Societies favor national affiliation for insurance

Transcription

Societies favor national affiliation for insurance
-DOME COOKIN'
,ARTINt ,ICTURES
Student reviewers rank
favorite Winston-Salem
dining joints
a
Photograph_ers capture
last looh at sorne co·mmon
views of ca1npus
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VoLUME
arts & entertainment/page 10
sports/page 12
perspectives/page 7
THURSDAY, APRIL
76, No. 29
29, 1993
Notre Dame President will give address at graduation ceremony
States Institute of Peace. Hesburgh was a
charter member of the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights and was awarded the Medal of
Freedom by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
According to Hallie Arrington, an associate
registrar, the university will award 785
bachelor's degrees. The Graduate School of
Arts and Sciences, the School of Law, Bowman Gray School of Medicine and Babcock
Graduate School of Management will confer
a total of 537 master's and doctoral degrees.
Jane Freeman Crosthwaite, an associate
professor of religion at Mount Holyoke College, will deliver the baccalaureate sermon at
11 a.m. May 16 in Wait Chapel.
OLD GOLD AND BLACK STAFF Rl'l'ORT
Reverend Theodore M. Hesburgh, the presidentemeritusofthe University ofNotre Dame,
will address more than 1,300 undergraduate
and graduate students receiving diplomas May
17.
The commencement ceremony will be held
on the Quad at 9:30a.m.
Hesburgh served as the president of Notre
Dame for more than 35 years, the longest
tenure among active presidents of American
universities. Over the years, he held 14 presidential appointments, including his most recent appointment as a director of the United
H. Felts, a professor of internal medicinenephrology; Jesse H. Meredith, a professor of
surgical sciences-general surgery; W. Keith
O'Steen, professor of neurobiology and
anatomy and Jack M. Rogers, an associate
professor of psychiatry and behavioral medicine.
Tickets are not required for admission to
commencement exercises. In the event of
rain, the graduation exercises will be held in
Lawrence Joel Memorial Coliseum. Rain announcements will be made on local radio and
television stations after 7 a.m. May 17. The
university weather line will also relay a change
in location.
Virginia Commonwealth University; Shogo
Sasaki, the dean emeritus of the Tokai University School of Medicine and Leroy T.
Walker, the chancellor emeritus of North
Carolina Central University will also be presented with honorary degrees.
Retiring faculty from the Reynolda and
Hawthorne campuses to be honored are: Ralph
Amen, a professor of biology; Leon Cook Jr.,
an associate professor of accounting; Henry
Lauerman, a professor of law and Bynum
Shaw, a professor of English.
Bowman Gray retiring faculty to be honored are Philip R. Aronson, an associate professor of internal medicine-gerontology; John
The undergraduate college's honors and
awards ceremony will be held at 2 p.m. May
16 in Brendle Recital Hall. During the ceremony, awards for academic achievement
will be· announced, honorary degrees will be
presented and retiring faculty will be honored.
The Walter S. Flory Service Award, the
Emily Crandall Shaw Scholarship in Liberal
Arts and the Carlton P. West Phi Beta Kappa
A ward will also be presented.
Hesburgh will be one of five individuals
receivinganhonorarydegree.JarnesK.Glenn,
a former general partner of Quality Oil; Paule
Marshall, novelist and professor ofEnglish at
Societies favor national
affiliation for insurance
people just felt it was too risky .... It was just more stable
to go national." Delphi will hold a formal vote on the issue
today.
Junior Meg Lewis, the president of Thymes, said she
agreed. "The insurance is definitely a big advantage to
going national."
Arthur said the societies have a contract with the uni versity that prevents them from seeking national affiliation.
This contract has bc:en in effect for three years and will
expire in September.
"Even if the groups have already taken a vote, it won't
be official until we get back," Arthur said. ''Nothing can
be made official until we get back in the fall, because this
agreement is still in effect."
Junior Erin Sullivan, the president ofLynks, said ... We
feel that the campus is changing and that this decision is
the best thing for our society."
Junior Angela Wrenn, the president of Strings, said:
See Greek, Page 3
BY Eo MYRICK
01.o GoLD AND BLAcK RbPORTER
No money down
Accepted students and their parents park their cars on Davis field Monday during
Campus Day.
Four societies announced their intentions to seek national affiliation Monday at the weekly meeting of the
Intersociety/sorority Council. Lynks and Thymes societies fonnally approved affiliation with a national sorority.
Delphi and S.O.P.H. societies voted in favor of national
affiliation in non-binding, informal votes. Delphi and
S.O.P.H. will hold fonnal votes this evening.
Junior Lori Arthur, the president of the Intersociety/
sorority Council, said one major factor in the societies'
decisions was the university's requirement that all women's
Greek organizations have social host liability insurance
by Sept<i!Pber. Arthur said that by affiliating with national
sororitieS, tbe societies will be covered under those sororities' national insurance policies.
Junior Tammy Nicholson, the president of Delphis,
said: "The ISC has been looking at some policies, but
Security suspects arson as cause of three recent campus blazes
Melton reported the fire after being awakened
by the smell of smoke. The two Davis residents found a chair burning outside Davis,
next to the Kappa Alpha fraternity lounge
entrance.
By the time the two men found the fire it had
begun to blister paint, char wood and melt
Plexiglass door windows.
Gristins and Melton moved the chair away
from the building with the help of another
Davis resident, junior Daniel Brienza, and a
security officer. The four of them then put the
fire out. The Winston-Salem Fire Department
BY BENEDETIA AGNOLI
OLD GOLD AND BtA.Cf( REPORTER
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Three fires took place on campus within a
nine-day period beginning April 18 and ending April 25. All are believed to be cases of
arson, according to University Security.
The latest incident took place between 3:45
a.m. and 4:17a.m. Sunday near Davis House.
"We believe the fire outside Davis House
was intentionally set," said Regina Lawson,
the director of University Security.
Sophomores Frank Gristins and Andy
"It was more mysterious than dangerous,"
she said.
A bed pillow and telephone book were
apparently set on fire in the garage of a satellite residence on Student Drive. The time at
which the fire was set is undetermined.
Security officers who arrived at the scene
found that someone had pried open the garage
door and set fire to the items. The fire was then
put out with a fire extinguisher, she said.
The residence was not damaged in any way.
The incident is being treated primarily as a
case of breaking and entering.
In an earlier incident, freshman James
ShpuntJr. was charged with malicious injury
to property after he allegedly set a fire on
April 22. A security officer said Shpunt set
fire to a wall poster at 2 a.m. in Taylor House,
setting off the fire alam1. Shpunt extinguished
the fire before security, city fire department
officials and city police arrived at the scene.
Shpunt was arrested by security officers
and taken before a county magistrate. He was
released on bond.
The first incident, occurring on April 18,
was also the most mysterious, Lawson said.
is conducting tests to detennine whether a
flammable liquid may have been used to set
the chair ablaze.
"We want to emphasize that it was a very
serious incident,"Lawson said. "It could have
jeopardized the safety of everybody in the
building."
Security is investigating how the fire was
started, with the assistance of the city fire
department. No one has been charged in the
case. Lawson said anyone who has any pertinent information is encouraged to call Campus Crime Stoppers.
Gay rights advocates show support for civil rights by marching upon capitol
BY
J. KEN STUCKEY
EDlTORIALS PAGE EDITOR
WASHINGTON- Thousands of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and supportive heterosexuals descended upon the
nation's capitol Sunday to voice their support for civil
rights expansion and removal of prejudice against homosexuals.
Members of the university community who attended
said they were uplifted by the events and the emotion of
the march, but they also said the experience made the air
of intolerance on campus even more palpable when they
returned.
Senior Wil Hawk, a member of the Gay, Lesbian and
Bisexual Issues Awareness Group steering committee,
said the march left him virtually paralyzed with emotion.
The final perfonnance of the march was particularly
charged, he said. "It was the most spiritually charged thing
I ever felt. It was like a catapult whose cord had been cut.
(Our spirits) were vaulted into the air and we kept rising
and rising," he said.
· .
INSIDE
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BY BENEDEITA AGNOLI
01.o GoLD AND BI.AcK REPORTER
Discussion has begun in the department of
speech communications about a student-run
closed circuit television channel on campus,
WFU-TV.
Sophomores J en Schiller and Steve
Bumgarner led an informational meeting
Thursday.
A bill which authorized the creation of the
planning committee forthis project was unanimously passed in the Student Government
legislature at its last meeting for the semester.
Three committees will be set up in order to
divide the various responsibilities which will
be involved in running the station. The committees will be the Charter Committee, the
page .._<.,.
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Ed1torrafs ..............o; ••;; •• ~.......... u .................. 8...... , '
Horoscope ......~ ........_:..• :·.~.~~.:~~ ............: •• 11 ~- ·
. Perspectives ....·.-·;;.;;.....~...._;,...,...;••. ;....:~,,~·'·_;·
'~=~~;;r:;:~;rJ~:~:::?.}::::;:~!:::::::::)::~t~-·;1·
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Sports .... ._,,.,,.,.~.uo•••:~-... ~ •••~ ..... _.;,.·,.·,. .. ,.~ ..'-•,•12 ·~· .,
Worldwide ••• o•••••·............ :••• nu•u•••~•••u···~ 4 ·
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Participants show their support of gay rights in a marct; in Washington Saturday.
Plans for student-run television channel discussed at meeting
,ih~ri~s;),#~r:, ~- ,J}i~~Wt~~l~j
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Hawk said certain parts of the march turned his critical
eye inward. At one point, a group of marchers chanted,
"Two, four, six, eight! How do you know that Chelsea's
straight!" as they passed the White House.
Although their intent may have been to point out society's
blindness about homosexuality, Hawk said that by singling out the president's daughter, they pointed out their
own blindness to him. "That (act) showed me that we (civil
rights demonstrators) sometimes miss the boat too. Chelsea
is enough of a target already," Hawk said.
Other parts of the weekend that Hawk found memorable
included the informal demonstration which took place in
Dupont Circle the night before the march. The enormous
diversity of the group that gathered there made an impression on Hawk, he said.
"The way (the demonstrators) dressed, what they said,
everything showed tliat all we want is civil rights. There's
not much else that links us," he said.
Freshman Chris Cooper attended the march as well as
other events that led up to the march: the Gay, Lesbian and
See March, Page 6
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Wake Radio a11d the television station at Elan
College.
Schiller said: "I think that it's a good idea to
model the constitution on Elan's. Their station is very good and everything works really
well."
If the plans go through as is expected then
the first broadcasts should take place in the
spring of 1994.
Bumgamer said, 'The easiest way to get
started will be to tape what is actually happening." Mainstage shows, sports events, concerts, SG meetings and lectures are some of
the events which will be aired in the first few
months after the station's opening.
Schiller said: "We will h;JVe to start small.
But there are no limits to how big it can get."
Among the number of o!her ideas which
Publicity Committee and the Planning Committee.
There will also be an executive committee
on which the chainnen of the other groups
will take part. The committee will also have a
faculty adviser and a technical adviser, as
WAKE Radio does.
"We want to jump start this," Bumgarner
said. "Once the organization becomes chartered and it passes the legislature then we will
elect people."
He said he expects that all ofthedetails can
be worked out by the second legislature meeting next semester.
Students who attended the meeting were
encouraged to volunteer in helping to write a
draft of the station's constitution. This document will be modeled on the constitutions of
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surfaced during discussion was the possibility
of creating a dramatic series which would he
written, acted and produced entirely by students.
Junior Pati Beauchamp, a speech communications major, said she hopes this would
only be the beginning of things to come.
"This will be an opportunity for students to
showcase their talent," Beauchamp said. "It
would be great if students could gt:t cluss
credit for their work, too."
Mary Dalton, an instructor of ~peech communications who has been working with the
students on this project, said this will he the
beginning of expansion into more broadcasting and film classes in the speech communication department.
See Channel, Page 3
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2Ow Gow AND BLACK THURSDAY, APRJL29,!993
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.BRIEFLY': ' </.~ Former governor lectures on· affirmative action
·,
·-"·'"····, .
J. HUNTER TART
AssrSTA>rr Nsws Eorrost
He is also now the head of the Medical
Research Foundation in Charlotte.
To introduce his topic, Martin said, "First
Fonner N.C. Governor Jim Martin told· of all, America, the United States, is a very
students that quotas are not the solution to diverse country."
the problem of encouraging equality and
He said many problems still exist in the
diversity in the work place.
assimilation of these diverse groups, but
' Martin met with students in the fonnal many improvements have already been
parlor of Johnson Residence Hall April22 made. "We've made progress." he said.
Martin said, "In recent years, there has
to talk about the diversity of talents in the
work force of today and tomorrow. The been a great deal ofattention to the fact that
talk was sponsored by COFFEE, the Com- most of the leadership jobs in America
mittee Organized for the Further Enrich- have been held by white males."
He·· said the question that remains is:
ment of Education.
Martin, who taught organic chemistry at "What do you do about that? Do you go
Davidson College for about 12 years be- beyond that and set a standard, a ratio of
fore being elected'govemor, said he will be this to that?"
Martin said he does not think this probserving as an "~djunct professor of no topic
in particular" at Wake Forest next year. lem has been satisfactorily solved. "MeanThis obligation will bring him to campus while, we are making some progress," he
several times a year to speak to students. said.
BY
• Judicial Council holds hearings
Th·e following charges result~d from Judicial
Board and Honor Council hearings completed during the past week.
A student was found guilty of stealing and of
unauthorized activity by the Judicial Board. Sanctions included a $70 fine and 70 community service
hours.
The Honor Council found a student guilty of
deception and on two counts of plagiarism. The
student was sanctioned with expulsion and failure
in two courses.
• Hospice offering orientation
Hospice of Winston-Salem/Forsyth County will
offer volunteer orientation May I, 3, 5 and 6 to
prepare volunteers to improve the quality of life for
families who have a loved one who is terminally ill.
Call the Hospice office at 768-3972 for additional
information and registration.
To give an example of a possible solution to the problem of assimilation into the
work place, Martin described one of his
goals as governor.
"As governor, I determined that a goal
that I would have would be to have a higher
degree of participation .in my administration of racial minorities than the previous
administration," he said;
However, reflecting. on political divisions, Martin said, "I had relatively little
minority support."
"So, the goal was: We don't have as
much support to draw on. Let's show them
we can do better than they did. Not by
setting quotas, saying ~hat this job is earmarked for that race and this job is earmarked for this race," he said.
Martin described problems arising from
these quotas when he said: "The previous
administration had had in . almost every
The Volunteer Service Corps is sponsoring
"Lighten Your Load," a clothing drive for Goodwill. From May 3 to May 8, students can donate
clothes by putting them in collection boxes around
campus.
• LEAD II to be offered
• GALBA to sponsor Benson mixer
The Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Issues Awareness group will hold an end-of-the-year mixer tomorrow from 3 to 4:30 p.m. The mixer will take
place in Benson 401. All members of the campus
community are welcome.
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•Leadership symposium
to be held
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A tive-day symposium will be held May I 7-21 on
: campus to examine the qualities of leadership.
The event, which is jointly planned by the School
: ofBusiness and Accountancy and the department of
. speech communication, is titled "Redefining Lead: ership: New Visions of Work and Community."
Daytime sessions will require advance registra. tion, but 8 p.m. lectures each evening will be open
to the public. The symposium is made possible by
· a grant from Spires of Excellence in Civic Responsibility, with assistance from the Center for Cre, ative Leadership in Greensboro.
For information about the program, call 7595788.
• Psychology lecture to be hosted
The university psychology department and the
University of North Carolina at Greensboro psychology department will host a two-part colloquium
series on May 13 and 14.
Robert Norman Hughes, a visiting scholar from
the department of psychology at the University of
Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, will
present two lectures in the series.
The first speech, titled "Invertebrate Tum Alternation Behavior: A Comparative View," will be
held May 13 at I p.m. in room 292 of the Eberhart
Building on the UNCG campus.
The second lecture, titled "Caffeine and Behavior: Effects on the Unborn," will be given May 14 at
11 a.m. in room 223, Winston Hall.
• German scholarships announced
Four students have been awarded university scholarships for study at institutions in Germany for the
corning year. Sophomore Todd Wisniewski received the University of Berlin Exchange scholarship for study at the University of Berlin. Juniors
Deborah Bilder and Nicole Wellman received the
third W. D. Sanders scholarship and wiJI be studying at the Goethe Institute this summer.
In addition, junior Jowe Harrison has received a
partial W. S. Sanders scholarship for study at the
University of Freiburg, where he is currently a
student. Wilmer D. Sanders, a professor emeritus of
Gennan, established the W. D. Sanders scholarship, which awards $2,000 to two students planning
to study abroad. Preference is given to candidates
who will use the award for summer language study.
• Classics society admits members
Eta Sigma Phi, a national honorary fraternity for
students of classics, has initiated the following
members into Beta Iota; the local chapter: freshmen
John Gregg, Mary Elizabeth Mason, Josh K. Jones,
. Joseph G. Desiderio, Evelyn N. Butler, and Colin
Creel; sophomores Brent Baroody, Kari Lester,
Hank N. Kennedy, Kevin Muse, John Cimaroli,
Paul Mcintosh, Tammy Plyler, and Brian Poligone;
and junior Carolyn Frantz.
