New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about...

12
. ' .Flying High! Ranked tenth fn the nation, men's basketball soar past. the Clemson Tigers Wednesday night A look at Dean Mullen's 27 years of service at the university' and his replacement Dean Art Embraces Technology sports/page 10 insighVpage 11 Exhibit using television screens and prerecoi"ded videos featured in Scales A&E/page 8 VoLUME 78, No. 20 ©1995 WFU Pue!ICATJO;-;s BoARD, Au RIGHTS RESERVED THURSDAY, fEBRUARY 23, 1995 Students, faculty give mandatory computer purchase n1ixed reviews BY HEATHER MACKAY OLD GOLD AND BLACK REPORTER telling students who already have a computer their system is not worthwhile. As the debate over standardized computers continues, mixed feelings seem to abound from professors and students, But according to the booklet composed by the Academic Computing Advisory Commit- tee, students who boughttheircomputersmore than two years ago will need to replace them before graduation anyway. It says many com- puters can be left at home, and students will be able to get better deals on software and hard- ware. David John, a professor of computer sci- ence, said he would be in favor of helping all students in the college become proficient with the usage of technology, but he does not see "the academic advantage of standardization." Right now, according to Provost David Brown, the university is leaning towards IBM, John also said he would find it difficult New spending rules irk student groups Bv LISA MARTIN Nl:\vs PRonucrJo:'-1 AssiSTANT Leaders in student organizations objected to anew spending regulation passed down last week from Harold Holmes, the dean of student services, requiring all expenditures to be ap- proved by a faculty adviser. Aftermeet- ing with several student leaders, Holmes and other administration mem- bers are working on a compromise that will be acceptable for everyone in- volved. organizations. Holmes sent a memo to all student organization heads Feb. 16 that requires all student groups to get expenditures approved by faculty ad- visors. About eight student leaders orga- nized a meeting with Holmes Friday afternoon to discuss their concerns. Among these concerns was the lack of availability on a day-to-day basis of some faculty advisers for the approval of expenses. Price is clearly a consideration as well as the outlook of each company's future and the technology they can provide. IBM has the most interest in the campus' proposal, he said. Another concern yet to be answered is the cost. Brown said there is not a tlrm price from fBM dealers yet, although they have received one from Apple. He was unable to disclose this infGrmation because they are still in the midst of negotiations. When the price is deter- mined it will be incorporated into incoming freshmen's overall Senior Connie Marks, the editor of The Howler, said, "We're happy with our faculty adviser, and he devotes to us as much time as he wants to. but dealing with a budget the size of ours, we can't look to him every time that we make an expenditure." Dueling Banjos The price of the actual computer is not the only expense this proposal entails. According to Brown, 17 computer specialists will be hired for various buildings, the campus will have to be wired, help-desks will be needed, loaner pools will have to be available in case a student's computer needs to be fixed, com- puters will have to be traded in every two years, faculty will have to be supplied as well and faculty and students will have to be trained. "We know it's going to be expensive," Brown said. The Babcock School of Manage- ment has had a system simil<Jr to this proposal for about two and a half years. They developed the Strategic Initiative Knowledge Navigation, making students very proficient in the usage of Apple's PowerBooks. ··we were able to justify the fact that comput- ers have become very important in business management." said Associate Dean James Ptaszynski. These PowerBooks added an additional See Computers, Page 5 The regulation originated from a memo sent to faculty members by Con- troller Tom Gilsenan in December that required them to get signed approval from department heads or another su- perior for all expenditures. Holmes said he and Gilscnan then decided the regulation should be universal to all groups on campus, including student Other students were also concerned about the possible effects this regula- tion could have on the autonomy of See Spending, Page 5 Dean William Hamilton performs bluegrass music on his banjo at Shorty's Coffee House Tuesday night. Hearn's surgery 1s successful OLD GOLD AND BLACK STAFF REPORT Thomas K. Hearn Jr., the president of the university, successfully underwent open-heart surgery last Thursday for repair of a leaking mitral valve. A team of doctors at Baptist Hospital Medical Center was able to rebuild and strengthen. Hearn's valve, rather than replace it. Doctors performed echocardiogram studies afterward to be sure the valve was functioning properly. "It looked beautiful," said Dr. Neal Kon, the lead surgeon and an associate professor of surgical science (cardiothoracic). As is routine after open-heart sur- gery, Hearn has been moved to inten- sive care, where his condition is offi- cially listed as serious, Kon said. He will be moved to a regular hospital room as soon as his recovery permits. Hearn's heart problem was diagnosed about two weeks ago during a routine physical ex:am, before any damage had been done to the heart. The mitral valve had been prolapsing, or ballooning out in the opposite direction, causing some blood to go backwards toward the lung as his heart pumped. If the valve had not been repaired, permanent damage to the heart would have resulted. Hearn is expected to resume his job duties full-time in April after a period of general rehabilitation. He hopes to gradually resume some duties before then, although doctors have advised him not to make any firm appointments until April I. In his absence, the vice presidents wil1 be working together more and asserting their individual ar- eas. more strongly than when the preseident is present, according to Samuel Gladding, the assistant to the president. Pepsi Cola fails to create jobs, university must pay BY BRUCE R. MARSH CONTRIDUriNG RU 1 0RTER When Pepsi Cola decided to locate its con- sumer service division in the former RJR World Headquarters, now called the Univer- sity Corporate Center, university and city officials held high expectations for the eco- nomic benefits that would result. A year later opinions have been revised. The university lured the beverage giant to Winston-Salem with help from the city and Forsyth County through a one million dollar economic incentive grant. The Pepsi Cola Company in tum promised to provide 1,000 jobs for the region's economy. Two years later, Pepsi has only added 200 employees at the Corporate Center and has no plans to reach the promised I ,000. Because the terms in the contract call for repayment if the jobs are not created, the university will have to reimburse the county and city, which has already given the school $700,000 of the $1 million. Although Pepsi promised to provide the I ,000 jobs, the university must abide by the termsofthecontract. AccordingtoJohnAnder- son, the vice president for finance and plan- ning, the university will honor the contract made between the school and the two eco- nomic development agencies involved in the deal. Winston-Salem Business, Inc. and the Forsyth County Development Corp. University officials approached the city in February of I 993 to ask for its financial assis- tance in efforts to attract Pepsi to Winston- Salem. City officials approved a plan to pro- vide $500,000 to the school with Forsyth County providing the matching funds. Offi- cials authorized WSBI and the Forsyth County Development Corp. to dispense the grant to the university. Both of these agencies have played major roles in the city's economic development projects. The State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander- son then negotiated with the company over the terms of moving Pepsi into the Corporate Center. Pepsi promised to create a total of 500 permanent jobs by Feb, I, 1995and l,OOOjobs by Feb. I, 1996. Along with the job creation Pepsi agreed to provide a minimum of $20 million in investments on items such as com- puters and telephone equipment, money that would benefit the local economy. The money allocated in the grant was used to relocate ihe Corporate s former tenant. Eduserv. to the Rcynolda Business Center. The school spent a total of $3.9 mil- lion on the project and provided Eduserv $500.000 for its move. According to Anderson, the money from the economic development initiative was part of the package for the university's real estate interests and is being used to defray expenses involved with Eduscrv's move and to pay for renovations tu buth the Corporate Center and the Reyno! da Business Center. Eduserv, based· in St. Paul. Minnesota. is a larQ:e loan servic- ing company that merged with Wachovia's Student Loan Scn·icc in February of 1993. See Pepsi, Page 3 University works toward teleconference capability BY ANDY SISK ··some of the physics graduate students have already gone over to Bowman Gray," Shields said. ''They've received course credit for courses offered by N.C. State. It will be nice to have such a facility on thiseampus. It certainly has great potential in expanding the course offerings for the students here on campus." Former Kellogg executive named dean of MBA school OLD GoLD AND BLACK Rr::PORIER While debate rages over the Pro- gram Planning Committee's recom- mendation for standardized computer ownership by students, another tech- nology need is gaining attention. According to Buck Bayliff, the di- rector of communication services. the university must have a teleconferenc- ing system in order to participate in the Information Superhighway. A teleconference is a conference of individuals in different locations. With the new video camera capacity ex- pected to be included as part of the renovation of DeTamble Auditorium this summer, teleconferences could play a major role in students' educa- tional experience. The Hawthorne campus already has the necessary equipment to hold tele- conferences. Howard Shields, a pro- fessor of physics and the chairman of the department, said some physics graduate students have made use of the campus' technology, Bayliff said the university's re- cent teleconference, last week" s lec- ture by Sydney Schanberg via sat- ellite from New York, was not dif- ficult to set up because most of the technical aspects were handled by the studio in New York. He also said the new center in DeTamble would be more sophisticated. "Right now, we're sort of doing it in an elementary way," he said. "All our (present) capability here is limited. We get their image. but they're not getting us. The future plans are that we will have a two way teleconferencing system." Bayli!Tsaid the campus will have See Technology, Page 5 OLD GOL!) AXD BLACK SlAI:f REPORT Gary E. Costley, 5 I, a former executive vice presi- dent of cereal giant Kellogg Co. and the president and chairman of Kellogg USA, has been named dean of the Babcock Graduate School of Management. Provost David G. Brown, who made the announce- ment to a gathering of faculty and university officials Wednesday morning, praised Costley's values and experience. "We have found in Gary Costley a leader for the Babcock School's next great leap forward," Brown said. "Dr. Costley has splendid credentials for this posi- tion, having been a leader in many corporate areas during his career, including the job of being a corpo- rate president. I am convinced that his vision and positive approach to our future will be mutually ben- eficial." Costley said he is happy to join the MBA school. "While I have spent the past 25 years in a business setting, I have always had an intense interest in aca- demics," he said. Costley, who retired from Kellogg's in 1994, said, "In many ways I have been training forth is type of role See Dean, Page 3 Gary K Costley has been named dean of the Babcock Graduate School of 1\lanagement. What's on your mind? Let The Games Begin INSIDE: ln-;ight A&E g_ 1 0 Liic in Hell 8 11 If you have questions, comments or story suggestions, call Ext. 5280 or send e-mail to [email protected]. • For subscription or advertising information call Ext. 5279. Perspectives takes a look at the popular intramural and club sport activities on campus. Next week in the Old Gold and Black. 2 Classified 9 Coming Attractions 10 Deacon Notes 1:2 Editoria Is G-7 News 1-S. E'QI Score_board .4 12 Sports 11-1.2 '0-:'Qrlclwide 4

Transcript of New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about...

