ld old and lack - wakespace scholarship€¦ · bett said. the white house staff used the building...

10
LD OLD AND LACK Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem North Carolina Fiiday, February 20, 198't SG Panel Holds Second Hearing Duscusses Minority Recruitment By HARRIET CHAPMAN AssiS1ant News EdiiOr The Student Government Presi- dent's Select Commission on Race Relations held ·its second open hearing Wednesday evening in Reynolda Hall. 'Ibpics discussed in- cluded minority recruitment for faculty, administration and students and improvements in intemacial student relations. You Be CbiiJin' Sam Gnell'lllllld Commission member Anthony Chavis opened the hearing by in- troducing Charles Richman, pro- fessor of psychology. Prior to Richman's comments, commission Wmston-Salem 'suffers its second winter storm in a many months as two to three inches of sleet and snow fell on the city. However, the - was soon back to normal as the temperature was back in the forties by yesterday afternoon. _ . Four. Top Officials Cancel Tuesday Classes · member Steve Mayo stated, "Our pwpose is· to promote mutual understanding and mutual sensitivi- ty and comlnunication between the races." he said, media generally do not carry com- said that some of his colleagues do remember Richman: began his remarks by plicated cancellation information. "We thought a cancellation. "There have been several close stating that racism exists in all cor- SCOIT PREIORIUS it would be a good idea to go ahead and make calls," said Wilson. . . ners of the world. He said, "The Provost Edwin G. Wilson said that four that decision [to cancel]." Wilson said. Harold Moore, the director of the physical primary driving force for war and members of the executiv:e council "got together "We felt that there was a degree of danger in- plant, said that he thought that roads and hostility among people is Monday afternoon and surveyed the weather volved;' Wilson said. ''We were motivated main- walkways were cleared more quickly during this racism. . . . Racism is vicious and situation" before deciding to cancel classes for ly by the fine layer· of ice coming down on snowstorm than during January's storm. "Our irrational. We at Wake Forest are Feb. 17. . everything, and knew there would be no time procedure was not different. You can handle a microcosm of its [racism's] ex- ; John Anderson, vice-president for administra- for that to thaw. three inches easier than 12. We were able to get istence." tion and planning, Leon H .. Corbett, vice- Wilson said that the decision to cancel classes more people here." Richman mentioned as one of the president for legal affirirs, John Williard, vice- "probably was" influenced by objections receiv- · Peggy Burr, director of nli.rsing at the univer- positive things on campus the met president and treasurer, and Wtlson made the ed following the 15-inch snowstorm earlier this sity health service, said that there were "approx- that years ago the dean had organiz- decision. President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. was semester, when classes were held. He noted, imately four" fulls and sprains related to the ed a team on minority recruitment. in Athmta ¥ond8:y. though, that "There were more objections this snow. That was fewer than during the January faculty." He said that the commit- Two to three inches of snow and ice pellets time." Some professors, Wilson said, were con- snowstorm, Burr said. tee met for approximately two aecun'Julated in the Wmston-Salem area during cerned about missing a day of classes. Moore said that physical plant had one addi- years. the sno'Wstorm of Feb. 16 ·and 17. · "I think anybody could second-guess either tional piece of road equipment this time, gain- The administration has provided ,. · · ·wa that _the administrators considered decision:• Wilson said. · ed by attaching a snaw blade on a truck. PhysiC!ll monies for the recruitment of black . bas J<:orest ·m recellt history, but · smaller scrapers, Moore said. · and a few years·ago Casa Artom Now ,Property By SCOTI PRE'IDRIUS News EdiiOr The president of Italy recently signed a decree ·acknowledging '\\hlce Forest as the sole and legal owner of Casa Artom, the university's residential study center on the Grand Canal in Venice, according to Leon H. Corbett, the vice president for legal affairs. "Italian governmental processes can take a long time," Corbett said. The building is an historic pro- Corbt:.tt said, so there were numerous restric- tions on its transfer. Corbett said, "The fact is that it (the finalized sale) was registered the same day the announcement about __ the RJR building was made. Of tourse, we didn't know about it for several days." . . agreement was ever reached between Wake Forest and the State Department regarding use of office space. "We're in the process of working out the agreement the act calls for:· Corbett said. The white house staff will use the building this summer as a communica- tions center during a presidential visit to Italy, Cor- bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic summit in Italy. Built in 1946 as a home, the house was.bought by the U.S. government in 1952 but was abandoned as a c:Onsulate in the late 1960s. banned the use of segregated facilities . on campus. "Our problem is recruiting black students and black faculty and black administrators:· Richman said. He said that the serious over- riding problem is the general at- titude in the community and he presented, as an example, the display. of the Confederate flag by some social organizations. Richman declared: "For me as an. adult the Confederate flag sym- bolized one thing - it symbolized racism. There is no mistake about it . . . . When people show these symbols we cannot provide a home for them. Find another place to house your liate." Another problem Richman noted was that Wake Forest has not hired a black oounsellor in the counsel- ing center when it had the chan!!e. He also said: "We need more black professors as much or more for white students than black students. Many white students come from in- sulated communities. Six black professors out of 223 is pathetic. One black administrator out of 56 is ridiculous." · Richman concluded his remarks by. "We can begin by set- ting some goals. . . . We need direction and the goals set to move us in that direction." The forum was then officially· opened for free discussion, and Eure said: "Wake Forest students have not been willing to take any .. m.8eewhat, PaRe 7 , Under the original terms of sale, Corbett said, the :State Department was to have retained the right to use some office spar.:e in Casa Artom. However, no final Graham Martin, who was the U.S. ambassador to Italy and an alumnus of Wake Forest, arranged in 1971 for the university to lease the building for $1 a year. When pressure to sell the building rose.in 1974, Mar- tin helped to arrange for Wake Forest to buy it for $250,000. The sale was mandated by a unanimous vote of Congress. Casa Artom, Wake Forest's house in Venice, was officiaRy signed over to the University on the :0"': day RJR-Nabisco donated their headquarters. Anderson Discusses RJR Building With . . . By ERIC HUNSLEY Old Gold and Black Senior Reporter • Deacons 1 End Losing Streak Women upset.13th ranked N.C. State for first· time since 1976. See page B. John Anderson, vice president for administration and planning, spoke to Wednesday night in Thy lor Lounge about the RJR Corporate Headquarters Building, which was donated to Wake Forest Univer- sity Jan. 16. portunity unlike any before in his work at Wake Forest, Anderson said, "In terms of specific projects, it's the most interesting one." He saw the project as a more difficult task, however, than most others. Anderson and Leon H. Corbett Jr., secretary to the university and trustees, are pursuing three alternatives for using the building. Anderson first mentioned the leasing of the entire building to one, two or three ma- jor corporations as a possibility. Anderson and Cor- bett met in Washington, D.C. last week and intend to meet in New York soon to discuss with brokers how viable the option is to lease, and whether it makes sense to do so. "It would take a great deal of moving," he said. The third option for using the building is to make an outright sale of the property. Anderson opened the meeting with a slide presen- tation, during which he gave statistics about the building while conducting a visual tour through the head- quarters. Many of the slides showed pieces from the RJR-Nabisco art collection, much of which will be taken to Atlanta with the corpordtion when it moves. The title of the building will pass to Wake Forest March 15. • Weather Today: Increasing Cloudiness. High: mld-40s. Organized by Thylor assistant hall director Alan White, the meeting an informative setting where students could ask questions about the future of the building. Saturday: Chance of Rain. Anderson said the administration was still in the first of two steps toward making use of the building. That first step, he said, was "to determine all feasible uses of the building." After that is done, they will see to it that the chosen use is implemented. The second option Anderson presented for the use of the building was to lease part of it and put the law and business schools in the other part. He said, however, that much effort would be needed to renovate the present office space to accommodate classrooms. "RJR-Nabisco has agreed to take the art they want and leave the rest for Wake Forest, which is very generous," Anderson said. High: 40s. . Sunday: Partly Cloudy. High: 40s. When asked whether he viewed the gift as an op- Access to the building, in addition to the main en- trance at the front of the building, is found in three arched entrances at the rear of the building, which each open up into separate lobbies with four elevators. . Fourth Tocqueville Forum Speaker Says Constitution is Flexible -. The interpretation of the United States Con- : stitution is a creative process that allows . citizens to adopt the document to their chang- ing notions and to reformulate their identity as the American people, according to Walter Murphy, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University. Murphy addressed the question of "What . is a Constitution?" Monday night as part of the Tocqueville Forum. The American Constitution is the "constitu- . tion of a people," said Murphy, "not of a government." He added that people are ''prior to government" and that although "society and government may recognize rights (citizens) have, they don't give them" to the people. American people, said Murphy, cannot claim a common language, heritage, or ethnic background. The Constitution is so central to our nation because it establishes our iden- tification "by a common political spirit." Murphy defined the American Constitution as a "charter for self-government" as well as a provision for the protection of fundanien- tal rights such as human dignity, freedom, and autonomy. Murphy praised the constitutional framers for using "concepts rather than conceptions." By utilizing such language as "unreasonable searches and seizures" and "cruel and unusual punishment," Murphy said, the founders assured that the Constitution could be inter- preted in light of the changing values of society. Murphy claimed that the current debate bet- ween Edwin Meese and William Brennan demonstrates that the problem of constitu- tional interpretation revolves around the more central question of what the constitution is. Brennan, Murphy said, understands the Constitution to be a procedural document, evolving with the spirit of the times, that em- bodies the will of the people. Meese, however, believes that the document should be read and studied to discover the intent of the founders. Murphy said that his own attitude is one of "light skepticism" about the possibility of interpreters ever finding "a correct answer" regarding the intent of the constitutional framers. He argued that "finality is not the language of politics." The "interpreting, changing, and correcting" of the Constitution should be a process which defines "what we are and where we want to be" as a people. In celebration of the 200th year of our Con- stitution, Murphy said, Americans should not merely "congratulate themselves but should find out how and why (the Constitution) is a great document." ' ' . ' . ' . < ' ·, ' ' ';;, : • i ' /. .. ' ' I ! . ; '.

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Page 1: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

LD OLD AND LACK Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem North Carolina Fiiday, February 20, 198't

SG Panel Holds Second Hearing Duscusses Minority Recruitment

By HARRIET CHAPMAN AssiS1ant News EdiiOr

The Student Government Presi­dent's Select Commission on Race Relations held ·its second open hearing Wednesday evening in Reynolda Hall. 'Ibpics discussed in­cluded minority recruitment for faculty, administration and students and improvements in intemacial student relations.

You Be CbiiJin' Sam Gnell'lllllld Commission member Anthony Chavis opened the hearing by in­troducing Charles Richman, pro­fessor of psychology. Prior to Richman's comments, commission

Wmston-Salem 'suffers its second winter storm in a many months as two to three inches of sleet and snow fell on the city. However, the -~ther was soon back to normal as the temperature was back in the forties by yesterday afternoon. _ .

Four. Top Officials Cancel Tuesday Classes · member Steve Mayo stated, "Our pwpose is· to promote mutual understanding and mutual sensitivi­ty and comlnunication between the races."

he said, media generally do not carry com- said that some of his colleagues do remember Richman: began his remarks by plicated cancellation information. "We thought a cancellation. "There have been several close stating that racism exists in all cor-

~;.. SCOIT PREIORIUS

it would be a good idea to go ahead and make calls," said Wilson. . . ners of the world. He said, "The Provost Edwin G. Wilson said that four that decision [to cancel]." Wilson said. Harold Moore, the director of the physical primary driving force for war and

members of the executiv:e council "got together "We felt that there was a degree of danger in- plant, said that he thought that roads and hostility among people is Monday afternoon and surveyed the weather volved;' Wilson said. ''We were motivated main- walkways were cleared more quickly during this racism. . . . Racism is vicious and situation" before deciding to cancel classes for ly by the fine layer· of ice coming down on snowstorm than during January's storm. "Our irrational. We at Wake Forest are Feb. 17. . everything, and knew there would be no time procedure was not different. You can handle a microcosm of its [racism's] ex-; John Anderson, vice-president for administra- for that to thaw. three inches easier than 12. We were able to get istence." tion and planning, Leon H .. Corbett, vice- Wilson said that the decision to cancel classes more people here." Richman mentioned as one of the president for legal affirirs, John Williard, vice- "probably was" influenced by objections receiv- · Peggy Burr, director of nli.rsing at the univer- positive things on campus the met president and treasurer, and Wtlson made the ed following the 15-inch snowstorm earlier this sity health service, said that there were "approx- that years ago the dean had organiz-decision. President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. was semester, when classes were held. He noted, imately four" fulls and sprains related to the ed a team on minority recruitment. in Athmta ¥ond8:y. though, that "There were more objections this snow. That was fewer than during the January faculty." He said that the commit-

Two to three inches of snow and ice pellets time." Some professors, Wilson said, were con- snowstorm, Burr said. tee met for approximately two aecun'Julated in the Wmston-Salem area during cerned about missing a day of classes. Moore said that physical plant had one addi- years. the sno'Wstorm of Feb. 16 ·and 17. · "I think anybody could second-guess either tional piece of road equipment this time, gain- The administration has provided ,. · · ·wa that _the administrators considered decision:• Wilson said. · ed by attaching a snaw blade on a truck. PhysiC!ll monies for the recruitment of black

clas~·iCSfor'ju~tfiootisiudentn:ndmcalty--:<- :WJlsQiuai~:~~·he ~id;~tr:e~~~~,Wake . p~t bas ~~~~~~~.,,xrwmbers, Ric~ ~d, J<:orest ~ancelmg cJa~se~ ·m recellt history, but · smaller scrapers, Moore said. · and a few years·ago dle~tiillvetSify'

Casa Artom Now 'W~U ,Property By SCOTI PRE'IDRIUS News EdiiOr

The president of Italy recently signed a decree ·acknowledging '\\hlce Forest as the sole and legal owner of Casa Artom, the university's residential study center on the Grand Canal in Venice, according to Leon H. Corbett, the vice president for legal affairs.

"Italian governmental processes can take a long time," Corbett said. The building is an historic pro­~rty, Corbt:.tt said, so there were numerous restric­tions on its transfer.

Corbett said, "The fact is that it (the finalized sale) was registered the same day the announcement about

__ the RJR building was made. Of tourse, we didn't know about it for several days." . .

agreement was ever reached between Wake Forest and the State Department regarding use of office space.

"We're in the process of working out the agreement the act calls for:· Corbett said. The white house staff will use the building this summer as a communica­tions center during a presidential visit to Italy, Cor­bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic summit in Italy.

Built in 1946 as a home, the house was.bought by the U.S. government in 1952 but was abandoned as a c:Onsulate in the late 1960s.

banned the use of segregated facilities . on campus.

"Our problem is recruiting black students and black faculty and black administrators:· Richman said. He said that the serious over­riding problem is the general at­titude in the community and he presented, as an example, the display. of the Confederate flag by some social organizations. Richman declared: "For me as an. adult the Confederate flag sym­bolized one thing - it symbolized racism. There is no mistake about it. . . . When people show these symbols we cannot provide a home for them. Find another place to house your liate."

Another problem Richman noted was that Wake Forest has not hired a black oounsellor in the counsel­ing center when it had the chan!!e. He also said: "We need more black professors as much or more for white students than black students. Many white students come from in­sulated communities. Six black professors out of 223 is pathetic. One black administrator out of 56 is ridiculous." ·

Richman concluded his remarks by. ~ing, "We can begin by set­ting some goals. . . . We need direction and the goals set to move us in that direction."

The forum was then officially· opened for free discussion, and Eure said: "Wake Forest students have not been willing to take any ~W~ wa.jt,~:qn.d .. m.8eewhat, ~ ~ce, PaRe 7 ,

Under the original terms of sale, Corbett said, the :State Department was to have retained the right to use some office spar.:e in Casa Artom. However, no final

Graham Martin, who was the U.S. ambassador to Italy and an alumnus of Wake Forest, arranged in 1971 for the university to lease the building for $1 a year. When pressure to sell the building rose.in 1974, Mar­tin helped to arrange for Wake Forest to buy it for $250,000. The sale was mandated by a unanimous vote of Congress.

Casa Artom, Wake Forest's house in Venice, was officiaRy signed over to the University on the :0"': day RJR-Nabisco donated their headquarters.

Anderson Discusses RJR Building With Student~ . . .

By ERIC HUNSLEY Old Gold and Black Senior Reporter

• Deacons 1End Losing Streak Women upset.13th ranked N.C. State for first· time since 1976. See page B.

John Anderson, vice president for administration and planning, spoke to stude~ts Wednesday night in Thy lor Lounge about the RJR Corporate Headquarters Building, which was donated to Wake Forest Univer­sity Jan. 16.

portunity unlike any before in his work at Wake Forest, Anderson said, "In terms of specific projects, it's the most interesting one." He saw the project as a more difficult task, however, than most others.

Anderson and Leon H. Corbett Jr., secretary to the university and trustees, are pursuing three alternatives for using the building. Anderson first mentioned the leasing of the entire building to one, two or three ma­jor corporations as a possibility. Anderson and Cor­bett met in Washington, D.C. last week and intend to meet in New York soon to discuss with brokers how viable the option is to lease, and whether it makes sense to do so.