Former student Ellen Correll and Allen
Mandelbaum, a Kenan professor of humanities,
: were elected to honorary membership.
The following new officers for 1993-94 were
installed: junior Jennifer Helton, president; freshman Elizabeth Reif, vice-president; sophomore
Perry Bell, secretary; and junior Heather Hutchens,
treasurer.
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Students find
profit in selling
ostrich meat
• VSC sponsors clothing drive
The Division of Student Life, with support from
the Mary Reynolds Babcock Fund, is launching an
advanced leadership development program for 20
upperclass students in fall 1993. LEAD II will
consist of three integrated developmental components: eight leadership lab sessions, a mentor relationship, and a final retreat.
The goal of LEAD II will be for students to
engage in study and critical thinking with regard to
current leadership theory, to apply what they are
learning through a well-defined project with their
mentors, and to develop their own personal statements ofleadership.
LEAD II is open to all upperclass students. Participation in LEAD is not a prerequisite for this
program. Applications will be available in the office of student life in Benson 311, and will be
accepted until May 17.
For more information, contact Mike Ford, Ext.
5921; Mary Gerardy, Ext. 5229; or Mark Hall, Ext.
5228.
department at least an assistant secretary
who was African-American. But in almostall those cases, it was an assistant secretary
for minority relations.
.
"But, to me, that was not the level to
which people should aspire. The minori-· ,
ties should aspire to serve a cross-section :
of the population."
Ma(\in said his pl!\n did a better job of_ ..
integrating minorities into high-level jobs. ,
"We were pretty successful at that," he. ·
said.
"We reached a level of 18 percent par- ,
ticipation of leadership jobs for black mi,- ·
norities. That would constitute about 25 to. .
26 percent of the population."
.Martin said, "The way we did it was not
to do it by quotas, but by setting a goal and
improving."
As an e~ample of his progress, Martin, ..
See Martin, Page 3
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Struck out
A group of students get kicked off of the Quad by Security.
Students present papers on gay
OLD GOLD AND BLACK STAFF REPORT
Students taking the course on gay
and lesbian literature and theory will
conclude a semester of study with
presentations oftheirresearch during
a symposium Monday.
The symposium, titled "Gay and
Lesbian Literature and Theory: A
Presentation of Student Research"
will be held from 6:30 to 10 p.m. in
room 409 of the Benson University
Center.
Mary DeShazer, the coordinator of
the Office of Women's Society,
taught the class with Gary Ljundquist,
the coordinator of the· women's studies classes at Salem College. The
course was open to both Wake Forest
and Salem students.
The course is the first class focusing on gay and lesbian issues offered
at the university. Although the course
was intended to be a seminar with
less than 15 students, more than 30
students enrolled in the class.
"Gary and I were very pleased to
have so strong an expression of interest in the course, but we were not
altogether surprised," DeShazer said.
"Discussing gay, lesbian and bisexual
issues is important to our society at
present and it makes sense that students from Salem and Wake Forest
would share the country's interests in
these topics."
Students taking the class read novels and poetry by gay and lesbian
writers, as well as essays and articles
focusing on "Queer theory."
"The class is not just about studying gay lifestyles," DeShazer said.
studies·~
"Our discussions have been balanced Homophobia" during the second sesin terms of literature, inter-disciplin- sion.
ary theory and issues concerning gay
"I'll be examining male socializamen and lesbians."
tion groups, particularly fraternities,
Nine students have volunteered to and how homoerotic practices are acpresenttheirresearchduringthesym- ceptable and yet homophobia is so
posium. Junior J. Ken Stuckey will prevalent,"Williamssaid. "I will confacilitate the program, which will be sider how it's manifested in collegiate
held in two sessions.
fraternities and limits rnalefriendships,
"Society has dangerously silenced and how it defines masculinity and is
dialogue regarding sexuality," then carried into further life."
Stuckey said. "The Gay and Lesbian
Also during the second session, seLiterature and Theory class is open- nior Jo Huddleston will try to answer
ing that discussion. If each member the question, "Bisexuals: Friends or
of our class takes his or her knowl- Foes to the Gay and Lesbian Cornmu;edge to the streets;· we can-· plow· onity?!'
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throug~. the weeds 0~ pre~utice.t?-, . . . ·.~1 ~ hop,ipg tq e~ajnine th~ stereo. .. . - - ~
" -- .types that Often accompany btsexualgether.
During the first session, from 6:30 ity and the ways that bisexuals are
to8:15,studentswillpresentresearch marginalized in the gay and lesbian
on gay and lesbian issues in religion, community," Huddleston said.
literature and music; the second sesOtherpresentersand theirtopics dursion, from 8:30 to 10, will focus on ing the first session include freshman
heterosexism, bisexuality and Christopher Cooper on "Condernnamasculinities.
tion Condemned: Homosexuality and
Senior Stephanie Spellers will Biblical Text," senior Joyce Gist on
present "Homosexuality and Christi- "Rich's 'Twenty-oneLovePoems' and
anity: Why God Is on Our Side" Wittig's The Lesbian Body," senior
during the first session." I noticed in Loxi Hayes on "Borderlands: Sketchthe course of reading literature by ing a Poetic Geography of Lesbian
gay and lesbian people that even Identity,"andseniorElizabethFairon
thoughChristianityhastumeditsback "Gay and Lesbian Issues in Pop Muon them they don't want to leave the sic."
church," Spellers said.
During the sec.ond session students
"So for my project I wanted to andtheirtopicsinclude:senior Allison
reclaim the possibility of not only Orr on "Heterosexism and the
tolerance but advocacy within the Women's Community at Wake Forchurch," she said. "I'm looking at the est," and senior Jay Woodruff on "Gay
liberating side of God in that God is Men and Masculinity."
on the side oftheoppressedand wants
The symposium, which is sponsored
them to be free."
· by the university Women's Studies
Senior Lesley Williams will dis- Program, is free and open to the pubcuss "Male Socialization Groups and lie.
use<
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and
It is a bird of a different feather, but ostriches may have.
a market with health-conscious consumers.
.
A university MBA study inaicates that ostrich farming .
might prove a fruitful endeavor for the consumption of
ostrich meat as well as for the sale of ostrich body parts' .
used for research.
:
Students at the Babcock Graduate Scliool·bf Manage-"
ment who studied the ostrich industry for the North Caro- .
lina Ostrich Breeders· Association (NCOBA) determined
that selling ostrich .meat is critical for the industry's_
,success.
Thoug!isalesofredmeathavedeclinedsincethe 1970's,
poultry sales have increased in response to consumer ·
demands for healthier foods.
·
. Ostrich meat has less fat and cholesterol than chicken
and turkey, so the students foresee a market with healthconscious consumers.
"Since ostrich meat has low fat, low cholesterol, low- .
sodium, and is nutritious; i~ can be marketed to consumers
as helping them reacti their goals of eating right, being: ·
healthy and eating good-tasting food," the students' report ·
said.
The report recommends that breeders initiate the marketing of ostrich meat to slaughterhouses and restaurants .. ·
"Although ostrich breeding has attracted entrepreneurs,
if the ostrich is to gain a foothold in the United States, ir .
will be the meat that makes ostrich farming a long-tenn ·
profitable venture," the report said.
"The future success underlying the ostrich industry will
be in th~-d~y_e!Qgw.em,~ !!-*ong meat market.
:
"It is pot!fntial~. vecy;proiltib!e," the report said.
Three second~ear Babcock students analyzed the ostrich industry for the N~OBA as a field study project.
Field study projects are required courses for which stu-.
dents serve as consultants, examine particular problems
and issues facing the sponsoring organization and make
recommendations. Mqre than 200 companies from Charlotte to New York have sponsored field siudy projects at
.the Babcock SchooL
As p!!fl of their study, the students forecast the population growth of ostriches in North Carolina and the United
States, and analyzed potential products, consumer behavior, and market conditions. ·
They also recommended ways that the NCOBA could
solidify its role in the industry's development.
The students' research estimated that there are 10,000
ostriches across the nation, with NCOBA members own. ing 278 of them.
Last year, NCOBA members', total bird sales were
more than $420,000.
By 1996, the students forecast that more than 165,000
ostrich chicks will be born annually.
And by year-end 1996, they say 100,000 birds could be
slaughtered, producing 12.5 million pounds of meat.
According to their report, in addition to meat there is a
market for ostrich hides, feathers, toe nails, egg shells and
eyes (for research).
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Hostage simulation allows students to examine terrorism~.
.
BY RACHEL SHEEDY
NEWs PRooucrroN AssrSTA>rr
Terrorists, hostages, media, advisers, officials and even
the President of the United States were working at a frantic
pace on the fourth floor of the Benson University Center
April 21 during a re-enac;tment organized by the department of speech communication.
Randy Rogan, a visiting assistant professor of speech
communication, led a group of students through the hostage negotiation simulation to try "to raise awareness and
sensitivity about these types of situations," he said.
· Students were divided into several different groups:
Washington media, Mideast media, terrorists, hostages,
the President and his advisers, ·and hostage negotiators.
The simulation consisted of three 50-minute sessions with
each session representing 24 hours of the incident.
First, a video of the history of the fictional situation was
shown. Mideast terrorist groups with strong anti-American feelings formed the Committee for National Struggle.
This new group then hijacked a Western airline, forced it
to land and took the passengers as hostages.
.
The simulation began when each of the students With
terrorist roles, mainly dressed in black and carrying toy
guns, blindfolded and tied together the hands of a student
hostage. The student participants then split up and went to
different areas of the fourth floor.
The President was notified of the hostage situation and
then came to brief the hostage negotiators on what was
happening. The terrorists had demanded the release of 10
of their freedom fighters from prison for the return of the
hostages. The negotiators then discussed several options
to advise the President on what steps he should take.
Meanwhile, the media in both Washington and the
Mideast were active, searching for infonnation and interviewing government officials as well as the terrorists, thus
providing a link between the terrorists and Washington
officials. However, several of the negotiators, who were in
a separate room cut off from the frantic activity outside,
complained of not being kept up-to-date on the ·situation
and not being able to see the media interviews. This
•
Graduate student Karin HU!strom and senior Mimi A.lexander play th~ role of hostages in a terrorist
simulation.
problem was remedied by the negotiators being able to see
the interviews and by establishing a press secretary who
worked with the negotiators and the President.
Interaction between the terrorists, the media, the negotiators, and the President and his advisers was kept up
constantly throughout the three hours of the simulation but
increased to a frantic pace as the situation continued and
time wore down.Threefemale hostages were released; but
soon after a member of the Mideast media was killed by
the terrorists. The terrorists also killen one of their own
members who had American sympathies. With time rm1ning out, the President and his advisers, along with the
negotiators, scrambled to strik~ a deal with the terrorists
for the safe return of the hostages. However, by the end of
the simulation, talks were continuing and no deal had beeq
struck, so the terrorists killed the remaining hostages. ·
After the reenactment ended, everyone regrouped to
discuss how the simulation went. Members of each group,
·got a <ehimce to discuss their part in the simulation and
what problems tliey had. Rogan said: "I'm very pleased
with how the simulation went, especially for the first time
doing it. The time pressure is very realistic, and feelings of
frustration, being overwhelmed, cluelessness, and dissension were also realistic."
OLDGo!DM'DBLACK THURSDAY,APRIL29, 1993 3
·';I
----------------------------------------------N~------------------------------_._.._._.__._._.
..
Student makes controversial art
I
BY LISA MARTIN
OLD GOI.D AND BLACK REPORTER
not the level to
•snnr... The minori-' ,
a cross-section. ·
progress, Martin, .
With the recent prominence of
women's issues locally and nationally, senior Alison Kafer perceived
the need on campus for some kind of
area for women at which they can
meet, formally or informally, to talk
and share experiences and feel safe.
She decided to do something to sat~ isfy this need, but not'everybody approves.
As part of an' assignment in her
sculpture class to define the function
of art and create a sculpture to fulfill
that function, Kafer is creating a piece
in the designated student sculpture
area by the road leading to Student
Apartments.
She said she intends for the artwork
to serve as a place for women of the
university community to gather and
talk.
Eight sandstone blocks -left over
from the construction of the Worrell
Professional Center for Law and Management and donated by the schoolserve as benches.
Kafer, withthehelpofotherwomen
volunteers, is carving images of
women from the past, mostly goddess
images and figurines similar to those
from ancient cave paintings.
"I'm hoping that this place will be
used as a place for women to talk, and
I also hope it will make people think
- about the images in the carvings
and about the fact that women need a
safe place to meet," Kafer said.
Although Kafer said her only intention is to promote togetherness and
communication among women, her
artwork stirred up feelings of discontent in atleastonememberofthemale
population. Last weekend, an anonymous person, presumably a man,
wrote a message with chalk on the
structure, saying he wanted his male
voice to be heard. Kafer said she disagrees with the notion that her art is
functioning against men or any other
group.
.
"lj11st want to make sure that this is
not being perceived as anti-male,"
Kafer said. "Just because it's for
women doesn't mean that it's against
men. Men and couples are certainly
welcome to visit and use the area as
well."
Kafer said she hopes other students
will take advantage of the sculpture
·space and create their own artwork
there.
She said perhaps the man who objected to her sculpture could be inspired to create something of his own,
and she sees her piece in that way as
promoting the interests of everyone,
not just women.
"I don't think my piece is denying
_his voice-ifanything, it can be used
for his voice," Kafer said.
Kafer said the idea for a sculpture
addressing asocial issue first occurred
to her through the influence of battered women's shelter.
She said women on campus could
a
benefit from some sort ofshelter here.
She said she was also influenced by
her own experiences.
"I remember that I experienced
things that I didn't know many other
women experienced as well. I thought
it would be good if there was just a
place for women to get together and
talk, so they could share these com~
monexperiences," Kafer said.
She said the kind of talking she
envisioned occurring at her artwork
has already begun. So far, 15 women
volunteers have helped with the carving, and this cooperation has generated dialogue between the women.
The construction of the artwork
began about a week and a half ago,
and the piece will be finished by next
Friday.
The structure will remain for two
years, because Kafer said she wants it
to stand long enough to have an impact and for many people to be able to
take advantage of it, but the school
does not have a policy in place for
pennanent student sculptures.
Since this is the first year that the
student sculpture area has been open,
Kafer's work is the first to be created
there.
"I really hope that others will use
this area provided by the school and
create more pieces there," Kafer said.
Kafer said she hopes classes will be
able to meet in this area while it is
there, but she thinks the main purpose
of her artwork will be as an informal
meeting place.
The range of material which will eventually be incorporated into the program will include a wide range of events,
she said.
Schiller said, "It won't be just an entertainment chanFrom Page I
nel." Ken Zick, the vice president for student life and
instructional resources, said it is necessary to work out one
aspect
of the project at a time.
"It will already be an opportunity for students to take
"First of all they will need a sound infrastructure," Zick
their classroom experience and tum it into practical expesaid. "Whether they succeed in becoming operational is
rience," Dalton said.
Beauchamp said the one drawback is the fact that there another matter."
Zick said the initial cost of beginning the station will
are very few people who have had the experience of
working with the equipment which will be used at the depend on what equipment is available and how effectively it can be used.
station.
Funding for the continuing operation of the station will
A plan to set up a series of workshops in which students
who have had experience in working with filming equip- have to come from the Student Budget Advisory Commitment is being worked out. Final plans should beset by next tee, Zick said.
"I don 'tlike to dampen the enthusiasm butthis is a major
semester.
"We will have to go with taped material to get the ·undertaking," he said. "I think that it is wise to begin with
an interest group." Students who attended the meeting
technical experience," Beauchamp said.
Dalton said it would be possible to start airing programs have been placed on a mailing list lllld will be contacted in
by next spring. "The students have really thought this time for the next meeting, which will most likely take
place early next semester.
through and they arc very committed," she said.
TV
cholesterol, low· .
tp consumers
ri:ght, being: ·
~e stud.ent:s' report ·
entrepreneurs,
United States, ir .
a long-term ·
Nicholas Zaclws
What's the scoop?.
A prospective student enjoys some Blue Ridge ice cream on Campus Day.
·Greek-·
From Page 1
"Right now we don't have·an insurer. Since the school
says we have to have insurance by September or we have
to disband, we have to take a formal vote now."
The society voted against national affiliation Monday,
but will hold a formal vote today. Wrenn said, "The fact
that other societies are going national wil1 be considered."
Nicholson said the Delphi vote was partly in anticipation of future changes in the Greek system on campus.
"People felt there were going to be changes anyway, so it
was safer to go national," she said.
Delta Delta Delta sorority is one of only four nationally
affiliated women's Greek organizations on campus. Junior Tami Jelovchan, the president of Tri-Delts, said:
"There are a lot of positive things about being national ....
There is a lot of networking ... and connections, and it is
a good way to meet people at other campuses."
Jelovchan said she believes financial considerations
helped to motivate societies to consider national affiliation. "National organizations provide a lot of financial
backing, and of course they also provide liability insurance."
• Arthur said that the ISC is continuing to help the
societies search for an acceptable insurance policy. She
said the ISC hopes to keep the option of non-affiliation
open to the societies.
Some members of societies are afraid that years of
history and tradition would be lost if their societies were
to go national.
Sophomore Melissa Dyer, a member of Strings , said
that many Strings alumnae are upset about these developments. She said they are afraid that national affiliation will
downplay the local history of the society.