Page 1: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

. '

.Flying High! Ranked tenth fn the nation, men's basketball soar past. the Clemson Tigers Wednesday night

A look at Dean Mullen's 27 years

of service at the university' and

his replacement Dean E.s~ott

Art Embraces Technology

sports/page 1 0 insighVpage 11

Exhibit using television screens and

prerecoi"ded videos featured in Scales A&E/page 8

VoLUME 78, No. 20 ©1995 WFU Pue!ICATJO;-;s BoARD, Au RIGHTS RESERVED THURSDAY, fEBRUARY 23, 1995

Students, faculty give mandatory computer purchase n1ixed reviews BY HEATHER MACKAY

OLD GOLD AND BLACK REPORTER

telling students who already have a computer their system is not worthwhile.

As the debate over standardized computers continues, mixed feelings seem to abound from professors and students,

But according to the booklet composed by the Academic Computing Advisory Commit­tee, students who boughttheircomputersmore than two years ago will need to replace them before graduation anyway. It says many com­puters can be left at home, and students will be able to get better deals on software and hard­ware.

David John, a professor of computer sci­ence, said he would be in favor of helping all students in the college become proficient with the usage of technology, but he does not see "the academic advantage of standardization." Right now, according to Provost David

Brown, the university is leaning towards IBM, John also said he would find it difficult

New spending rules irk student groups

Bv LISA MARTIN

Nl:\vs PRonucrJo:'-1 AssiSTANT

Leaders in student organizations objected to anew spending regulation passed down last week from Harold Holmes, the dean of student services, requiring all expenditures to be ap­proved by a faculty adviser. Aftermeet­ing with several student leaders, Holmes and other administration mem­bers are working on a compromise that will be acceptable for everyone in­volved.

organizations. Holmes sent a memo to all student organization heads Feb. 16 that requires all student groups to get expenditures approved by faculty ad­visors.

About eight student leaders orga­nized a meeting with Holmes Friday afternoon to discuss their concerns. Among these concerns was the lack of availability on a day-to-day basis of some faculty advisers for the approval of expenses.

Price is clearly a consideration as well as the outlook of each company's future and the technology they can provide. IBM has the most interest in the campus' proposal, he said.

Another concern yet to be answered is the cost. Brown said there is not a tlrm price from fBM dealers yet, although they have received one from Apple. He was unable to disclose this infGrmation because they are still in the midst of negotiations. When the price is deter­mined it will be incorporated into incoming freshmen's overall t~ition.

Senior Connie Marks, the editor of The Howler, said, "We're happy with our faculty adviser, and he devotes to us as much time as he wants to. but dealing with a budget the size of ours, we can't look to him every time that we make an expenditure."

Dueling Banjos

The price of the actual computer is not the only expense this proposal entails. According to Brown, 17 computer specialists will be hired for various buildings, the campus will have to be wired, help-desks will be needed, loaner pools will have to be available in case a student's computer needs to be fixed, com­puters will have to be traded in every two years, faculty will have to be supplied as well and faculty and students will have to be trained.

"We know it's going to be expensive," Brown said.

The Babcock Graduat~ School of Manage­ment has had a system simil<Jr to this proposal for about two and a half years.

They developed the Strategic Initiative Knowledge Navigation, making students very proficient in the usage of Apple's PowerBooks. ··we were able to justify the fact that comput­ers have become very important in business management." said Associate Dean James Ptaszynski.

These PowerBooks added an additional See Computers, Page 5

The regulation originated from a memo sent to faculty members by Con­troller Tom Gilsenan in December that required them to get signed approval from department heads or another su­perior for all expenditures. Holmes said he and Gilscnan then decided the regulation should be universal to all groups on campus, including student

Other students were also concerned about the possible effects this regula­tion could have on the autonomy of See Spending, Page 5

Dean William Hamilton performs bluegrass music on his banjo at Shorty's Coffee House Tuesday night.

Hearn's • surgery 1s

successful OLD GOLD AND BLACK STAFF REPORT

Thomas K. Hearn Jr., the president of the university, successfully underwent open-heart surgery last Thursday for repair of a leaking mitral valve.

A team of doctors at Baptist Hospital Medical Center was able to rebuild and strengthen. Hearn's valve, rather than replace it.

Doctors performed echocardiogram studies afterward to be sure the valve was functioning properly. "It looked beautiful," said Dr. Neal Kon, the lead surgeon and an associate professor of surgical science (cardiothoracic).

As is routine after open-heart sur­gery, Hearn has been moved to inten­sive care, where his condition is offi­cially listed as serious, Kon said. He will be moved to a regular hospital room as soon as his recovery permits.

Hearn's heart problem was diagnosed about two weeks ago during a routine physical ex:am, before any damage had been done to the heart. The mitral valve had been prolapsing, or ballooning out in the opposite direction, causing some blood to go backwards toward the lung as his heart pumped. If the valve had not been repaired, permanent damage to the heart would have resulted.

Hearn is expected to resume his job duties full-time in April after a period of general rehabilitation. He hopes to gradually resume some duties before then, although doctors have advised him not to make any firm appointments until April I. In his absence, the vice presidents wil1 be working together more and asserting their individual ar­eas. more strongly than when the preseident is present, according to Samuel Gladding, the assistant to the president.

Pepsi Cola fails to create jobs, university must pay BY BRUCE R. MARSH

CONTRIDUriNG RU10RTER

When Pepsi Cola decided to locate its con­sumer service division in the former RJR World Headquarters, now called the Univer­sity Corporate Center, university and city officials held high expectations for the eco­nomic benefits that would result. A year later opinions have been revised.

The university lured the beverage giant to Winston-Salem with help from the city and Forsyth County through a one million dollar economic incentive grant. The Pepsi Cola Company in tum promised to provide 1,000 jobs for the region's economy. Two years later, Pepsi has only added 200 employees at the Corporate Center and has no plans to reach

the promised I ,000. Because the terms in the contract call for repayment if the jobs are not created, the university will have to reimburse the county and city, which has already given the school $700,000 of the $1 million.

Although Pepsi promised to provide the I ,000 jobs, the university must abide by the termsofthecontract. AccordingtoJohnAnder­son, the vice president for finance and plan­ning, the university will honor the contract made between the school and the two eco­nomic development agencies involved in the deal. Winston-Salem Business, Inc. and the Forsyth County Development Corp.

University officials approached the city in February of I 993 to ask for its financial assis­tance in efforts to attract Pepsi to Winston­Salem. City officials approved a plan to pro-

vide $500,000 to the school with Forsyth County providing the matching funds. Offi­cials authorized WSBI and the Forsyth County Development Corp. to dispense the grant to the university. Both of these agencies have played major roles in the city's economic development projects.

The State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander­son then negotiated with the company over the terms of moving Pepsi into the Corporate Center. Pepsi promised to create a total of 500 permanent jobs by Feb, I, 1995and l,OOOjobs by Feb. I, 1996. Along with the job creation Pepsi agreed to provide a minimum of $20 million in investments on items such as com­puters and telephone equipment, money that

would benefit the local economy. The money allocated in the grant was used

to relocate ihe Corporate C~nter' s former tenant. Eduserv. to the Rcynolda Business Center. The school spent a total of $3.9 mil­lion on the project and provided Eduserv $500.000 for its move.

According to Anderson, the money from the economic development initiative was part of the package for the university's real estate interests and is being used to defray expenses involved with Eduscrv's move and to pay for renovations tu buth the Corporate Center and the Reyno! da Business Center. Eduserv, based· in St. Paul. Minnesota. is a larQ:e loan servic­ing company that merged with Wachovia's Student Loan Scn·icc in February of 1993. See Pepsi, Page 3

University works toward teleconference capability

BY ANDY SISK ··some of the physics graduate students have already gone over to Bowman Gray," Shields said. ''They've received course credit for courses offered by N.C. State. It will be nice to have such a facility on thiseampus. It certainly has great potential in expanding the course offerings for the students here on campus."

Former Kellogg executive named dean of MBA school

OLD GoLD AND BLACK Rr::PORIER

While debate rages over the Pro­gram Planning Committee's recom­mendation for standardized computer ownership by students, another tech­nology need is gaining attention.

According to Buck Bayliff, the di­rector of communication services. the university must have a teleconferenc­ing system in order to participate in the Information Superhighway.

A teleconference is a conference of individuals in different locations. With the new video camera capacity ex­pected to be included as part of the renovation of DeTamble Auditorium this summer, teleconferences could play a major role in students' educa­tional experience.

The Hawthorne campus already has the necessary equipment to hold tele­conferences. Howard Shields, a pro­fessor of physics and the chairman of the department, said some physics graduate students have made use of the campus' technology,

Bayliff said the university's re­cent teleconference, last week" s lec­ture by Sydney Schanberg via sat­ellite from New York, was not dif­ficult to set up because most of the technical aspects were handled by the studio in New York. He also said the new center in DeTamble would be more sophisticated.