"It would take a great deal of moving," he said. The third option for using the building is to make

an outright sale of the property. Anderson opened the meeting with a slide presen­

tation, during which he gave statistics about the building while conducting a visual tour through the head­quarters. Many of the slides showed pieces from the RJR-Nabisco art collection, much of which will be taken to Atlanta with the corpordtion when it moves. The title of the building will pass to Wake Forest March 15.

• Weather Today: Increasing

Cloudiness. High: mld-40s.

Organized by Thylor assistant hall director Alan White, the meeting ~s an informative setting where students could ask questions about the future of the building.

Saturday: Chance of Rain. Anderson said the administration was still in the first

of two steps toward making use of the building. That first step, he said, was "to determine all feasible uses of the building." After that is done, they will see to it that the chosen use is implemented.

The second option Anderson presented for the use of the building was to lease part of it and put the law and business schools in the other part. He said, however, that much effort would be needed to renovate the present office space to accommodate classrooms .

"RJR-Nabisco has agreed to take the art they want and leave the rest for Wake Forest, which is very generous," Anderson said.

High: 40s. . Sunday: Partly Cloudy.

High: 40s. When asked whether he viewed the gift as an op-

Access to the building, in addition to the main en­trance at the front of the building, is found in three arched entrances at the rear of the building, which each open up into separate lobbies with four elevators.

. Fourth Tocqueville Forum Speaker Says Constitution is Flexible

-. The interpretation of the United States Con­: stitution is a creative process that allows . citizens to adopt the document to their chang-

ing notions and to reformulate their identity as the American people, according to Walter Murphy, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton University.

Murphy addressed the question of "What . is a Constitution?" Monday night as part of the Tocqueville Forum.

The American Constitution is the "constitu­. tion of a people," said Murphy, "not of a

government." He added that people are ''prior

to government" and that although "society and government may recognize rights (citizens) have, they don't give them" to the people.

American people, said Murphy, cannot claim a common language, heritage, or ethnic background. The Constitution is so central to our nation because it establishes our iden­tification "by a common political spirit."

Murphy defined the American Constitution as a "charter for self-government" as well as a provision for the protection of fundanien­tal rights such as human dignity, freedom, and autonomy.

Murphy praised the constitutional framers for using "concepts rather than conceptions."

By utilizing such language as "unreasonable searches and seizures" and "cruel and unusual punishment," Murphy said, the founders assured that the Constitution could be inter­preted in light of the changing values of society.

Murphy claimed that the current debate bet­ween Edwin Meese and William Brennan demonstrates that the problem of constitu­tional interpretation revolves around the more central question of what the constitution is.

Brennan, Murphy said, understands the Constitution to be a procedural document, evolving with the spirit of the times, that em­bodies the will of the people. Meese, however, believes that the document should be read and

studied to discover the intent of the founders.

Murphy said that his own attitude is one of "light skepticism" about the possibility of interpreters ever finding "a correct answer" regarding the intent of the constitutional framers. He argued that "finality is not the language of politics." The "interpreting, changing, and correcting" of the Constitution should be a process which defines "what we are and where we want to be" as a people.

In celebration of the 200th year of our Con­stitution, Murphy said, Americans should not merely "congratulate themselves but should find out how and why (the Constitution) is a great document."

' ' . ' . ' . ~I <

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• i ' /. .. '

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Page 2: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

: 2 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987

Summer Study Grants Awarded - Staff Report

• ·staff Ropon been taught this year by visiting professor Janak Pandey.

Williams said he may attend a special workshop at the East-West center in Hawaii that deals with develop-

The international studies office has awarded sum- ment of cross-cultural courses. H~ever, he said he mer grants to three members of the Wlke Forestmculty: plans to do the bulk of his course preparation here at Wulie Pearson, associate professor of sociology; John Wake Forest. Williams hopes to teach the class for the Wuliams, professor and chairman of the psychology first time in the spring of 1988. department; and Alan Williams, associate professor of Alan Williams will make use of his grant to travel history. · and study extensively in Asia. He intends to gather

The awards for $2500 each, plus travel funds, are firsthand impressions and insights into the cultures of made possible under the terms of the $487,000 Pew China, Japan and India. Willi!lllls will use these im­Grant that Wake Forest received last summer. Richard pressions, Sears said, to strengthen the non-Western Sears, coordinator of international studies, said the components of History 101 and 102. grants will enable the faculty members to add interna- According to Sears, the Pew Grant was given to the

. tional_ components to the courses they are now teaching university, "to, strenghthen international studies at wake : or to develop new courses. · . Forest, with some emphasis given to non-Western : Pearson said he will use his award to add a cross- studies." In addition to the summer grant program, : cultural unit to his course "Sociology of the Family", Sears said, the Pew Grant provides opportunities for ' which will focus on the Chinese, Japanese and Soviet other international studies. ALL wE WA~ TO DO IS DANCE ' - ' . : sam GftenwOOd

; ~:rn w~~ will use his award to prepare to teach fo~;:a~=~a~v~! ~~~;e!~t~e: These members of the Wlke Fo~ Pe~o~ nari~ C~m~ itre. practiclug ~or thek spring'pedo~ · the course "Cross Cultural Psychology", which has develop proposals for the summer of 1988. mances. The performances are scheduled for April 23-25.. · · ·

Politics Honor Society Competes, Wins Award

Speech Choir Presents Stoly of Blacks Jn Ain~rica . ' . . . ' ' .

By CYNTHIA WILLIAMS Old Gold and Black Roporll:r

and the story of Martin Luther King Jr., the program was the second event of Black History Month.

Hughe8, Countee Cullen and Niktrl- all over Mobile and h:i': mw~l~ Giovanni wet:e ·included ·in the tO several otlllir statesi . · program. . . . . Michell~ ·conner, ~ority aC:l- < •

··:-.. ::

By BAR1' GANZEKI' Old Gold and Bla<:k Rq!oner

Wake Forest's chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, the national politics

. · honor society, recently won a $1,000 award in a competition held by the society's national organization. The money will be used to hold a mock constitutional convention.

Terri Johnson headed a group of students - members of the politics club and Pi Sigma Alpha - that fonnulated the idea for the convention and submitted the pro­posal last fall for the competition.

Carl Moses, professor of politics and Pi Sigma Alpha ad­visor, said that he was notified Feb. 3 that the proposal had won the prize. .

Moses said that the competition offers two prizes of up to $750 each year from entries sent in

. from around the nation. This year, in observance of the bicentennial of the United States Constitution, Pi Sigma Alpha awarded two ad­ditional prizes of $1000 to its member chapters.

The opportunity to hold a con­vention, Moses said, is a wonder­ful chance to educate students on convention matters and constitu­tional issues.

Pi Sigma Alpha and the politics . club plan to hold their convention

The Zion Images Speech Choir , The program used several dif-presented Feb. 14 a program entitl- · ferent artistic mediums. Choral ed "From Slavery to Freedom: A speaking to the works of Vaschal Documentary in Song, Dance, Pro- Lindsay and James Weldon se, and Poetry", which told the Johnson, interpretative movement story of the black man in America. to the music of Stevie Wonder,

· The d.irector of the group, Lula .missions co'w_lsel9r, said the perfor­G. Williams narra~ the program · ·mance .was ~llent and very rich: and portrayed the. life of Harriet--- She also expressed disappoinment Tubman, .conduct()t of the that more people were no~ there to Underground: Railroad. see it. . . • · · · . The group, sponsored· by Big . Williams said ~at·. the group

Beginning with slavery and con- Mahalia Jackson, and the Howard tinuing through the abolitionist Roberts Chorale, and individwil period, the Harlem renaissance, poetry recitations of Langston

Zion A.M;E.Z. Chun:b of Mobile, plans to continue sharing their story Alabama, consists of 17 youths ag- through additional research into ed 10 to 21. They have performed black history. .

Colleges, States May Adopt Prepaid Tuition. Plan · · Parents pay· a lump sum of money, perhaps

$500, to a college fund when their child is very young. The state treasury manages the fund and

Since Jan. 5 legislators in seven states have invests the money, which earns futerest. In proposed creative new programs to let parents theory, the interest will multiply into enough enroll their children in college years in advance. money during 15 to 18 years to pay for tuition

during the week of April13. The The programs vary in detail, but the idea is to by the time the child gets to college. convention will open with a let parents prepay tuition for their children up Parents get a guarantee that they will not have keynote speaker that evening, and· to 18 years before the students get to college. to pay more in tuition even if prices rise; neither will include two-hour daily ses- Though as many as 60 private, generally will they have to pay taxes on the interest money sions April 14, 15 and 16 in small, campuses have adopted such programs their lump sum investments earn through the DeThmble auditorium, Moses since 1984, in recent weeks whole states have years. said. moved toward applying them to vast public col- "It's like buying a service contract on an ap-

Pi Sigma Alpha has invited lege systems. pliance," explained Robert Kolt of Michigan's author and former Committee on Michigan adopted a prepaid tuition plan two Treasury department. ~'You might pay $50 to-Constitutional Convention months ago. Now Florida, IDinois, Indiana, day for what may be $200 worth of service in member James Sundquist to Maryland, Missouri, Pennsylvania and Texas the future." deliver the keynote speech. Moses lawmakers have jumped on the still-untested In Michigan's program - called BEST (Bac-said that Sundquist has not yet idea. As many as 35 others have expressed in- calaureate Education System Trust) - parents committed. terest in it. of a 5-year-old child today would pay $3,484 to

Moses also added that the con- Some financial advisors are unwilling to en- the fund. By 2005, when the child wil!lld be a vention was open to all students. dorse it, while still others voice dismay about freshman, that money will have multiplied into Application procedures for ob- it. They argue that the programs may be risky enough to pay tuition at one of the state's

.. taining a seat will be.di.&c~ssed.at.. _,for. students,. par.eilts· and ·even~ tJ,le states Jh~t: -~!!,~~~:. ·'' · · . future committee meetings. finance them. • - · · · · · · · KOlt Sa1a ~t.the plan will help ·~middle-class

By LISA JEAN SILVA CoUegc Press Service

should you~ tuition wh~m 10 or ~.years down the road· your kid might decide not to go to col-

. lege?'.' · · , The Internal Revenue Service, moreover, has

not approved the plans yet. If the plans are not . approved;· parents would have to pay :fi:deral taxes on the difference between the money they originally Divested and the higher amount of tui­tion it eventually would buy.

Colleges don't absolutely guarantee they will admit the students 1~r. If they choose not to, they will tef\md the.original amount and keep the profits .it earned in the years since, orlet the student use the guarantee for anoj:her school.

Some financial aid administnJtors, including Katharine H .. Hanson of the Co!lSQrtium. on Financing Higher Education, wrry that fiunili.es will overburden themselves making · total payments . while the programs·. could force students .to forfeit financial ai~ later.

Harry Sladich of Gonzaga · University in Spokane, Washington, does not think anyone would have to forfeit aid,.~ut he Wo_rrj.es a~ut "the pressure on the admissions office down the road" to admit.prepaid,but.borderline students. ·­·- "Like with any investment, there is some and lower-in~me workers," even if they have L..------------------------.J risk," said Ralph Hodel of the Illinois Board of to borrow the money to pay now. ·

Higher Education, which expects to adopt a But there are risks. _ Senior· Class Begins Its .; 'ffl College Fund Drive

Critics alsri point out that college programs can deteriorate through tiine, -meaning pi}ents who thought they were paying for a good liberal arts education program might find a poor o~.e

,;;:

:; Staff Report .;·

~

•· The senior class kicked off their .. · ~ annual college fund campaign Feb ·' ll. This campaign asks each student

who is graduating in the year 1987 (May, August or December) to

. . make a three-year pledge, of an • amount decided by the individual, , to the fund.

Michelle Bodley, co-chairperson, said, "Participation from as many seniors as possible is what we are

:: really after." .· Participating and sending a check

:· to the office of alumni activities :: every year allows the office to keep :; track of young graduates who :; undergo numerous job and address :;: changes. This is important because ::; it makes it possible for the office :~ of alumni activities to organize ::; alumni functions and to send the n• Wake Forest magazine to those who ' .

._

·­.. ,. ·­.. .. ·-

·., ~:

" ~, -•. ...

are most interested. Greg Warren, co-chairperson,

said, "The power of the campaign lies in the fact that students are working with students." Seniors chosen as class agents have been contacting the members of the class of '87 since the campaign began, and they will continue to do so until it ends Feb. 26.

The college fund, to which the campaign money goes, is an unrestricted fund. This means the money can go where the need is greatest. ·

The administration has already targeted three main areas of need for the next few years: increase of financial aid and scholarship, the construction of the student ac­tivities center, and increase in the salaries of junior professors to at- · tract the top young teachers to Wc!ke Forest and reward those who are already here.

"· ~ . .. ...: Dr. Richard Groves, Pastor ... .... ..

'""• "\.

""' .... 'lr· #+ ~~

'-· ~

~ :t .,;. ~­~~ • . .._ ·..; .... _-.• '"

Rev. Vicki Tamer, Associate Pastor

Sunday .. School 10:00 a.m. · 110 Wingate

Worship 11:00 a.m. Wait Chapel - .- ' • i

prepaid tuition plan of its own by April 1. Deanna Malone, of Merrill Lynch Co., is un-Here is how a state college program would sure whether the program is a good investment.

work: Her brokers, she said, might say, "No way. Why 18 years later.

Education Professor to Lead WFU Tour of Orient By EUGENIA MEIMARIDIS Old Gold and Black Rq!oner

ly by introducing them to cultures unlike their own.

it is likely that the country will be included in the tour next year.

During the tour, students will travel extensively John H. Litcher, professor of education, will in the Peoples Republic of China, North Korea,

lead the first Wake Forest tour to the Orient this · South Korea and Manchuria. The group will also summer. The trip will last three weeks in July visit Hong Kong, Macao and the demilitarized and can be taken by itself or as part of a four zone between North and South Korea.

Litcher strongly supports the Vhke Forest pro­grams in Europe and hopes that this Orient tour will expose students to cultures and peoples of the ever-growing non-Western world.

credit class. Litcher feels that the Orient will be well- The total cost for the tour will be $2,500 for transportation costs, hotels and breakfasts. Anyone interested should contact Litcher in Tiib­ble C-103 by March 6.

Litcher studied in China in 1978 and said that, presented by this tour, since most of the travel with the recent emphasis on the non-Western will be by train and sea. Although participants world, this program will benefit students great- will not visit Japan this summer, Litcher said

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Maine By ELIZABETH MOJ Old Gold and Black RePorter

Thomas E. Mullet the college, presente Doyle prize for exce:

· teac~g tO co-winne M~e, a8~ista'nt pro1 English, and Susan l assis~t p~fessor of the. Fotinder's Day- e ~n. Feb.·s.

Mullen said, "The given 'because. there i to recognize teaching general. It's a kirid o: of the respect in whic teachers are hefd " Sei~on of th~ re<

~~'place at the be~ the spring semester. ~ ~hairperson of each d JS·asked to nominate 9idate for the award.

· didates must hold the instructor, assistant pt or first-year associate fessor. Only persons , been at Wake Forest f

'.81'S or less are cons: An anonymous com

s~dents and mculty n dtSCU$s the candidates nominate others that t are qwilified. The wii selected by secret ball·

Maine said that teac highly valued tradition English department an

· has. only tried to live 1

tradition. "I don't real

Case Rej Staff Report

At an administrative he ral board, during the 1

students charged with unc public display of alcoholic ed a $25 fine and 10 hours

Mark Reece, dean of s1 ' students! all under age 2

possesston or consum beverages. All four receiv( student appeared in the charges.

A student charged with

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Page 3: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

Maine, McCaffray Win Teaching Award .. ' ' •' •." '

By ELIZABETH MOKI'ON Old Oold llld Black ~

Thomas E. Mullen, dean of the college, presented the Reid­Doyle prize for excellence in . tea~~g tO co.--winners Barry Main:e, as~istant professor of English, and Susan McCaffr.ly, · assi~taitt p~essor of history, ·at the Found.er~s Dar- Convocation · ·. on Feb:s: · . · Mullen ·said, "The awafil is . · ·

given because there is a desire to recognize ~ching ·in. · general. It's a kirid of symbol of the respect in which ~y.

. teache~ are held." . . . SeieCtion of the recipient(s)

~~'place at the beginning of the spring semester. The chairperson of each department · is·asked to nominate one can­<;lidate for the awaro. can~

· didates must hold the rank of instructor, assistant professor, or first-year associate pro­fessor. Only persons who have been at Wake Forest for eight

BARRY MAINE

why I was chosen;• Maine. said. "I relate to students ..Veil, I have a law:-key approach. I don't talk down to students;•

"It's. nice to be recognized for what I and students 1:hil)k is important," Maine said.

Modem American fictioQ is Maine's special area of in­terest. He also occasionally teaches a. film class. He sai.d that he .wanted his students to

>.ars or less are considered. An anonymous committee of

students and faculty meets to diseuss the candidates. and may nominate others that they feel are qualified. The winner is selected by secret ballot.

· understand and appreciate ~ood literature and· film "to knO\V how it works and what it ia about."