Dyer said Strings have not made a formal decision, but
that there is a strong sentiment in the society to maintain
national non-affiliation. ·
Michael Peil, editor in chief, colltributed to this article.
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4 Ow GoLD AND BLACK THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1993
___._.._._._~----------------------------N~-----------------------------------------:-··
Cartoon comic discusses career
BY VICTOR!.'\ ANDERSON
• Women to train for combat
WASHINGTON - Secretary of Defense Les
Aspin announced Wednesday that henceforth
women will be permitted to train to fly in combat
missions.
Last week, Congress lifted the ban on women
flying in combat missions launched from certain
types of ships. Aspin requested that Congress lift
bans on the remaining classes of warships.
• Bosnians clash on two fronts
BIHAC, Bosnia-Herzegovina- Serbian forces
attacked this city in northwest Bosnia Wednesday. Several Bosnian civilians were killed in the
attack, according to Bosnian officials.
Croatian troops clashed with Bosnian forces in
central Bosnia after the Bosnian units attacked
Croatimi-dominated villages.
President Bill Clinton requested that Japan
lead the way in providing economic aid to beleaguered Bosnia.
• Hostages held in Costa Rica
.SAN JOSE, Costa Rica- A group calling itself
Death Command has taken 23 hostages in the
Costa Rican Supreme Court building, including
11!1 18 members of the country's Supreme Court.
The group attacked the building Tuesday. Two
hostages were released Wednesday to convey a
message to federal troops. The group is demanding $8 million and safe passage to South America.
OLD GoLD AND Buctc REI'ORTER
Billy West, the voice behind the crazy
cat and chihuahua of Nickelodeon's
"Ren and Stimpy" show, spoke to students Tuesday night about his career in
comedy and voice-over.
"For as long as I can remember, I
have been fascinated with people's
voices," West said.
West told his audience that he grew
up listening to radio disc jockeys and
mimicking the singers.
Since then, he has done voice-overs
from Donald Duck to the "Honey-Nut
Cheerios' Bee."
West said he was originally interested in comedy, helped in part by his
flagging music career. In 1966, he became part of his first band, and after
high school attended the Berkeley
School of Music in Boston.
Whenever problems with guitar
strings or amplifiers occurred during a
band performance, West said he would
do some comic improvisation, such as
Porky Pig playing the air guitar, to
entertain the audience.
In 1978, Weststarteddoingstand-up
comedy acts in clubs, but he said that
only lasted about a year because he did
not plan his performances ahead of
time. He said, "Nobody told me you
had to have an act."
After his comedy stint, West put together a cassette of various voices and
was hired by a radio station as a disc
jockey, where he worked for about 10
years. He said he found comedy on
radio difficult because it is not like
"regular comedy."
"You have a core audience from 6 to
lO every day, and you cannot repeat
your act," West said.
It was not until1988 that West started
doing voice-overs for cartoons. He began working on "Beany and Cecil," a
cartoon about a boy and his sea monster
friend, which began in the 1940s as a
live action show.
But shortly after West's premiere,
the show was cancelled because of controversy at the ABC network over the
content of the show, he said.
West said it was through "Beany and
Cecil" that he came to know animator
John Chris Valucy, who was later responsible for his job as the voice "Ren
and Stimpy."
West said he moved to New York in
1989, found an agent and "began goirtg
out for everything" on voice-over auditions for mostly radio and television
ads, often competing with about 100
other hopefuls. This led to his position
as semi-regular on the Howard Stem
radio show and later the television show.
He said that during auditions one is
usually asked to create a new part based
a
on general information about a character that is provided by the creators.
"They test market everything you see
and hear because they don't want to
spend vast amounts of money" on material that will not sell, West said.
He described the voices he does as
"work in progress" because the voices
are always evolving. He said the voices
often reflect those of real-life personalities.
For example, West sai·d .he based
Stimpy's voice on that of Larry from
"The Three Stooges" comedies. Ren is
said to be a combination of voices, from
German expressionist actor Peter Lorre
to Kirk Douglas. Ren also has touch of
the "South of the Border" in him, West
said.
In 1990, while working as a staff
announcer on HBO's comedy chimnel,
West accepted an offer to do voiceovers for a Nickelodeon cartoon called
"Doug," which was about an 11-yearold boy and his dog.
Then, in March, 1991, West began
working on "Ren and Stimpy" at the
request of Valucy. West does voiceovers for both characters .
He concluded by criticizing current
television sitcoms, calling them "unimaginative and overprepared."
West advised students that "innova~ion. happens when you follow your
mspuat10ns."
.
a
• Student found with marijuana
An anonymous report Of marijuana smoke in a Kitchin House suite led to a resident turning over ·
marijuana to UniverSity Security officers. The '
student voluntarily gave the drug and a pipe tO··
officers after they requested permission to search'·
the student's room April 20. The incident has
been referred to Harold Hol~es, the deati of •
student services.
THEFf -.Two student-owned bicycles, valued.
a•
at $860, were stolen from the front porch of
satellite residence on Polo Road between 3 p:m: :
April22 and 3:30p.m. April23. On each bicycl~'
a U-lock secured a wheel to the frame.
A student's bicycle, valued at $250, VIas stolen:
April20 from a hallway at the Townhouses. ' :
Cassette tapes, valued at $210, were stolen··
April 18 from a student's car parked in Lot R;'
outside Student Apartments.
:
·A student's camera, valued at $200, was stolen
from a Kitchin roombetween 9 p.m. April16 and '
4p.m. Aprill7.1tisnotknown whether the
was locked.
·
Plants, valued at $170, were stolen from-~· .
hallway at Faculty Apartments between Apri116
and 19.
'' ·
A student's textbook, valuedat$67, was stolen>
April20 from a Piccolo Residence Hall lounge: " ·
A license plate was stolen April 20 from
student's car at Faculty Apartments.
room·
a'
DAMAGE- Someone broke the gas door on a:
student's car in LotJ, behind South Hall, betweea
3 p.m. April16 and 10 a.m. Apri111.
·
• Waco investigation continues .
MISCELLANEOUS -University Security is.
investigating the firing of a handgun April 21
outside Luter Residence Hall. A student reported
hearing several gun shots outside the building at ' '
I 0:28 p.m. Security officers found discharged ' ·
shell casings on the ground. No one has beeri · ·
charged in the itwident, but an investigation is
continuing.
An 18-year-old campus visitor was taken by ' •
ambulance to a Winston-Salem hospital after
being found intoxicated and ill in Lot N, between : :
Poteat and Kitchin Houses. University Security '
officers discovered the woman shortly after mid- ' · 1
night April 18. She was on campus visiting
student and attending a fraternity party, accord~-·
ing to University Security. The incident has been · ·
referred to Holmes.
'
A Babcock Residence Hall resident reported, · ·
receiving several harassing telephone calls April
21. A university employee reported receiving a_'·
harassing voic~ mail message April 20.
•· '
Strongwindsblewaparkingsignontothehood- '
of a car parked outside radio station WFDD April
22. The car is owned by a station employee. . •
University
handled 61 calls between ·
incidents, and '
WASHINGTON- Attorney Genera!JanetReno
was among the witnesses before the House Judiciary Committee Wednesday.
The committee is reviewing the actions taken
by the Justice Department and other federal agencies against the Branch Davidian religious cult.
The cult set fire to their Waco, Texas, compound
during an attack by federal agents after a 51 day
standoff.
Reno said she reviewed all possible alternatives before ordering the attack.
William Sessions, the director of the FBI, also
testified before the committee. Sess.ions said there
was no indication that cult leader David Koresh
intended to commit suicide.
a
• Clinton appoints drug czar
WASHINGTON- President Clinton appointed
Lee Brown, a former chief of police of New York
City, as the national drug policy director.
Clinton said he elevated the position to Cabinet
level because of the gravity of the nation's drug
problem.
f+t1~6Q~1est:s.
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OOK BUY BACK AT THE COLLEGE BOOKS
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books are stolen durzng 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 in those areas. If you have a book(s)
stolen, report the information to Mr. Holston at the bookstore on a 3x5 card giving title of book and
~ourse, a~y special unique identifying markings or notes, your name, address and phone number. It
zs a good zdea to code your books on a single common page in the spine side margin! Your name on
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OLD GoLD AND BLACK THURSDAY, ArRJL 29, 1993
5
. ~.,~.--------------------------------------------N~---------------------------------------------[~Researchers
discuss Nazi stories
Bv JEN RoGERs
News PRoDUCTION AssrSTANT
' .
hi""'r.11P..~.
S.A., Adolph Hitler's stonntroopers,
and the stories were collected in August of 1934.
Peter Bearman and Kate Stogel,
The purpose of the research is to
professors of sociology at the Uni- identify "the structure of the process
V@rsity of North Carolina at Chapel of becoming a Nazi, not the reason,"
Hjll, held a discussion titled "Becom- Bearman said.
ing a Nazi: Structural Models ofiden-·
Bearman began by giving an introtity Formation" on April 22.
duction to the paper; then he and
.The topic was based on Bearman Stogel answered questions for there, aqd Stogel's current research and maining hour.
\ , paper that attempts to diagram· the
Beannan and Stogel outlined and
: process of becoming a Nazi ..
identified events in the stories and
;Bearman has studied topics such as diagrammed them into a skeletal
; th~ Confederate identity in a histori- model, a processBeannan said is "net: c~l context of Winston-Salem and work modeling." He then handed out
· North Carolina.
copies of this model. .
·stogel, a political scientist at
"What we are interested in is the
: St.anford University, has studied extent to which we can identify some
: lynchings with a professor of kind of patterns," Bearman said.
' VlUlderbuilt University and had work
Each event was given a number,
: published in the March issue of Psy- circled, and connected with "nodes"
: cliology Today.
. that represent the cognitive thought
, BeannanandStogelsaidtheybased of the individual about how the cer· ' thj:,ir research and paper on stories tain event contributed to his or her
: w~tten by former Nazi Party mem- further development into a Nazi.
: bers who told about how they personBearman and Stogel sai!i they con, ally became Nazis.
cluded there is a "deep disjuncture
. : :rhe stories had been collected as a . between becoming and being a Nazi.
<< co.ntest that offered a monetary prize The self falls away and they don't see·
: to ,the story that most accurately de- a Nazi self," Bearman said.
: picted personal transformations into
Bearman and Stogel said they
, Nazis.
"haven't made a lot of progress other
' The contest was sponsored byI the than framing and trying to understand
I
valued
front porch of a;
between 3 p.m: :
On each bicycl~'
frame.
·.
$250, was stolen ,
Townhouses. · :
10, were stolen ··
parked in Lot
R; '
the identities of the people writing the
stories."
One man 'asked whether students
that come to the university can be
compared to Nazi members in the
formation of tlieir respective identities, He said students let the university provide their identities by letting
their identities be fonued by the activities in which they participate.
Bearman claimed that the folmation of student identities is almost
opposite to that of Nazi identity for- ·
Bar
mation because, unlike students, a
Nazi does not need other people to be
Prospective students learn about Safe Rides from students at the activity fair held
a Nazi and isn't driven by interactions.
on Campus Day.
Therefore, a Nazi would not be
driven to a certain identity by some- .
thing like the university, he said.
Another question asked was
whether there are any core stages in
the fonnation of a Nazi. Beanuan said
and on each 9ccasion, several shell casings from handguns
finding core stages is not the goal, in
OLD GOLD AND Bl-ACK STAR' REPORT
were found near the residence.
that they are just interested in identiDispensed .380 casings were found after the first incifying patterns.
Rumors circulating about a third shooting incident near
The pattern Beannan a_nd Stogel LuterResidenceHallweredeniedtodaybyReginaLawson, dent, and 9 mm casings were found when the area around
the residence was searched after the second shooting.
said they have found so far is a "gen- the director of University Security.
Kevin Cox , the assistant director of media relations,
"There is no clear evidence that the two incidents are
era] process of shearing off of social
relations," Beannan said.
said Lawson told him no one at security has been informed related," Cox said.
Since finding the shell casings from the first shooting
Both Stogel and Bearman said that of any shooting taking place on south campus in the last
their studies are in no way completed · week. ·
university security officers have been interviewing people
"She said that if there had been a third incident that she in the area to find out if anyone either saw or heard
and that they will continue their analysis of stories.
would know about it," Cox said. "It is highly unlikely that anything which could lead to finding the guilty party, or
a third incident happened because students would have parties.
cailed in about it, just as they have done up until now."
"They do not have any particular suspect," Cox said.
The last of two incidents in which students reported "An arrest is not imminent." Security officials are still
having heard gunshots outside Luter residence took place pursuing their investigation into the two incidents.
April 21 at 10:30 p.m.
''They need to find someone who can tell them even the
Callers who pledge at least $30 ($15 for senior citizens
The first took place on April2 at 7:15p.m.
smallest piece of information which would give them a
and students) will receive subscriptions to WFDD's proSecurity officers responded immediately to both calls, lead to go with," Cox said.
·
gram guide.
Persons who pledge at the patron level of .$60 also
receive a coffee mug. Day sponsors, who pledge $120,
The term "afflnnative action" suf- versity," Martin said.
receive their choice of coffee mug or T -shirt, plus on-air
fers from a confusion of interpretaIn response to a question about the
tions in our society, Martin said.
recognition the day of their choice.
importance of education in imple.Employer matching gifts count toward membership
"I would say, in my view, what I menting equality in the work place,
From Page2
was trying to do with goals was action he said establishing early learning
levels and can double or triple a pledge amount. Contributions help provide continuing support for WFDD, the
that was affirmative, but it was not habits is essential to decreasing the
· region's only full service, 24-hourpublic radio station and discussed his goal of increasing state legally binding.
number of high school dropouts.
North Carolina's oldest NPR member-station.
"It did about as well as legally bindpurchases from minorities.
The topic of political employment
"WFDD will not interrupt regular programming as
"The goal we set was not that dra- ing approaches," he said.
tactics came up in the discussion peoften or as long as in the fall campaign," Callison said.
"I personally don't subscribe to quo- riod.
matic," he said.
"Listeners will continue to enjoy their favorite pro"
tas. Example: How would you say
"We set a goal of 5 percent."
Martin said, "I oppose the decision
grams."
•
"The best they (the previous ad- that a particular race is going to be of the attorney general lo fire every
WFDD broadcasts NPR's popular "Morning Edition" ministration) ever reached was 0.05 limited as to how many of them can U.S. attorney.
and "All Things Considered," local musical programs, percent," he said. "
attend Duke University?
"That was uncalled-for."
such as "Across the Blue Ridge," and concert ' Martin said his administration ex"That's wrong.
On the topic of language barriers
performances.Pledges may be made by calling 759-8851 ceeded its goal by reaching a level of
"At one time there was a limitation, for immigrants, Martin said, "I hapor SOQ-262-8850 any time during the "Voices of Spring" nine or 10 percent purchases from a quota, on the number of Jewish pen to think everybody ought to learn
fund-raiser.
minorities a year.
· students who could attend Duke Uni- to speak English."
flies
1---------..,------------------------------'
Gun shots heard outside Luter
WFDD holds spring fundraiser
WFDD-FM, the listener-supported university radio statioil, will give away a trip to Asheville to a caller between
April 28 and Tuesday during its spring, on-air fundrai~ing campaign, dubbed "Voices of Spring."
The National Public Radio member-station will focus
. on'signing up members, rather than trying to reach a dollar
'.
was taken by ' '
hospital
Lot N, betweeq : ~
,iVF•.r<:ilhl Security '
,snoruy after mid- ' '
~<pus visiting
accord:··
incidelllt has bee~ · ·
go~tl.
after
a
)Vhat the station is calling a "friendraising" effort hopes
to ~ather 400 new and 600 renewal memberships from
WFDD's audience, said Cleve Callison, the station man•·
ag~r.
~ore than 200 volunteers from local businesses, arts
: groups and non-profit organizations will answer phones
:from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day, taking pledges from
· callers. Last spring, more than 900 members joined during
·the campaign.
.
: Every caller will receive a WFDD window decal plus a
'ch~nceto win the Autumn Leaves Getaway Giveaway, a
:trip for two to Asheville, featuring two nights at Grove
: Pa~k Inn and admission to Biltmore House.
.I
Martin
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6 OLDGOLDANDBLACK THURSDAY,APR!L29,1993
-----------------------------------------------------N~s
March
From Page 1
Bisexual Student Caucus, a gathering
that featured a speech from Rep.
Barney Frank, D-Mass.,; and the
Youth Empowerment Speak-Out, an
event which Cooper said was the largest gathering of gay, lesbian and bisexual youth in history.
Cooper and other students in attendance generally agreed the number of
participants was well above 300,000,
the figure cited by the National Parks
Service, and much closer to the 1.1
million cited by march organizers.
Several celebrities participated in
march activities as well.
Cybil Shepherd, Judith Light,
MartinaNavratilovaand Phil Donahue
showed their support for civil rights.
Other political figures in attendance
were the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Ben
Chavis, the new executive director of
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo.,;
and Patricia Ireland, the president of
the National Organization for Women
also attended the march.
The activists regarded the absence
of President Bill Clinton as significant but not critical.
When an emissary of the administration attempted to deliver a speech
on behalf of the president, the woman
was drowned out as the crowd chanted
"Where' s Bill?!"