"Right now, we're sort of doing it in an elementary way," he said. "All our (present) capability here is limited. We get their image. but they're not getting us. The future plans are that we will have a two way teleconferencing system."

Bayli!Tsaid the campus will have See Technology, Page 5

OLD GOL!) AXD BLACK SlAI:f REPORT

Gary E. Costley, 5 I, a former executive vice presi­dent of cereal giant Kellogg Co. and the president and chairman of Kellogg USA, has been named dean of the Babcock Graduate School of Management.

Provost David G. Brown, who made the announce­ment to a gathering of faculty and university officials Wednesday morning, praised Costley's values and experience.

"We have found in Gary Costley a leader for the Babcock School's next great leap forward," Brown said.

"Dr. Costley has splendid credentials for this posi­tion, having been a leader in many corporate areas during his career, including the job of being a corpo­rate president. I am convinced that his vision and positive approach to our future will be mutually ben­eficial."

Costley said he is happy to join the MBA school. "While I have spent the past 25 years in a business

setting, I have always had an intense interest in aca­demics," he said.

Costley, who retired from Kellogg's in 1994, said, "In many ways I have been training forth is type of role See Dean, Page 3

Gary K Costley has been named dean of the Babcock Graduate School of 1\lanagement.

What's on your mind? Let The Games Begin INSIDE: ln-;ight A&E g_ 1 0 Liic in Hell

8 11 If you have questions, comments or story suggestions, call

Ext. 5280 or send e-mail to [email protected]. • For subscription or advertising information call Ext. 5279.

Perspectives takes a look at the popular intramural and club sport activities on campus.

Next week in the Old Gold and Black.

Bri~fl~ 2 Classified 9 Coming Attractions 10 Deacon Notes 1:2 Editoria Is G-7

News 1-S. E'QI i~e Fl~<Jt Score_board .4

12 Sports 11-1.2 '0-:'Qrlclwide

4

Page 2: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

2 CloGoi.DANDBLACK THURSDAY,FEBRUARY23,1995 ______ _.._.__.._ _____________________________ N~------------------------------~--~~~~~ SG beginning: fle:J, f>rbj\Q~ ·

• PPC focus groups to be held

Anyone interest(!(i in participating in focus groups to discuss issues in' the Progi'am Planning Commit­tee report should contact Julianne Surface at Ext. 1362. The groups will meet Wednesday at 3:30, 4:30 and 5:30p.m. in Benson 406.

• Arts representative to speak

David C. Hudson, the president and CEO of the Arts CQuncil ofWinston-Salem and Forsyth County, will speak Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in the Johnson Formal Parlor as part of the Leadership Speakers Series.

• Mardi Gras festival held

Food and music will be served up New Orleans style Tuesday in Poteat Lounge in honor of Mardi Gras. The celebration, which includes traditional holiday cuisine, will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. and tickets are $2.

• Rotary funds avail~le _,, ....... '•. '>2

Applications ar~ now ~vaili@le for the Rotary Ambassadorial Scholarship, Yf.Nch is designed to "fm;ther intemationfll understllfiding and friendly relations among peopleof diff~ent countries."

Applicants should plan for one year's study in an9ther country and should hay~ completed a least two years of university coursewprk when the schol­arship begins July I, 1996. St%!¢.nts are ineligible if they, their . parents, or theif . grandparents are Rotarians. Call Susan Faust a\ Ext. 5891 for addi-

. tiona! infonnation.

• Chi Omega to donate funds

'Just before the Virginia game on Sunday, Chi Omega sorority will present the university with a check thatrepresen~the proceeds from their "Honor Your Scholar" fundraiser. This money, which will benef,it the Biian Piccolo Cancer fund, is the largest -donation made by any, camp,us Greek women's group. . . .

• Latin films to be shown for fest

The department of Romance languages is spon­soring a Spanish and Latin-American Film Festival Feb. 22-April 26. The second film, Como Aqua Para Chocolate(Like Water for Chocolate) will be

. shown Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Tribble A3.

• Travel seminar to be held

Ulrike Wiethaus, an assistant professor of reli­gion, and.Bemadine Barnes, an assistant nrofessor of. an. wilf'iea(fti\e trav~nemlnat' 1'Ai\.'anl.l Reli-

. gious Life in Northern Europe, 1400-1600" May· · "17•Jilrre ·12: The itirrerar}' includes stops in Vienna;· ·

Prague, Nuremburg, Antwerp, and Amsterdam. Students will receive four credits in either art or religion. Interested students should call Barnes at Ext. 5303. The deadline for signing up is March I.

Thomas Young

Catch this!

~S result of Students~~~~~:,~ Bv LILLIAN NASH

SO REPORTER

· mented with newer and nicer equipm'eni:.iftth~' costs and physical renovations: can'li$ j~ie4. •

In other eoiillD!ttee dev'eloptnentli~1p~vell9 1

With the completion of a campus door to door announced the revival of the universal dllbft:Cartl: campaign,StudentGovemmentisbeginningwork. debate, the forihillatiori' Of"a contrac(w1t1Hilti' on several new projects that range from rewriting athletic department regarding SO's ~li)la~i\~t)f the Honor Code to renovating the fitness level of basketball ticket distributicin, and thtftl~tfnitt6n • the Benson University Center .. _ ·- -· · of food service limiuitioris·at ·semester•§'enir. ·,~. ~

Nearly sixty ideas emerged from: the recent SG ·. · Peverly and:senior Steve'BumgarneP, 'tlie'S'G · door to door campaign and they have been as- President. will draw up a contract with the a'(&~· signed to appropriate committees for action, ac- letic departmi:mt outlining SG' s coori:ij.ihltl~n'bf, cording to junior Evan Peverly, a co-chairman of ticket distribution. This will have to tie ratified by· the Campus Life Committee. . . the legisla~ure, perhaps as. early a5.ne~~~~aY/

Senior Joe Wall of the Judiciary Committee ·Peverly s&d. · · ·' ·· 1 • ··• ·• ... r ·· said, ":I'he door to door campaign reinforced One pi:obleni. Bumgarner and Pe~etly 'fla\itf issues that we are already working with. About articulated individually is the· question 'dt' com!; the vague Honor' Code, the Honor Council and pensation. · ·.: · · · · .. _ · · '' '. :.• ·•:;;•:(r' · Judicial Board ar~ handling the rewriting, but for "The Alpha Phi Omegas teceH;e· a:ftlie'ltiUJI,ge~ creativity'ssake,sothatwejustdon'tcopyWash- for managing regis.tration and ~e·~~-~~~~~ ~ ington & Lee's or Davidson's, our committee serve something, maybe some m9n~y that C;JUld' members are working with them on that also." go into an SG fund or someth!ng;:'Pev~~Y -~~d:'

Wall said his committee is considering the "Tl)ere has never been anything'.m Wti.tin'g'.'tlil!.t creation of a statement that every student would cl~fi~ who handles ticketdistributio~; 1\oipli,¥!#'' memorize and write on every test and paper. He this will help everything out.~' ' . · ~- : ·· ~: said the primary purpose of his committee's . Peverly shld ~e al~o pla,ns t9 Wk. 'tl(rc~tt.: efforts is to make the. c?<~e more specifi.c. s? ~wnby, the campus dn:ectofpf ~ f~I;I.S.~-~7;·, students understand the1rngbts and responsiblii- vtces, about the Pit and Benson's Closings anh'e ties as. memb~rs of the univer~ity community .. '" end:~flast ~mester. ''They,wer~.'?<>tp ~lose£bii~ Semor~atnckVra.na,th~ch~ano~the.Phys•-· the end ofexams .. and ~e would lik.~,p:i:ge~1 a.,

ca! Plannmg Comnuttee, IS working WlthJUfilOrs schedule of closings ahead, of time,. s~tw~ ¢!ili.'. Mtke W axelman ~nd Spencer Schreckengaust, define that early lind take care of'it ahead of tjm~: Bob Baker, the ctn:ector of development~ and if we have any problems," .Pever;ly_ sai<i'.',-. · ... :.: · Joanna Iwata, the d1rector of Benson Center, to Tina Schippers, ·a co-chrurwoman.Qf the· stu-. evaluate the fitness level of:Benson. dentrelationscommittee,saidtheinter~t\llfcouft~;

Sophomore Bill Ferguson takes advantage of~ break in the winter weather to play a little catch.

Aw~ting app~oval. from ~wat~, the P~ysical cil will meetfor the first time after sppng'~re~ .. ; Planm~g Comnuttee IS constdenng IDOVI~g !he "We also learned from doo~ to qoor ~hl!t ee~p1~· check-m desk c;mt to the ~otunda.ar~a. restncting want more campus-wide parties that arj! op~n,'~o access to one fltght of staus, making the other for everybody. We are thinking abOut a battle ot ttre• · emergencies only, and creating, in essence, an-· bandskindofideathatwouldbringtogethdriocaf other workout area. or Wake Forest bands: That'is all being'loolCed

Vrana said the existing rooms would be aug- into," Schippers said. · " · ·· -'·• · .·:''· . . : ... ·~~ . ' ~

Vietnam War expert lectures via satellite on-journalism., wqr ., •, I ~ ~

: Bv DANIELLE DEAVER becomes more widespread and common. whlte House and Pentagon oftfcial~ cla\nied·lhJ~ess~ · NewsPRooucnoNAssiSTANT During the lecture, Schanberg compared the restric- causedthelossoftheVietnamWarbeeauseoftheir'·a'iiii:

Taking advantage of new technology, Pulitzer Prize winningjoumalist Sydney Schanberg lectured students in Pugh Auditorium Thursday night from New York City.

Schanberg' s lecture was shown directly after the movie The Killing Fields, which was based on his experiences as a reporter in Vietnam. Speaking via satellite, Schanberg lectured foran hour on the subjectsofjoumalismand war .

