerite Yearns W. Buck Yearns Daniel A Zacharias Kenneth A. Zick Isabel E. Zuber Richard L. Zuber
** Campus Campaign Steering Committee members
• Campus Campaign Volunteers
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