Other speakers showed the president more clemency in his absence,
referring to the decisive stance he
took in his campaign regarding gays
in the military and in administrative
posts.
Senior Pokey Fair also attended the
march.
Fair said the march was an emotionally charged experience for her as
welL
Fair said: "It was extremely empowering to be in an atmosphere of
complete acceptance.
"This issue may not necessarily be
a popular one ~t Wake Forest, but it is
one that urgently needs to be addressed."
Hawk said GALBA had other activities planned for this week.
Monday they participated in the
Student Activities Fair. and Friday
they will have an end-of-the-year
mixer at 3 p.m. in Benson 410.
In addition to the general goals of
the homosexual community, homosexual students have very particular
concerns locally.
Several members of the community, who did not wish to be identified
within this article, mentioned several
separate instances in which they had
all been harassed for their involvement with sexual orientation issues.
Some received telephone calls in
the middle of the night.
The caller accused them of imposing the ideas of a "fringe" group onto
all citizens- the "fringe" idea being
one that the students at the march had
hoped would be disproved by the tum
out in Washington.
Some students said they felt that
somewhere along the line 300,000
was a deliberately deflated figure fed
to the media by those who were opposed to the goals of the march.
These persons expressed the concern that as gains are made nationally
for gays and lesbians, the local environment also will become more intolerant.
One student said returning from the
march was a let down as it demonstrated "how different things could
be."
Still, these students expressed hope
that the energy and commitment from
the national community would
strengthen the resolve of those who
struggle silently with these issues.
In recoiJnition of their dedication to education, the
Jefferson EfementarlJ School PTA has selected Wake
Forest students as their outstandin(/. dolunteers for the
1992- 1993 school lJear. A heartfelt thanks to all the
rlolunteers for their actide rote in our tutoriniJ. protJ.ram.
--Jefferson ElementariJ School PTA
Raaj Amin
Katie Axford
Paul Bernadas
Aaron Brown
Clayton Cheek
Karen Clark
Elizabeth Eagleson
Stan Ezzell
Ginger Hannon
Sharyn Ingram
Jamie Peacock
Jennifer Ross·
Kathryn Swaney
Jay Turner
Brett Watkins
Rebecca Wilson
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age or older, ·a non-smoker and treat your asthma daily.
For More Information,
Call Piedmont Research Associates
at 919-659-8394
e
is pleased to welcome the
following outstanding graduates of Wake Forest University.
We extend our ~ongratulations
to them at the completion of
their college studies and look
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professional careers in these
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Kory Barrett ............. Baltimore
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Ramsey White ·u········ Charlotte
••l
... man created the computer. And it
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Then man created
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And man created faster hardware and
better software. And it was gooct
But better equipment usually meant
higher prices. That was bad.
The solution? A unique idea
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PERSPECTIVES···
OLD
. GoLD AND BLACK
.
.
THURSDAY, APRIL 29,
1993
.
7
..
~
··a. ·
'
'
. '"
.~ ;
;•
.. .
'
>
.
' '~ '
. ·•..
:~.'
.
-Photographers
capture beauty
.in daily life
OLD Gm.o .<ND BLACK STAFF RF.PORT
As the year ends and students find their
faces in books rather than in the sun, here is '
a parting look at some common views of the
campus.
Sometimes we are too .busy living in the
moment to notice the beauty that surrounds
us, so some student photographers have tried
to capture. the transitory beauty of life.
,. ~.
/';"'
..:;.~·~:..:>~~:~·:. ~.~::~. '";-.. ;
>~f
'''
'
~
.be
often over~·
. the
to study. Sopho- ..
:Trid~U~iies.was able to
:~mrpb..iJ~e the tw~. (below)· .·
need
.. '.
.
'.
Ji•.j'>•(:...:
~-- ~-:.
. .·.
"_:.~pie Jook
up
, . t~, set: the.interesting
· · .· ~efl.eetions and sbad:ows on:ibe rotunda of
the Benson Center.
,.,
~8~:o~Qw~MID~Bu:a~~:~~~~~~Mm~~~,I~m~................~............................................~.~-,------------------~--------~...•
Red-necks bear burden· of stigma
OLD GoLD AND BLACK
The Student Newspaper ofWake Forest University
Founded in 1916
EDITORIALS
Campus highs, lows:
•
•
year 1n review
Members of the university
community have a tendency at
the end of the year to look back
with rose-colored glasses. For
those who do not remember the
many ups and downs of this
tumultuous year, we have afew
reminders.
Cheers to the basketball team
for a spectacular year. Cheers
as well tojunior Rodney Rogers
for giving us something to remember him by. Jeers to the
fair-weather fans who couldn't
remember long enough to cheer
the Deacons through the Kentucky game. Jeers as well to
those who shortchanged the university on tickets to the Sweet
16 game.
Cheers to senior members of
the football team Ben Coleman,
Mike McCrary and John Henry
Mills for making the grade in
the National Football League
draft; also to Maurice Miller
and George Coghill for selection as free agents. The football
team at large gets one big cheer
for taking Wake Forest all the
way to the Independence Bowl.
Cheers toMayaAngelou, the
Reynolds professor of American studies, for making Wake
Forest a household name, and
for inspiring us more than ever.
We could say more, but what
can we say that she can't say
better?
Jeers to Provost David G.
Brown, who said this university is a "vertically-integrated
supplier of educations."
Cheers to seniors Stephanie
Spellers, John Meroney, Zeke
Creech, Allison Overbay, Matt
Rebello, William Hawk, Pokey
Fair and many other graduating
activi~ts who will be giving us
some peace and quiet at last
(we hope).
Jeers to apathy: It needs no
explanation.
Jeers and cheers to the StudentBudgetAdvisoryCommittee, the former for equivocating on a number of important
issues (conflict of interest
charges, for one), the latter for
taking a stand on the Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Issues
Awareness Group funding.
Cheers to Jambalaya for going out with a bang instead of a ·
whimper.
Jeers to Physical Facilities
for the poor blizzard clean-up,
for the irrigation system that
goes all the way to Reynolda
Road, for operating loud machines near residence halls early
in the morning and near classrooms in the afternoons and for
failing to come up with a creative solution for the stinging
insects that hover over trash
I
think of country music, chewing toracently received a very inter· TONY HoOKER
bacco, my southern drawl, a tenesting letter from Bubba, a friend STUDENT CoLUMNIST
dency to drive pick-up trucks....
of mine at a college in New En·
Need I say rri(lre?
gland. In this letter, he brings up an
"4)1splace4.in the groupinvolunimportant topic I should share with cars like those Hollywood stars do.
Well, I think Bobby Clodfelter back tarily. Well, you really can't take the
all of you:
home in Kernersville does, but all of country out. of a red neck, even if he
"Howdy!
"What's going on at Wake Forest? his are up on blocks in his front yard. or she wants to change. Just suppose
"2) Suffers various forms of dis- that I sold my flannel shirts, my pickDo you remember that course in
up truck and my
American minority cultures that Ihad advantages at
moonshine still.
tf1ehandsofthe
to take this semester? Anyway, our
Well, thin_k of how many •·
What
could I do
majority.
Well,
class went over the characteristics of
red-nee~
jokes
you
have
then?Iwouldn't
think
of
how
an oppressed minority group. I real·
have enough
ized I could be covered in these char- many red~neck heard before. Now just
money to move
jokes
you
have
acteristics.
imagine
the
outrage
if
this
heard
before.
to
New Jersey,
"I'm white, male, heterosexual and
just
Now
wearaPoloshirt,
just about everything else that counts
many jokes were toJd about"
·buy a Mercedes
as being unoppressed. So how can I imagine the
other
groups,
such
as
the
outrage
if
this
and pay . for
be part of an oppressed minority? I'm
bottled water.
a full-fledged, I00 percent red neck. many jokes disabled-or certain races.
Most red necks
Just read these characteristics and see were told about
other groups, But since these are red-neck
couldn't change
if they fit.
such
as the dis- jokes, no one minds. Surely,
if they had to.
"1) Is denied access to power,
"5) Tends to
wealth or prestige. It would be diffi- abled or certain
is
an
example
of
being
this
races.But
marry
within his
cult for a rf'd neck to have power,
since
these
are
or
her
own
wealth and prestige before we all get
ata disadvantage.
red-ne·ck.
group.
Heck,
indoorplumbing. Well, President Bill
most ·red necks
Clinton and Vice President AI Gore jokes, no one
go
one
better
than
that and marry
inay have these three, but I hardly minds. Surely, this is an example of
within
their
own
family.
'Nuffsaid.
being
at
a
disadvantage.
consider them red necks. Besides,
"Well,
maybe
we
can
get some
"3)
May
have
social
characteris·
how many red necks would be willkind
of
special
treatment
by Contics
which
are
used
to
label
him
or
ing to stoop to politics to get power?
"Red necks don't have 10 or 12 her. Well,offthetopofmyheadlcan gressnow. Hey, Richard Petty is free
cans and drive everyone insane.
Cheers to those who consolidated the schools of law
and management into the Worrell Professional CenterforLaw
and Management with much
success. .
Jeers to Parking Management for slowly destroying every car on campus with "Mt.
Everest" speed bumps. More
jeers to them for saying there is
adequate parking on campus.
Jeers to them again for provin~
themselves wrong by turning
Davis Field into the Darlington
SOOon Campus Day.
Cheers to the new members
of Phi Beta Kappa for their
achievements. May they go on
to share their talents with the
community at large.
Cheers to Bynum Shaw, professor of English, who soon
will be gone but never forgotten.
Jeers to everyone who continues to ignore the wishes of
the students: for example, the
calendar committee for taking
away Fall Break and putting a
one-week vacation two weeks
prior to a four-week vacation.
Apparently, their plan is to exhaust the students with an unrelenting schedule and then to
bore them to death with endless
vacation.
Jeers to the Judicial Board
for several instances in which
their handling ofcases left much
to be desired.
Cheers to Residence Life and
Housing for responding to the
need for more housing space.
Jeers to whatever person or
committee is responsible for
keepingallfouroftheclocksof''·· ··
Wait Chapel at different time~: ·
Are ·we supposed to take an
average?
:~~~i~~~~~f;;:~;:a-h~
control in that building. In the
past, fluctuating temperatures
brought us misery. Now we do
not even notice because the temperature indoors is almost always comfortable, and we forget to appreciate it.
Cheers to Maria Henson for
winning the Pulitzer Prize and
coming back to share the experience with her alma mater. ·
Cheers to the faculty for upholding the Pro ·Humanitate
ideal in their support of adding
sexual orientation to the nondiscrimination statement. Let
us hope the board of trustees
will stand behind them in their
valiant efforts.
We have notforgotten,andwill
not forget, the tuition increase.
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Michael Peil
Editor in Chief
Nicola Dawkins
Chris Wickland
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager: Robbie Zalzneck.
News: Lori Donath, editor; J. Hunter Tart, assistant editor; Rachel Sheedy and Jen
Rogers, production assistants.
Editorials: J. Kenneth Stuckey and Terese Mack, editors.
Perspectives: Sara Harrington, editor.
Arts and Entertainment Brian Uzwiak, editor; Pati Beauchamp, assistant editor.
Sports: Steve Welgoss, editor; Cayce Butler, assistant editor; Steven Kleinman,
production assistant.
Insight Page: Kelly Blue and Eddie Southern, editors.
Forum Page: Scott Walker, assistant editor.
Copy Editors: Sarah Knowles and Myra Caudle.
Photography: Holly Tackett, editor.
Graphics: Diana Steinway and Derek Carter, editor; Gift Chowchuvech, staff
artist.
Advertising: Jon Bobalik, sales manager; Rick Hershberger, production manager; Karen Nunley, production assistant.
The Old Gold and Black encourages members of the Wal:.e Forest community to address current
issues through letlen to the 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 typewritten and double-spaced.
We gready appreciate contributions submitted on Macintosh·compatible disks or the university's
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Station. Winston-Salem,NC 27109,sentviaelectronic mail to ogb@wfu.edu, or faxed to (919) 759·
4561.
The Old Gold and Blacl: reserves the right to edit, without prior notice, aU copy for grammatical or
typogmphical errors, and also to cutleners as needed to meet layout requirements.
The deadline fD< the Thullday Issue is S p.m. the previous Monday.
The Old Gold md Bb:k Is publl!hed each Thursday during the school year, except during examinations,
summer and lwUday periods by Newspaper Printer.; Inc. ol Winston·So!em. N.C.
Opln!D110 ..,.,...dIn lhlo newopaper •~ u..,. of tho editorial stalf or c:ontrlbuton to the paper and
donotn-nlyftflecttheaplnlonaof lheotudonl body,faLulty,stafforadmlnlstraUonofWako Fcr..t
Unhomlly.
J
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'
now. I wonder if the NASCAR
fans could talk the King into ruriningforCongresstorepresentredneckrights?Hey,maybewecould
lobby for a quota system for colleges and.then Jim-Bob and Innior could get into a real college r '
instead of going to truck school .,
like their oldeJ: sister. \
"Well, you get the point. By the
way,sinceyouaretherenearRJR, ' : ~
could you buy me some chewing
tobacco? Nobody up here in the
north knows what I'm talking ' '
about when Iask for it. Well, I'll
see you this summer.
Bubba."
After reading this letter, I was
caught by uncontrollable fits of
laughter. The only scary part is
that Bubba was trying to be senous. I guess he doesn't realize
how absurd his statements are.
But, be has the infonnation to
support these claims of injustice
just as well as other groups have
· don~ to justify special treatment.
Maybe red-neck rights aren't all
'
that far-fetched.
'
They are no more absurd than
the special privileges of other
groups that already get special
I·_
treatment.
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LETTERS :};(ltMD~(IiiJB>s.}
.'
r···_,._._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..::.::.._:..::::.....;.:_=-:::.=_~=-~:..;_._..::;_.:=:.;:::::~==~::.=.~:..::::t;::::.J~~~~~
Rebel with cause
dents I've taught and worked with in
other capacities here at Wake Forest;
On the afternoon of April 26, sev- the depth of their support and comeral students, including myself, were passion over the past year is one of
flying the Confederate flag from our the most gratifying things I have
ever experienced.
room windows.
Among them, there is one group
ArepresentativeofResidenceLife
and Housing came to the dormitory I'd like to single out, if only because
and informed us that the flags had to fraternities are commonly (and not
be removed before he returned to without some cause) maligned as
bastions of reactionary, boorish
campus tlie following day.
According to a spokesman for the (male) behavior. All things considForsyth County Sheriff's Depart- ered, the gentlemen of Sigma Nu are
ment, there are no legal grounds for a genuine class act.
One only wishes that the same
§!!i;h \1 mandate.
Furthermore, according to the could be said for the university's
Wake Forest University 1992-93 Stu- administration, which has consisdent Handbook, this university strives tently demonstrated a singular lack
toward "a society in which good will, of effectiveness and credibility (to
respect and equality prevail. To that say nothing of, shall we say, grace)
end, hatred and bigotry in any fonn in dealing with the situation in my
are rejected, and justice, honor and department.
Damage control and image manmutual trust are promoted."
Some may view the "Stars and agement, no matter how slick and
Bars" as an expression of support for "corporately correct," are not the
unfair ethical practices that existed same thing as ethical leadership and
in the pre-Civil War Confederacy, never wiJI be.
It is bad enough that this adminisbut to do so is to ignore other facets
would tolerate a patent disretration
of the Southern heritage.
·
gard
for
academic freedom at an
Aspects of the South that deserve
institution
that once won an award
to be celebrated are its emphasis on
for
its
commitment
to that principle.
commercial and agricultural auWhat
is
even
worse
is that it would
tonomy and success, a civil code of
tolerate
and
reinforce
an attitude of
conduct, an unquestionable faith in
the
opinions of
outright
contempt
for
God, the pursuit of educational ex·
cellence, and strong family ties. This students.
region is not merely a political or · Perhaps President Thomas K.
geographic entity but the collected Hearn Jr. and his lieutenants would
experiences of many diverse people be content if the faculty buried itself
who stand together under a common completely in research (or buried
itself period?) and the students just
symbol.
But Wake Forest did not respect went away- after paying, ofcourse.
Then they wouldn't have to worry
that Southern heritage. It supported a
about
anyone or anything trampling
stereotypical perception of the flag
on
that
manicured, evergreen lawn.
and of me as a Southerner and judged
Pardon
my naivety: but my enboth to"be offensive.
counter
with
total quality manageSuch behavior is in opposition to
ment,
Wake
Forest-style,
is not goeverything a truly liberal education
ing
to
.change
my
conviction
that
embraces. Do not dishonor the South
both
faculty
and
administrators
exist
that is by forgetting the South that
was. Remember the harsh lessons in the first place toservetheneedsof
that it has had to learn. Leave the flag students and not to s~rve themselves.
As for the tenure process, the proalone.
vost got it right when he told the
William J. Wright Winston-Salem Journal a year ago
this month that, in light of this case,
administrators might be forced to
rethink it.
Since then, things around here may
I would like to underscore how
profoundly grateful I am to the· stu- have been tightened up procedurally,
Ambivalent exit
but little else has changed.
With that in mind, I'd like to make
a constructive suggestion. There is
going to be one tenure fiasco after
another at this school until some
intermediary body is established to
review departmental decisions ori
tenure and promotion prior to their
review by the administration, and,
above all, to counteract the "fiefdom
mentality" prevailing in certain instances at the departmental level.