Maine said that teaching is a highly valued tradition in the English department and that he

· has only tried to live up to the tradition. "I don't really know

Maine received his Bach~ior of Arts degree frOm the University of Virginia and lris Master of Arts and doctorate from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Mlrine said that hb did not know tl!at he wanted to teach until he

·SUSAN McCAFFRAY

. taught a class as a graduate student at. Chapel Hill.

Maine said that because he . ~jOyed that class he decided to· get his doctorate so he could. teach at the university level. After finishing school he was hired by Wake Foies.t; he

· has· taught here since 1981. McCaffray said that a

· teacher is an "actor, scholar and entertainer. You are trying to keep students interested in something you think is impor­tant."

She said she feels it is her job to "digest what I know to what they [students] need to 'know as educated people. I : owe students good prepara .. tion."

McCaffray said of the award, "It's nice to get positive feed­back." She said a teacher puts

her ego on the line every day. McCaffiay said she had .m;>t

consciously planned on bemg a teacher. She just knew she wanted to get her Ph.D in history. Then, faced with try­ing to earn her living,. she turned to teaching.

"Teaching makes you figure out what you think;' said McCaffray. Students in her western· civilization classes are challenging because "they ask the big questions." . .

Her special interest is in Russian history. before the 1917 revi>lution. McCaffray finds students more interested· in Russian history than the history of other countries "because of the superpower rivalry, people want to know about the Russians."

McCaffraY received her undergraduate degree from the College of Wooster (in Ohio) and her Master of Arts and doctorate from Duke. She taught at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for two years before coming to Wake Forest in 1985.

Wilbur Doyle, a Wake Forest altimnus ('48), decided in 1986 to fund the award to honor his philosophy professor A.C. . Reid. It was renamed the Reid­Doyle prize for excellence in

· teaching to honor Reid and to recognize the generosity of Doyle.

Case Referral, Administrative Hearings Are Held Staff Report

At an administrative hearing of the case refer­ral board, during the week of Feb. 2, two students charged with underaged possession and public display of alcoholic beverages each receiv-ed a $25 fine and 10 hours of community service.

Mark Reece, dean of students, said that four I Students, all unaer age 21, Were Charged With

possession or consumption of alcoholic beverages. All four received fines of $25. A fifth student appeared in the case but. faced no charges.

A student charged with hitting a delivery per-

son with a snow l:Jall (physical abuse) received a verbal warning, · ·

TWo case refel'ral hearings and three ad­ministrative hearil\gs were held during the week of Jan. 26. In ·one case referral panel hearing, o.ne student J>leaded guilty to a charge of posses­Sion of manJuana. The student was given social probation for one a.nd a half years and lost hous­ing for one year.

A student ap{)eluing in the second case was ·charged with violation of the visitation policy. · The student receivoo 15 hours of eommunity ser~ vice and lost one housing point as a penalty.

At an administrative hearing, a student pleaded

.) ' : .

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guilty to a charge of possession of a deadly weapon and was verbally warned.

A student appearing at an administrative hear­ing pleaded guilty to a charge of violation of the visitation policy and suffered the loss of one housing point.

In another administrative hearing, a student pleaded guilty to t\W chiirges of underage posses­sion of alcoholic beverages and one charge of public display of alcoholic beverages, public con­sumption of alcoholic beverages, public intox­ication, and failure to comply with the instruc­tions of a university official. The accused receiv­ed a $50 fme and 55 hours of community service.

Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987 3

Brantley Reflects on Wake Forest History By R. HASTINGS HAln' Old Gold and Black Senior R.eporter

Few peOple have been able to witness firsthand as many of the significant changes that Wake Forest has undergone since the 1950s as Russell Brantley has. Brantley, who won the Medallion of Merit this year, is retiring as the director of com­munications after more than 30 years in that office.

Brantley. has been right at the heart of the school. Working in the comn1unications office, he had to keep abreast of all the changes. Then, later in his career, he had a hand in making those changes as he became an adviser tO the president.

In an interview yesterday, he said that more than anything else, it is Wake Forest's academic quality that has chang­ed. He also said there is a greater variety of cultur;U ac­tivities and the university is more geographically varied.

He attributed much of the change in academic quality to the move from Wake Forest, N.C. to Wmston-Salem. After the college moved, many faculty had to be hired to accommodate the larger student body. William C. Archie, the head of the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation, was in charge of hiring, and he felt that Wake Forest was too in­bred. As a result, the school hired more teachers from dif­ferent areas. Brantley said this variety helped contribute to the exposure to different ideas.

Brantley was born in Wmston­Salem and was raised in Zebulon, N.C. He graduated from Wake Forest in 1945, ma­joring in English. He has always been an avid reader, he says, and was especially impressed by E.E. Folk, his journalism teacher at Wake Forest. He said Folk imparted to him the impor­tance of good journalism, especially objectivity.

Later he wrote The Education of Jonathan Beam in response to the dancing controversy and of­fended more than a few Baptists.

The book is about a boy who goes to a religious school and· is exposed to different ideas. ·

Brantley enjoys writing, and he said that one of his favorite themes to explore is "how peO­ple deal with an existence of

. quiet desperation. Characters : who manage to do something · funny or ·

. outrageous appeal to me in terms of fiction but also in terms of people who have kind of given up:'

He said BRANTLEY _. Wake Forest's

greatesgtht . th ". . stren IS at tt IS an ex-tremely democratic place,'' for several reasons.

Brantley said the best tradi­tions of Baptists, though they can be conservative in social matters, tend to be liberal in religious matters. Indeed at : Wake Forest, academic freedom has always been high, but the : rules on such matters as dancing

. or intervisitation have not been : quite so liberal. ;

Brantley also said Wake Forest has been blessed with good presidents. "They were always good at standing between faculty and whatever pressure groups there were complaining about what was being taught in the classroom."

President Thomas K. Ream . Jr. is more of a managerial type than other presidents have been, Brantley said. "I find him ex­quisitely fair. He is a man of enormous energy. He is very jealous of the good name of \\hlre Forest."

He said that one of Hearn's successes has been in developing the relationsliip between the university and the city.

"We've also raised a con­siderable amount of money over the past few years. Money in itself doesn't make a goOd in­stitution, but you'd have a devil See Brantley, Page 7

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Deacon'' battalion of the Ar­my ReserVe Officer's Train­ing Corps is offering slots to Sophomores. for Camp Challenge this summer. Located in Ft. Knox, Ken­tucky, this action packed six week training course is designed to cover the first two years of instruction received by cadets entering the program their freshman year. Don't confuse this with basic training. Camp Challenge is a course design­ed for those aspiring to become part of the Army Of­ficer Corps. There is plenty of physical activity, weapons faing, live demonstration and tactical exercise. You'D be in top no~ condition and have your self confidence boosted immensely by the time six weeks are up.

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On a f'mal note, those wishing to compete for two­and three-year scholarships need to act soon. For more information call 761-5545/5308.

MON., FEB. 23 AGUIRRE: The Wrath of God 8 p.m. DeTamble FREE ... after the showing, Professor Barry Maine will respond.

TUES., FEB. 24 Student Union B.O.D. group photo 11 a.m.; meet in office.

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Page 4: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

4 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987

OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Founded 1916

The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University

Race Relations Forum Raised Questions, Awareness

T here were 36 people there. Seven of them had to be present; they were on the Student Government President's Select Com­mission on Race Relations. Anotlter seven were members of

the faculty and administration. The other 22 were students, eight of them black.

The lack of attendance at Wednesday night's open forum on race relations was discouraging. Clearly, the majority of people at the forum share a vibrant concern over race relations at Wake Forest; and are interested in seeing them rectified. But all admitted the weakness of the commission: personal attitudes.

No matter how much the administration recruits new minority facul­ty, administrators and students, the Wdke Forest community must come to terms with the race relation problem. First, the upper-middle-class whites that dominate this community must recognize that there is a problem, that it is not merely a whim of the black students or student government.

The capacity fur change lies in the power of the students themselves. Faculty and th~ administration can only do so much. Students must incite each ether to accept their minority peers. The ~~dents must also demand the same from their professors and administrators.

Students are the reason this university exists. "Pro Humanitate" is Wake Forest's motto: For Humanity. The motto doesn't specif¥ race, sex or skin color; neither should the Wake Forest commumty.

The small group of 36 is a beginning, but it won't make changes alone. We challenge the Wake Forest community, expecially the students, to get involved.

Getting Deacons Cheering on Their Feet Cancellations S chool spirit" is an· enigmatic term. What

is it? And do we as students have it? The answer to the first question is difficult

ROBERT N. WILSON, JR. it alone.

Rather, it is the primary responsibility of the student body to rally behind the team.

Weather Preparedness Improved Old Gold and Black Columnist

and requires serious consideration. The answer -------------­to the second is an unequivocal .. no." In the greater scheme of things, school spirit

leads directly to school pride, and that is not a bad thing. It improves the way that the J ust when the last remnants of the 15-inch snow of three weeks

ago were finally disappearing, Mother Nature dumped on us again. Monday's ice storm was lovely weather fur penguins and

polar bears only. We applaud the administration's decision to cancel classes Monday afternoon and Thesday.

Area roads were nearly impassable; steps and sidewalks on cam­pus not much better. The physical plant had the situation under con­trol early, sanding the Quad and salting many of the steps around cam­pus before noon Monday. The entire Quad was cleared of the three­inch accumulation of ice and snow before nightfall.

Missed classes are rescheduled far more quickly than broken bones mended. Student Health Services reported only four ice-related in­iuries, compared with eight during the_last spe~ of bad w~~er. .· ,

Back to the first query. School spirit does not necessarily mean that students must paint their bodies black and gold (or even wear black and gold); it does not mean that they must make banners lauding the team (but it doesn't hurt); and finally it does not mean ~at we should lose sight of good sportsmanship and the values that we learn throughout our lives. It does mean however that we, the student body, should take an active part in the game.

their fans standing in anticipation of the next athletes feel about the fans and their part of play rather than sitting disinterestedly. I doubt the university community. Likewise it makes that there are more than a handful who can- the student body an integral part of the .team not stand fur a full forty minutes of basket- (a sixth man, so to speak) . .The overall result ball, so rather than complain about the funs is a more harmonious relationship between the standing in front of you, stand up yourself. athlete and the average student Finally it im-

Every so often this happens, and we (the proves the University's standing in not only fans and the team) are the better fur it. Perhaps the sports community, but the academic com-the basketball team's defeat of Maryland \\Uuld munity as well. After all is it not easier to feel not have been if it were not for the cheers of good about one's school if the teams are the fans. The point is that not all games end successful.

This participation can take several forms, a losing streak, nor are all ganJes as big as Since we are in the final weeks of basket-the simplest being attention lo the game and those with Carolina and State. They are, ball season, it is unrealistic to expect a drastic We were quick to point out the problems m the administration s

handling of the problems associated with winter weather three weeks ago. We are pleased to s~ ~at many of these I?robl~ms were dealt with more successfully this tune around. The umvers1ty may.not s~f­fer such weather again for years, but the p~edures for dealmg w1th it safely and efficiently seem to have been developed and successful­ly implemented.

response to the efforts of the cheerleaders. In- however, important. I am sure that Coach change, but in the upcoming seasons, especial-deed there is no reason that the Coliseum Staak \\Uuld agree that it is a l~t easier to play ly baseball this spring and football next fall, (either in Wmston-Salem or in Greensboro) an exceptional ball game w1th fan s~pport. perhaps it would be to the advantage of the· should ever be quiet. Cheering is infectious, rather than dead~jWice: Furthermore we must , . sJu.Q.ent.qo,d~ fP ge~ out ~d cheer, to make a and it can only help the team play at a higher realize that the cheerleaders arid pep band, httle nmse- to be JUSt a b1toutragepus. After level. It is also encouraging for a team to see ·while. asked to encourage support, CaJ!DOt do all, we never quite grow out·6f it.

Snowbound and Starving at Wake Forage: . In Search of Food for Thought

I t was cold; it was damn cold. I had not eaten in three or four hours, and the first pangs or" hunger were mak­

ing themselves known in my gut. There was a fresh layer of ice on the ground, and the latest reported temperature ,wind chill factor included, was near zero. But the hunger, the hunger.

Then, as if in a blinding flash from heaven, I realized that my salvation from the tremors of my empty stomach lay in the Snack Pit. Quarter pounder, fries or rings, pizza number seven - they all beckoned to me. I prepared fur my expedi­tion in search of food. I donned III¥ \\UOlen coat, backpack and gloves and headed toward Reynolda Hall.

The wind was biting. I had barely walked one hundred feet, and already I was shiver­ing in the harsh cold. By the time I reach­ed the front doors of Reynolda Hall, I was thoroughly convinced that my nose had fallen off in front of Kitchin. I made my way through the game room, stomping to return the circulation to my feet. After suc­cessfully vanquishing the infamous "push, don't pull" door, much to my horror I saw

W.F. NORRIS Old Gold and Black Columnist

the doors to the Snack Pit closed and lock­ed. There \\Uuld be no quarter pounder that night.

I held no anger; sending the ARA workers home was the only safe and humane thing to do. Sullenly I turned to brave the elements and trudge back to my dorm.

As I returned to my room, that demon Starvation took over. I found that there were others on my ball who were similarly stricken. We needed food, but where could we tum? Someone mentioned that the pizza places were not delivering and that the roads were too dangerous to travel. Even if we should venture out, would any fast food place or grocery store be open? And, upon our return, we would never be able to find a legal parking space in the snow; we would be met by a Public Safety meter maid, standing there with ticket book in

coiild experience the military, you could Leadership Upheld perhaps begin to undeJStand these inherent,

yet intangible, qualities that may be difficult It is apparent that Jeff Riddle, in his fur you to identify because of your limited

editorial last Friday entitled "Voicing Con- point of view. scientious Objections," has some· If the Army is an ozganization bent on misconceptions about the roles of both the destruction as you say, Mr. Riddle, then Army and the RO:OC. Mr. Riddle stated that why is the National Guard (a component the Army is a "life-threatening" and " of the total army) on hand to aid in time destructive" organization that "discourages of emergency? Why is the Army Corps of critical questioning" and operates by means Engineers involved in co~unity proj.ects of deceptive propaganda. su~b . as beach re~toration and bndge

My father is a former ROI'C cadet and building? Undertakings such as these are now a career Army officer, and I am an hardly "life-threatening." On the contrary, Rare cadet here at Wake Forest. I have, they reflect the idea of people serving pea­therefore, been exposed to the Army my P!e, the_ phil~sophy behind the Army ser­entire lire. My experiences at home, coupl- vmg thts nation. ed with those I have bad as a cadet, have The ability to make decisions is an im­provided me with a personal knowledge of portant element of leadership and, military virtues. I have experienced the Ar- ~erefore, an ~t~ Pat! of the Army. Our­my and its merits whereas Mr. Riddle mg the dec1s1on-making process, the seems only to ha~e observed the Army decision-maker must explore all potential from afar outcomes of a given situation. This action

· . requires (you guessed it, Jeft) both free-From firsthand expenence, I ~ sta:te thinking and critical analysis - processes

without reservation that the Army Js b~ilt you claim to be frowned upon by the Ar­on and fosters values. such .as leade!'5htp, my on the part of the decision-maker. This honor, discipline and mtegnty. Jeff, 1fyou Army is not critical of these actions. If it

hand, like a waitress at a curb service restaurant.

Then disaster struck; a fight broke out down the hall. Two roommates . had discovered a single 7-ll microWave burrito in their refrigerator. They viciously bludgeoned each other in their attempts to wrest the prized foodstuff from one another. Would blood be drawn? Was this to be the Donner Party revisited? Was it now survival of the fattest?

Oh,the humanity! We were becoming hunger-crazed animals. Sources of sugar­based breakfast cereal, eaten dry from the box, had been exhausted. In the delirium of starvation (it had been four hours and twenty-seven minutes since my last meal), I imagined that the microwave oven in the dorm had broken down. Where could we go for food?

We began a careful search of the closets. In mine we found only a loaf of bread, left in the dark fur several months longer than is wholesome. The colors were not of Earth. When our search yielded no~~g

· edible someone suggested that we lie m wait fur a passing student who might be

· were, it would be undermining its own ob­jective to produce leaders who make sound decisions.

You suggest that, since I am a cadet, I am a "victim" of an Army "meade" com­posed of temptation and deception that has supposedly deluded the true motives of the Army with its Rare program. Don't in­sult my intelligence.

The only w.rj fur me to have made a wen­informed decision about applying for an Rare scholarship in the first place was to "do my homework" and research all that Rare entailed, which I did thoroughly.

Mr. Riddle condemns the Army and questions the presence of Rare on cam­pus. Why anyone \\Uuld want to challenge an organization that promotes leadership and excellence is puzzling to me. Jeff, if you feel the need to expound on that which is truly based upon deception, hypocrisy, propaganda, lies, and the stifling of critical questioning, I suggest you consult the various totalitarian regimes of this \\Urld.

Joe Saffron Cade.t Corporal

Wake Fbrest ROI'C

l

drunk. It was decided that the weather was simply too cold fur "lying in wait" and that we should hold that idea for later.