Wayne King, an instructor of journalism, said he chose Schanberg to lecture for several reasons. Schanberg's connection to the film and the correlation of the subject of the film to the Vietnam symposium currently being held at the Z. Smith Reynolds Library was one reason. King said Schanberg was also chosen to show students that the events shown.1.'n:the ·movie· were not fictional, but ·rather · based 011 :tbe. experiences· of an actual ·journalist. "Real jeumali~do this," King said.

The satellite relay form of lecture was mainly because Schanberg will not leave Manhattan to give lectures, King said. Therefore, the video relay system was an ideal way to receive Schanberg's lecture. "The point is getting the person you want if they don't want to come down here,"

tions placed on journalists during the Gulf War to the war" prejudices. Schanberg said the defeat and loss of nearly restriction-free reporting during the Vietnam War. public opinion were caused by the loss of so inany_sol-.. Schanberg said the Gulf War was just what Washington diers: He said, "No President was big enough to say, officials had been waiting for- a "brief, clean, neat war" 'Look, we're.coming home.'" to replace the public's memories of Vietnam. Military officials have said it is likely the same 'restrlc-

During the Gulf War, the numbers of reporters allowed tions imposed during the GulfWarwill be imposeddilrihg'' to go to the Middle' East was nearly unlimited, but few future wars. · · · • ., · ·~ ' · ·; '': journalists were allowed to go to the front lines. "Most During the Gulf War, the public shi:Jwed no· conceljr ' reporting was done by pools, and they would be taken about the fact that the press was being placed under ~ch where the military chose," Schanberg said. strict government control. Mo_st news organizatiori~'p{e:: ·

Pentagon officials chose the sites and the soldiers who tended the restrictions did not exist, and few joitrlifllists~' would accompany the journalists to the chosen sites. wrote about them. Schanberg said, "The. press haS aflowea· : Many reports written by pool members were held by ·. itself to be defamed." A la~suit wa8· filed agah1st',ili~ : military officials for 36 to 48 hou_rs, un_ til they were no _ militarybX sey~tal_journali!its~,incJudi'!g.~c~~b~rd, b:ur· ·tongeqiel.'tineFJ.t;h~·said. . .. ,,,.,,., .,. · ·. ··· ,,.,.,.,,-, ,. · :-,, .. :·.1··: ·there wete'no·'defluiUV~~poam., - ··10 ~~s,iJ!'b.c;::t

-These regalations were imposed, accoi'ding to military . · : . ScharibCrg said'tlfe'j:i{f~m\i~uf>1f6-'.s1rWct'ioil iS till?'; .officials, becausenationalseGuritywasatstake. Schanberg · war as shown to them by'uierprfl:~'Wh-pO~l:fii9(oPiW~' said, "The White House had decided that the press wasn't . much of foreign policy. Schanberg cited' the· ptiblit:""~ ·• going to get a fro~t seat, and therefore the p~blic wouldn't outraged reaction to .the picture of a soldier bei'!g d~tgi!f! ·· get a front seat etther." · away by enemy soldiers as a large part of the reason for the

According to Schanberg, military officials placed re- American withdrawal from Somalia. ~

• Field school tak•'ng a· p' plic.J.~"'o' ·ns·.·. ·.he liaid. Anotherrea~on(o,r.the video lecture was that it had a · .... never beerr att~pted on the Reynolda campus. "!thought

· · . ·· ' :· · '· : ..... '. · ' that this,wa:s ba5ically'the\vave of the future," King said.

porters under house arrest and confiscated their creden- Schanberghad.anegativevic;rwQn.~etrendf'lQ'>.~ress.~. tials if they violated the conditions imposed. "At least 2Q. "I Wnk the prbss.has caved i~t Sf~r_g $i.l;\.fl~-ll.l~'... reporters were arrested in this fashion," Shanberg said.. said the public should be informed about wars before

The Department of Anthropology is a,cceptipg. ·.: · . Thelecture·~'costsroughlythesameasbringingtheguy applications for its annual archaeology field scho'oi' . ~- dOWil;.h~re/ligi_rig srud. He also added that the price will in the Bahamas May 29 to June 23. This anthrp~}~'- . ;··probably godoW.n asl!fe procedureofusinga video lecture

During the Vietnam War, according to Schanberg, th~re allowing the country to become involved in them. were virtually_ no restrictions on the press. Travel was not · Junior ~ura FiQrini atteqded.the lecture; ShO;!rlg. ~·1 ·• restricted at all, and the only cen~orship was the token thought it was really 'interesting to have his oView.,on:wfn:J censorship applied by the foreign officials. and to get his perspective."

ogy course is taught by Mary Jane Benn'a.n, ·an>· :. .. · , ... ·. · ·

assist~nt ,prof!!SSOr of anthrgpology, and ~erry~ . •s ·" t Art' t s • rt GQivecki,aprofessoratLenior-RhypeCollege,an\1' ..... -. ec:r.es: :· . lS . enes conce ~akes place at the Bahamian Field.Station:~n Sari· . ··· . ·· ... ·· . . · '· .. · . .· · ·

Si~:~:::;;::~':.~~~ff;;~r,, hea.dlffie~Arts Day festivities ·• ~A SessiOn explainS. prog.f~·:_ .. ' -~ ....: .. _· _· _·· _..::B....:y....:J:.:E:::.SS:.;il.:o;QA..:.·.;::Y.;::o:::.UN:..:.G::......___ ing, ~rawing and other works in the Benson

. . . , " . . . .. . . Co>rrRmtmN~.RE,v6RTE~. · Rotunda. · ···An information s.ession on executive and.eveping·. - · · ·. .· , , In addition, there are displays of various

· MBAprograms at the Babcock Graduate Schqol of.; .' ·.A Secrest Artists S~ries·e\!'ent featUring · forms of art with the opportunity to learn, M;ap&g~ment will' be held from 10 a.m. to uoon· · .. 'the J::laf!del and Hayd'nSoci.ely ·will be the. observe and buy in Benson 401. .t~riiorro~.iiliheWorrellProfe~sionalCenier~oJ'm . highljghtofArtsDay,ac~.lebrationofthe Displays by a jewelry maker, 'McKinnon, the dean of the school', and Marianne,:· !. arts·beiQg he1d:~oday._on.c~pus. woodcarver, lamp blowers and a number . Hill, the director of evenin& and executive: pro-''. : . : .. · . Arts Day.lia~ ttS'~;',OOtS in the New .Stu- ofPiedmont craftsmen began at 10 a.m. At ,gnlJns, will prov.id,e. answ.er questions. Prospet;tive ..... dent. Leiider' Co.nference last May. Stu- • 1 :oo p.m: there is a display of Fimo clay stu_ dents·.ar. ~ invited to attend, - · : . _;, .. :dents .wffo.'attended the retreat decided to beads and Origami. A demonstration of

. organize. a:.·group that would attempt to· Japanese brush stroking will begin at4:30

· ·• ··na ... ~ .... C·l,;es: . rem·-;.~n ~0 .. r N. C t,·r· l'ps ·. bring togeiher stu~ents, faculty ·and ad· p.m. ,. i ""-'-.. &U 1.1 rninistrators. · A Tablecloth Art display and a "Virtual

'· :, . There are vacancies remaining for a trip to the old

Wake Forest campus and'NortfK:arolina Museum of• History .. Chaplain Ed ChriSllnan will. host the · ApriH trip.•A trip to leairfaoo\\\l,Agricultlire in the · Pieamont area in the 18tli and :P.Ith century wili be ·hosted by Edwin. Hendricks, a Pfufessor of history,·.· on Marcti 18. AnotHer trip io le'lllil about industrial- · ·

·· ization in· the state will take plate in April.at a date to-be annotinced. Paul Escott; ilie Reynolds profes-

; sor of history·and the newly a-ppointed dean of the college, wi11 host the event. Td}hake a reservation, tirst.year students should colltact Paul Orser, an

' assistant dean of the college ii\d the dean of fresh­·men, at Ext. ·5133.

·• Over-seas ·research. trip planned • . I ' ' ·' •

:rills slimmer· the university overseas research , C:.entei Y{ill hpst a trip tQ .~atan: Islapd, the largest ·

· island in the fornier British colony of the Bay Islands, located in tile Western Caribbean. The fieid school will offer course-work and lectures. Several ·video documentaries will also be produced about "the biocul<urai changes. that h~ve occurred on the island since :196'1. StudentS will conduct interviews with islanders. For more inform'ation, contact se­nior John Parker ·at Ext. 6582 or David Evans, a profes·sor of anthropology, at Ext. 5276. .

• , ' . I, '

• .cav1pus phot~grapher named

Lee Runion, a member· of. the Bowman Gray Department of Biomedical Communications pho­tography staff, has been appointed university pho­tographer.

'

. As a result, senior.Tarnetta Jones now Reality" dramatic performance wassched­chairsacomrnitteecailed the Community uled at 11 a.m. in the Pit. A Saxophone Development TaskForce. Junior Garrick Ensemble also is performing at 11 in the Isert, a student on the committee, said, Tribble Hall Lobby. Following the en­"The goal of Arts Day is to unify the semble, Kevin Muse is slated to play the Wake Forest-community while sirnulta- guitar in the lobby. ~;IJeOusiycelebrating the 'arts." Dean Hamilton is playing his banjo in

· Arts Day is one of three events planned the Benson Food Court at noon. Tribble by the Task Force. The committee has Lobby is hosting a 15 minute Recorder also scheduled Community Plunge Day Ensemble at 1:15 p.m. and a 15 minute for April, with the intent of involving the clarinet recital at 2:45 p.m. entire campus in a community service The Piano Players are playing in the project in Winston-Salem. Next fall there Benson· Rotunda from 1:30 to 3 p.m. and will be a Field Day. the University Dance Company will per-

SophomoreBeverlyHuffstetler,amem- form there.at 5 p.m. ber of the task force, said, "Wake ·Forest Plaidypys, a student band, will play in is such a small campus and students don't the Coffeehouse at 5:30 p.m. Daddy Cat­take advantage to interact and learn di- fish, another student band, will perform reedy from the faculty." . there at 7 p.m.