Call me a dreamer, but the accountability problem here - and it
is a critical one - could also be
alleviated if the decisions reached at
various stages in the process were
made known.
I can't recall who said it, but he
was right on target in asserting that
the way tenure is handled at Wake
Forest remains "sheerly medieval."
Anhis point, I readily confess to
looking forward to leavingthe Middle
Ages behind - in more ways than
one.
But that makes me no Jess grateful
to the many, many students, colleagues and support staff people at
WakeForestwhosecourage, decency
and humanity have helped sustain
me and .wi~l continue to do so in the
years to come.
Michael Gilbert
Assistant professor of
German and Russian
Erecting meanings
Have you ever walked along the
Quad and been absolutely astonished
by the magnificence ofWakeForest's
symbol, Wait Chapel?
I certainly have wondered why such
a magnificent structure was on such
a small school's campus. It seems
almost out of place. However, upon
pondering the chapel's significance,
I thought about an alternative reasoning behinq its existence. ·
Perhaps along with your wonderful experience at Wake Forest, the
faculty and administration have altered your fantastic memories of the
Old Gold and Black toward a more
negative view of the campus.
I propose that the architects had
this in mind long before they erected
this "spiritual tribute" of the Bap·
tist tradition.
TP.e chapel, in all of its phallic
glory, seems to represent the fac- -' '
ulty and administration's uncanny
abilitytoscrewthestudentswhenever they see fit to do so.
Iamnottalkingaboutanyevent
in particular, but I am sure that if
you ·have not had a bout with the
administration, you will before
yotir tenure is finished at Wilke
Forest.
The tenure comes to an end
upon the orgasm of the university
every May during graduation,
which is held at the base of this
enonnous phallic symbol.
The clock on the chapel is plau:d
there to ensure that this ejaculation happens at the proper time
every year.
The students, being the sperm
of the phallic symbol, are ejaculated into the world after this orgasm of graduation.
Thedonns around the Quad are
the testicles of the school where
the sperm are housed until they
are ready for ejaculation. The
plants and vegetation around the
Quad represent the fertility of the
university to show off for all visitors to Wake Forest.
The feminine Reynolda Hall
eternally beckons the chapel in all
of its enormity.
Reynolda Hall beckons in the
hopes that some of the sperm will
circulate back into the system so
that the system will perpetuate
itself after having matured the
sperm in the proper Wake Forest
fashion.
This letter was written as a ereative response about my experiences at Wake Forest. Hopefully
after reading this letter you will
appreciate the beauty of the Wake
Forest campus in a different light.
Remember, however, that no
ma~~r how much you feel that
you are being screwed by the systern, you are privileged to attend
such a wonderful institution that
is regarded highly by your future
employer.
Good luck with your tenure!
Brian Thacker
-..... ·''"
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..
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beem
the; p.
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Blad
If 1
dorse
then·I
shoul,
Clu
based
upon;
of the
more•
As•
other·
.
•••
'
Ow Gow AND BLAcK THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1993 9
'.
Final retrospect reveals omission: expressed gratitUde
T
hank you.
· Of all the words I have written
,8JJilspoken in four years at Wake
Forest, these are the ones I have not said
enough. And, ifl must write my last, these
are the words I want to leave.
I shtiuld tb8nk the friends who.acted as
my ps)rchiatrists when the Counseling
Center'
closed. I need to thank the
faculty and staff members· who· inspired
me arid convinced me that I should return
to the clitssroom as a ·professor, to teach
and learn from future generations.
.Morethananythingoranyoneelse,however, I must thank my mother.
Everything I read and see tells me I
should not exist; if 1 do, I should not be a
success. That is the fate of children with.
single black mothers. My own life contradicts these assumptions•.
When I was five years old, my father left
my mother, my brother and me and headed
to California to find himself. For most of
my youth and even today, I have looked on
people who had "whole" families with
.,
~point. By the
nearRJR,
chewing
here in the
.
was
,
rm talking
it. Well, I'll
erncmts are.
~folrntation
to
of injustice
grotllps have
ought, but I also know there were simply not their pet project. It should have been a matter
of course that they would foster the growth of
enough hours in the day.
Frankfort, Ky., was also not a kind ~ity to all students, but one black charity case every
STUDENT COLUMNIST
· grow up in. My older brother attended the few years was theextentoftheirphilanthropy.
This was the setting that shaped my fonnalocal schools for nine years as a behavioral
jealousy and wonder. Would my life not have problem child before a teacher noticed that his tive y~ars. I go back to Kentucky for holidays
been infinitely irnp~ved ifl had enjoyed this reading difficulties were not a sign of the now, and most of the girls I played with as a
ideal unit? Didn't I deserve this gift, too? · stupidity they ascribed to all black boys. He child look very tired and much older than their
I realize now that I would not trade rriy life has dyslexia. But it was too late, an'd his . years. This should have been my life, by all
accounts. But it is not. And so I give thanks.
for any other, and this affinnation is a tribute bitterness is the legacy·they left.
'
to the woman who raised me.
I admit that I have not always
Usually the only families in which
showed my gratitude. So, Mom,
one parent is acceptable are those
I'm sorry that I was embarrassed
where the income of a single parent No, did not get the cookies and milk and
when you began working a second
is more than adequate. Sure, those motherly advice •••, but you taught me so much
job as a clerk· at Food Lion. Sorry
mothers are alone, but they have
that I begged you not to take the job.
enough money to give the kids ev- just by surviving and then telling me thai perSorry that I did not understand you
erything, and so society gives these haps I could do more than survive. I could live. I
did it for me.
families the nod. ·
I am sorry that I strolled off to
My family's is the other story. will never stop trying. I owe you that much.
Wake Forest and forgot to say thank
Mom has worked two jobs since I
you for seeing me this far. I am also
started high school, ·and even before
sorry for my impatience. I know my
that she worked long hours in anI got lucky, and I give thanks for that provi- road has bec:n easier than many, and. it is
othercity for mediocre pay. I know she could dence daily. The same teachers who p.iscrimi- .because you chose to make yours much harder.
not give us the support she probably felt she nated against my brother later turned to me as
No, I did not get the cookies and milk and
STEPHANIE SPELLERS
i
•Male bashing makes sense
M
'
KOJJ-aid r
'
en are manure: pure TIFFANY REECE
waste.
Men are polyester leisu're suits: lacking taste.
Campus", complete with ID photos.
Men are toads: horny.
Male bashing is a favorite female
Men are the TV show 'Dinopastime. It unites women. On a typi.
saurs': corny.
Men
wonns: thrive in dirt. cal Wednesday night in Bostwick
Residence Hall, the girls of 3B blow
Men are'cramps: they hurt.
Men are acne: begging to be off their studies to spend an hour of
quality time ragging on the more un~
squeezed.
fortunate
sex. Why do girls enjoy
MenareEnglishteachers: never
·male bashing so much? There is a
pleased.
Men are political discussions: purpose; it's not just idle sarcasm.
When girls are frustrated orstressed,
causing friction.
ReaiMenaresmurfs: FICTION! they commonly tum to their favorite
Girls delight in coming up with fonn of entertainment. Making fun of
new male-bashing slogans to deco- the stupidity of men is stress-relievrate their rooms, donn halls and ing; therefore it is good fortbecardiothe walls ofbathrooms across Win· vascular system. (Just think guys, if
ston-Salem. One hall on campus, we didn't make fun of you at least
even went as far as to post ''Top three times daily, we'd probably die
10 List oftheWorstScamrner8 on early ofhigh cholesterol. Hey, maybe
are
a
motherly advice I once wished for, but you
taught me so much just by continuing to
survive and then telling me that perhaps I
could do more than survive. I could live, if
I wanted to do it. 1~\vill never stop trying.
I owe you that much.
I doubt I wifl ever forget the night a few
weeks ago when I called and told you your
daughter is goin_g to Harvard University .
You.were so ecstatic. Then you were so
quiet. It was like the words did not go
together and tqe story somehow made no
sense. What is.a black child- the product
of a horne without a father- doing heading to Cambridge, Mass., for graduate
school? Why did I escape the cycle of
poverty and self-hate that America haS
built for people like me?
· ·
By some miracle, I broke out, and it
appears that I am headed to a bright future.
But I made my break on your back, and I
cannot forget. So, before I take the torch
and run like hell, I tum now and give glory
where it is most deserved. I give the glory
to you.
that is why women live longer!)
Male bashing is also an adamant·
forum for feminism. Whenever agirl
is frustrated by the male ego, she can
always turn to her sisters for a quick
round of chromosome criticizing. It's
a bond of sisterhood that all females
can depend on.·
Most importantly, male bashing is
a form of female bonding. All girls
have been hUrt by someone, so we
can all relate when one of us is upset.
It's a way of rallying around each
other, of lending support. Even girls
in healthy, happy relationships will
occasionally participate in the acrossthe-board slamming in sympathy for
the way less sensitive guys than their
boyfriends are treating their friends.
The next logical question is )-YhY
guysdon'tfemale bash as part of their
male bonding experience.Who knows,but, hey, how about those Mets?
''
ScriptUre admonishes those who ·abuse faith for persecution
I
1
do not intend to join the bandwagon WADE SOLOMON
of editorials concerning the "Is Gay - - - - - - - - - - - - - - OK?" debate. l think that issue has STUDENT CoLUMNIST
been more than adequately analyzed within - , - - - - - - - - - - - - tht; past few weeks in the Old GO/d.-.asd- thew 18:22). Christianity shouliJ.~~on
Black.
an individual sin, but rather forgiveness.
If we are to assume that the Bible en-. , .. &f9st signifi~antly, ho~.ever~ ·th':\ ~\t¥e
dorses the idea of homosexuality as a sin;-\.1 teaches that all.sins are equal in the eyes of
theni would like to address how Christians God. They all separate us from God (Romans
should act toward these sinners.
3:23), but viitually all can be forgiven by God
Christianity in its purest form is a faith (Matthew 12:31). Because no one can claim
based upon grace and mercy, not solely innocence, we are all perceived equally by
upc:)n actions. The New Testament speaks· God in regaro to !iin. All people are sinners·
of the sin of homosexuality, but it speaks and therefore in need of grace.
more of gl-ace arid forgiveness.
For those who believe they are holier-thanAs Christ said, one should forgive an- thou, Christ respond$: "Do not judge, or you
other "seventy times seven tinles" (Mat- too will be judged" (Matthew 7:1).
It seems that somehow homosexuality has
become a special sin in the eyes of many
Christians. Homosexuals are constantly
singled out by many Christians as the scourge
of our decrepit soeiet}o.
However, homosexuality is no more evil to
God than any..othersin. In fact, while the Bible
refers to hOmosexuality less than 10 times, it
refers to the sin ofgreed more than 100 times.
Therefore it seems that the persecution of
homosexuals is not religious (as many argue),
but societal.
Ideally, Christians are in no position to
persecute homosexuals because the Christianity advocates the idea that all humanity,
with their different sins, are trapped in die
same- state of sinfulness.
The recent emphasis on homosexuality is
just another example of how pure Christianity
is distorted by society.
I!mowofsomecaseswherechurch-attending nomosexuals left their churc~e~ because
other members could nodl~cept their'.sexuar·~
orientation, even as a personal fault:' ' .... ~I find it ironic that these Christians are so
disapproving of these homosexuals that they
are driving them from the place where they
believe the homosexuals belong most: the
church. We have been forgiven, yet we are
driv!ng others away from forgiveness.
· It disturbs me that modern Christians who
believe homosexuality is wrong are regarded
as close-minded, for many Christians believe
that the Bible is the unchanging Word of God.
However, it disturbs me more that Christians support these labels by their persecu- ·
tion of homosexuals.
For, although homosexuality is wrong,
it is just wrong fo.! a Ch,r~ti~,n tA s~gl~ , ... ,..
9u't' noi:rlosex.ums. !is· inferior P.~opli;:,w.li'<i: ..J, ::...;
are:·un\vorthy ofGod's.grace an(! f0:fgiveness.
It is definite! y possible to "love the sinnerwhilehatingthesin."Ifwecannotlove
sinners, then we can love no one- we are
all sinners.
We should love all people, despite their .
personal faults, and anyone who views
someone, due to his.or her personal fault,
with contempt corrupts the true meanings
of Christianity.
as
First year need not befuddle ·
I
've made it through freshman
year, and I must say that it was
not as bad as I expected it to be.
Every freshman had those "college
adjustment" books such as College
Success Stories and Why You Won't
have AnyorCol/ege: Flunk Out ifYou
Want To (subtitled: It's Just Your
Mama's Money).
These books, however, did not
specify what one learns at Wake Forest, so I will take the burden upon
myself to do so.
When trying to obtain the maximum amount of sleep one can, one's
powers of subtraction increase tenfold. Believe me, it has happened to
everyone.
How many times have you looked
atyouralannclock(which reads 3:47
a.m.), realized that you have to get up
at 8:30, and instantly figured out that
if you fell asleep immediately, you
could get exactly four hours and 43
minutes of sleep? Those truly blessed
with the gift of night subtraction can
tally the hours of sleep they have
gotten for the week. This is truly one
of nature's wonders.
·I have learned a lot about classes.
First ofall, I learned that 8 a.m. classes
are for sophomores and suckers. If
you have not read the student handbook, you can only blame yourself for
signing up for the earliest class, because in tlie registration book, chapter
three, verse eight, it reads, "Cursed
are those who take 8 a.m. classes, for
they shall wake up in the dark."
If you do make ittoclass, more than
likely you will find, to your dismay,
that the professor is speaking in
tongues. (This also occurs in almost
all science courses, so don't be
alanned. You are still normal.)
When this happens, nothing short
ERIC
R. WILLIAMS
SruoENT CoLUMNIST
of a cattle prod will keep you awake.
One exception is being asked a question in a room full of people you don't
know. I will vouch personally that
this will wake you up quickly.
I eagerly await the day that I have a
car on campus so that I, too, can speed
up when a pedestrian crosses the road.
Oh, the joy of meal money: It's just
like using Monopoly money except
you actually get something for it. This
is opposed to real money, where you
can see your bank account decrease.
Delta faucets have three settings:
freezing, I guess this will do, and
!ill@# THIS IS HOT!
THE ULTIMATE TIP! I promise
this really works. I saw someone doing this in the Pit one day and I immediately beheld hi:. genius. If you
choose an item from the pasta bar as
your entree, get your food, then take a
paper plate from the salad bar. When
you gettoyourtable, use your fork, or
a stainless steel colander if you happen to have one, and drain the excess
water onto the paper plate.
Finish by placing the plate of pasta
onto the water plate (don't worry, it
rarely leaks out). I bet you never knew
that the spaghetti could taste so good,
or for that matter, have a taste.
Seniors, you can only look back in
regret- you won't be here another
year to put this useful tactic to work.
In college, it is nonnal to find people
sitting in unusual places, such as on
top of the columns in front of the
library. Once you see this, you automatically think, ''That's so neat in
that 'college brochure' sort of way."
Scott Owenby, the manager of the
Pit and ARA, answers all questions posed to him, even math problems. Try to stump him before the
year is out. Be sure to write a
relevant food comment, though.
The best place to stand during
those hot days is near the mailbox,
outside of the Reynolda Hall side
entrance, on concrete. The sprinklers will hit you eve1y time. The
worst place to stand is on the grass.
On the Friday before Spring
Break, I noticed that the teller rnachine was shut down· because it
was "OUT OF FUNDS." Imagine
my chagrin when I found out that
this was a temporary thing and not
a permanent repercussion of the
Clinton administration.
Just like with fishern1en, everyone has a "secret spot" in the library where they believe that it is
possible to get the most studying
done. It's the quietest, coolest, least
distracting spot in the library. Isn't
that totally ridiculous that everyone thinks that they know where
that spot is? 1' m the only one who
knows where that spot is.
There are five dryer settings on
most machines: setting one: dryer
shoots out dense hail; setting two:
dryer shoots out snow; setting
three: dryer shoots out extremely
cold air; setting four: impossible,
the lever moves back up to setting
three; setting five: "FIRE!"
Last tip: Nice guys (I had to
bring that up) need to ask out the
girls. The ladies on campus seem
to agree that it is due to lack of
asking that nice guys finish last. (I
signed a waiver stating that any
psychological damage resulting
from rejection is hereby not my
fault.)
OLD GOLD AND BLACK
10
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
...
.,..
_?
THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1993
.P&C say 'hasta lavista, baby,' share top ten list of Winston-Salem. restaurant~ ,
BY PAXTON HELMS AND CATHERINE FINCH
Ow GoLD AND BLAcK REVIEWERS
Well, gentle readers, the time has come to
say our bittersweet goodbyes (sniff, sniff).
. P&C just couldn't bear to do it alone, so in a
somewhat vain attempt to keep this from
being too maudlin, they brought in a few of
their hungriest friends: Deerslayer (DS), Bona
Petite (get it? BP), Quik (Q), and Bed Bug
(BB).
Upon reflecting about their previous hog
ratings, and with the advice and consent of the
assembled Epicurean senate, P&C et al went
back to Bell Brothers to see if it did not, in fact,
merit a four-hog rating instead of the still
stellar 3 and 1/2.