I once had an ROI'C class on survival skills. We llad been shown films about trap­ping small game and dressing deer in the deep wilderness and even about finding water in the desert, but nothing had prepared me for starvation in my own dorm. I had neither the strength nor the will to hunt squirrels or dl'llllken winter revelers.

Then true salvation arrived. We discovered that Itza Pizza was still operating somewhere deep within the bowels of Reynolda Hall and was accep­ting all coupons. We called in our order and were told that we could not get four pizzas; they only had the materials fur three. We would have to pick them up ourselves.

We informed other members of our frothing mob that pizza could be had. The news came just in time to prt:vent stalking the campus for food in any form. Three

Social Flaws Exaggerated

I VIlaS happy to read that Brian Austin and I have something in common; I too want to see the campus drinking problem solv­ed. After great thought I decided to make these suggestions.

Obviously the fraternity system and the societies are at the root of the problem. It is my opinion that they both be abolished. That \\Uuld solve the whole problem - ac­tually two problems. Since the frats are the source of all drunken evil on the campus, aided of course by the societies, the alcohol problem \\Uuld be solved. The problem of social life would be ended as well. No longer will people spend their free time socializing and enjoying their youth.

As long as we are abolishing the frats and societies, .why not do away with visitation? This policy allows students the opportuni­ty to meet behind closed doors. Can we allow that?

Why not go fur it all? Let's outlaw smok­ing, take away televisions and telephones,

of us set out for Reynolda Hall; this time we knew we would succeed. We bundled up as best we could against the harsh winter wind and staggered into the night. ·

The next memory I have is of being in Reynolda Hall. We were all frozen, our noses running. We took the elevator down to the ARA main ldtchen, which seemed deserted. We walked around, realizing that it was considerably bigger than any of us

·had imagined. Then there was that smell: that hot cheese and tomato smell .... It smelled like victory. My nose, suddenly cleared, led us deeper into the ldtchtm. ·Finally one of the guys intoned apprehen­sively, "Mr. Pizza Person, hello?"

There was a response. We had found him alone in the bottom ofReynolda. Our piz~s were ready. We each carried a disk of sustenance back tO the dorin, like the three. wise men bearing gifts. The ordeal was over. The piZzas were done.

With apologies to Conrad. Hemingway. and

Robert Duvall.

not allow radios, ban talking to the opposite sex, assign seats in the pit so guys and girls can't meet there and require freshmen and sophomores to be accompanied by adults.

These suggestions all accomplish the goal. They all make Wake Forest more bor­ing and force students off camp~s to socialize and drink. Perhaps some will DUI's, maybe some will wreck, pQ!;sibly die. Maybe that family feeling that bro111ght,..l us to this school will fmally die off.

I know these suggestions are exagger- . rated, and the consequences enlarged, but the point is valid. Wouldn't you rather us teeter home on campus than from a 30th Street bar? I have been to other colleges this year and am convinced our administra­tion exaggerrates the alcohol problem more than I exaggerrate ip. this letter.

I think there is a reason the administra­tion goes home at 5:00. We place our trust in you between 9:00 and 5:00; how about placing some in us after 5:00?

John D. Clehlnd

I just received a call . · a friend of mine iit Ho : a g~t idea for a new ~would ~ called 'Kollege ;to me. "The average Ameri 'years after a takeover by dent, who'~ actually a C.P.

. "Certified Public Accou ,"N~Communist ·

Anyway, "this·gny ha8 , into· an . oppressive :center." .. , · ·_.:. ·: . . .

;"SoundscJfte"the Infi~ . . "What?'; ·,' ·. . ·.:' : .· ·"Noth:uig~ ::Go.ahead.'~ · ; · "Okay4o;'this C:P.A,

: by ten ~rCent three years ' "That's awful."

'. · "That~s,'tbe tnith about "No kidding. Teii.me

· . ·"In keeping with their · . , ad.ministnitors break with ·heritage, potentially losing . in ·aid." . . ' .

"that must be • the system-so capitalism a happy ending?" ·

"This has· tO last an end. if on the first night. No; up for in' other ways; Not hire a cheaper. fuod 'service

· national.dishes.outof ' . the elites· receive- _lpciltba:ckSj soda conipariy when in campus vending··. n l8.cl1inq

"That's fuod· for thclugltt. "That's not the worst

preferred parking fur Party censoretl mail."

"Is there a . hero?" "His name is Steve· L ilCliNI

· jor reviled by fellow stuc:11enq a stringent atcoliQl policy. ed to resistance when his

T he Soviet Union has doing some strange Recently the Russians

pardons to some of their , prisoners. The Ru!!SiadS illlVe

allowed more Jews to emigl'll~ Israel. Finally the Soviet ment has considered all(JWillg candidates to run for "elected" office (instead of usual on~).

These events seem to be news. However, if this trend up and the Soviets perform good deeds, America may something it depends on -enemy. . . .

America has had an enemy most of its histoxy. First it · Great Britain, then Mexico, ourselves, then Spain, then many and then Japan.After Wctr II, Russia became our

Russia was the perfect foe. was a tyrannical wanted to destroy all the free<!~ we treasured and. that soon quired the power to do it. In Korean Wdr and the Vietnam the threat that we were fighting was the Godless Evil pire that was controlling Korea and the Viet

, However today the u • .:;l •• ~.J"-1 becoming a decent, open (please note becoming). Reagan's attempts to ove1rthrl Nicaragua, to circumvent the and to send arms into space the good old U.S.A. appear than Russia. We are losing a enemy; soon we won't have good reason to fight Russia.

Our country will suffer from lack of an enemy. Our econot will come to a as

OLD GOLD AND

Room 226 ~ Hll1l PO Box 7569

Winsron Sal.m NC 27109 Phone (919) 761-5279 ar 5280

Aaior Edi:M in CN4 ~&liwr

N""' Edi:M E<fitorial l'ac< Ediwr

Ans Edi:M

Spans &liwr

l'roduaicm As>U­

Codin& AWu:nl

Codin& As>;,.,

Codin& Assisron! T­T-~Solmnan

The Old Gol:l and BLid Is published <Kh durtnc the school yoar, - during examinatto<l swnmer ond holldrr periods at the T.,... Thomasville. N.C.

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Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987 5 ?

I

Amerika: 'My Kountry 'Tis Of Thee. • • •

I just received a call from C.J. :Qigtime, . afriendofmineinHollywood,wbo'sgot. CHRIS HOERTER. : a great idea for a new TV UlllXiseries. "It Old G"old. and Black Columnist :;would ~ called 'Kollege Kampus:" he said ;to me. '~The average Americ;an university te~ :· ·. ·-. :.....----. -------'years after a takeover by the school's presi:- ·· trabarid." · · ·· · ' · · · ·. · dent, who'll actually a c:P.A." · . ~· · .. ~·~us you something about his mail."

. "Certified Public Accountant?". · ·· .,, . · ••He resurreets .the College .Dem9Crats, a ! ,"No-Conimunist · Party Administrator. . mythi<;al organization long4>elie'Ved ·to be Anyway, 'this'gtiy bas turned the wholep~ . ~; and leads the figlit ,iljainst.the one-.. . into an . oppressive pinko · · indoctriruition . . · party' :sys· ·tern '·' · . - · · . '' ·. · •; ... 'center."· , . . : . . . · .: · · ' · · ·. . "Artd.wbat PartY is that?'~~~~·. : · . ·

"Soldier of Fortune magazine, the Ku Klux Klan (we liked the K's), the Anned Forces and Trojan prophylactics."

·~rrojan? I thought ABC refused to air those. · .. " ·

· "Okay, ·so we were desperate." ~:tu'en't yOU worried about the controversy?" "Look, Trojan is a respected-" ~~ldon't mean the commercials."

.. "Sounds:-like:the Infmnary." "The frat party.'' . '· . : .: _, :.:. ·,,.

. "What?~~ .. : . ' . . . "I~ everyo,te a party meame~:~ · ~

"Oh~sorry. Well, in the first place Con­troversy is good for the ratings. Secondly, we could have used anybody to play the Soviets' role; the point is to question the security of our education, not to·de~de the Soviets. I mean, we could have used anybody-the U.N., South Africa, alien lizards, the smurfs-"

COUEGE ~SERVICE .

: · ·"Notlfuig~.'Go ahead.'' . . .... "Hardly;Bm~party~tbeobcilience · ; "Okay~~·o;· this <;;P.A. guy rais~ tuition of th¢ masses.''.· . · . . · ... : . . , by ten Jle.rcent three years in. a row." . . ..Through~tbe tyranny of the $Cleret police? ' "That's ~wful." ... Througb·:the narcing· of party· m9nitors?' "Jri short, any group that inspires worldwide

fear and paranoia for the greater glory of Nielsen." ·

Out of Distortion ; )

· •. "Tbafsc the 'tnith about comDlwiism." '"Should have known. What abou~ freedom "No kidding.· Tell me more.''·.· . : . :. · · . of speech?_~ LaPastill~im>~t?" · ·

. '·"In keePing with their g(l(lless ideology, the ' . . "Ohly. m. Ru8$ian. The 4fat:O:nia.n and op-. administmtors break with theschoqrs ~ligi.ous portunist 8dmini~tion app~e8 ~minor in heritage, potentially losing millions of ~Uars ·the language,. while at the. same .~e cutting ·in aid.". . . . . .. . · . funds for' student literary end~rs.''

"that must be the death blOw to the · : "It seeins the pseooO-intell~s are rather system-so capitalism wins out, lind· there's· resigned .to ~eir filte.'~ · a happy ending?" : · · · · · . · · · · .

"This has· to last an entire week-we can't . "~y :the paper's Editor-in-Chief. He . enq if<?nthe first night. No; the m()Iiey's made . ~aes-.resig~,. ~-:~ li.terary Jllllgazine sta!f up for mother ways; Not oilly does f!te .schOol . . : 1S ~legated·to.Usl.Dg_ ~e hunt-aild~~k ~hni-hire a cheaper. fooc:hervice that crea~ intei:- que on 1935 u~~ ~n~rs. .

· national <Jishes out of soybean concent,lllte, but. ·~ Jll!l hav~ .any ~uble getting ~po~: · the elites· receive: ~ckbackS from ·an upstart · sor:s for-ycur patriotic projeCt of re-education? soda compariy when they.replace Coca-Cola · · . . in campus. veliditig: machines." · · · · · . · "Wen;:¢birsi~ pulled ~ut in the early run-

"That's to¢· for ·thought.'' . ning: fa~ said he had ex{)C(:ted a mo~ "That's not the. worst of it; there's even upbelltshm.V. You know, American tanks run-

preferred parking for party ·members, and even Ding o,ver Soviet women and children instead censoretl mail?' ofvice-versa .. But of course; classic series like

"Is there a .hero?" 'Kollege KamPus' aren't for the Weak of heart. "His name is Steve LaPasta, a politics ma- We eventuiilly ended up with a great. little

. jor reviled by fellow students for his belief in cartel of traditional; family .value businesses a stringent 'alcolie~l policy. He's fiDally push-, . to support our effort." ed to resistance when his mail is declared con- "like who?" ·

The Empire Strikes • Out . ' .

T he Soviet Union has ~n · doing some strange things. Recently the Russians gave ·

pardons to some of their political prisoners. The Russians have also allowed more Jews to emigrate to Israel. Finally the Soviet govern­ment has considered allowing two candidates to run for each "elected" office (instead of the usual on~).

These events seem to be good . news. However, if this trend keeps · up and the Soviets perfonn more

good deeds, America may lose something it depends on - an evil enemy. . . .

DOUG CH.e\THAM Old Gold and Black 'Columnist

bought, sold or built. Millions of soldiers and ljefense ·contractors wili lose their jobs.

Also America will lose much of its spirit. What else will there be to do in this great land if there is no foe to struggle against? There is no frontier to settle, poverty and · disease are not. seriol18 probl~ms here, and we do not care about the rest of the world if i(~'t.~ us.

"Exactly. I think." . "Have you had much trouble with critics?" "Well, most of them are reserving judgment,

at least until they've Seen the whole thing; they only got to preview the first four installments.''

"Whfs that?" "We had a lot of last minute editing to do. .

It was just routine work for a maxiseries." "What was that?" "Thking out all the exciting parts. We also

had to work out the logic of the actual takeover, which we eventually cut. Another big waste of time." ·

"How did you work that out?" "Well, it involved a last-ditch stand by the

football team in the snow. I got into a huge argument with the director about the nickname .for the team, so we just cut the whole seg­ment: It only made sense that we call them the 'Eagles."'

"What did the director want?" "The 'Demon Deakons.' He was big on

religious irony."

T he p!opaganda film festival has emancipated me. Now I know the truth

about communism. Now I 'even know how to discern sex madness and reefer madness. These films have also freed me from my old misconceptions about the very nature of propaganda. Apparent-

. ly, propaganda does not need to be velvety smooth and seductive in order to be effective after all. It can employ subversion to frighten the masses awzy from, of all things, subversion.

A subliminal approach to the sex madness film yields some fascinating interpretations of the problem of venereal disease. If we can believe the film, women con­tract syphilis by becoming showgirls in New York. These women are also most likely to smoke, drink and (gasp!) bleach their hair. Innocent men out look­ing for "innocent fun" at burles-que shows, of all places,never seem to transmit the disease; in the film's eloquent symbolism, syphilis strikes specifically, mark­ing "bad girls" for life.

The marijuana film was even mo~ intriguing. Thke notes, kids: hooch fiends always wear business suits, and, once high, they laugh diabolically like Batman's enemy the Riddler. It's nearly impossjble to discern the bad guys from the thirty-year-old high school students in this film; they wear the same suits, and they all speak with the same ludicrous melodramatic accent.

Perhaps the. biggest lesson of this film is that one should never hold the ttuth·back from authori-

JANE E. DUNLAP Editorial Page Editor

ty figures. After all, if all the peo­ple we encounter wear business suits, bow can we spot the reefer­mad until they begiii to laugh like the Riddler'? Better to respect them all blindly at first, or at least un­til after the first few puffs. They all even hold their cigarettes -regular and recreational - the same way, so noting that dif- · ference won't bail us out either.

Now we even know the truth about communism. The pro­tagonist of the short "Red Nightmare" had everything a red-

. blooded Cold War American man could want: subservient wife, docile children, optional respon­sibility on the job. The communist state of his nightmare denied him the right to force his family to share his beliefs. His underlings no longer heeded his threats! The real threat in communism might possibly be the eradication of male dominance as we know it.

An impossibly young Ronald Reagan narrated The Truth About Communism, the only film of the four described here to employ carefully clipped newsreel footage instead of fourth-rate actors. This film had its heart-tugging, corpse­smelling, carnage-decrying moments, but it was still pro­paganda.

Hats off to the Student Union

,,

,,

Film Committee for pointing c;>ut : ; to ; 'uS'. the necessity of careful · i i>~l·~r.>ation. F'Jrie work,coini'ades! i

I

America has had an enemy for most of its history. First it was Great Britain, then Mexico, then ourselves, then Spain, then Ger­many and then Japan.After World war II, Russia became our enemy.

What can We do to stop this threat? Obviously we CllJ!l:lOt.

. eliminate our need for an oppo- · nent. Some philosophers may preach peace, but we do not even have to try peace to see that it can­not work. Human nature is basically unchangeable . -everybody knows that. ·

A Prime Time In Which To Be Amerikan I

_)

l I

Russia was the perfect foe. She was a tyrannical ~untry that Wan.ted to destroy all the freedoms we treasured and- that soon ac­

. quired the power to do it. In the . Korean war and the Vietnam war,

the threat that we were really fighting was the Godless Evil Em­pire that was controlling North Korea and the Viet Cong.

. However today the U.S.S.R. is . becoming a decent, open society (please note becoming). Indeed Reagan's attempts to overthrow Nicaragua, to circumvent the law, and to send arms into space make the good old U.S.A. appear worse than Russia. We are losing a great enemy; soon we won't have any good reason to fight RUssia.

Our country. will suffer from the · lack of an enemy. Our economy will come to a as billion-dollar are

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Room 226 Reynolrla H<lll

PO Box 7569 Winsron Salem NC 17109

Phont (919) 761-5279 or 5280

klint Edi:or in CIUtf JOJ:'ll L. JAMES Mmagmg FAirm KAREN ROMINES N""" Edi:or SCOTI' PRIITORIUS Edi!oM!I\1ge Edircr JANE E. DUNLAP

BusintJs Mat,.grr

GARLAND KIMMER CHAD KILlEBREW

CHRISSADD Ad""'"in& Manage MICHAEL LAMPHIER k$~ NNS F.dirm LISA YARGER Asso'""' N"" Er1iror HARRIET CHAPMAN Assisrant sr- Edi:or )AB!N D. WHITE eop, Slo< STEVE 10NEY eop, s1o< ERIC HUNSLEY Rim F.dirm BETH HUOOINS Rim Fdiwr SHAWN &\RLEY Rim Editor CATHY JOHNSON Prorluction Manacrr TINA SMITH eomp.r.r ProJoa;on ~ J.D. FUGATE /'7odloaicm AssisU1nt JOHN SINCLAIR Codin& A!risr.:n1 KAREN BECHT

1RACY PROSSER MIKE WILLIAMS T- VIRGINIA LEE T- RACHEL PEARCE

Admlisin& s.~esman NIEL MCDOWELL

The Oid Gold and Blad: Is publis.o,.d ach Frtrlay during tho: :ochool year, - during ..... ~rw~on, ,.,..,., aru1 hoiidar periods "' m. r.... 1n Thomasville, NC.