The Task Force hopes Arts Day will The Gospel Choir will sing in the Pit at incorporate art into the students' daily 5:15 p.m. The Contemporary Men's A life. Cappella Group will also sing at dinner.

. Following the ,$ecrest Artists Series There will be wine tasting from 6 to 7:30 performance there will be a reception in p.m. in Calloway 223. the Green Room in Reynolda Hall. Per- Student Union will show the film formers from the current play "Top Girls" Barcelona at 8 p.m. in Pugh Auditorium, and the Handel and Haydn Society will theHandelandHaydnSocietyperfomance attend the reception and interact with the begins at 8 p.m. in Wait Chapel and "Top students: Girls" will be on ttie Mainstage theater of

There is also be a photography exhibit Scales Fine Arts Center. ondisplayoutsideofBenson401 through- Arts Day will close with a reception in out the day. "In Search -of a Corner" the Green Room of Reynolda hall and a performers are making random perfor- Printmakers'displayintheMagnoliaRoom mances all over campus. from 9:30 to 11 p.m.

Other events include an art exhibit in This is the first year for the campus to · Scales Fine Arts Center, Graffiti Walls have an Arts Day, but the organizers hope

outside-the post office and Tribble Hall for extensive campus-wide participation and a display of student sculpture, paint- throughout the entire day.

'. • • . : •. 'f t

Come to Wake.' .• and b~ing r~ur,,.wal.l~s~. A member of the Harbinger Corps condocts a tour for prospectiv~·"

' . • • 'l' t I'/ '

students and their parents. . . . . . · , ... ', ',· . • • • ' -.:. • ·~ : -~ •• •I. -~ • • • . -· 0 ' ~ • "

. . '

Alumnus, lifetirlle: .. triistee:,:s: · • . • · , ' 1 ' , , ' ' ·• • -'I • , ' ' " t. r 11.,. ( :

dies in ·Raleigh at age .. 86·.·.:·.~·~:·.~. ' ' ' . I '' ' 0 •· l I

OLD Gow AND BLACK STAfF REPORT nis and baseball teams. · . · ,. : ,. • . , . : '· After serving. in !he u·J;. Army Me4i~a(;,

. George Washington Paschal Jr., 86,' a Corps in World War II, Pas_chal:.:Yf.as !;b,e. •. r life trustee and an alumnus of the univer- . university football team:physician, H,e ~s~ sity, died Feb. 15.A retired surgeon from tablish~ a m~ical practice i!Ji ~#glitr·•, Raleigh, Paschal was a life member of the wherehew.aschiefoftliesurg\cal~ezyi~!!t .. Board of Trustees and served as its chair- : M;iUY Elizabeth Hosp,ital.fro~ 1~~:1?.7&,.; man from 1971-1973. · . . He held the same position at.~t,. A.gn~~- •,

He established the Paschal Collection Hospital from f954-1960. on American history atthe university's Z. Paschal was a past pr~_~ident .of the_ ~£1~ _ Smith Reynolds Library in honor of his Carolina· Surgical Association and the father, George W. Paschal Sr., a university So~ them Society of Clinical ~'o/g~oos . .,ltrr professor ana autoor of a- three-volume . 19.89, the Old North State Medicat-soQ.ety! history of the college. honored Paschal for his efforts to eti.'d rnedi:-

In 1985, the university gave the Paschal cal segregation during the 1940& .•. ; , .,. , ~ familytheDistinguishedWakeForestFam- Paschal is survived by his wife, -'k·eili ' ily Award for its long history ofleadership Cummings .Paschal; three children, George­and contributions to the university. W. Paschal ill, Laura Huston P~chal and.

Paschal earned bachelors' of arts and Robert Cummings Paschal,. all ofRal<:igh! ~ sciences in 1927 and 1928, respectively. and five grandchildren·. He is 'also slirviVet'l' · He received a medical degree from Tho- by three. brotliers, · Richard Pasch&· Of·· mas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, in Reidsville, Paul Paschal and E!Jwaro•P$- · 1931 and an honorary doctorate of science chal of Wake Forest; and·-thtee ·sisters:· "' degree from Wake Forest in 1963. While a Catherine Paschal of Wake Fdresi;· Rilih­student, Paschal played on the 1927 De- Paschal Lupton of Alamance and Mary mon Deacon basketball team and the ten- Paschal of Raleigh.

, .. ·

Page 3: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

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··C'OEFBE:Ie~tllre.features BY Micu.W. R. BU~tl'is occupied the Amos home, and more

OlloANJZATJONS ltEPoRTER followed. Each child was allowed to .. ' . f if'. i . ' -: ·-· : ' . . wa«;htelevision,playbasketballand

Nearly3PstudentsldmedTUesdayriight -. enjoy other recreation as often as he what it meilnt to be the father of almost or she wished. However, every hour ~IJety ~n.: . of~reation was to be followed; on

, • ~g~o~ning lecture of the ~om- the s_ame day, with an equal hour of n:U~.Qrg~fo~ Further Education~ . reading and studying. To date, sev­Bnr.t91unent's. thfrd .annual Leadership ,e11ty-three of the Amos ."children" S~S,eries,J{entAmos,,~epres~dent have gone to college. Some have w;ld.fo11nder. oftl;le.Urban, ;Family Jnstitute, · ~uatedandsqughthigherdegrees 4~1#~ ~s.~x~riences as·a:roster.father in their fields. for ~ahty .. ~veq chil~.n .. Amos also. re- At one point, Amos's son intro­spqn~~ to,stud~pt,que8tio~s ¢er the let;- . duced a new member into the ex­ture.. ., · • · . tended family,. Andre, who was a · .Acd~~~··t~ .&nos, Ju~ ~xiended fam- · confessed drug dealer, posed the !l~,~!)r~~-:~.cop.cern for his son:s _ .Amos'swithadilenuna.Onceagain, . tn~~~on~ ..ytth SOC!ety. Both h~ and ~s they were pressed to decide whether wife, Carmen, debated about sending therr .· or not to allow., such a youth into sqn ,to a: PJIPli~ .school. ~e. question be- their home .. Yet, the rules for the c~~p~ularfY.imi>ortant :when his son other chil9i'en applied~ and_ Andre_. brougbt'tiome friends that ·had criminal asked for help, Amos said. ~s an~·IJOQrap_!l;detiD.c.h,ab~ts. · Howeyer,. acc()rding to Amos,

·er father

'.">We, W,oniJered whether or not our son Andre's past caught up with him, ' .v9Ji1~.· ¥,.'a_ble ~o negotiate the modern resulting in a shooting death on his Ken Amos, President o_f the Urban Family Institute ofWahington, D.C., speaks:--wo~lcJ,";Afnos said. _ . way to school. Since that time, sev-

'Tiiu8, a5 aremedy io the situation, Amos et!ll other Amos "children"havesuc- students Tuesday evening In Johnson Residence Hall's formal parlor. aqd :his Wife chf)Se io send their· son to cumbed to violent demises. Amos decided The Urban Family Institute is also .in- All students are welcome and should pu~Hc ·school, with a ~light twist. In 1981, it was time to tackle the violent, modem volved.in setting up .. Kid Houses" around look for signs announcing the exact date tl).e_AJnQSeS also took' in their son's friends society thai had taken the lives ofhis own. . theW ashington area. According to Amos, and time of each presentation. aii4 :off~ ~em th_e. same educ~tional "It killed my ·kid!'; he said. . college and high school stud~nts are. in- "This is the first time it has been this oppart~JIJities and p¢nefits as. therr own . Thus, Amos founded the Urban Family volved ~ communityactivHies with chil- big," the president and senior Amy Cook c~~: .. . : · . , : . · . · · Il)$titutein W~hington,D.C. Theinstitute's dren. The goal is to pro-.:ide the same type . said. "We'rereallyexcitedabo_utthespeak-. ''Wer¢co~zedtheopportunit}itotake goill is to craft strategies for reclaiming of environment in wllicli'Amos's "chit- ers." ·

... !q<:l§·~n ,~d see that they had the same society's stability, through public aware- dren" were raised. COFFEE was founded by Cook three cliari~ that our children' would have," ness, public action and publjc policy. In The 1994-95 ''Lead~rship Speakers Se- years ago. This year's committee, com­Anitis sirlo: . ' piuticular, one of the institute's current ries" willcontinue throUgh April; address- .prised of nine students, has. established a

What _began with ~nly a few boys be- studies is aimed at bringing the college ing such topics as the arts, media; politics, link between faculty and students in the caine an lncredibll'i' venture in outreach. atmosphere to public housing. . law and athletics. . . . . foimofalecturepo<>l.ResidenceAdvisers ~qs'-jirl~ the' Same policy that allowed "We plan to implemen:dhe pro grain in Scheduled speakers in the series inClude may use the lecture topics offered by fac-their &on's' friends to· become partof the two test neighborhoods in Washington, John G. Medlin Jr., theC.E.O. ofWachovia ulty members at any time as activities for fa.~ily. e~ttmded to those individuals' . o:c.," Amos explirlned. ''the 'i(;Iea is to CorporationandthechairmanoftheBoard residents. . ; fii_ehds. 1:Jie · re!iult was ex;ponential ex- bring a sense of commUnity and neighbor- of Trustees; Peter Perret, the music direc- "We want to connect students with the tende4 f!Pllily growth. hood back to public hou.sing." ·tor and conductor of the Winston-Salem faculty,"fteshmanSarahHovis,thegroup's

~'fo!y kid, cou~d brfng in any other kid, at ''We're going to base the entire project Symphony; Yolanda Carter, a production secretary, said. "Our faculty surveys have any time, for any reason," Amos said. on the resources and. ~e.community that supervisor for Black Entertainment Tele- provided RA' s with a seminar source for

For nearly two yea)'s, twenty-five teens exists on college campuses," he said. vision; and others. students." ' . : ~ : . ~ ,

Safe Break '95 . . . . i . i''

discusses i s'afe trip measures

BY BllL\N DIMMICk

Whenstudentsscattertotheirvaiiou8SpringBreak destinations next week, most will probably be think­ing about having a good time. However, a number of campus organizations will come toge~er to remind

. studentS of the importance .of safety dunngthe week­long vacation during Safe Break •95. a safety fair to be held Tuesday and Wednesday.