There, they contemplated a full year of
P&C's Excellent Adventures and communed
with the entourage about Winston-Salem dining experiences.
P&C were fortunate enough to have the known each other since the beginni!lg of time,
foresight to tape record their conversations and have simultaneously developed a love for
that lovely April evening; otherwise, they Southern food of almost any sort-barbecue
would have completely forgotten what they especially. Personally, I think that P just really
and their guests said. This way, no one can misses his Momma, but we both like to eat (a
impugn the veracity (or lot), and are tired of finding wood chips in our
is it voracity?) of the spinach at the Pit. (Editorial note: C did find
testimony of the cote- a two-inch long wood chip the other day in her
Pit spinach.)
rie.
DS (a yankee, albeit a nice one): How do
There were several
questions that kept pop- you select these places? I mean, I didn't know
ping up during the there were so many ways to fry things.
P: Typically, we wait for the tenth muse,
evening, and P&C
Epicurianatus,
to speak. Sometimes she guides
thought it might be
worth their readers' our eyes to a promising spot as we drive down
while to answer some the road, sometimes she speaks through our
· friends' suggestions, and once she even incarof them.
BB (who had just risen from a three-hour nated herself as Dr. BIU11ett of the history
nap): So how (yawn) did y'all get started department. (We still can't figure out what he
was doing floating 10 feet in the air as we
doing this P&C thing?
drove
off the campus.)
C: Well, BB, it's very simple. P&C have
DininiJ
Rerliew
Q (as he wiped the choeol~te pie from his
mouth and reached for: the chocolate milk):
What would you consider..to be the top ten ·
restaurants in Winston-Salem? (C felt a bond
with Q, as she, too, has been known to consume vast quantities of .chocolate in a single
sitting.)
P:Hey, BP, are you finished eating on that
pecan pie yet? (Pis at,out twice the size o{BP,
and has been known to scarf food from her
plate whenever sl,le isn't looking.)
BP: No, not yet, but your socks are untied.
(As P reaches down to retie his socks, BP
leaps over the table, spears the remaining
morsels ofP' s pie and rides off with them into
the sunset.)
·
·
C: Anyway, as I waS saying, we have come
up with a ranking of some of our.favorite
Wins~on-Salem dining joints. Here 'goes:
(We're gonna let you.find your own way this
time.)
10. The Lighthouse.
· '
9. Rier8on 's Family·Restaurant, den phi·
losophy.
.
8. La (]taudiere (Are you nuts? Ou~ ~tots
would never reimburse us for that!)· :.:. :
7. Dottie's Diner(delicious dining delights).
6. Simos' banbeque: Be sure to ask for Mr.
Simos.
,
5. Mr. Waffle: holidaycheerextraordiilaire.
4. Akron Drive Restaurant: Alas, no longer
open 24 hrs. a day.
.
3. Mountain Fried Chicken: It ain't ~Y·
2. Little Richard's BBQ, with the Eat Ma'
Pig sauce. ·
1. Bell Brothers Cafeteria, where the
tions are huge.
,
. ;
Well, folks, that does it for P&C. We're
gonna miss all you gentle readers a,lot, b(lt
come on down to see us in Atlanta (no direCtions this time) if you want know where to
eat next year. Adios, P&C.
'
of
por-
to
Benny and J oon offers new
twist on boy meets girl theme
BY PATI BEAUCHAMP
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT AsSISTANT EDITOR
Benny and loon is not just another boy-meets-girl
story; instead, it is agirl-wins-boy-in-a-poker-game-thenloses-boy-because-of-overprotective-qlder-brotherstory.
In fact, Benny and loon does have the familiar scent of
a typical romantic comedy, but the sweet chemistry between the mentally disturbed Joon and the inexplicably
weird Sam disguises this worn-out genre.
Mary Stuart Masterson (Fried Green Tomatoes, Some
. Kind of Wonderful) stars as Jooniper Pearl, a highly
creative but mentally disturbed artist who has remained in
· the care of her older brother Benny (Aidan Quinn) since
. the death of their parents many years before.
Living on Benny's auto mechanic salary, the two struggle
to avoid what they have been told is inevitable: placing
· Joon in a mental institution. Somewhat of a saint, Benny
shows little visible frustration with his role as caretaker,
which precludes any social life beyond his weekly poker
games.
Joon' s psychological need for a routine necessitates that
Benny lead an habitual lifestyle as well. However, this
story would never have become a movie if a little spice
didn:t disrupt their lives.
Enter Sam (Johnny Depp), the unwanted eccentric
cousin of Benny's poker buddy. AfterJoon acquires Sam
in a poker game, he becomes Benny and Joon 's house mate.
Sam has developed a comic style that pays homage to
the silent film legends Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin.
Complete with a wobbly cane and Chaplin-esque clothing, Sam's humor is reminiscent of an era-gone-by when
four-lettered words and sexual innuendo were not the
staples of comedy. His benign physical antics and pratfalls represent not only the innocence of a past age, but
they parallel the tender and wide-eyed wonderment with
which he and Joon enter into a romantic relationship.
The independence of Joon ·and Sam's love frightens
Benny, who is unable to trust that
which he does not understand.
r
Benny's fear is not only for Joon
butforhimselfaswe!l. These years
e
he has spent obligated to the care of
v
his sister have allowed him to avoid
romantic involvement or commiti
ment. Now his sister, who is supe
posed to be naive about such things,
has
turned the metaphorical tables,
w
teaching him a valuable .lesson
about love: the human heart has a
will and mind of its own.
Benny andJoon is a quirkier film than most, often more
odd than unpredictable, but the finesse and sincerity with
which Masterson plays Joon adds a great deal to the
credibility of the story. Depp is surprisingly genuine as
the curious cousin who inhabits trees, irons cheese sandwiches, and performs impromptu comedy in the park.
Reminiscent of his previous roles, Depp is best when he
does not speak.
·~
Benny and Joan may lack the driving action that
characterizes most American films but it does not lack
heart or humor. Joon and Sam, despite their "mental"
deficiencies and behaviors, find that which eludes most
of us; they find a love that is pure and enduring, proving
that the most precious things in life often come in misunderstood packages.
revzew
Inspired voices bless Creation
· sociate professor of music, James
Powers of Zebulon, N.C. and John
DLo GoLD AND Bu.CK REVIEWER
Williams of Winston-Salem, in adThe hall filled with the reverbera- dition to the 100 voices of the chorus. Instru~ion of tuned instruments, soon acmentalists incompanied by a hundred inspired
cluded stuvoices singing to the glory of God.
0 0 0 dents and facSo began the University Music
ulty as well as
Department's presentation of their
members
of
spring choral concert last Sunday.
(\')(\')(\')
N.C.
School
The concert united many of the standof the Arts,
ing choirs to present Franz Joseph
and the WinHaydn's The Creation. The Concert
re\·iew ston-Salem,
Choir, the Madrigal Singers, and the
Choral Union collaborated with the ~---·-- Greensboro,
and Salisbury
faculty and student orchestras, under ·
symphony
and
orchestras.
the direction of Brian Gorelick, the
What is most impressive about
director of choral ensembles, for this
Haydn is the way in which every
closing concert.
Haydn's Creation, was written in portion of the music seems to have
1797 and follows the creation story its own order. Even the opening,
as presented in the book of Genesis. "Representation ofChaos," had symThe first English version borrowed metry, as well as a relaxing quality.
heavily from John Milton's Paradise The emotional influence was apparLost. That libretto has since been ent from the beginning of the piece.
The hour-and-a-half oratorio •.vas
lost. Sunday's performance used a
translation from the German by Rob- always delightful, often entrancing
and occasionally struck with inspiert Shaw.
The three-part oratorio featured the ration.
The performance of the chorus
voice talents ofTeresa Radomski asBY CHRISTINA SALME RUIZ
nnn
===
., .., ..,
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.............
was particularly spectacular as it interacted with the three guest artists.
The guest artists themselves, who
played the parts of the angels and
later of Adam and Eve, were beyond
lovely. Radomski deserves special
note. The strength ofher soprano was
challenged by the choir at times, but
Radomski carne out the winner. Her
clear and powerful voice rose above
the chorus in an uplifting brilliance.
Baritone Powers' performance was
more than equal to his multiple roles.
His graceful voice replicated the effect of a cantor as it fell to the depths
of the scale.
Tenor Williams, too, performed
with a clarity of heavenly proportions. It was unfortunate that his role
was the smallest; I would have liked
to have heard more from him.
The members of the choir formed a
true chorus of angels singing to the
glory of God and His creations, the
most powerful and beautiful of which
seemed to be the human voice. I was
lifted and inspired by the soprano
heights and baritone depths of both
the choir and the soloists. It was a
perfect way to spend a Sunday.
:All un~tied work.tru1i~ited fu Scales>Gan.;;,. -~
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Spring dance concert offers outstanding performance despite lulls
BY
Loxl HAYES
Cor.musunNO REviEWER
Girt Chowchuvcch
Junior Mary Sue Petroshius practice~ for last weekend's performance.
The University Dance Company members
can rest their calloused feet this week, having
survived the Spring Concert that began April
22 and ends Saturday in Scales Fine Arts
Mainstage Theatre.
They can also rest their minds, assured that
they gave what was far and away one of the
most outstanding performances .of the
company's recent history.
Created entirely by students, the pieces
represented a varietyofchoreographical styles
and the accompanying music was equailj
diverse. On a low note, the show opened
rather quietly with senior Blain Fitz-Simons'
enjoyable-but-inert modem ballet piece "Pot
Pourri." While senior Lindsay King's.talent
shone, her two colleagues seemed unable to
keep up with her lively pace. Fitz-Simons'
fluid choreography was picturesque but done
lflJ• •ice by two of the dancers' seeming lack
ofvigo~.
Fortunately, the pace soon picked up as
junior Mary Sue Petroshius, freshman Marisa .
Sechrest, and senior Monta Corirad emerged
from the wings to flirt with the audience in
Petroshius' jazz-enpointe work, "Life Delectable." Set to the sizzling strains ofa Wynton
Marsalis tune. this piece
proved as much theatre
as dance. Though the
number was flawed by
the dancers' occasional
. . ..
lackofunity,Ccinradand
Petroshius engaged the
audience by hamming-up the seduction. :
Having just sat through relatively light examples of music-in-motion,·the audience was
not prepared for the sheer force of this dance
set to Peter Gabriel's "Rhythm of the Heat."
Choreographed by senior Cindy Lewis, this
untitled piece was arguably the most powerful
saga of human movement this reviewer has
seen in<; .. :... some time. The number PTipped
the audience from its simmering start to its
pounding finish. Like nerve endings in trauma,
the dancers acted and reacted with pulsating
throes of control and release. Somewhat
analogous to a choreographed version of an
Oliver Stone film, Lewis' modem-dance triumph left the audience mesmerized, exhausted
and thirsting for more.
Following a rather short intermission, the
student talent exhibition continued with Laura
Fiorini's "Thrice Happy Isles," a peppy jazz
piece set to Suzanne Vega's popular "Tom's
Diner" as embellished by the group DNA.
Highlighted by the civilian character dress of
each of the dancers, this multi-media glimpse
of a "day in the life of' a bustling city was
thoroughly delightful and artfully produced.
Its street rhythms, urban moves, and comic '
tones were refreshing, and the applause it won
was proof of its success.
Senior Allison Orr and company recaptured the audience's attention after it lulled
during a less-than-interesting ballet piece with
See na .. ,.~ n., ... ~ • •
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OLD Gor.o AND BLACK THURSDAY, APRI.o. 29 199311
--------------------------------------M$Mm~--------------------------------------
Dance
From Page 10 .
Music:
StudentChamberConcert: 8 p.m.
tQnightin Brendle Recital Hall. The
W*e ForestUniversity departinent
mation: Art and the Environment in of music. presents a program of
~ the Nineties focuses on artists pro- chamber music performed by stumoting environmental awaren~ .. dents of the department. A guitar
. $3 adults, $2 seniors citizens, stu- duo and trio playing music by Henry
Purcell and Manual de Falla, and a
c dents and SECCAmembersare free.
Photography: May 8 through July string quartet playing a work by
18, SECCA. The photography of Mozart are among the composi' John Pfahl frequently contrasts· the tions to be performed. Free.
industrial and picturesque. $3 adults, Selections from the Collections:
$2 seniors citizens. Students and Organ and Brass: 8 p.m. May 9,
Hanes Auditorium, Salem College
SECCA members are free.
Fine Arts Center. Free. Contribution accepted.
·
Movies:
Lakeside Jazz at SECCA: 3 p.m.
May 16,outdqorsatthelakebeside
, Aladdin: 8 p.m. tonight, 7 p.m.•. SECCA. The Triad Jazz Society
9:30p.m. and 12 a.m. Fri. and Sat,. presents an afternoon of outdoor
7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. Sunday in jazz featuring local perfonners such
Pugh Auditorium. Robin Williams as The Matt Kendrick Unit. Tickets
provides the voice of the genie in are$3forTriadJazzSocietymem· this hilarious blockbuster film from bers, $6 for non-members.
. Disney. A great pre-exam film! $2.
• Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Miscellaneous:
. Factory: 8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., Pugh
· Auditorium. Gene Wilder stars in Peking Acrobats: 8 p.m. tonight,
Ibis fantastical film adaptation of Stevens Center.. North Carolina
the childhood favorite Charlie and School of the Arts' Something for
Everyone Series presents a perforthe Chocolate Factory. Free.
Art and the Environment: May 8
throughJuly 18,SECCA. The eXhibition From Destruction to Recla-
I·
Aries: (Mar. 21-Apr. 19) Avoid
making hasty deci~ions when
choosing a beverage at lunch.
Taurus: (Apr. 20-May 20) Aim
high in all pursuits. Don't give up
until you are the Supreme Ruler of
the Cosmos.
·
Gemini: (May 21-June 21) No
length is too far when courting a
' new love. Stand outside his. or her
window screaming obscenities until they invite you in.
·
. Cancer: (June 22-July 22). Your
· ,gyyy in predi~ting.ma1t~syrup futUres will land you a earner 'office
. ; · at the Ex~hange.
Leo: (July 23-Aug.22) Your get- .
BY RUBY WYNEa-Io
ONION FEAI1!RES S~!CAll!
away weekend with a lover will be
cut short when your car is
broadsided by a steam shovel.
Virgo: (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Completion of your current course
of study will guarantee you a position in the shoe-shining business.
Libra: (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Despite
your protests_, your midsection will
be amputated by a gang of toughs.
Scorpio: (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) Your
childish ways will attract others to
games of Kick-the-Can.
mance by 24 of China's most gifted
tumblers, contortionists, jugglers,
cyclists and gymnasts. $18 adults, .
$16 students and senior citizens.
Artspedition IV: 8 p.m. May 15,
SECCA Main Gallery. The fourth
annualACCES benefit event in support of the SECCA Education Program will feature door prizes, refreshments, hor'd'oeuvres and live
entertainment. Tickets are $15 in
advance and $20 at the door.
The Scarlet£etter: 8 p.m. May 13- ·
· 15, 2 p.m. May 16, Stevens Center.
North Carolina School of the Arts
presents the world premiere of the
dance, The Scarlet Letter, choreographed by Rick McCullough, original score by Robert Ward. $15
adults, $12 students, seniorcitizens.
Group rates are available.
the concert's second outstanding combination of body and soul, appropriately· titled "Passion." Perhaps indicative of its choreographer's anthropology major, this piece was
marked by earthy nuances, pulsating
rhythms and natural movements of
weight and rotation. A fitting sequel
to Lewis' earlier piece, the Peter
. Gabriel-accompanied "Passion" was
a full production of human connections, melding bodies and interweav-.
ing energies. Orr captured in one
piece everything that dance is about.
Though the concert ended with a
rich tapestry of dancers and styles in
Theater:
Follies: 8 p.•m. May 7, 8, 14, and
15,3 p.m. May 9 and 16, ~olina
Theatre, 310 South Greene Street,
Greensboro. The Community Theatre of Greensboro presents
Stephen Sondheim 'sTony Award
winning musical. Tickets are $10
for adults; $9 for students and senior citizens, and $5 for children
12 and under.
Sagittarius: (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) This
week marks the beginning of a new
phase in your life - the LosingAll-Your-Friends-And-Living-OnPoverty-Row Phase.
Capricorn: (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Don'trushthroughworkthatneeds
your complete and patient attention. When strangling someone,
make sure to check that they quit
breathing before you stop.
· Aquarius: (Jan. 20-Feb.18) If the
group mentality does not meet your
ideals, gun ,them down with a repeating rifle .
Pisces: (FI!b. 19-Mar. 20) Lick
evecything this week.
Jazzing it up
Freshman Jeff Madden solos with the Jazz Ensemble concert April 21.
The following are the top ten albums played on W A.KE. Radio last week.
. 1. BeJJy-star
2. Primus-PorkSoda
3. Su_gar-Beaster
_
· 4. Lenny Krirviu-:-Are You Gof!'lf!.J!:P,,MY .
Wdy? ''"! .,.,, ·'' ' :'
.••• , v
5. Porno for Pyros-Pets
Finals ar~ almost
4-speaker cassette. Not
•
At
over. School's out
to ·mention a convertible.
forever. So let Nissan
Worried you'll be late
be the first to open a
for the working class?
don't pay for 90 days. The Sentra"' SE-R, with
few doors to you.