We could try·to manufilcture a suitable enemy.- However.an ar­tificial foe could never be as satis­fying as the U.S.S.R. _

Thereroi:e we must cause Russia to remain a villain. We mist frustrate all its efforts at reform •. We must make the SovietS use repression more often. We should make arm8 proposals that Russia cannot and will not accept.

At home we must clean up our '· act. \Ve must try to appear peaceful and mo¢, We must also teach ourselves :tofear the Soviet Union - Amerika was a good start. ABC should produce more educational programs like Amerika.

Who watched television last Sunday night? Pete, one of my roommates,

persuaded me to watch 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, with g~ old · warship-bashing Captain Nemo. Then the maxi-series Amerika came on. I wasn't plann~ ing to watch it, as I'd heard bad reviews. But then I decided to watch just the beginning to see "how the Soviets conquered the U.S." I became involved in ·the series, somewhat against my will.

First we should address the con­servative criticism of the series. The .thought of the Soviets occu­pying the u.s. ana Americans aiding and cooperating with them

· brings fits of rage to patriotic citi2llns. N~ertheless many points are brought forth by the series. Points we ·as Americans should confront before the situation is out of hand.

JONATHAN C. JORDAN Old Gold and Black Columnist

The first item the show forces us to face is the situation of col­laborators. This subhuman species ranges from traitors in official capacities (the Chieago woman magistrate) to collaborators in the W.W.II French prostitute tradition (Mariel Hemingway as the KGB

. official's mistress), A much larger group of collaborators is the multitude of former Americans who cooperate with the occupying powers.

Yes, cooperation is the definition of collaboration. The argument that at least they are alive is invalid. I strongly believe that - as one state's license

to die fighting for freedom than to live in slavery.

A speech by one of the 1988 presidential .candidates (in the series) sums up what might be seen as the reason for America's downfull- we lost it in our hearts. We lost our vision. We lost our courage. It was a fuilure of in­dividuals to take responsibility for moral choice. I suppose we lost out to the Soviets because in 1988 we elected some liberal Democrat -Hart, Biden or Cuomo -president of the United States. Now there's a point to ponder.

The occupation provided posi­tions - unnecessary in a free society - for people of authoritarian, self-interested tendencies. The former shop teacher-turned-politicalliaison of­ficer portrays the ascension of the small-minded,

F~ncb Revolution, delight in pom­ting the deadly finger at all who oppose their narrow personal vendettas. And the Hitler Youth hall monitor given power by the ,

I dictatorial regime shows us the en- '

I thusiasm of youth molded to un- .. '

\ savory ends. 1

I

Finally the glimpses of pro- • ~ paganda techniques and attempts to · ~ instill in the Amerikans hatred of ' the former system and pride in the "new" order bear some reflection.

Come on, do they really publicly say things like that? Corny and stereotypical as it may sound, the Soviets do paint the world situation in such a light. And when foolish and. naive liberals (and radicals) here in our country take the Soviets literally at their word, in a time when even the Bible is seen as an "allegory;• it is time to carefully inspect our position.

' \

< ' I ·,

STUDENT GOVERNMENT • I~ ,·.

The President's Select Commission on Race Relations ,·. ,. ,.

Will Hold OPEN HEARINGS ON

RACE RELATIONS AT WFU: 1!4re Minorities Treated Fairly at WFU?''

STUDENTS, FACULTY, AND STAFF ARE ASKED TO ATTEND AND TO VOICE THEIR OPINIONS AND CONCERNS.

Wednesday, February 11, Rm. 231 Reynolda Wednesday, February 18, Rm. 231 Reynolda

Wednesday, February 25, East Lounge

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT ANTH.ONY CHAVIS (725-2523), STEVE MAYO (761-1291) OR WILL KNECHT vVAKE FOREST (723m9293)

. ·NIVERSITY.

fJ I . ..

Page 6: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

OLD GOLD AND BLACK ARTS 6 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20;

,'.:.;•

Rebels Force Queen to Take a Look At ij).1111an Na ....... ::::-,., By GARLAND KIMMER Am Edilor

The University Theatre opened the spring semester's performances before a less-than­capacity crowd with The Queen and the Rebels, which was written by Ugo Betti. The play was one of the more interesting performances to have been done in the Theatre in the past two years.

The play was set in a small village in the mountains near the border of a neighbor­ing nation. The entire action, or rather dialogue, of the play takes place in the ruin of the main public building of the vilage. The time is described as being between great \\Iars, which along with the words and actions of the characters seem to indicate that a period of civil wars has just ceased for a short while.

It is apparent that the nation in question is Italy due to the historical circumstances described in the play, along with the fuct that Betti is Italian. The Queen has not been seen in the five years since the beginning of the rebellion, so the revolutionaries have probably pinpointed her location because they have found that she is nearby.

motives for stopping the company. The charactrs then enter into a converstaion that is very revealing about the natures of some of them. One in particular stands out. When a fellow passenger commented on the stench caused by decaying corpses, another replied that it was the smell of history. This is almost as scary as the smell of napalm in the morning.

This comment also underlies the idea that the nature of the world is fundamentally evil as Betti sees it. It is very' difficult to im­agine that a world of good could have a history that is built on the death of others. Durin" this initial conversation we are in­troduc"ed to Raim, who is the translator for the regiment stationed in the town and is played by Daniel Gentry Britt. In his con­versations the audience can see the selfish nature that lends his entire character such an air of despicability. The audience soon learns that Raim and Argia (played by Lyn­da Clark) had known each other in the past and that she had come to fmd him because she was in desperate trouble.

before she reveals herself to be the peasant Elisabetta, Kerry Lawson.

When the Queen reveals herself to Argia, the audience knows that there will be trou­ble for the Queen because Argia and Raim are two of the most selfish people ever on stage. They plot to take her money and jewels as well as to blackmail her supporters in the capital. · ·

The fundamental theme in the play seem­ed to be the underlying evil in all characters. Without exception, they were motivated by greed. One pel'son made the statement that the world is divided into those who eat potatoes and those who eat steak. It seem­ed to indicate in the play that every character wants to eat steak. Those in power at the time were especially guilty, wanting to carry out whatever was necessary to maintain their power.

The playwright also is very effective in making the struggle of leadership seem dif­ficult as it may seem simple to most viewers. The desire to simply be left alone by the Queen is the ultimate statement of the loneliness of power and the burden of deciding for more people than yourself in everv decision.

...... -; ".

. ' ·, ..

:~·A cardiac rebai,~~·l ·session.· The program · :physical activity, nutrit

:Tournam~ This provides for the action to begin the

play as well as for the actions that are to carry the characters through to their respec­

. tive ends. A truckload of travellers has been , diverted to the small town in order to in­

.. spect their travel permits, but the viewer is _, led to suspect that there mav be other

After the priest, the character who made the comment about history, is revealed to be Commissar Amos, the action begins to take shape. Raim is in fear for his life lest Amos and the General find out about Argia in his past, while the revolutionaries try to discover the Queen. The play itself does a nice job of foreshadowing the person who is in reality the Queen, although there is always some doubt as to who is to the Queen

The Queen and the Rebels was an ex­cellent performance and a wonderful way to spend an evening that might otherwise be wasted in less productive pursuits. It eon­tinues this weekend on Friday and Satur­day nights with shows beginning at 8:00 p.m. in Scales Fine Arts Center.

"Th Q d ·Staft' i'itoio e ueen an the Rebels" will continue to play at the University Theater this

By ELIZABEDI ROVERE Old Gold and Black Reponer ·

Locklair Creates New Work By RONALD BARISTER Old Gold and Black Reporter

on the organ. 1apestries, a choral piece recieved its world premiere in New York on Jan. 31, by the Gregg Smith Singers, and was recorded by the S&IDe on Feb. 2.

Dan Locklair and Melanie Dement began the Music The evening began with a piece by Francois Couperin Department's Faculty Recitals series for this semester and continued with two works by Daniel PinJ:.ham, last Sunday night in Wait Chapel. The evening was Uf!dding Song and Blessings, which was based on the especially notable in that it was the world premier of receiving on several blessings from God by Biblical one of Locklair's works, The Creation Canticles. characters. The next piece was the Choral Prelude on

Locklair is a native of Charlotte and his output has "Wachet auf' by Bach. consisted of nwnerous synmphonic wnrk.s, a ballet, and _ a number of chamber and choral ensembles, one of _ The prog~ was dedicated to the memory of which was perfromed by the Concert Choir last Archie G. Locklair. The evening was a fulfilling ex­semester. As an organist he has performed at St. perience of musical delight and demonstrated the Patrick's Cathedral, St. Thomas Church, and the abilitiesofbothartists. Locklairmustcontinuetopro­Cathedra/ Church of St. John the Divine. He has duce the works of this quality and Wake Forest will studied under Donna &bertson and David Craighead be a place where music can be appreciated.

weekend. Written by Ugo Betti, the setting is a hillside village between great w8rs. The play conce~:ns the natural evil in the human soul. The cast includes Kerry Lawson as the Queen, Richard Needham as Amos, Lynda Clark as Angla and Daniel Gentry Britt as Raim. '

.The recreation co~itfe ~etwork recently held ,tou rus, chess, bac~Qn Several of the competitori Forest at regional.tolirnail ty of Tenne.s~ in. Knox,

DANWCKLAJR

Delaney Brings Life and Spirit to, Poe :

The tournament ·cham Watson, table 'tennis; Thd: Fugate, boWimg; Jerry Sail

' '~'

By GARLAND KIMMER Arts Editor

the imagination that can take over. These poems seemed to point at idea that what you fear is- withinU you rather than .around you. By TERRI JoHNSON.,··.

One of the more beautiful poems·· Student ~in~~< ; he read was "Out of the Blue," · · · which was set on a. beach in In the Feb.17 sessioh b Ireland. Theimages.heusedin this ; 1.: dentlegislatore,-SGiegisl poem conveyed the image of a ,1 ,· proved a resolution suppc PeacefuL~beach.so. ·well·that,the :1 · removalofthewall•r

greater effect. He-spoke of the' · of the cafeteria. This resc

·· Critics and Listeners Agree on The Best of '86

Wednesday afternoon Greg Delaney was present on campus to read some of his own poems as well· as contribute ideas to the discussion of poems in at least one of the English classes. Delaney is from Corlc, ~~!Ill~. wmc;h. js .cons!~~~ . to be one of the heavier populated areas with young poets in Ireland. He has won several awards for his poetry including one which allows him $20,000 to travel around America without being required to write a single word. Delaney has also had the good fortune to have studied with John Montague in the past.

words in . tbe poem had a . mu<:!l~l !' 1,; •. ·athlete's dining room 4ou fragile nature of the body. in rela- · supported by!· athleteS, ~ tion to the world, iri particular that athletic department offic of the lady he is with on the beach, would increase seating ca but goes on to see that the .soul. is the cafeteria as. well as file

~, By TIM RILEY College Press Service

-: Rock critics often pack their :' year-end lists with would-bes, -. should'a-beens and want-nots ·:, mostly to impress intellectuals and ~ to play Stump the Reader. But dur­

·:"· ing a year infused with nostalgia, .~: contemptible soundtrack compila-

tions and flunked comebacks (eg., The Monkees, Kansas, and Emer­son, Lake, and Powell), only three albums on the following list weren't among the 100 bestselling albums of 1986.

(1) King of America - Elvis Costello (Columbia); (2) Blood and Chocolate - Elvis Costello (Col­umbia); (3) Graceland - Paul

Staff Photo "The Mystery of Picasso" leads the viewer to see the real world as black and white, while the painting opens us to a wealth of color.

I BLOOM COUNTY

Simon (Warner Bros.); (4) Daring Adventures - Richard Thompson (Polygram); (5) Talking With The Taxman About Poetry - Billy Bragg (Elektra); (6) Raising Hell­Run-DMC (Profile); (7) Big World - Joe Jackson (A&M); (8) Get Close- The Pretenders (Sire); (9) Back In The High Life - Steve Winwood (Island/Warner Bros.); (10) The Indestructible Beat of Soweto- Various (Shanachie).

In short, commercial taste and critical opinion seemed to mesh.

There's one obvious omission in the Best of '861ist: Bruce Springs­teen's "Live: 1975-1985." ·That's

II Honea Mall Cln.,.a Black Widow, Star Tn!k IV: The Voyage Home,

Oulrageous Fonune, From tho Hlp (768-1050)

II lllarif8tplace Cinema Over the Top, "Crocodile" Dundee, Light of Day,

Platoon, Critical Condition, Dead of Winter, Peggy Sue Got Married (727-1787)

111 Reynoldl Cinema Over the Top, From the Hlp, Ught of Day (748-1188)

II ThNwoy Theater The Bedroom Window, Mannequin (722-3439)

II Club Hll'l'lll Clnoma Pub Mosquito Coast (788.6955)

• Plnebroolc Clnerruo Pub The Golden Child (187-6955)

lor the baddest. most cone shak1ng. k1dney-curdhng 81lly and the Bomgers theme song that could ever be

The wrnnmg entry w1ll also be mcluded. as ougmally recorded, on an upcom1ng

B1lly and the Bo1ngers/Bioom Couflty proJect to be released nat1ona!!y m tile fall olth1s year

A4AA Entnes must be rece1vedby March 21.

One song per group. Mus1c and lyr1cs must be ong,nal. A clear and weU­m,:.:ed recordmg of tne song should be subm1tled on

standard stereMape casse\le Include name and phone number on the ca~seue

and send to

a ~!~~e~ ~~~~.'and 1

34 Beacon Street Boston. MA 02106

The w1nnmg group IF ANY. wll be nohhed

by March 31 Entr1es wdl be Judged s1r1ctly on whether the lune msp1res Opus 1n1o a f.t or unrestra1ned

Per1od.

because it deserves a place of its own. Its arrival was this year's pop event, and its proportions put it in a class all by itself.

The year's best also provoked a year of controversy. Some critics wrapped Paul Simon for not overtly attacking apartheid on his "Graceland;' which was peopled by South African musicians and in­spired by South African rhythms.

Madonna, by· the way, didn't make the best album list because her singles stood better by themselves.

Finally, last year's question still lingers: Where are you, Los Lobes?

II North C&rollna School at tho Arts ''A Man For All Seasons" in Agnes de Mille Theatre,

Feb. 19-2t, "Winter Dance" Feb. 26-28, March 1 in Stevens Center. (7B4-7170)

II SECCA Feb. 25 - Andrew Potier. Feb. 26 - Rec11al by Jan

DeGaotanl, accompanied by Gilhert Kalish. (725-1904)

The afternoon began with Delaney participating in the discus­sion of Yeats in Dillon Johnston's Irish Literature class. Delaney then moved on to his own poetry at4:00 p.m. His only volume published to date, Cast in the Fire, is so titled for a number of reasons. The most important that he mentioned was that the critics could follow the sug­gestion of the title if they did not like the volume. Delaney admitted that he had ben a bit more influenc­ed by Yeats than some of his con­temporaries, especially in choosing to. use more typical and everyday images.

The first few poems he read dealt with the darker side of his poetry. In "Thrust and P.rrry" he discusses a fight and speaks of· the "the magic, black magic of words that no magic can take back." The following two poems dealt with nightmares and the darker side of

THE>FAR SIDE < •,• ''·

even more fragile than the body. teraction betWeen student On a lighter note, several of his and the rest of the stude1

poems were quite funny in their A related bill was also i choice of words and in the mean- ed by the Student RelatioJ ings they suggested. These poems mittee to establish a collll included "Out of the Ordinary;• investigate alterations "Fusion," "God Contemplates tud s ent-athletes' dining p Writers;' which contained the idea the coaching staff has also' that all works in heaven will be ed support for the inves good, and "Observations by a Pond :A-thletes .~e expressed all at Dusk in Gainesville, ·Florida, ~ .obtaining dining 'pt With a Thank You." similar to those of other ·

"The Lizard and the Lover" dealt to increase variety il with the similarities in the feeling selection. - .. . of a man who sees that he has been rejected for another. He feels . Legislators also appro\'1

I ed by th 1· rd th supporting the installation repu s e JZa ey see on television and indiv1"dwil. a walk, though he pretends to be brave. The female had been open- hookups in the residence ly repulsed by "the Pre-historic order to improve the qualit creature;• and the writer is now dent life and IDa.ke Wake realizing that she is just a repulsed . more attractive to pro: by his incessant wooing as she was students. . by the sight of the lizard. Petitions for the four- ~;

Delaney made for a good after- offices will be available M noon of poetry, and his accent and and interested students images leant a very Irish air to the couraged to cOntact the pi'l: reading that is so appropriate at fleers for infOrmation. Th some times. be a meeting of candidate!