The theme of the event is "Do the Safe Thing." ''This is a generic safety message on safe behavior.

· There is always a safe way to do something if you just stop and think about it,.but we all know that spring break is a time when you don't ~nk things tbrougb," said Campus Police Prevention Specialist Don~ Horoskosaid.Thecenterpieceq~thepro~ will be an outdoor safety fair Tuesday from 1 p.m. to S p.m. on the Magnolia Court. The fair will-feature safety booths as well as frt£food and o~~rriteo;ts. ;,•

Community grou~··expected to operate booths include the Winston-Salem Alcoholic Beverage Com­mission, which will 'ilisplay an aloohol still; Engine Eight, the flre rescueri'eam, 'which 1wiJ1 operate a fire safety booth and thdJN,orth Carolina state highway patrol, which will dis'ftlay several Hatley-Davidson motorcycles. '1 · • ·

Other booths will inelude a bicycle safety booth· with bicycle lock displays and a health educator and· peer health educator OOOth. Pizza Hut and ARA food services will give out 'free food Tuesday afternoon. Students attending the fair will also be able to pick up Safe Break Survival Kits, which contain iteiils sucb as buttons, sport bottles and sunscreen.

Several of the campus groups will also participate in an indoor safety fair Wednesday in the Benson University Center Food Court. This fair will also provide safety information and demonstrations,

Q."r~k.Caucus questiOns gender, racial separations in organizations -• . , · . 'B.v B•NEDETTA AGNOLI Griggs were the student co-chairmen who each other's culture," Wallach said. "The Interfraternity Council, took part as the mo(l- . ceptions by faculty and Greek students,ab9Ut _

• GREEK LIFE REPoR-mt organized the event. black sororities are much more into service. erator in the session focusing on -Greek-fac- ·each other. · - · "We had eleven people on our committee _ The idea of having another, pseudo-caucus, ulty relations. "It was really more of a disagreement on

T.he~ -10th an~ual Greek Caucus featured and three of them were in charge of getting· where the black groups can explain the mean- "The faculty expressed their discontent at principles than anything else," Young said. dis<;us§i~~ofthedivisionofGreekorganiza- donations during the lunch and the others ing of some of the things they do so we can the lack of educational programs by Greek YoungandjuniorEmilyGraham,thepresi­tions along racial lines and the competitive- were assigned to organize otte of the ses- build some more bridges between the various organizations," Young said. ''They suggested dent of the Panhellenic Council, spoke to all n~ ~~t exists l>etween campus sororities. sions," Wallach said. groups ... everyone thought it was a good idea that a way to bridge the gap between Greeks of the participants .about the need for cohe-

. J',lle c~ucps began Saturday morning with The sessions were organized into two rounds but we do not have a definite dateJor it yet." and the faculty would be to try and heighten siveness between Greek groups and the pOsi-an~ ad<!fe:;s. by . this year's keynote speaker, of 50 minutes each with a moderator and The second round brought the realization cultural awareness through faculty-run semi- tive aspects of the Greek system which at-

• Bafb.TQOtJ~. the assistant t9 the president of panel. Because of the organization students that competitiveness between the sororities nars." ready exist ' Omo State, University, and lasted through were able to take part in only two of the eight · must be toned down. Students at the session were willing to take Young said, ''I tried to give a positive ap-lunclitjin~: The subject of Tootle's speech available sessions. Wallach. said, "The feeling of unity be- part in those seminars but wanted to make pearance to everyone that there can be more w~. Cr~':ity and ~e C:b~enge of Change. 'Yallach was part of the panel in the session tween us is not as strong as it could be .. We sure that the social focus of Greek organiza- _ coh~s~ven~ss betwe_en ev~o~~ ~! ~l?':'~-

Each Gree~ orgamzatlon.~P.rF!Yt~~!e ··:· ~~ir_Jg,oJl inter-Greek relatio;11s on ~ampus. ~~~~0\~f>Pect•each_:otherr:s- d!fferences<an~' '·tions·cJi~ no~suffer·because ofity·~ . ', ... -~ ~ l9.f~~~ fafiW~W~-~~-mde~n~~~ts~~ ;,, .l b ;~ ~ ~~ !IA~_.~yt,£Pfi~8~-!~H9 ~e~m :! ~g,Jhe fi~. ro.1md,. the.~s~usston .. 'Vfl& • bu1ld'a 1Dltltual unde~tanding.as well, as try .. ·~It: real!~ 1s the s~stem •whereby m~e~n-. . ,, P~;:l~~~~. ~c~.l,Jl ~~on~u~ : !fw1ctrnG~·:W~IW-tncl41,f~;c;l~~ll,ltses,s.\oPS _; ,mwnly ~:m. the;prqbl~m. pf. Qiy.I~~Qn ,betweett< . and.hold m0re educational programs to show dents get mvolved m cabipus social life, ~· r.esl'!)nstbllities of members. of. Greek~- ; thalil~sed ISS~C!i relevant to Greek l1fe on predorninantly·white and predominantly black that there is more to the Greek groups than just Young said. · zations, the Panbellenic social policy, under-Cl!JllP~S.·.·· . . . . . organizations. their social life." Heattributesthedisagreementwhichresur- standing the new Greek life policies and a

• ~m!Jr, Shelby W allacb and JUIDor Paul "We realized that we need to learn about Junior Roger Young, th~ president of the faced during the session to mutual miscon- session titled "Our Chapter. Our Chojce."

~ture offe,rs insight into proper use:of.·statistics in social decisions ..

" -· · -- · · Bt J. HuNTER TART · .. "With reference to the death ptmalty, both effects rn~y be . ·>?.t ·: ,.:;_,, ·,_,; ·. ;~;,, NF.Ws.EOR'oR : -... .•, · · • · .• -..·... 'liappenfug, and if they do, the'y are additive," he said.: : :~~::;,: <F'·!~} :; ~- · ·::<; "· .' •;:· :.: ... ,;· .,.' ·,Orsaghsaid though liberal estimates say one out of :Is t&~~~!!lw.a.¥00d d.et¢'en~ J6. vi!Jle9t cO;m_e.'? :' e:v¢ry l,DOO people on death row may be innocent, more

S~outiy;~.:£~JYlffl~'rt!¢"F~ and pnig AdJllil!i~tt:at\~~ .. · i~'nQCe.~t ·peop~e:IJl~Y d!e.if the death pen~Ly irnot.used tqmapl:~~·~~.Q~trewdrtigs.1Sho_uldco~~rarrl~ne _ ~tnc~~ vtol~n~-~r,prup~s.' ~e currently_ relea:~ea after an t11ghti~Y ~y,eJ~en ~~unded? _ _. -- .-".. ·., · ·'· _;-- ., averag~:of eifl~~ years and they rna~ kill. a gam .. ;Th~P.~.n~~~s $~pul~ gu~tiO!I~ c~: up m a H~:satd, ':E1~erway, somebody IS gomg todte."

lectu~--~~ titlea,j;·.ffPe·Ethicli!Us_e.ofStau_suc;~: Half~. . .,; "If·yo.u -~~o!<,~t people who are in prison for violent T~~..ilfl~·BOd)' C0unts:"'-Thom~ Otsagh, a:professprof . 'criii_le) .thOse: who have committed murder are two to three e~pn~f tl!e p:~:ver~iif o{-N9.rth Caro~jna at Ch~pel time~ .IJ1oie .ii~~ly to commit murder again than. those H~ll, !fi~g~dlh(!'W statt~ti9§'otten mean diffe.renttpmgs conv~ct«rof oilier ·violent crime," he said. . . when. viewed~Ih diffe~nt pPin~ of view. ', · · Referiiil.g'tQ.the FDA's restrictions on new drugs in the Or~agh oogan•by presentingra ~ce, ::· :-: .... - ,· u.s .. Orsagh said the point of view of

~QofaCqast,Guardr~u~pilotwho: · . . . .· . · :_.·· the,deeision-maker plays a crucial role had ~~ _choqse p~hich Qf; ~'? capsized · :. "W base well-being tare· " in _the decision. He said the FD ~ may boats.he shoQld help.·~.;could oqly;··.· · :· know how many-people could d1e as a save tfi!;l"~bpleirolli one of the twti .. •: .. we talking .about .wben result of a new drug, but it is impossible bqats,·He had a 100 percent chance of we make a decision?" to know how many people die because saving the frrst boat, which ,held only .. · • · . • of the unavailability of the drug. The

• o~eperson,butonly.a50percentchance · ·· ' media's publicity of problems caused o~ reS<luing. the .~ond boat, which · . . . · .. :l1Jomas O~sagha by new drugs could damage the FDA's h~ld two people. ProfessO.. of &:cino~cs. UNC-Chapel Hill image, he said. As a result, he said, "You