With the new Nissan
it's 140-hp 16-valve
U. program, you'll,be on the road faster
engine and Sport-tuned suspension will
than you can sell those old text books.
get you there with time t9 spare.
Your local Nissan dealer wants to put you
Just confirm that you'll be graduating
behind the wheel of a new Nissan ®.car or
truck now and you won't have to start
paying for 90 days. How about cruising
out of school in style with a
new 240 SX"?
You can get
Super
HICASTM
4-wheel
steering.
Ntssan U.
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who ha~ come into his own. "Denim"
sent us through all sorts of emotions;
it was simultaneously honest, disturbing and funny. Gradually getting
dressed on stage as he danced, Taylor
made the point that, despite any other
"differences," we all put our pants on
one leg at a time.
The 1993 Student Work Spring
Dance Concert was a testament to the
wealth of talent enriching the Wake
Forest community. Marred on1y by
.the lags between numbers and the
anticlimactic presentation of flowers
to coordinator Becky Myers, this
event was a huge success. From
classical to modern, ballet to jazz. the
audience was wooed again and again.
Quite simply, the Spring Concert was
an artistic presentation of bodies in
movement and poetry in motion•
the wonderfullycreativemedley"Sunday Side Up," (choreographed by
Lewis, juniors Dani Lincoln and
Orlanda Taylor, and sophomore Karen
Nunley), the show had already been
stolen by Taylor's astounding creation, ''Denim."
The most inventive and controversial piece of the evening, "Denim,"
was performed to a recorded narrative written by the dancer himself
(read by junior Jeremy Kuhn). As
Kuhn told the story of growing up a
gay male in America, Taylor danced,
acted, and sounded his way through
the ambiguous conceptions of masculinity and what it means to feel
"different." An entire audience sat in
awe as Taylor's powerful body moved
in progression from questioning child
. to searching adolescent to the adult
6. Midnight Oil-Earth, Sun and Moon
7. Alice In Chains-Dirt
8. Stin~Ten Summoner's Tales
9. Digal* :r•~~~Reachin' (A Ne~ .R.efot,atio,n'
~
Jb
·of"Fime,and Space)
·
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10. King Missile-Happy Hour
""
' -
•
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within 90 days, with 4-years under your
belt, from an accredited U.S. college, or
that you've gotten your B.A. or higher
within the last 12 months. All you need
is a job. And well, you were going to get
one anyway. Then we'll help you grad.uate to a new car or truck
For the lowdown on your favorite Nissan
and where to get it, calll-800-NISSAN-6.
Because if you don't get your foot in
the door now, you just might
find yourself taking
the bus.
---~---
The Nissan
240SX
It's time to expect
mo-re from a ca/~
1
LiuJiud-cin1r vffu f01 qud!tfrrd buytr~ ,Jt parttt:tpating dc~1l~r5. Financm~: throt1gb NMAC A-1ulii.r bt·.1 Fow v~m grctd!I.Uc- !toni ,m cKa~dJCc·d U 5 (o/Jrx(·lc!rfC""t' 1't',ll RlV dc;.':tcn .1/1cJ qJt,,lti\ ·1 '''tlhln rite· /,l'>l I} n1onrh' mprcw1dc tllli''<'t~ir_l· tonflttl1.1fion of IIJXOmiiiJ: ljf.lduactolt wirltrn YOd1y~ 0 f,·onrr.lLT d.ur ,\·l1t'tl
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29, 1993
I
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SPORTS
OLD GoLD AND BLACK
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•
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~'.
·h
12
THURSDAY, APRIL
..
Rogers declares himself eligible for NBA Draft·
BY JAY REDDICK
Ot.n GOLD AND
BLACK SENIOR REPORTER
The announcement ended months of speculation about
the future of one of the greatest players the school has ever
seen.
Rogers, who is expected by most observers to be one of
the first 10 selections in the Jurie 24 draft, said it was a
tough decision, but he decided to leave school early so he
could support his family.
"Some of the things I've been thinking about are my
teammates, Wake Forest family and friends," Rogers said.
"It leaves me with a lot of sadness to leave those people
behind, but I've been thinking about it and I think this is
the best move for me and my family.
"Still, it's something I'll never forget ... the way the
people around here have treated me for the past three
years," Rogers said.
Rogers has treated Wake Forest students and fans to
some special things as well. Despite staying only three
years, Rogers levaes Wake Forest as the No. 8 scorer and
rebounder in school history.
During a junior season when he led the Demon Deacons
into the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament, Rogers led
theACC in scoring by pouring in an average of 21.2 points
a game and was named ACC Player of the Year, along
with earning honors as a onsensus second-team AllAmerican.
Head Coach Dave Odom said he was glad to coach
Rogers for the past three seasons.
"He is certainly one of the best basketball players ever
to play in this league," Odom said. "I'm very proud he did
it at Wake Forest, and he did it with grace, style, and class."
Still, Odom said, he stood behind Rodney in his decision.
"This is not a time for sadness," Odom said. "I know the
"But the thing that's so great about Rodney is th~t 1
through this whole process, he's never changed. He'll'
make a terrific pro, because he's got such a great sense of
values and work ethic."
Odom said that while Rogers will move on, his presence
hopefully will force others like him to look at Wake
Forest.
"How could you do anything except celebrate the decision that he's made?" Odom said, "We're happy for him,
we look forward to following him during the course of his
pro career, and yeah, we '11 miss him, and continue to love
·
him.
"But what he's given us here is a solid foundation to
build on, and we '11 take that and go on. We'll do it because
of Rodney and others like him. In order to compete at ihis
level, we need players of Rodney's caliber, and getting
him will show others like him that you can do whatever
;-..you wantto accomplish, and that if you're willing to work,
,I
the opportunity is here."
Rogers said he does not expect to make a large impact
immediately upon entering the NBA next season, ·but
hopes to spend a ljttle time getting used to it.
· "I thitlk you have to get there before you can really learn
what·it's like (in the NBA)," Rogers said. "The first year
will be a learning year, and I'll have to work even harder
Nicholas Zacllos
than I have."
Senior Rodney Rogers bids farewell to the Wake Forest basketball program on Monday atJoel Coliseum, where
Still, Rogers said he is mentally prepared for the NBA.
he held an afternoon press conference to announce that he has declared himself eligible for the Junf:! NBA Draft.
"I don't fear anything now," Rogers said. "Once you get
to this level, you shouldn't fear anything. The pros are just
Wake Forest people are torn up about wanting him to stay talents and the hard work he does," junior Trelonnie like college players, except bigger and stronger. I just have
and share another special year with us, but more than that, Owens said. "He's worked hard to get to this level, and I'm to go in with power and determination."
·
they want Rodney to do what's best for Rodney and his proud of him."
Rogers is expected to be picked by one of !he 11 te\lms
"It's like being. a parent when a son goes away-from in the draft lottery, made up of those teams who did npt
family."
Other coaches and teammates were also supportive of home for the first time," assistant coach Jerry Wainwright make the NBA playof~ this season He said this will
said. "I've known Rodney since eighth grade, and there's probably keep him from playing for his favorite team, but.
Rogers' decision.
"I'm glad he'll finally get a chance to get paid for his always a point when you know you have to let go.. ·
See Rogers, Page 13
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the A
Deacon baseball drops series to Duke; Kramer'hits slam on HTS
Bv DoNNA JoHNSON
Ow GoLD AND BLACK
REPoRTER
The baseball team (28-15, 9-10 ACC) won
three and lost two games during the week,
including dropping a series to ACC rival
Duke.
Tuesday the Deacons defeated UNCAsheville 5-0 when freshman Brian Coffey
pitched the first complete game shutout in two
years.
, Coffey gave up six hits, walked three, and
~truck out six. Despite three errors committed
by the Deacon defense and a jam in the first
inning the freshman never lost composure and
gave the Deacons a good look at what future
seasons may have in store.
The Deacon offensive unit pounded out
seven hits. The Deacons took a 1-0 lead on an
RBI single by junior Brad Pryce in the fifth.
In the sixth Wake Forest broke out for three
runs when UNC-Ashevillepitchersfacedcontrol problems and walked in three runs.
This past weekend the Deacons hosted Duke
for a three game series, in which Wake Forest
won one and lost two.
Friday the Deacons were battling a 2-1
deficit until the eighth when the Blue Devils put the game out of reach by scoring four
more runs. The Blue Devils went on tho win
the game 7-1.
Sophomore Ross Atkins took the loss after
pitching seven innings, giving up four runs on
eight hits, and striking out nine.
With two on in the eighth senior Steve
DeFranco came in to relieve Atkins. However, DeFranco could not baffle the Devil's
bats as he gave up two runs on three hits.
In the ninth freshman Bobby Wood carne in Blue Devil bats as they scattered three hits and
to replace DeFranco. Wood gave up one run scored two runs despite his athletic doubleon two hits and struck out one.
play. DeFranco dove to catch a bunt before it
The Deacons were strong at the plate with reached the ground then spun around and
10 hits, but couldn't get those baserunners caught the runner before he could return to
across the phte. Sophomore Bret Wagner second base.
Junior Todd Jenkins took the mound with
went three-for four on the day, including a
homerun.
two out in the sixth and pitched the remainder
Saturday's game ending differently for the of the game allowing two hits on two runs and
Deacons as they defeated the Blue Devils 8-6 striking out four.
with another 10 hit attack.
In the third Wake Forest put two runs on the
Junior Jason Robbins got the· start and board off senior David H~gec~ :s hP.l)1ef!IJ,L
pitched six innings before turning over the . · -Witb.thescore.9-2,.th~~!!,Q9JJS;;.')lo!~Jjlp.p.·...
mound to Wagner. Robbins gave up five n,ms ing for an offensive explosion in the sixth, It
on eight hits and fanned five.
started off with a walk, and two infield hits to
Wagner recorded the save while pitching load the bases.
three innings, allowing one hit, one run and
Withon~outsophomoreKyleWagnercarne
striking out two.
up to bat and hit a sharp ground ball. DeFranco
The Deacon bats were red hot as both Pryce slid into second trying to beat the throw and
and Wagner went two-for-five on the game. breakup a possible double-play. Wagner beat
Pryce had two doubles and Wagner had one. out the throw to first and was called safe, but
Senior Matt Riggs broke out of his hitting then the second-base umpire made a contraslump to go two-for-four at the plate.
versial called which ended the inning.
Sunday marked the first time the Deacons
The umpire ruled that DeFranco's slide was
played at Ernie Shore Field since 1977, in a intentionally trying to interfere with the secgame that was covered by regional cable ond baseman's throw, this resulted in grantnetwork Home Team Sports. Unfortunately ing the double play and taking away the run
fortheDeaconsthereturnwasnotahappyone which had scored on the hit.
Ni('holas ZachDS :
In the ninth the Deacons were able to mount
as they fell to the Blue Devils 11-8.
Junior Brad Pryce takes a cut at Ernie Shore Field vs. the Duke Blue Devils on Sunday.:
Senior starter Marc Palmieri was called to a comeback, but it was too little, too late.
The ninth got started off two Duke fielding Wake Forest played before a regional television.audience on Home Team Sports. .
duel against undefeated Scott Schoeneweis.
Palmieri (6-3) did not fare well in the first errors,aBretWagnerhit,andatwo-runhitby
inning. Duke rattled Palmieri for five runs on Smith. With oneoutsophomoreJason Kramer
Kyle Wagner hit his first homer in the who made his first collegiate start. Coffey:
five hits, including a double and a homerun. stepped up to the plate and belted out to dead- second inning and drove in another run on a held the 49ers to six hits and two runs. Fresh-· I
He settled down after that allowing only six away center the first grand-slam of the year. sacrifice fly in the sixth. His twin brother Bret man Bobby Rodgers carne in to relieve Coffey:
more hits and two runs before being relieved
Last thursday the Wagner brothers com- hit a two-run homer, his eighth of the year, in with two outs in the eighth. Rodgers allowed'
by DeFranco in the sixth.
bined to score four runs giving the Deacons a the sixth to give the Deacons a 4-0 lead.
two .llits and one run as he closed out the game:
DeFranco once again couldn't baffle the victory over UNC-Charlotte 4-3.
On the mound for the Deacons was C~ffey -· to record his first save.
Three from football team
get drafted, two sign later
day and Monday in New York City.
SPORTS EmTOR
All-American offensive tackle Ben
Coleman went in the second round
The football team reaped the ben- (32) to the Phoenix Cardinals.
efits of an 8-4 season and a bowl win
The 6-foot-6-inch, 310 lb. lineman
when it had three seniors chosen in becomes only the sixth Deacon ever
the annual NFL Draft, held this Sun- to be chosen as high as the second
round, with Norm Snead '61
the only one to go in the first
round. Most recently, two
Deacons went in the second
round of the 1989draft,Mike
. Elkins and David Braxton.
Going in the fifth round
(131) to the Houston Oilers
was tight end John Henry
Mills.
Mills, long a fan favorite,
will try to fit into the highintensity run-and-shoot offense in Houston, where he
will have ample opportunity
to display his three-time AllACC skills.
The Seattle Seahawks
chose defensive end Mike
McCrary in the seventh round
( 170). McCrary has been one
of the leading sack men in
the ACC for four years.
The Deacons also had two
players signed as free agents.
All-ACC defensive back
George Coghill was picked
upbytheNewOrleansSaints,
and joining him in the free
Old Gold and Blacl: file pholo
agent market was defensive
Senior John Henry Mills was one of three end Maurice Miller, the leading tackler for the Deacons
Deacons selected in this year's NFL f;aaft. during his stay here. ·
BY STEVE WELGOSS
'
'
••• •
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agaitJ
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with
A.C.C.
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inent
pi!(ce
·:Ins
liers,
Zawa
seven
. ,injury
_...
m~
'
.
re~ult
W.in tc
.At!
'•
,Men·s;w6inen~s track stars shine at:Penn Relays
,_~peeds;~rs P:~~ake~:JVeper, C!~rk~;~ ;i;ne~an help anchor seco~d~pl{lc~4;~ls¢6:·Yizeter .relay ~earn
:
.. :',: .·, ·~YPRkJSGRA1iAM \ > ' .'
tirn~:of'ls.riti.ii~f~,J5"~:seconds, in
·. Ow'OoU> .\Np B~o; REPO~TI!II· .· • ·.: ·.fro_nl: of almost 40,000 f\lns
cheering
.. ~: ~ ~·- ....:· ;·: :.:~·= .~::~ ·. ·. · .,\·. for the hometownfavoritt!.Villanova.
' , The ·w~rt1eri•s ~ai::k teiirli',J~qR·<;;-.,.' Clarke made up a.3~second differth~field1a~'w¢eJ<end~g~~stS?m< :ence'in the'third leg;~ splitting the'
of the nation's best,athlete.s ·at the:' . Jailtest .800-meter run ·of, the entire
, j>ciln. Relay~:inJ~~ilfic!eipnill.·p~<;meet in):p5.5. ~i~was,~o . an im: ,.spi~e,pQor<w~ther, the;D~<:;o~;;~, ,provement-ove,(he('4.9G.~leading
:' managooto'eomeao/aywith'SQtile'' . time, but will.notcou,ntas:~uch since
·.. unp~s.sive;:s~ore~';: ·: ·.; 0: _ · ; >, .'. '~' itw~ ,achi~ved during' !i r~lay event.
:- .. Oneofthe}).ighlightsoftheineet: o:.'V\flth W:ife Forest going into the
·. w'asttitnedjnbyth~4-x"8()0-meter·: ·fiflal l~g neck-an<i-.neck with
... relay Jeilin,:ofjim\O!-·.Molly Pan: .. Vil~an()va, tlie.Wild~hi.tnnersproved
-:cake; freshli:lai\·.Ghris.Web~r. jlin'-'. . l(bit too strong. · . · · .
·. · 'iorKelly Clarke and 8enior Jeilrii-;: · .."We,finishe!f !Jigher. thari we could
fer Finnegan.
F~res(man- · have:hopedfor(going:intotheevent)"
aged a sec()~4 place firush w,i~l:i.a· Head Coach Francie Goodridge said.
:·'~._.· ' ~ ..::..'-'~.; ...... . ,··.':,~. ~' ,'
,'
...
'
~
'
<
·wat:e
M~ry Pow~ll,ha~· a
,Senior
·good ing,'lGoodrldge said.
showing as well in th~'·J 0,000-meter · : . , Freshman Carrie Buckley show"race.. She placed (hir~ !n the~ College .· e<ised her talents in the c~llege
d,ivision with a time oqs; 17.'36. · , · ·: d[visiori.javelin, throwing for 145
:"This was the highest finish ever. f~t; lOinches. She placed eighth
for her in the Penn," Goodridge said:, inanev~tit in which she holds the
';She·did an excellent job in the ter- school record. . .
·
rible weather.."
.
,
..·, Sophomor~Trina.Biitdel,com- ·.
The other relay event for Wake· 'ing off ·a .big·week (It the A-CC ':
Forest was the 4-by-500. The team. Championships, where she com- .
consisted of Weber, senior ·carrie peted in four events, was given a :
P~wers, Finnegan and Cl~Uke. . ..
ligpterJoad at, the Penn Relays. , :
. The team competed in the champi- · , . She entered tl)e high jump and the
onship division and placed fifth. They · discus butdidnotachieve her usual
had the lead going into' the second leg : scores because .of the weather.
but lost it and could not recover.