24. Elections_ will be Mru

IHE FAR SIDE DE

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Yes, yes, Leroy ... :I have> <? salt J;ck

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I 1·'

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Page 7: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

< Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987 7

Program Improves Cardiac Patients' Lives By HARRIET CHAPMAN Asaislant N~ Editor

Nearly 200 people are currently enrolled .in Wake Forest University's cardiac relutbilitation program, accOrding to program director, Paul M. Ribisl. The cardiac rehB.bilitation program is designed to aid pa­tients in recovering from heart attacks, angma pectoris, and other conditions of ·heart disease. ·

. · 'Ol~ JD.ultiple-intervention program was established in July 1975, as a joint effort of

. the ·Department of Medicine at the Bowman. .. GraY' School.of Medicine, Wake Forest's

department of health and. sport science, the .North Carolina affuiate of the American Heart Association and local physicians. · .Ribisl helpeci Dr. Henry S. Miller Jr., pro­

fessor Of medicine at Bowmari Gray, to im· ple)ri,ent the progiam under an innovation and expansion grant obtained from the Divi­sion of Vocational Rehabilitation Services, DePaitinent of Human: Resources.·

The program addresses four areas of · lifestyle: physical activity, nutrition, life stress· management; . and smoking behavior. Durip.g the opening phase of the program

.. staff members perform laboratory, nutri-tio~, psychological and vocational status evaluations on each patient.

physiologist and a vocational counselor. Finally th~ patient begins therapy, during

which be begins an exercise prog~ ~f walking, jogging, cycling, and swmunmg and attends counseling sessions for his diet and psychological and vocational well-being. The exercise sessions last from 7:30 to 8:30 a.m. every Monday, Wednesday and Friday on the campus. Many patients go directly to work following the sessions. . ·

Ribisl said that with its enrollment of almost 200 people, Wake Forest's program is one of the largest in the nation. He estimated that over 1,000 people had used the program sine~ its inception over ll years ago.

"I think we've been extremely successful with people in helping them to achieve their potential for returning to a successful ex­istence We cannot cure anyone, but they [pa­tients] are able to improve in just about any aspect of their lives," Ribisl said. In older to participate in the program, patients must be referred to it by their physicians.

Ribisl estimated that about 75 percent of the patients smoked before entering the pro­gram and that probably less than 20 percent smoke now.

cent time there. Six graduate students· put in 25 percen~ time for pay, and there are other students who work there as well. A voca­tional counselor who is assigned and paid by the state works at the center three or four times per week, Ribisl said.

Wake Forest's program was the model which established procedural guidelines and a process for certification for other cardiac rehabilitation programs in the state. There are currently 35 such programs throughout the state .

Ribisl said, "We set up our own evalua-. tion system. At the end of the period [for the grant funding] we set up our own evaluation and certification plan, in 1978. In 1984 it was officially adopted by the state." He said North Carolina is the only state in the. nation to put standards for programs fur cardiac rehabilitation into its state law. ·

Ribisl arrived at Wake Forest in 1973 and worked in the department of physical educa­tion. From 1973 to 1975 he worked with adult preventive programs until the present one was founded.

He received a bachelor's degree in physical education from the University of Pittsburgh, his M.A. in physiology from Kent State, and his Ph.D. in exercise physiology from the University of lllinois.

~·Atantiae·~ ~·.cil~ ~:beaJtt:afe.durlng ~ seri:ise :session.· The program addresSes four. areas. of Jl&tieJ1ts' ~estyles: . physical activity, nutr;ition, . stt:ess m.~nagement and smoking.

Follawing this,. Ribisl said,. there is a team working for each patient to cooniimite that person's prograin. -The cardiac rehabilitation team ci:>nsists ·of the medical director, a nutritionist, a p~chologist, an exercise

Several local businesses - such as AT&r, RJR and Hanes - and Wake Forest Univer­sity have employees who are enrolled in the program.

Only two staff members are employed full­time at the cardiac rehabilitation center. Ribisl said, ·~ the rest of us are part­time," working anywhere from 10 to 75 per-

Ribisl is also chairman of the Preventative and Rehabilitative Programs Committee of the American College of Sports Medicine. This committee has 50 members who certify

, the 1,000 individuals nationwide who run rehabilitative prognuns of this type.

:

" ' . ~ . ~ . ·' ~ .

Tournam~Ilf'Chaffipions to Compete in Knoxville ,"

By ELIZABETH ROVERE ·' . . •. ' ;

. · :sbawn Hoshall, chess. Old Gold and Black Reporter

. . ,, Mike Williams, the Recreation Committee The recreation committe'iafthe Student Union I c~rson;. Said that the organizational process

Network recently held touriUmients lil·table'ten- , vya.s .slightly rushed by ~e-~~e number of Pll!­nis, chess, backgamqiQ11, boWling and pool.. ttClpaDts: A total of.65 indivtd~s. took part m Several of the competitors will represent Wake the ~ames M.d 14 will advance to the regtonals, Forest at regionaltoUrnaiilerits at theUM,versi-: Williams saJd. , " ty of Tennes~ in Klioxvilte .. ; . ·.. · ,: . • The regional winners in pool and table te~s

The tailmanient ·champion'S .were Sbani19n will go ta the national tourilament in Colorado Watson, table1ennis; 1bd~'Sailford; priol; J.D. Springs, Colorado at the~U.S. Olympic Train­Fugate, boWlliig; Jerry S~sbury;· bac~on;1 • ing Center. Students from Virginia Tech, Clem-

,

son, 'UNC-Charlotte and Elon College will also compete in the regional tournament.

The recreation conuinttee presented cash prizes in each of the tournaments: $25 for first place, $10 for second place, and $5 for third place. ·

The recreation committee holds the tour­naments annually, but this year has brought a .new addition -bridge. Williams said the bridge tournament will not be held until March 1 and entries are still open.

: ,--~----------------------------------------' j', •

Wake Forest Public Safety

Public Safety is seeking infonna­tion concerning two larcenies on campus. Saturday, a roof-top Domino's Pizza sign was stolen from an employee's car while she was delivering pizzas on campus. Later that day, a pizza was stolen, as well.

Both incidents occurred in the area of Thy lor Dorm. Anyone with infunnation should contact Campus Crime Stoppers through the public safety office.

Campus Crime Stoppers pays up to a maximum of $500 cash for in­fonnation leading to an arrest, pro­secution and conviction of the in­dividual(s) responsible fcir crimes.

J~raritle,y dominated by Baptists." And referriilg to all tb~ changes over · the .years, he said, "We've been pretty successful with a board of North Carolina Baptist trustees:•

"We need to give some good role visiting chaplains since there is not

Rae. e models," Eure said. He said that a permanent black chaplain now. one faculty member displays a con- Michelle Conner, minority ad-

Froio Page 3 · ' By TERRI JOHNSON '· ... I : ;

Student ~in~~. • . .li' ofa~ tiine making one without

In th Feb 17 · · : . . · . }, . . .. it;' [email protected] said. . ·

e . · · sesston or the stu- The re-definition of the· rela-

From Page 1 federate flag on his office door in missions counsellor and an alum-Tribble Hall. na of Wake Forest, said that a

Student Karen Baynes said: minority brochure on the university Vanderbilt, Chapel Hill, and Duke ''i\nother institution that needs to is "in the works now." Conner up-~ going to do." He said it is time be focused on is the Parents' Coun- dated statistics on black student ap-to take a stand, in reference to stu- cil. Only two sets of black parents plications, saying that 123 had been dent participation. "Everyone are on it now and there are no other received, not 83 as bad been stated dent legislature,·:S(;-iegis~r& ap.. ··-tionship 'with the Baptist conven­

proved a resolution supponmg the tion has been one of the most · rem~ of~. wall' ·~g tl1-e., ·.··notable .changeS during ·Hearn's . athletes din~ roo'!t t\tJIJl<~~restJ;, ~remi. · ~~~ simply~ »;leans that you

of the cafeteria. This ~oluti~n is,!, can reach out apd get more peo-

Brantley closely ties the. idea of freedom to variety, and he thinks. the student· body shoUld be more.varied. "You learn when you're exposed to many differeil~ opinions. If we could

· get aV;ay frOm the blonde, blue­ey,ed &YndrOine;··tliat ''Would help."

wants to jump on the band- minority parents." · at last week's heating. wagon. . . you go along with the Frank Ioppolo, the president of The fmal open bearing on race program and tl:lat's hQW six million QRC, said that Wake Forest needs relations at will be next Wednesday .

su~rted · bY.' athletes,· ~de~ts, ·:,pili .whose. ~perience: and · athlett~ departmen~ officials. lm.d , t;;ack'groUnd Should qualify them would mct;ease seating cap~1ty.~ : for, . .doing a good jQb." the cafetena as. well as fil~tate tn·. . But Brantley echOed Hearn's teractton between student-athletes reni1nders that there has not and the rest of the student body. ,been a split with the Baptists

A related bill was also introdue- · ~d. ~t Jbe ~vers_ity does not ed by the Student Relations Com- . ~~ev: .Its~ :f!.apttst hentage as a mittee to establish a committee. tO.. ·liability,.~. You have.to remember investigate alterations . in :: tlie.r tJ:lat the l:K>.a,rd. o.f trustees that student-athletes' dining plan, and . made ·that decJston ~

And, he said, "The vestiges of .racism on this campus are more tban vestiges. You don't pass a law and make· it go away. It takes a hell of a lot of work by a lot of people." Part of that work, Brantley said, is admitting more blacks, which will take some effort, since the competi-

. tion for black students is high. lhe coaching staff has also expreSS" ... ed support for the investigatiqn. · Athletes have expressed an interest in obtaining dining 'pcivllege( . similar to those of other ·students · to increase varietY 'in' meal selection. ·- · · · · · · 8UMIII!IISCHOOLBOUND?How

· eboutrunnlnQ "'"'""" ~ Legislators alsoappl'OVed a bill w~~~~eoutarlhe~LArge . th . tall . f bl eimlllg polenlial, ~summer supporting ems atlon .. o ca e · .JOb;,.,., unlwrtlly ~urant

television and individwil ·phone .and Bar Guide. ComactCilrlsat

hookups in the residence halls in·· _m-m __ ~_· ·-· ___ _ order to improve the quality .ofstu~ • . ·THEf!E'S A >1011 FOR vou 1n a

dent life and maice Wake Forest · ~=~ :::, -;'~': . more attractive to prospective , make you~ apptleallOn m~~. 111

stude " IMit' 300 Clll1jlllln liMo NallheUt. nts. Edlng~nltlellcw.co.'loge

Petitions for the four. executive · :,:-..;,ct ~:, offices will be available MaJ:Ch 17, · · · apor11. ans· & · ciofts. drama, and interested students are en- · mUIIc. dance, tripping, naiUre, R.N:o, M.D.'s Aldl8, kitChen, couraged to oontact the present of- maintenance. ·COLLEGE

fleers for infOrmation. There will CREDITAVAILA&.E.CIIar-tcw llpp/lcsl/oti.,AmeriCarr camp. be a meeting of candidates Marth ~~~g ~. 43 w 23 St.,

24. Elections will be March 31. r:f.J::Je'f:' -· N.r. 7001o.

NEED A VACATION? For sale, round4rlp airplane llckat 10 New Orleano, for .Mardi Gras. lmM! WlnsiOn.Salem, Friday, 2·22, Rllum Wednasday 3-4. Low fare at $200. c.n 125-91&; IIYOrllnga and nights.

SUMMER JOB INTERVIEWS: Average earnings $3.400. Gain valuable experience In aciVortis­lng, sales, and !)llbllc rslallons selling yellow page aciVorlisJng lor the Wake Foreot Campus 'llllephona DlraciOIJI. Opportuni­ty Ill travel nationwide. Comp161a training program In North Clll'Oilna (Ollpitnses paid). Look-

. lng lbr enlhu8lasllc, goakJrlenlect Bbldenlo lor challenging, well­paying summer job, Sign up lor lnterYIBws whh Unlverslly Dlmc­!Orleo at Career Planning & Placement Cenlar by Monday, Malch 23.

CRUISE SHIP .JOBS - Dorneellc and Overseas. Now hiring: kU­chen help. deck hands, maids, gift shop salaa. Summer & Career OpponunlllM. Call (206) 7311-2912, En C332.

ATTENTION MUS!CIANSl Thera's a nw1 music IIO<eln IIOWn and H's l1ghl next to Woke- 2822-A . Unlverslly Pi<wy. Major brands, basi prices In IOWn.(csJI ut flrrl) 721-7991.

SEEKING RESPONSIBLE parson to ballysR 3 yr. old In my home 7:30a.m. -4:30p.m. one or two Saturdays par monlh: 'Near University but need own lranoportalion.Ca/1 .IBn 7fJ0.2667 sllot5:30p.m.

GOVERNMENT .JOBS $18,040 -$59,230/yr. Now hiring. call 1JC5.61J1.6000 Ext. FJ.S999 Alr CUI· rent (OderaJ /i$1,

DEACON SHOP JUST ARRIVED

,• ---------"OLD TIMERS" WAKE FOREST

100.% .. COTTON FLANNEL ·BASEBALL SHIRTS

AUTHENTIC STYLING

University Stores "On the Campus" Owned and operated by the university

, for the· convenience of the I students and faculty . ' . .

• ·.4

Jews were extenninated," Eure a black recruiter here now and sug- at 7 p.m. in the East Lounge of · said. gested that the university have Reynolda Hall. ·

******************************************************* ·: . c= ~ ~ :. .; ., E!~ ,_ :.:

: .4lij(Uitr.. : ! Camp Thunderbird ! * * * * :. Excellent summer counseling opportunities for men and women who are! ~ interested in serving ~ and girls ages 8-16, guiding~ in'theirt : physical, mental and sparitUal development. One must have ability to teach* : in one.or more of our specialized activities and. be dedicatedto helping: : each individual child de~JC)P his ~r her potential. College stude,._ # * teacherS andcoac~es should apply. CAMP THUNDERBIRD, located··17: : miles southeast ofCharlotte, N.C!,.is an ACA accredited camp m,mbef',* :. specializing in water sports (sailing, water skiing, swimming anct# :, canoeing), yet an added ~mphasis is placed on the land sports (general: * athletics, tennis, golf, archery, riflery and backpacking). Horseback riding,# :. white-water canoeing and tripping are extras in our excellent program.: :. For further info~tion write or call Camp Thunderbird, One Thunderbird,* :, Clover,·'s.c., 29710, 803-831-2121. .:

'II'

: \y ·JJ' : .~ . . . . • Orw H!.,:l~l~·r!J,rd lane. Clover. SC 29710·9703 • T~!ephone:· 1·803·831·2121 __ . ::

******'**********************************'***************

O·B

Page 8: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

OLD GOLD AND BLACK SPORTS 8 Old Gold and Black Fri&iy, February 20, 1987

Deacon Women Upset N.C. State.Jo End Streak . ~.. . . . . ' ·'·,

By COLLEEN KOONTZ Old Gold and Black Rep<mer

Wake Forest upset 13th-ranked North Carolina State 69-59 Wednesday night, breaking an eight-game confurence losing streak and recording its first win over the Wolfpack since 1976.

The victory was especially sweet for seniors Amy Privette, Mecky Steenmetz and Helen Williams, who were playing their last game in Reynolds Gymnasium.

Steenmetz said, "I think it was our best present. We have never 'beaten State and it was our last

· · game at home." . Williams said, "We knew that we

· were going to win the entire game.

coach, was extremely excited about the victory.

"I am really excited for the kids," Sanchez said. "I am very excited for the seniors. We will miss them; they are the backbone of the team. The seniors came through with a maximum effort."

The Deacons were led by freshman Lisa Carter, who scored 14 points and grabbed nine re­bounds; and Privette, who scored 12 points and dished out five assists. Steenmetz and Alice Neal each contributed 10 points, and Steenmetz also pulled down nine rebounds.

Behind the hot hand of Trice, who made six of N.C. State's first eight points, the Wolfpack cut the Deacon lead to three at ll-8. The Wolfpack ran off five unanswered points to tie the score at 13-13 with 10:12 left in the half, then built a three-point lead, 21-18, with 7:22 remaining.

The Deacons tied the game at 21-21 with Privette scoring her first points of the game on a three-point play. Wake Forest pulled ahead for good at the 4:00 mark by a 27-21 margin.

I just can't put into words how I · feel."

Annemarie Treadway scored a game-high 17 points for the Wolfpack. Ali-ACC center Trena Trice, who has been averaging 19.1 points per game, was limited to on­ly 11 points. Angela Daye chipped in 10 points.

After State trimmed the lead to two, Sanchez called a timeout to re­group his team. The Deacons returned to the floor and increas­ed the spread to 35-27 at halftime with _key plays by Amy Cartner, Susan Gasperson and Neal.

. · . Steve Kiulan Susan Gasperson looks for an open teammate in Wake Forest's 69-59 upset of 13th-ranked· N.C. State Wednesday night in Reynolds Gym. ·

Privette, the team's captain, said, "It felt good to finally come out on top. We've come so close in so many games. I can't think of a bet­ter way to end our season, being our last home game."

Joe Sanchez, Wake Forest's head

The Deacons jumped out to an 8-0 lead aver the Wolfpack in the opening minutes of the game before Trice scored at the 16:21 mark to put her team's first points on the board.