•When Orsagh asked members of the ·" will tend to be very conservative in your audience w~ch boatthey would save, - decision making." they were split between the two options. As Orsagh ~llllt Orsagh asked, "Whose well-being are we talking about on topertuf:\l the circqm.stances by :adding moTe·peotl~ to when we make a'decision ?" . the secohd:boat, nearly llll' audience·members.eventuaily . · .Fmally,.drsagit spoke about the recent decision by the committed ~emselves to take a chance and rescue the · Federal Aviation Administration. to· ground commuter second boat. , : . ~ .. planes like the two that crashed at the end oflast year. . ''Wh.at ~·redealing with is Pllfan:teters b,ere. We'rieed . He' presented statistics that .show even taking the two to think' aooilt 'the•ilumbers of people being affected," . . recent crashes into consideration, the probability of death

· Orsagh said. He said the f~e<~ors considered iil making while flying is considerably lower than the risk of death such a d~ision include the number affected, the nature of -while driving, which. is often the only other mode of the"e~r, ~e probabilities of specifiC' 'effects and the transportation available in areas served by commuter

' quality·Qf the pers~ns involved. · · ·flights. Of government bureaucracies like the FDA and the He _then;·nimed his attention to a broader issue,· the FAA, Orsagh said, "They deal with visible deaths and

arg11mentS for iind·agai)lst capital punishment: Orsagh' forget inVisible ones .... Why can't they just provide said !fi~ie are two detemmt effects of any criminal punish" 'inforination and let jou make the choice?" meilt:the ~~ific deterrent to the criminal and the general · "Don \put the. decision in the hands of someone whose deterrent to otherpeoi)le who ~ay commit a similar crime. welfare runs contrary to yours," he said.

. ~. ' ' . . . .

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Dean.-• ' '• '' ' I • \ ~ I : •

Fr9~ Page-l .j·

; r , 1 .. • • , • • ~ •

al! U!Y. prqfe~sional care~r. The com-­binf!.t~ol). -.of my assignments at KeiJogg's !Jas given me a unique op­Jl<ll'Wnlty, tQ view busin~ss from a

· .,.~ty ~f ~rspectives and to manage and y.>prk with people from different

, .··· ...

business units· and cultures· from . around the world." .

HewillsucceedJohnB.McK.innon, · who announced his intention to step down as dean· last summer. Costley 'will assume the dean's responsibili­ties May 15. · UnderMcKinnon'sleadershipsince

July 1989, the MBA school has en­joyed unprecedented gr.owth, higher admissions standards, record' place­ment of graduates and national rankings and recognition.

Costley's appointment followed a national search by a campus commit­tee chaired by McKinnon.

Costley joined E;:.ellogg's, the world's largest cereal maker, in 1970 as the director of nutrition. He served asdirectorofpublicaffairsfrom 1973-75 and vice president of public affairs from l975-78.In 1978,hewasna.med vice president and assistant to the president, servicing in that position until 1980. Over the next six years he went on to serve as the senior vice

The Chill for two

MC~

... ·-·

loeWe<lcs

Pepsi·· . Froni Page 1

. ' -According to Allen Joines, the

assitant citY manager for economic ·dtwelopment, Pepsi's failure to' fulfill its pledge is the first since the eco­nomic incentive progi'am was ini~­ated. "The city/county's incentive . program has bad nine major projects . an.d eightofthose-nine bave surpaSsed . job projections," said Joines. He said . he does ~ot believe Pepsi!s broken · prontise will affect future incentive . deals by the coun~ and,city. ·

BecausePepsionlyp)ilns_foexpano · its operations here to 400 e~ploy~ . by nextNov~mber, the university 'Yill be requirl::d to pay back $300,000 of tlie $700,000 paid to the schools~ far. Pepsi will nc;t be held accountable for ·

. reimbursing the school because tlle . ·agreement is exclusively between the · university and WSBI.

ApcordingtoAnne Ward, aspokes-­woJilan for. Pepsi, the company has no · shq~-term Plat:ts to expand operations in tR,eir ~onsull\er. service division. "W.fJ are very hitPPY with our Win­stoJloSalem ope.-ation ·so far,". said W&.W. Although Pepsi's long. range pla~ call .for a gradual- expansion ·at . the Ci:orporate .Center, Warp said in any,pusiness situation-employment fi!N(~s·are bound to change. ·

Senior Randolph Childress makes a layup for two points -during the game against Georgia Tech. The Deacons won the game 73-62.

AlUJough it appears_ the university . will ~ve. to return a portion of the . grant, Anderson said he believes the entire investment in Reynolda Busi- . ness Center and the University Cor­porate Center will pay off in a number · of years. Along with Pepsi, the Plant­ers/Lifesavers Company, a subsidiary · of RJR Nabisco, rents space in. the Corporate Center. _ , ·

president of corporate development, the senior vice president of science and quality, and the executive vice president of science and technology.

In 1986, after leading virtually all of the staff functions of the company, Costley was named executive vice president of the corporation and presi­dent of Kellogg U.S. Subsidiaries which included Mrs. Smith's Frozen Foods, Fearn Foods, Salada Tea and Whitney's Yogurt.

In 1988, he was promoted to presi-

dent and chairman of the l,J.S. com­pany, Kellogg USA. four years later he was given additional responsibil­ity as chairman of Kellogg Canada and area director of Kellogg North America, a $4.2 billion division of the $7 billion multi-national food com­pany. In addition to his specific as­signments, Costley consistently served as Kellogg's chief internal and external spokesman on a wide range of business, scientific and public policy issues during this time.

He has bachelor's, maSter's and Ph.D. degrees frQmOregon State Uni- : versity. : · . . ·

Costley is ~so a trus~ee of the Miller Foundation and a former ttustee' of Youth for Understanding and the _ American Health Foundation. •.

He serves on the adviSory board {()r · the Sara W. Stedman Nutrition Cen­ter at the Duke University School of Medicine. · · · - · ·

Costley and his wife, Cheryl have · two adult children. -• , .

Page 4: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

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• Anglo-Irish plan considered

LONDON - British and Irish governments ap­proved a plan Tuesday that will be the framework for a settlement in Northern Ireland that will hopefully end 25 years of violence. The joint position, which has been approved by both gov­ernments, was achieved after 14 months of talks.

The Protestant Unionist camp fears London will eventually give control of Northern Ireland to Dublin.

The agreement, called the Framework Docu­ment, is not a binding accord between the two governments. It sets the agenda for new rounds of talks. Both sides hope the talks can eventually include Unionists and Sinn Fein, the political arm of the Irish Republican Army.

Leaders of the Ulster Unionist Party are di­vided as to whether the Framework Document should continue to be the basis of talks. Sinn Fein has expressed willingness to begin talks, but British officials are hoping to have a finner cease-fire position with the IRA before it is welcomed at the negotiations.

• Violence increases in Algeria

PARIS- A growirlg rlumber,-\;>f attacks in the < lpital of Algeria and a series 8f brutal slayings have made an increasing number of people fear­, ul that a showdown may be developing between ll;e Algerians and Islamic militants in Algeria.

1\ senior Algerian Army officer was shot to '~;•.th Sunday in an Algiers suburb. He is the

·, :~hest-ranking official to be killed by militants smce an Islamic revolt three years ago.

The colonel killed was a ranking intelligence nfficer responsible for issuing reports to the pub­lic and news agencies. He had been under surveil­! ance for three days, according to associates.

Islamic militants have also blown up three vital 'ridges in the area surrounding Algiers and have ;lied at least II well-known figures in the civil ' :'.!irs and arts within the past week.

~Advertising censored in Russia

MOSCOW-Russian President Boris N. Yeltsin banned all advertisements for tobacco and alco­hol products in what many public health officials called a long-overdue attempt to curtail the rising alcohol and tobacco-related deaths and illnesses in Russia.

The ban was to have begun as soon as notice of it was printed in the official press, possibly as early as Wednesday. There is also a moratorium on ads for services such as faith healers and unlicensed doctors, whose popularity is growing.

If the newspapers, radio, televisions and maga-7.int:s fcril to comply with the regulations, they will be forced to turn any revenue over to the Health Ministry to be used for public education programs.

Sig Ep initiation time to grow BY BENEDETrA AGNOLI

GREEK LIFE R""OKTER

The university chapter of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity agreed to take part in the Balanced Man program that their national headquarters designed to increase the ad vantages of membership and awareness of its responsibilities. .

"It goes away from the usual ~ight week pledge process and turns it into a continual learning process which lasts. until you are a senior," said senior John Cimaroli. ..

The university chapter was first in­troduced to the program by the fraternity's regional director, Jin;t Lowry, before the semester began. Af-. ter a review of the program the mem­bers voted to begin implementing it this semester. Activities relating to the pro­gram will begin soon after the official starting date of Feb. 24.

The program is already being imple­mented by other chapters of the frater­nity at universities ilround the country.

Among th~e are the University of · Arkansas and West Georgia College.

,: Tl:le progranrjs stFUctured in. such a way as to make sure .each member is col)!ltanU.Y:. 1eanulig al:iout issues that affect college'inen in Greek organiza­tions. Each· :}'e~ a·<Jifferent stage is emphasized t(),~ricate .. th~, ptember in one specific !If~ D~ng th~ fll'Sqhree Yci!rS eachmemberis assiglleda brother ment9r who is responsible for guiding the younger brother through a particu-

. Jar stage. · . . · . "At the same time the mentor will be

able to develop. and utiliZe tlie s!dlls which he bas learned during the previ­ous years," said Ken Zick, the vice presiclent for st1,1dent life and instruc-tional resources. .

"Each stage has a goal,',' Cimaroli said. '.'There is no longer such a differ­entiation between pledges and broth­ers because we are a11 constantly learn­ing something."