Junior Brit Boshamer also com, "We are still pleased with theplac- . peted in ~ediscris. · ·
~.
'(''
' ;···
'·
~ :'
.
l'
· Sophoriwre Aluiy.Bloom dominates shot put; takes first pl~ce while resetting school outdoor record '.,
OLD GC?LD AND .BLACK REPoltrER
;The men's track tea;n went up against its
tougheSt c,ornpetition of, the season.at the Penn
_Relays in.Philadelphia 'last weekend, a ,meet
· which drew almost 40,000 fans. : ·
.
u'fhi$,is~lya~#.tact!lilrevt:!tt.tHeacj. ~ac.h
Johp GQodri~ge srud. '.'For many athletes thts 1s
Iike·i:oinpetingin:the Olympics."
<:Sophomore Andy Bloon,l 01ice again proved
" 'J1fmself against.·some ofthe best athletes in the
, ppuntryJ>y.takingfirst place in the championship
division'inshotput.His throw of59 feet, 6inches
the best in the. field anda new outdoor. school
reconL- .
"We're all very proud of Andy's win,''
Two Deacons saw action in the 5,000-meter
Goodridge said.
·
· ~ --·race. Junior ,Brant Armentrout competed in ~he
Bloom is slated to compete in the NCAA champion:;hipd(yision,whilejuniorDennisHearst
Outdcior Championships in June. He also com- ran in the cpllege division,, ,
; ...
.· .
peted in the college division discus.
,
· .Wak~ Fotest.also entered two relay teams. In
The Deacons had a strong sh~wing in the . the 4-x-800, freshinan Jim Clarke, sophomore
championship division 10,000-meter race also. ~aridy Spuigeori,junior Leon Bullard:and senior
All~American senior John Sence placed seventh. Terry Weik ran 7:~4.2 in the college division. .
.. with a time of 29 minutes, 48:94 seconds, which
. The distance medley relay team was coTI)posed
was an outdoor season-high for Wake Forest.. · , of ClarKe,,Bullard, Weik 'anC:I sophomore Craig
Close behind was junior Kyle Armenqout,' konghurst. They ffuisheMn 10:10.37. .
who placed lOth with a time of 30:0.2.5. Junior. . · Sehlo-r~autSklarranthesteeplechase,anevent
Stuart Burnham was also in the hunt'finishing )r),· · he has been' su!<ce8sful iti this season. He was a .
. 30:4~.92.
' .
:,
: . . . . ,· . little off of his ilsuat tiine at 9:t4. ' ' .. '
.. ·.
Sop~omore Ed Smith fared well in the college ·. ·.. "Ov'erall~· it
a.\i~cy· encom:ag{ng meet," .
division pole va~:~lt at 15-6 1/4. . . :'>" . .. · Goodfidge sai~. . .
. . , · " . ·. . ,. • , ~·
·was.
A
~----------------------------
~~-------------------------------------------
1992-93: a
~Y, APRIL
• Rodney Rogers wins Arnold Palmer Award ·
29, 1993
Senior Rodney Rogers has been awarded the Arnold Palmer Award
~raft~
~s the top male athlete· at Wake Forest University for the secomi time.
· · Rogers led the Deacons to the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament for
~he first time since 1984, and ied the ACC in scoring this season.
..
• Tracy Connor wins Marge Crisp Award
10ut Rodney is that. )
:ver changed. He'll'
mch a great sense of
· · Freshman Tracy Connor was selected to receive the Marge Crisp
· :Awar~·as Wake Forest's top female athlete this year, the first time that
a freshman has ever been honored with this award.
. Connor was among the nation's leading rebounders for most of the
· season,- and wound up as the ACC's leader in boards nabbed.
1ove on, his presence
n to look at Wake
>t celebmte the deci/e're happy for him,
·ing the course of his
and continue to love
: .' • Connor named to U.S. Olympic Festival squad
. · . Connor added to her list of achievements this week by being selected
to play on the 1993 U.S. Olympic Festival South team.
. · She has also been named as a finalist for the juniornational team trials.
solid foundation to
. We'll do it because
.er to compete at ihis
caliber, and getting
·ou can do whatever
u' re willing to work,
· ~ Deacons name new assistant athletic director
.,
make a large impact·'
A next season, ·but
sed to it.
:you can really learn
said. "The first year
to work even harder
· · Athletic Director Ron Wellman has announced that Joel Nielsen will
serve as its new assistant AD for marketing and promotions.
.: B Deacons sign seven recruits for soccer team
. ·. Coach Walt Chyzowych has signed seven new players for next year,
. including two-time Parade All-American goaltender Sal Fontana.
:pared for the NBA.
;said. "Once you get
ng. The pros are just
l stronger. Ijusthave
.
m. "
r·
one of lhe 11 teStms
teams who did n.ot
1 He said this will
is favorite team, but.
Ot.oGowANDBIACK THURSDAY,APRIL29,199313
memorabl~
In my last column for the Old Gold ·JAY REDDICK
and Black, I would like to address one
very special quarter of the student FROM THE F'REsSBOX
body. The rest ofyou are welcome to
· read along.
trip followed, where Wake Forest
won one before falling to Alabama.
Dear Class of 1993,
Last year, the football team finished 3-8 while showing some signs
What a year to be a senior.
As we all suffer through the last of promise, and the basketball team
week of classes and prepare for .the enjoyed another successful camlast exams of our undergraduate ca- paign, beating Duke again on the
reer, I don't know how many of you way to another NCAA Tournament
realize the sports history we have bid and prompting more rushing the
witnessed during the last four years
court and mudslides on the Quad
This is unquestionably the greatest than I ever thought I'd see.
Which brings us to the unexpected
time in the history of Deacon athletics, and we were here to see it begin.. glory of 1992-93. There are certain
As freshmen in 1989-90, we saw athletic moments during 1992-93
· the opening of Joel Coliseum and the which! will never forget.
• Sept. I 2: The football team's win
first season for men's basketball head
coach Dave Odom As we suffered over Appalachian State. For we sethrough losing seasons in football and niors who had only seen eight wins
men's basketball, none of us could in football over the three previous
have had any idea of things to come. . years, any victory was a sweet one,
In 1990-91 cameprobablythegreat- and this last-minute comeback cerest athlete during our time at Wake tainly fit that category.
Forest: Rodney Rogers. Led by Rogers
• Oct. 31: The BIG one. Junior
and fellow freshman Randolph Todd Dixon makes the greatest catch
Childress, along with senior Robert I have ever seen in the corner of the
Siler and juniors C~ris King and An- end zone, and Wake Forest football
thony Tucker, the Deacons rolled to a arrivessudderilyon the national scene
series of improbable victories during with a win over Clemson. It just
the year, including a win over fifth- couldn't have gotten any better.
mnkedDuke. An NCAA Tournament • Nov. 14: Who'd a thunk it? The
· Tennis ends season Rogers
with loss to Virginia From Page 12
year to be a senior
football squad gets their sixth
straight win, this time over Georgia Tech, and clinches a bowl bid.
• Dec. 31: "WesttoBobby Jones
on the reverse... Jones looking to
throw long forToddDixon ...Dixon
on the streak ... DIXON- THE
CATCH! 15, 10, 5 ... TOUCHDOWN! And the Deacons have
taken the lead! Ohhh,doctor!" Mac
MacDonald describes the turning
point in the Deacons' first bowl
victory in 47 years, a 39-35 win
over Oregon
• Jan. 30: The basketball team
crushes arch-rival North Carolina
88-62 as Childress strokes six second-half three-pointers. Fans rush
the court to celebrate the -second
win over UNC in II years.
• Feb. 13: The Deacons beat
Duke for the third year in a row,
this time in their hallowed
Cameron Indoor Stadium, 98-86.
Bobby Hurley said it best: "It was
a balanced effort on their part.
Rodney Rogers kicked our butts in
the first half, and Trelonnie Owens
kicked our butts in the second."
• March 21: "I think Rodney just
knew it was money time, so he
stepped up and cashed in the
checks." Owens said it, and Rogers
did it, scorin<r 13 points and gmb-
---,_CLASSIFIEDS
Rodney Rogers displays the future with
his-first-ever dunk in a Deacon uniform.
bing 10 rebounds to propel Wake Forest
into the Sweet 16 with an 84-78 win over
Iowa.
I would like to thank everybody who
made these moments possible, I'll never
forget you. Go Deacs .
Sincerely,
Jay
r--_;,:"~::·.-.;~,~>:~,..-.,-:--:-.. -.,;-:.-~·=".-._
. ..
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Murren picked up a win for the Rogers said. "Unfortunately for me, they
SASE to: International Inc.,l 356 coney Male or Female. For employment Let's Go! & NY Times.) AIRHITCH®
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The women's tennis team
team at No. 3 singles as she de- made the playoffs. I'll be on one of the teams
Island Ave., Brooklyn, New York program call 1-206-545-4155 ext. 212-864-2000.
en~ed the season Friday with a
feated Ly-Lan Schofield 6-4, 6-4. · that is rebuilding, and hopefully be able to
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, first-round loss to Virginia 5-2 in
At No.4 singles, sophomore Dana turn them around."
$200$500
WEEKLYAssemble
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· MisCELLANEOUS .
.' the ACC Tournament. The loss
Evans defeated Leigh Buchart 6Rogerssaidheisplanningoncomingback
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•ps now 1rmg - ·am
'?'<'l> the second for the Deacons 2, 7-5. In a close match, senior to Wake Forest to gradu!lte.
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Tracy Zawacki closedouthercol' m m greats ape as far as graduation,"
•
an, e c. o 1 ay,
24
: :the Deacons ended the season
legecareerwitha6-7 (5-7), 6-3,6- Rogers said. "There will be a point where I'll
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with a 12-8 record, 5-3 in the
4 loss to Alison Cohen at No.5 think about coming back to (Wake Forest)
.(\:GC. The fourth place (tie) fm:. ~,,singles.SeniorElaineSmith,play- andgettingmyde~.Iwilldothat,because
*EXTRAINCOME''93"*Eaffi$200- employment program call 1-206-634~sJ~ in the ACC was a disappoint- · ing No.6 singles, was defeated by it's something I promised· my mom."
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Whitney Sharp 7-5, 6-4.
Rogers was somber during the press conbrochures. For more infonnation send BABYSIITER NEEDED: At my
pl~ce finish.
In doubles play, only one match ference as he said his goodbyes to teammates
self addressed stamped envelope to: home close to campus (need car). May
· : ~nsingles play against the Cavawas completed. At No.3 doubles, · and coaches.
Travel INC., P.O. Box 2530, Miami, FL 20-June 27. Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and For Sale: Den on AM/FM Tuner/
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"I'd like to thank my teammates for help33161.
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Zawacki returned to play after
Ann Zawacki were defeated 7-6. ing me have a great season," Rogers said.
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but good memories."
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:giate start. Coffey:
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h. Rodgers allowed·
closed out the game:
~lays
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:,;.
;aid.
eBuckley show' in the. college
hrowlngfor 145
placed eighth
ch she holds the
1e
naBindel,com:ek at the ACC
where she comIllS, was given a
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tchieveherusual
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IS.
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oor record .: :'
ARMY ROTC SALUTES OUR SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS.
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the 5,000-meter
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iorDennisHearst
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140LDGOLDANDBLACK THURSDAY,ArRIL29,1993
Tennis reaches ACC semifmals
two sets for Degler to put Hall away
6-3, 6-2.
.
Duke swept the rest of the singles
The men'~' tennis team had its best matches. 20th ranked Chris Pressley
perfom1ance in the ACCTournament defeated senior Christian Guhl6-1, 6~ince 1988 last weekend, advancing
1; senior Lawrence Kiey was dropped
to the semi-final round after defeating by Peter Ayers 6-2, 6-2,; Duke's Willy
fifth seeded Georgia Tech 5-l.
Quest defeated sophomore Quentin
Unfortunately for the Deacons, they Huff in straight sets; junior Jason
faced the Duke powerhouse in their Marler was shot down by 57th ranked
1irst appearance in the semifinals in Jason Rayman; and Jordan Murray
1i ve years and were defeated 6-1. The slipped past junior ScottAthey6-l, 7Deacons ended their season by post- 6,7-4.
ing a record of 12 wins, 5 losses.
In doubles play, Deglerteamed with
Wake Forest was simply Guhl to produce a victory over Hall
outmatched in their second contest and Pressley 8-2, but Duke took the
with the Blue Devils.
other two doubles matches to earn the
Duke, ranked tifth in the country, team point as Ayers and Chess deeasily defeated the Deacons with a feated high-school teammates Athey
:;quad including three nationally and Marler 8-3 and Philippe Moggio
ranked players.
and Quest dropped Huff and freshHowever, the Deacons' perfor- man Suraj Batheja 8-2.
mance was highlighted by the play of
The Deacons had an easier time in
senior Siegmar Degler.
the first round ofthe tournament, takFor the second time this season, ing on an ailing Georgia Tech squad.
Degler has downed Duke's No. I
The second matchup of the season
player, David Hall, who is currently between the two teams proved not to
ranked 15th in the nation. It only took be nearly as close as the first. The
BY
C\ Yn:
BUTLER
Ass!SlA:'-fl Sro~trs EDITOR
.DeaconS bad squeezed by the Ye11ow
Jackets i.n March 4-3, but with Georgia Tech missing their No. 1 player
Rob Givone, the ACC co-champion
at his seed, and their No. 4 singles
player Mark Ottinger, Wake Forest
defeated Georgia Tech with ease.
Georgia Tech took their only team
point in doublesp1ay. Degler and Guhl
fell to the combination of Scott Cotton and Joe Nickels 8-4, Ottinger and
Zubin Sarkary were victorious over
Athey and Marler 8-6, and the match
betweenBathejaandHuffandMiguel
Martinez. and Jay Nerenberg was retired Ill 0-'·
The Deacons then took control in
the singles matches, winning evey
contest. Degler defeated Nerenberg
6-1, 6-4, Kiey beat Nickels in straight
sets 6-4, 6-3 at the third position, Huff
dropped Mike Berlin 6-4,6-3, Tech's
Martinez fell to Marler 6-4, 6-4, and
Athey handed Sarkary a loss by a
match score of 6-3, 6-1. Because the
match was already clinched for the
Deacons, the contest between Guhl
and Cotton was not completed.
The
MIDNIGHT
BREAKFAST
,, ..
~·
'
t
,,.,
.;1:
••
Strikes ,Again
1
• Baseball
Marc Palmieri, WFU
ACC Standings
Team
Conf.
w L
N.C. State
14 5
Georgia Tech 11 5
Florida State 11 6
UNC
11 9
Duke
9
9
Clemson
9
10
Wake Forest 9
10
15
Maryland
4
Virginia
5
14
~
Brett Binldey, GT
David Allen, NCS
Thad Chrismon, UNC
Bret Wagner, WFU
Overall
w L
38 3
35 8
35 11
27 14
35 13
32 14
27 15
16 22
16 25
Comgletg Games
Paul Wilson, FSU
Shawn Senior, NCS
Phil Harrell, Duke
13
11
10
8
Dou!;!les Per ~2-IDS!
David Hedgecoe, WFU
Scott Pinoni, Duke
Ryal) Jackson, Duke
Mike Hampton, Clem.
Matt Riggs, WFU
91
91
88
79
79
75
Home R!.!Dll Per Glilme
Pat Clougherty, NCS
Cookie Massey, UNC
Chris Cox, UNC
Jason Varitex, GT
6
5
4
.22
.21
Pat Clougherty, NC
Jason Varitek, GT ·
KeHh Williams, Clem.
Cookie Massey, UNC
Ryan Jackson, Duke
Chris Cox, UNC
Bret Wagner, WFU
Jay Payton, GT
Chris Madonna, UNC
Scott Pinoni, Duke
Riggs and Pryce, WFU
17
12
12
11
11
10
9
9
8
7
7
. ___
-
•This Week
96
96
.26
.23
Home Runs
Innings Pill;hgg
Paul Wilson, FSU
90.1
Scott Schoenewweis, Duke 88.2
Terry Harvey, NCS
81.1
Ross Atkins, WFU
80.2
Derek Manning, UNC
79.2
John Wasdin, FSU
79.1
Jonathan Johnson, FSU
77.2
Shawn Senior, NCS
74.1
Marc Palmieri, WFU
-72.2
ACC Statistics
Strikeouts
Brad Rigby, GT
John Wasdin, FSU
Shawn Se.nior, NCS
Scott Schoeneweis, Duke
Johathan Johnson, FSU
Buck Hall, GT
Paul Wilson, FSU
Ross Atkins, WFU
Keith Williams, Clem.
Bret Wagner, WFU
Ryan Jackson, Duke
Chris Madonna, UNC
3
.38
.35
.33
.33
.29
.37
.28
.28
Thursday:
Baseball at Georgia Tech
?p.m.
Friday:
Baseball at Georgia Tech
7p.m.
Saturday:
S<is~~ll. at Geqrgi~ Tech
.!28
2p:m.
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Take a break
from exam
studies.Breakfast (all·
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$3.50) will be
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Pit ·by Facuity
and
Administrators
from.9:30·
11:00 p.m.,
Wednesday the
5th of May.
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