Grant Leads Tigers By Wake Forest ~-71 Bogues Injures Wrist in Fall By JABIN D. WHITE As.istant Sports Editor

CLEMSON, S.C. - Horace Grant poured in 33 points, grabb­ed 20 rebounds and dominated the inside to lead tenth-ranked Clem­son to an 87-71 Atlantic Coast Conference victory over Wake Forest on Wednesday in Littlejohn Coliseum.

Deacon fans received a scare at the 18: 11 mark of the second half . ' ;_as Tyrone "Muggsy" Boglies

; :·drove for a layup and was fouled ;: :: by Michael Tait. Bogues went :: down hard to the floor, hitting his :: :: head and sliding into the bleachers. : ~ Bogues left the game, but return­;~ ed less than three minutes later to ~·:play the rest of the game. It was ; : revealed yesterday that Bogues sus­·~.: tained a bad sprain, but x-rays were :~:inconclusive. ; :: Bogues will not practice with the :::team today, and will see how the ~:wrist feels tomorrow before he : :practices. He is a probable starter : ::against Mary land on Sunday. :: Wednesday's win marked the ::first time in history that a Clem­:: son team has won 24 games in a ·-season, and the occasion was ::celebrated by the Tigers cutting ::down the net after the game.

point lead at the intermission. The beginning of the second half

saw the Deacons make a run and tie the game at 44, but the Tigers scoredl2 unanswered points before 1..'le Deacons could recover.

Grant's dominant inside game started to show itself just 11 seconds into the game, when Greg Keith was whistled for his first foul. Keith went on to foul out of the game, while teammate Alan Dickens fouled out 34 seconds later, mostly due to G~~fs .li!J:ong play inside.

After Clemson assumed a 4-0 lead at the start of the game, Wake Forest ran off six straight points and 12 out of the next 15 to post a 12-7 advantageatth 14:05 mark in the first half.

The Deacons built the lead to 29-18 at the 7:50 mark after a Rod Watson three-pointer from the left wing. Wake Forest, however, then went cold, and Clemson charged back to score 16 unanswered points, giving them a five point lead with 3: 16 to go in the half.

Two baskets by Tyrone Bogues cut the deficit to one with 2:23 left, but the Tigers ran off another eight straight points to assume a 42-33 lead at the half. ·

Wake Forest outscored State 9-2 in the opening minutes of the half to go ahead 44-29 before Wolfpack Coach Kay Yow called a timeout to try to stem the tide.

However, the Deacons met the Wolfpack challenge behind the play of Privette, who was responsible for

six of their next eight points as they increased the lead to 52-38. Carter made three key plays including a hook shot at the 8:51 mark that up­oed the lead to 57-50. • The Wolfpack would not be able to come any closer than seven

pomts. Wake Forest survived State's trapping press defense with clutch free throws by Steenmetz at the 2:12. mark that increased the· lead to

"We· executed well both .on of­fense and defense,". Sanchez said.

N.C. State's overall record falls to 19-6, and its ACC record falls to 10-2. The Deacons ·improved to 13-13 overall and 3-10 in ~e con­ference.

66-56. ,. Sanc~ez thought that his team

played good, solid basketball.

Relay Teams Lead Runners At. Indoor Meet

By H.B. THOMAS Old Gold and Black Reponer

The Wake Forest men's and women's track teams finished their regular indoor seasons with several fine performances at the Virginia Tech Relays Satu!(lay in Blacksburg, Va. .

For the women, this was the first competition since cross country season began, as they were snowed out of the Bud Light Relays at the. end of January. The Deacon runners did well, though; placing high ·in almost every event in which they . .competed.

On the 200-nieter, banked, · synthetic track, the ··women's 4xl51XYinetel" tela}' sqtiail~ c6mpostdcofCindy Goethals, Jennifer Rioux, Sue VandeiWagen and Liz Becker; raced to a first place finish with a time of 19:05. Goethals had the fastest split, covering the 1500 meter distance in 4:43.

The team consisting of Kay Gemrich, Maria Mer­ritt, Goethals and VandetWagen ran to a seco~d place . finish in the 4x800 meter race with a time of 9:46.6, and finished fourth in the 4x400 meter race in 4:16.

Sophomore Kristi Cassell was the lone individual competitor for the Deacon squad, running to a third place finish in the 3000 meters in 10:30.

The men's team had similar success, with the 4x800. meter relay team, consisting of Chris Pass, Brian Ponder, John Ormond and Chris Ingalls, racing to a second place finish with a time of7:55. Senior Ponder.' had the fastest split over the 800 meter distance in' 1:56.3.

The men's 4xl500 meter relay squad, with a time; of 16:42, ran to a sixth place fmish. Freshman Jon:

·:: It was a game of streaks, as the :: Deacons led by as many as 11 :: ~ p~ints in the first half, until the ·::Tigers came back to assume a nine

Wake Forest assumed control at the ~tart of the second half, tying the score at 44 at the 17:40 mark as Sam Ivy hit a five foot jumper See Clemson, Page 10

Steve Killian Sam Ivy slams home two of his 18 points in the Deacons' 84-76 victory over UNC Charlotte last Saturday.

Htune led teaminates Steve Schmidt, Dave Delmonte • and Graham Clark with the fastest split, covering the! 1500 meter distance in 4:02.9. :

Coaches John and Francie Goodridge were pleased l with their teams' performances.

~l19th-Ranked Tide Edges Men's Tennis Team 5-4 :::By RUSSELL ROGERS ::: Old Gold and Black Reponer

~; The Wake Forest men's tennis team opened :: the 1987 spr_ing seson last Saturday with a 5-4 :--loss to 19th-ranked Alabama ::: The Deacons got off to a sl~ ~tart in singles ::play as the team won only two of the six mat­::. ches. Mark Greenan defeated John Stimpson at ;: the ~u~ber one _position 6-3, 3-6, 7-6(5); and :~: Chnstian _Dallwitz added a victory over Clin­-~, ton Ferreira at the number three position 6-1 :.: 3-6 6-2 '

Wake Forest came back strong in the doubles play by taking two of the three matches. Chris­tian Dallwitz teamed with his brother Stefan to post a 6-7, 7-6, 6-3 victory at the number one position over the team of Stimpson and Ferreira. The pair of Greenan and Mark.Kriscunas add­ed a 6-3, 7-5 victory over the team of Const" · tinos Efromuglov and Brad McMun .. y .: .. <c number two doubles position.

"Being ranked 19th in the country, Alabama was obviously an excellent team. The main dif­ference was that it was their fourth match and only our first. Th perform as well as we did, knowing we're going to get tougher as the season progresses, shows that a national ranking by the season's end is not an unrealistic goal."

·~· ' .

While the team suffered its first loss, Head Coach Ian Crookenden was still pleased with what he saw.

fhe Dcdcons' record on the young season is 0-1 with two matches coming up this weekend.

The two matches will be on the road, as the Deacons travel to Old Dominion on Saturday and Wiliam & Mary on Sunday.

:i: All-ACC, All-Academic

,~tPrivette Excels Both On· Basketball Court and Off . -'· '. ~; By COLLEEN KOONTZ ' . Old Gold and Black Reponer ....

~- Amy ., .. Privette's ... ·~ ·. philosophy ~ on basketball ~-

" · is simple. ". "Wh I ~-- en .,_ .. started to ~ • play basket­~~ ball, I played ·~ ·: because I ....._~~;;:;;r..--1 :·· · loved the :~ :. game," the :3 ~ senior said. "Even though I ~: have been successful, I play :~ ·• because I love it. Sometimes ::; when I get frustrated, I have to ... ~ ::. remember why I am playing; .......

that helps keep things in perspective."

Privette's outlook has proved to be a very successful one. She was named to the 1986 all-ACC team and to the academic all­America team, the latter of which was a first for the women's athletic program here at Wake Forest. Privette is the Demon Deacons' all-time leading scorer, and is also at the top of the assist and steals lists and is closing in on the school record for rebounds. So fur this year, she leads the team in re­bounding (165), assists (107), steals (75), and scoring average· (16.8).

"What can you say about

Amy Privette but that she is an outstanding basketball player and a team leader," Head Coach Joe Sandhez said. "She can do so much with the basketball. She can play both ends of the court, she is extremely smart and she has tremendous basketball sense."

Deciding where to go to col­lege and to play basketball was no problem for Privette. "When I first started watching ACC basketball, I always pulled for Wake Forest. My dad graduated from there. I was looking for­ward to coming here; it was the place I wanted to come."

When she first arrived at Wake Forest, many people did

not believe that Privette would be successful.

"They were not expecting a lot out of me," Privette said. "I was their only recruit. They had an overabundance of guards and five seniors.

"I never thought about my role; I just went out and played. I was not expecting much play­ing time as a freshman, but I ended up starting and averaging 14 points a game."

After Privette's sophomore year, Wanda Briley left as the head coach. Sanchez took over, and brought a. new coaching · style with him. .

"It is neat having two years See Privette, Page 10

.Intramural Nicknames Are Interesting, Unique

L ast week, we began our look at some of the unique and interesting nicknames

of teams in the Wake Forest in­tramural leagues. We conclude our look at IM nicknames today, and reveal our ultimate nickname team for this year.

The Campus Building 'Thams

Several teams choose to name themselves after a building on the Wake Forest campus. It has not been determined whether a special feeling for the building or a lack of creativity in thinking of another nickname is responsible for this phenomenon.

Battling it out for the supremacy of South Hall are the. South· Hall Slammers and the C-Men of South. The edge must go to the Slammers, since the C-Men are only the third best team in the dorm. The Bostwick Lightn­ingbolts qualify for the defunct USFL on the basis of their catchy nickname.

Competing in the graduate leagues are the Babcock Blues. These men are not Duke or North Carolina rejects, as has been rumored, but are simply feeling the side-effects. of deciding to get

FROM THE PRESSBOX CHAD KILLEBREW Sports Editor

a graduate degree in business.

The Dictionary Teams

Any team whose nickname is either unpronouncable or requires deep thought to figure out its meaning qualifies for this category. Professors will be glad to learn that not all teams choose trivial titles for their team name.

Heading the list is Necrofrot-. , tage, which sounds like a biological fungus that could cause serious 'damage to the human in­testine. The Cremasterics take their name from the seedier side of the undertaking business. Volbrachts could well be the newest precision German7 engineered car, and Moonachie deals with the study of the dif­ferent phases of the moon.

The team most deserving of tex­tbook honor is the Epicureans. I actually learned the meaning of ' See Pressbox, Page 10

' \ . , '

·The ed to 12-12 at Clemson.

stand$ at 1-10. ·

'IYIQne: Bogues, · Dickens played in their eareers last Chariotee. Wlke left, •· but both . Greeen5b0ro

· Saniivy.'! .............. . . ' the.~k"' . } with 1eyOn McCoy t35.points:and . , ·. r Deacons' .tw· o· Pllmlf!'

. :Vhis. thiid "ltoolde r·th . . • ~- _e ~n. .. "' .. ..,_. . .

, .( ~The Deacons' . •:at Maryland on· • ·. home .to host . ~ N.C .. State on

The Atlanta the head football tant coach, the Suwanee,. Ga.,

Marion · aunpll,ell,' replace Dan HeJilllilag pleased with AU~mta·~

"The Atlanta coach to our staff," several qualities that level, a sincere valuable knowledge men that play."

Groh will be in . aitd tight ends. Th··mo

for most of his the special teams at head coach Bill

. Gro~ did not sign a when his last co·J 1tl'a1ct a two-year pact, but year contract.

It was rumored of the New York coach Bill Parcells. ·.1978 at the Air

Groh finished his a record of 26-40.

'Atlantic Coast C0111ter with a 24-21 win

Page 9: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

., Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987 9

Deacons' · Record Evened, ACC Teams Prepare for Showdowns · T he Deacons bad their.record trimm- . . . · ed to 12-12 'with Wedl}esday:s ~!oss AROUND THE ACC. Duke

stands= ~~on. The conference,mark JABIN ri. WHITE · · •. The. Blue 'Devils got some bad news ·· · : Assistant Sports Editor earlier in tlle week when they learned that

. · Tyrone: Bogues, ·Mark Cline and Alan . ,. Billy King will be out for twO weeks 4ue Di~ke~s p~yed in the last"home" g8me of . . . · . . to· a broke!'l·.wrist sustained in Duke's loss thell'. careers last Saturday against UNC ~son Wednesday night, because they are the to ~otre·Dame. Cbar1otte. "Mike ,forest bas .oo home gathes:' fU'St· Clemson team to win 24 games in' a · ' . • . . . left, .b~t both. are. be~g .played at the season ... This is.something that we talked · Coach ~i¥ Krzyzewski and _his ~ Greeensboro Coliseum. .· · .·· ·. . . · . . · · . . . faced.an 1m~rtant ~arne last mght as 1t

. . · · : · . · · ' .. · ; · .- about during shQOting practice this after- hos~ N ;C; . S~te m Cameron lndO?r

Bobby Cremins and his team have a~ weekend ahead of them. After a road game at DUke on Saturday af 1:30, they travel to Chicago to face fourth-ranked DePaul at 1:00. .

.. Maryland

. . . '

Maryland enters. the last stage of its. season on Sunday as it hosts Wake Forest; They then face important ~nference tests against N~C. State and Vuginia.

players in double figures, while t\\0 finished ~ with ·nine points.

N.C. State

Kenny Drummond said arrivederci to Coach Jim Valvano and the Vkllfpack earlier . this week, souring Valvano on recruiting junior college players in the future.

· Sam Ivy ·was named co-ACC Rookie pf noon" . Coach Cliff Ellis· said after the Stadtum. Awm would keep the Blue Devils · ~ ~:Wee.k:' fOr last week, sharing the award·. gamJ~ "I told them that if we would win, aliv~ . in ,th.e ~o.nfere~ce race with ~ritiCal ~~~McCay ofMazylaJ.ld. Ivy ~red we would make Clemson history and we· ·games ~g wtth No~ Carolina and

, ~.35 pomts·~ snared·22 rebounds.m the 'would be doing something that no one else Clemson, but ~.los would g1ve them four · . .i ,.J?.ea~~s~ two· ~es last week, leading to · had done:• · . losses and end their hopes for a conference

The Terrapins' record in the conference stands at .a still winless o-n, while their overall mark is 8-13. · ·

The point-guardless Woltpack visited Duke last night in what could be its last at­tempt at salvaging the season. State's record has dipped to 4-6 in the conference and 14-12 overall and faces exclusion from the NCAA 1bumament for the first time in a number of years.

}}!is.~rd ."Rookie of the Week" award of . . · . title. . i·tll·e ~n. .· Clemsot:~ faces a tough· te~t tOmorrow, The D~vils conference record was 7-3,

North carolina Virginia

. ;':'·:The I>eilcons' next game is on the road however,. as they traveJ; tcr Chapel Hij.l k?. 20-5 overall going into last night's game.

. :at Maryland· on Sunday, before returning · tan~le With the· Thr J:Ieels for what. ~y ~ •· home to host Virginia on Wednesday and dectde_·.the. regular season conference Georgia Teeb .

~ ,,• ~ , N.C: _State on Saturday. champiOnship. , 1 . . . · Georgia Tech received a crushing blow

Third-ranked North Carolina continued its dominating play with wins over Maryland, Malqliette and East Tennessee State. The .fu Heels host. Clemson tomor· row at the Dean Dome for bragging rights in the ACC regular season.

· The Cavaliers helped their own cause on Wednesday night with a 60-58 win over Georgia Tech, raising their ACC record to 5-6 and their overall mark to 17-8.

It· · '•. Horace Grimt was named ACC "Player Wednesday night with a .60-58 loss to Clemson of the Week" for last week, after p(>uriJig 1 Virginia in Charlottesville. The loss drop. How deep are the Thr Heels? Well, in

Wednesday's night victory over East Ten­·n~~ State, North Carolina placed seven

Virginia travels to Raleigh for a showdown with N.C. State on Sunday and then visits Greensboro to tangle with Wake Forest on Wednesday. .

l · ' in 52.points and grabbing 14 rebounds in ped the Yelli>:wjackets' recoro to &-Sin the i The Tigers cut down the ne& iti Clelll- two. wins for the Tigers. . . . . ACC, 15-8 oVerall: ~ ~

• Falcons ·Hire .Groh As Coach · The Atlanta Falcons have hired AI Groh, formerly

the head footbal1 coach at Wake Forest, as an assis-· tant coac~, ·the ~ announced Monday from· its·· Suwanee,. Ga., headquarters. . .· ·

Marion · Campbell, who was recently named ·.to replace Dan Henning ali the Falcons' head man, was pleased with Atlanta's acquisition of Groh. . ·

Men

Atlantic Coast Conference

w Demon Docs 4 TadPoles 2 Wsrr.oros· 3 Lord of th9 Alms 3 S'!J)pers 3 Fighting DSJ1os 2 J..Axe 2 Dave ClarkS 1 Dunkenstelns 0 Writs 0

L . Penetralor8 2 0 1liJs Ia Collooo 2 0 Brlllo Plda 1 1 O!Mir Ncllh IU'od th9 Fifth 1 2 Foster Cltlldrwn p 2 2 2 3 Murray State Conference 4 4

w 4

Dnlno and the PoweJI!Ullhera 1 Social Dez'a D

Yukon Conference

w BUiemlc: Elhoplana 3 . ~ 3

L 0

Allamoan Still'a 2 H«w!Nots 2

3, Lynke 4 Thymes

L 1 1 1 1

SOPH's Fldoles Phoenix

Baseball

3 2 1 0 0

1 2 3 2 4

"The Atlanta Fali::ons have &ided anbther talented . N. caro11na

coach to our staff," Campbell 'said. ~·He possesses · ~~rrmon several qualities th8t are· important to succeed on this Georgia 'reeh .

w 11

L 0

Stetson ConJerence w L 24 2

l.al8 N1gll1 Bllcl< l.eyant 3 0 9 Placa Chlcktln Dinner 3

Big Dlctaa 2 2 . Baltera . 1 2 Sa!unlay WFU at FlO/Ida ln18mlllonaf ;

Sunday WFU 81 FlOrida ln1ematlonll 9 2 24 2 7 3 20 5, w L 8 5 15 9 Phi Samba Jamma 4 0

Browns 2 1 Hurricanes 1 1 Babcock Blues 1 2 Buzz Busters 1 2

level, a sincere dedication to the game oHootball and · Virginia .

valuable knowledge and concern regatPing the young . ~;_ ~ 5 6 17 9 4· 6 14 12 1 10 12 12 0 . 11 8 ·13 men that play." . .Marylai!d

. . . Gf?h will be in charge of the Falcons'· special teams and tight ends. Though he has been a defensive coach for most of his coaching career,. Groh did work with the special teams at North Carolina under new Deacon

Sec.3 1 ,2

Women

· · Atllntic. Coast Conference

head coach Bill Dooley from lfJ73-77. . . Grob did not sign a new contract with Wake. Forest . ~~~ when his last contract ran· out iJ,J. January. He wanted N. Carolina

a two-year pact, but the Deacons offered oruy' a one- Duke; Maryland

year contract. Georgia Tech Wake Forest

. It was rumored that Groh would become a member Clemson ·

. . .

: ' Conf.,.noe 'Overall · W · L .~ W L 11 , 22 . 2

.• 10 ·. 3 19 6 7 5 16 8

. 6 . 6 17 7 : 6. 6. 13 11

. 4 . 8 13 11 3 10 13 13 2 10 6 19

of the ~ew York Giants' coaching staff under head · coach Bill Parcells. Groh coached under Parcells in : 1978 at the Air Force Academ}'. ·

lntramurals .

· Men's Competitive Graduate ·. ·

The Third Degree 1 CobraKongs 1

Xavier Conference

Mai<ing' Mows II V &Company JoeDots . Mandala Electric · Dlngleberty Express MDs2B Marian's Misfits Owls of Simas Sl""hrats

w 2 2 3 3 2 1 1 0 0

·Men's Noncompetitive . Beaver Conference Groh finished his six-year career at Wake Forest with

_a reco~ of 26-40. His 1986 team Was 5-6, 2-S in the · Atlantic Coast Conference. The squad ended the year with a 24-21 win over Georgia Tech; ..

-':1.'- . ' ' -- . " ~ ~~-' w .• · Loyola. CdrJf.ren~; : , i };,:~~~~ang ~ . '• ' • ' • • • •.· • j- .. ~-~i· .· .· ... ' ,\

It's eleven pm

2 4

L 0 0 1 1 '1 2 2 3 4

L 0 0

Vallnchta 2 Ate You Sariollll . 0 Couch..- 0 DGB'a 0

Peppercllne Conference

w Camels of Doubt 4 Bllcl< Boys . 4 M'O Quadtrotleia 3

·South Hall Siemmoll 3 c- 2 PaUl and lilt Band 2 lioglna , Muons 1

Winthrop Conference

w 4 4 3 1 1

. 1

1 2 3 3 3

L 1 2 2 2 2 3

.4 4

L 0 0 1 2 2 3

,

Ahylhm MMitod . 1

lnfeclloua Olseeseo 0

Wom·en's Meredith Conference

w GDI-KIMFA 4 Peftol Servltllde 3 Tunnel Team 3 Wild Wllf1looo 1 Buai..a Deals 1 M'ORocketa 0

·Hollins Conference

w Nolorloua 4 AllsWa 3 ~ l.iglttningbolls 2 Hllldlcajlpod Hoopes 2 Jamntets 2 Wt AltNdy Slld tt 2

2 4

L 0 0 1 2 3 4

L 0 1 , 2 2 2

Tuesday WFU at Ml8ml (A.) Wednesday WFU at Miami (A.)

Men's Basketball SUnday WFU at Maryland Wedneoday WFU va. Vltglnla

8 p.m .. o.-Cdllelm

Women's Basketball Saturday WFU Ill Clemson

Men's Tennis Saturday WFU B1 Old Dominion Sunday 81 Wlllam & Mary

Women's Tennis Saturday WFU 81 AubUm Sunday WFU 81 Geolgla Tecll Tuesday WFU Yl. Duke

1:30 p.m., Varalty Courts

Sweetbrier Conference Track

Sl!lrtgo Delphi

w 4 3

L Friday- WFU 81 ACC Indoor 0 Saturday Championslllp 1

Do you know where Yrurp:tper is? Let's be real. Compare the equipment she's using to yours. If

you were both trying to tunnel through a mountain, she'd have a bulldozer and you'd have a shrimp fork.

Yes.

Don't despair. Your problem is already half-solved. For a lim­ited time, you l'all buy anApple®Macintosh'" Plus or a Macintosh . 512K Enhanced computer with Microsoft Works-for less money.

Which is wonderful. · You get a Macintosh, with its speed, ease of use, and graphics

capability. Plus, you get a software program that lets you use all this Macintosh power in all your subjects.

Microsoft Works is not just one program, it's four integrated programs: word processing, data-base management, spreadsheet with charting, and communications.

Meaning you can put charts in your history essays. Spread­sheets in your economics papers. Call Dow jones News/Retrieval at 2:00A.M. to get the facts for your journalism story due at 8:00A.M.

So if you're taking more than one subject this semester, you should check out Macintosh and Microsoft Works.

But don't wait till the eleventh hour.'This offer will end soon. And your paper might stay out all night.

Macintosh and Microsoft Works

MICRO CENTER

Page 10: LD OLD AND LACK - WakeSpace Scholarship€¦ · bett said. The white house staff used the building once before during the Carter adminstration, when Carter attended a European economic

10 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 20, 1987

Alpha-Sigs Rally to Defeat Sig-Ep A Team in Overtime

Intramural& Men's Top Fifteen

Record 2.0 H

-.Top Positions· Same T .rln lntramural.·Polls

~ By R.J. MILLER · Old Gold and Black Reporter

Fourth-ranked Alpha Sigma Phi-A downed fifth­. ranked Sigma Phi Epsilon 59-49 in two overtimes in . an intense Lake Forest intramural basketball game

Wednesday night in North Gym. Going into the game, the Alpha-Sigs were 4-0 and

atop the league standings. The Sig-Eps were in second with a record of 5-l.

half. Led. by ~n Stanley, the Sig-Eps trailed 29-17 when they began a run that brought them within 29-24 in the first five minutes of the half. With the momen­twri in their fiwor, they used their agressive offense to tie the score at.39-39 at the conclusion of regulation · time . · Both team.s traded basket for basket in the first over­

time as the tension mounted. When the final seconds had expired, the score was tied again at 44-44.

. The Alpha-Sigs were strong offensively in the first half, and held a 27-13lead at halftime. The Alpha-Sigs

· had twice as many shots as the Sig-Eps. Precision ball­handling and teamwork by Paul Harnice, Craig Pear­son and Vmce Zw.tdyk staked the Alpha-Sigs to its lead.

The moment\lm swung again in the second overtime in tilvor of the Sig-Eps. The Alpha-Sigs got into serious foul trouble from which they were unable to recover. The Sig-Eps took advantage and pulled out front to win the game at 59-49.

The Sig-Eps improved their record to 6-1 and the A hot-shooting Sig-Ep team came out in the second Alpha-Sigs dropped to 4-1. '

Privette · From Page 8

under Briley and two years under Sanchez,'' Privette said. "I learned a lot from Coach Briley, but they have totally dif­ferent coaching styles and per­sonalities. Coach Sanchez is driven to succeed. Strategy-wise, he knows more than he will ever be able to translate to his players."

It has been under Sanchez's coaching that Privette has her

Press box From Page 8

-

this word in my Introduction to · New Testament class, but if I did · not know what it actually meant, . I might think it was a lost group of

native tribesmen who first practiced the curing of skin (epidermis)

fondest memory of her Wake Forest career thus far: a first­round ACC Tournament victory over Dulce last year.

This season has been a somewhat disappointing one for the Deacons and Privette. ·~ I got ready to play this

season, I was excited about the things we could do," Privette said. "We are a better team than . 500. At times, it has been frustrating. I wonder why we are coming so close. We need just one more shot in a lot of games.

"But we have pulled out some nice victories. The win over Old

beards. The Quadtrotters and Rockets are both APO (all play of­fense) teams. GDI, which stood fur good defense invigorates (a Bobby Knight-inspired team), and KIM-· FA, kids interested in making fine · assists, combined to become GDI­KIMFA, or girls doing inti:'llmurals, keeping in maximum fitness always.

Dominion has been the most satisfying so far."

Looking back on her career at Wake Forest, both from an athletic and academic point of view, Privette said that she sometimes wonders what she did to deserve all of the good that · has happened to her.

"People probably think that I am a real '!Ype A individual, hard-driven and competitive,'' she said. "But I am not like that at aU; I am real laid back. I am going to do the best I can, in athletics and in academics. There have been times when I have not done the best I could

Hazardous Waste, 'composed of players from North Carolina, are protesting the proposed building of a nuclear waste dump in the Thr Heel state. The Plowshares, who participated in Fanil Aid II, are concerned about the plight of the American farmer. Infectious Diseases are helping to spread the word about the dangers of AlPS and other diseases

"" H t-1 3-1

"" 5-1 4o1 4o1 .H

"" H 3oO

""

3

" s I 7 nr

• nr 11 12 1"

. 11 nr

Women's Top Six

Tum 1. QDI.KTMFA 2. Slrlnp 3. Notorlcul .. 4. Lynlal 5. Penal StMtucle e. AI~oS~mW

"-"""' <JoG 1

"" 2 "" 3 3-1 4 3oO . s 3-1 •

· have done;. but I am. only human."

As for t'\lture plans, Privette is applying to graduate schools in sports management. "I plan on st8Jmg involved in athletics, preferably college athletics, on the administrative level," Privette said.

No matter what she does in the future, there is no doubt that she will be successful. There is also no doubt that she will be· missed by the Wake Forest com­munity and that her athletic and academic abilities will be remembered for a long time to

.come.

:Operate Behind the President's Back and Use the Fifth ~erid­ment to Get Away with It."

The Ultimate Nickname Tham

We have taken a partial look at the many interesting nicknames in­tramural teams pos~s. As any list must do, a top nickname must be picked. ·

Slllff Repon

Making Moves n and GDI­. KIMFA re~ on top of the In­. tramural Basketball Polls.

Making Moves, 2-0, ,maintain­ed its top position in the men's Top Fifteen for the sixth. consecutive· week. Sigma Chi-A, 6-0, stayed at number two on the strength of a 59-49 double overtime victory over Sig Ep-A.

· T~e Blundering Herd, 4-0, Alpha Sig-A, 5-0, and Sig Ep-A, 6-l, round out the top five.

The second five is composed of

·Clemson From Page 8

from the rlgbt Wing. The Tigers then went on another

streak, which saw them score 12 unanswerd points, mostly by the

· dominance of their inside game . Grant had five points in the run and forward Jerry Pryor added four. · · The last Deacon threat of the night came ~hen the lead was slic­ed to nine points at the 6:04 mark, as Bogues buried a three-pointer from the top of the circle.

After a Clemson timeout, Michael rait drove through the lane and was fouled by Wake Forest's Cal BOyd. Boyd protested, . and was sllipped with a technical foul by official Hank Armstrong ..

"I blocked· the shot," Boyd said, • 'but he (Armstrong) said I got him with the body. I said • Ab, pitiful call,' and that's when he called the technical. '' .

After Tait hit all three of his foul shots, and then lofted in a three-

the Brotber:s, 3-1, Phi Samba Jam­rna, 4-0, Kappa Sig~B, 5-1, Plugs, 4-1, and the Demon DOcs, 4:0 . Kappa Sig-Band the Denion Docs entered the pollfor the fust time.

Aaaahhglih, S-0, leads the third five at the eleventh spot;. followed by .the Sultans, 4-0; the ·Potato Tuberwomis, 5-0, ~Undisputed Truth, 4-0, and · the Ground­bounders, who enter the polls at 4-0. . ..·. ·. I

GDI-KIMF A, 4-0, was the number one women's team for the. second straight week. ·

' . pointer, amounting to a six point play for Clemson without the ball leaving .their halfof the court, ef­fectively putting the game out of reach. ' · · . • ·

The Tigers' inside domination was apparent in the final statistics. Added to Granes}3 points, Pryor hadl6 and Anthony Jenkins chip­Ped in 11. Pryor and Jenkins. finish­ed with eight and seven rebounds, respectively. ·

Watson led the Deacons With.16 points, while Ivy and Bogues scored 14 each.

"I think that it was a game of spurts and runs. We had ours, but we had difficutly stopping theirs,'' Coach Bob Staak said. "They are a very good basketball team. Perhaps it was too easy for us at the beginning of the game, and the players didn't~ doing the things that got us there."

• 'Our defense is what made this game happen,'' Coach Cliff Ellis of qemson said. I was very con­cerned at the start of this game, because if ever there was a night tbat we were primed :for an upset, it was tonight." ·

problems. · Two teams, composed mostly of

television and movie fanatics, nam­ed themselves after some of their fuvorite shows. OTIS is named after . the beloved drunk on The Andy~ Griffith Show, and the RATS are· named after the animated classic The Secret of NIMH

The most concerned team, though, is Oliver North and the Fifth Ammendment. The recent Iranscam invoked these players in­to a better understanding of the Constitution-particularly the Fifth Ammendment. The team members are trying to get North on campus for a lecture entitled "How to

With that in mind, our nomina­tion for the top nickname of the 1987 intramural league is Draino and the Powerflushers. It bas been said that this team really stinks up the gym some nights. They also really clog up the middle when on defense. What is a ·powerflush anyway?

~~ ....... ~~llllllli!llll ... R $50 CASH The All-Initial Tham

Many teams have initials for their nicknames. Only the team members know what the letters ac­

. tually stand for, but, using a little · imagination, one can guess what

the initials mean. MD's 2B is fairly obvious:

: mother dunkers to be (these players hope to someday play for the Mother Dunkers squad). The DGB's could be a Buddhist team that tells its players don't grow

The World Affairs 'Thams

Wake Forest students are deeply · concerned with world issues. Many intramural teams carried their con­cern so far as to employ their. par­ticular concern into their team's nicknames.

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By JENNIFER REIRSON Old Gold and Black Reporter

. Fragments of. pottery near the Wake Forest major cultunil change North Carolina's W01odb N&i Woodall, professor

"During· the Archaic said, lndiBll!l in ,this.

' and lived as hunterS . ·~· s.a

Assistant News Editor

Sixty-one students · adults attended the

largest of the three hearings sponsored Government Commission on Race Wednesday evening.

·· ·.-· G. McLeod -·J~, ~ religion, said: "I

· tonight is one of the • seen in 31 years here at

. : . White racism is vasive, very subtle and to eradicate . . . It bas the heart . . . Wake sity was conceived in

_ born ·in racisin . . ." · showed two examples of in the form of two books. the only book ever Board-of Trustees ,;,.<;<.~~>M

. book which he said · racism.

Bryan gave several , what be considered to be .~ campus. He asked where ' , alumni of Wake Forest

,, . and said, "I would percent of the Wake do not believe in affirma.ti1

! ., • • • they believe in the hiring."

In reference to the fact half of the minority campus are athletes, "Our athletes are Roman to entertain a white shy." He wondered many students and fuc1lltv• the gospel choir sing. there are more-whites in choir than there are blacc•

, university choir. He also ' ed the lack of black chaJ>l•

and the lack of black ·visiting on Parents' we~lc• . When the forum ooe:nedlll discussion, white -Owen said, "I cannot they would want to con1e•

, black students_ . . . It's WASPy place." Black

· Tonya Adams said; Wake Forest I did not ratios. I have not ~n any racism here . . . I you look at the percentage to whites. I just wanted a good school."

Michelle Conner, the admissions counselor, the past Wake Forest's recruiting had mainly been letter and through the search service.

Conner has held her since January. She has ly in contact with stucleii have already applied to as she calls them to inquirl if they Would like to See Race, Page 3

• By ELIZABETH Old Gold and Black Reporter

Because of faculty ing, undergraduate studen~ ty apartments next year. of residence life and mpted by differences in faculty.

Under the new arrange~ live in buildings 1-8. graduate, professional apartment building B students.