One of the program's policies de­creestheabolitionofthetenn "pledges"

atodiDJid~tntetidfytomtehmebef:rartsewrnhi.otyh. ~'Thvejeuyst .. dP.o.~n.:'.nt.. : . . ~.~~~~!t,J:~.QpatJ ... · ... ·. , .. · :.-.. ; . . . >iAn officer:obServed.a male student ~m an, ..

e~en we~ t?deir pledge pins anymo~.~· · olber.unNersityrunriingnudeontbeQuadatl:14 . .Cmtaroh sw. · . , . . · ·.:: ... , a.m; '~b:' 18. ae· and another. viaitiitg· stisden~ .

.. The four stage8 of the pi:cigrarii, on~. . w~re is5uea:ttis:PiS!i'~amings; The incident hBs . foreachyearofcollege,havetbenames been .referre<Ho-'HaroldcHolmes, the dean of . Sigma, Phi, Epsilon, and Brother l\<leri-: . . . student mieei c.>.;· .. •· , . ' .. : .: . \:. · .. • .. : ... ''· . tor, respectively. ,. . THEFI': _. -Asttidenes bicycle v~ued at $200 '

During the first stage, members learn . was taken frcim outside Student Apartments Feb. more about the fraternity's national poli:- 12 bet~een· 1 o I;:m.llitcl.ll :30 p.m: The bicycie; cies and the history of the organi:Zation. which. had beer(SeCiuied, was found Fel;:• 13 on . During the second stage the focus' is_on Polo ,Roail. Also;· ·the student's. apamnent wa5 .. ritual of the organization.and brother.:.· entered but nothi~g:~ missing:· ;?:": ,. hood development. The third s~e con-· . A Visitor's purscfvalued at $53 was taken from centrates on the issues of volunteerism . aScal~FineArisCenterroom·Feb. 13 bet\\!een

.and service to the community and the n:Ociriand'1•30pm~····· . '·~:. . ... ·-... . ' .. ·• .. , ' university· · .. . . . · · . . · ·· · , Items w~nh trior~ ilian $400 ~ere talcen'fro~·.

"It really requires .. the· members :.to · .. a··student'srcur\fnti)t-W iiearWorreil 'Pi'ofes~' · stistainand eJ!.~and chapter involvement'. . siomil Cenit!f for 'Lliw and :ty~anagemerit:Feb,'. 13 · in various fields," said Zick. MemberS · · · · · · · · 1

al · ak. · •• · th. .. ... · . bety/een 5:15.:p_.~.: and. 5:55'P..m.· A pot1{lb ~ . must sot e part m e acttvities of a compact msc player, a eliSe filled\irltti ·~mpaci non-Greek organization on campus. · discs,a wallet;. cash, a check, basketbal. tickets

Each member will also have to keep a and crerut cams \Vere stolen. · .• ·-, , journal in which he will chrorucle his· Item5 worth nearly $2;odo were taken ~Oin a involvement in the fraternity and his residence in StudentApartments·Feb.'14'be-reflections on it. . twt;en 9:30 P:in·. and U:ts·p;ni·. ·Takeri;~W:~i:e a

.--------------------------------------.:.---, bicycle; 70compactdiscs, aNiiiteridoplayer'alu;l

cl.;~~ficense:-pl!iies were. taken rr<>m a s~~:nt·~ ve~<;!ein ~t.P IJ~-~!lit<?ltapelFeb, ~~-be:..

Feeling a little lightheaded Juniors Rebecca Horner and Stacy Smith donate blood Thursday in the basement of Babcock Residen,ce Hall at a blood·drive spqnsored oy.the Volunteer Service Corps.

• :. . • . . . . . " . • : ~. . I ' ; . ' . ' ' .. I l" -

tween 3J?·.Ill· an~ ~:~Op:~;~· ·<. : ;,. ~- . ; . Piri~sign:wastaken_trom Reyriolda

Hall cafeteria Feb. l5betvleen 9 a.m. and u)·a.m. DAMAGE-A window and sign were broken in the Deacon Shop betWeen 5 p.m. Feb. r.~r and 8:30.a.m. Feb. 16. ·. . . • MISCELLANEOUS -· Two stUdtmts'\Vere re­{iorted8tteniptingtounloekawiridowtoaJ¢i$S.on Residence Hall rot>m at about2: 10 a.m. Feb. 17. The incident has. been refei:red to HolmeS; ~ · . .Officers co!!fiscated m.arijtiima and dnig .P¥a~ phemalia fi:om_ a: S.tudent A~.ents resi~ent Feo. 14. The items were fourid·while officers were investigating a breaking and entering the student had ~ported. The incident has be~n:re-ferred to the dean. .' · · . A student and a visitings~dentwere~d~~y. opening doo~ tQ I'Q(ims in Bostwick Resitl~~ce Hall at 3:30 a.in. Feb. 19; Both were underage and admitted to officers they had been cons.um-'

. ing alcoholic beverages. The visitor was i~~~ed a trespass warning. The incident has been re{eited tothedean. ·

Two visitors staying with studen~ in Kitchin House were issued trespass warnings Fe~.: 12 after they reportedly made harassing phon~ calls to other students between4:58 a.m. and 5:30a.m.

A high school student was iSsued a ti;esj)ass warning after she attempted to leaye the Z: Smith Reynolds Library with a book that had not ~en checked out. · · ,

· Campus Police handled 59 calls Feb. ·11.:19, including 22 incidents and investigations and 37

o : 'tS' ,,,,I .j,.HJl,UIA!.I"l. •.J'. ,. \..l'lhf'()V r . serv1ce requ~s . ~< hJivd -:-. i~.:: ..... 1 :

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Page 5: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

............... •'' ~~~ · .. ."· . OuJGoi.DANDBLAo:: THURSDAY,FEBRUAJ.Y23,1995 5 r .. -: -· .,.,. , ,. .•

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\<§p~hl( O~t exposes . . . . ' ,,,

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.. :~·9~~~pus.· .. rape Issues #- ' '• .. I • .

• J' ) . 1 , , ' ' I~·

BY JENNIIER FowLER _. "It w~ very effective because they ,;•',.• ,-, · : NE"!sCoPYEmoR used.real stories. You knew these ,'·']·,··- 0:1 · ....... _ .-' ·.--: ·-; • storiesdidn'tjustcomefrommaga--, . . V-oices in ~Wait .Chapellast mght zines .. . they came from students :, 're.ffi1nded.stuc;lenis that rape vj~tims' here." , ~!ricmds,girlftiends and even.little Seniors .Pete Mohler and Charlita · · sU!ter8~. .. . ~ _ · _ .. - · Cardwell, the ·co-chairmen of :":· ~~fourthannualSpeakOut.fea- .. PREPAR, said they were pleased . ,)l}rt;,d, testimonials. suj:)mitted· by . with this year'.s "Tie A Yellow Rib-

WakeFore8tstudents who.detailed _ bon Week." .. ,_tJlej.r ~xperjences of rap~ and its afc . . Cardwell said, "There have been , :~a~ .• The. well-attende~. ev~nt _more (lCtivities iii previous years, , epd¢Jhe •1'le.a Yellow Ribbon buttheculminationoftheweek,the •.. :Week" orgapized by 'the Policy Speak Out, was wonderful.'·' She , . O,t:~mp .on Rape Education, Preven-· said .PREP AR will plan more acti vi­. ~ .~of!:ana Response. . · . . ties if\ th~ future to target specific

PREP AR members, unseen by · student .interests. thqse attending the program, ·read _. Mohler and Cardwell noted an

. :I~¢ anon¥moMs accounts to. a silent jncrea~e in male students' • involve-. ~ ~u<Pen.ceofsiildentsa<;campuslead- In,ent in PREPAR. Mohler said, :tJi;s Ji~ candles in remembrance of _"Since I've been in PREPAR, I've

. ' 'the' woman who is raped every notjced an increase of men partici-~put~ in ~.world. . , . . patihg in the event. Men have be-

_; .'::t'h(test.iriJ.onialst:an'ged fr~m~a ',c01;ne,.aware that rape is riot just a college student who Cilffie t().t~rms . :wom!l,h's problem."

, .. "Xitl!beingse~ually abuseda.Sachild "Tig a Yellow Ribbon Week" be~ ~ ~o ;t brother .who recejyl!(l a tele- gari Monday when PREPAR mem­: ·. ph?ne .call from his little sister afier beis tied yellow balloons to the Quad

· ~ sl:je was raped in college. . . · ~nd di.stributed yellow ribbons to In addition, student leaders and students.

. -. faculty members drew off personal ~ohler said; "We encourage :. ~x~riences and pbs~rvations to ()f· people to tie the ribbons on the Quad

'. -r~t ~houghts on rape and its .exist· iftheyknowsomeonewhowa5raped . . ence at tfle utftve).'&ity. . .. .. . .. or iftpey themselves were rape vic- ..

_ .. ,.'I'Jl~piogrambeganwithstati.sti~s · tims.,'' . ·.·. _ .. , ·., .. fio.m a PREP.~ survey that md1- AccordingtoMohler;theresponse

I , ~~te, One in fou,r, WOmen at, the wii-. tO the yellow ribbpn c_ampaign WaS ~ .• v~~ityhavl( beenr~ped, and 85 per- large, but Physical Facilities re­~ · .cert.t of tl,lose ,victi!Ds were raped as . moved allthe ribbons before the end

Spending FromPage'l

student organizations. Junior Stacey Leaman, the chairwoman of the Women's Issues Network steering committee and founder and president of the campus Amnesty International chapter, said niany organizations al­ready have the internal bureaucracy in place to handle their own expenses, such as a treasurer or business man­ager, and she does not believe that this authority should be taken away from the students. -

"(This rule) takes away all sorts of autonomy from the student organiza­tions," she said. Marks agreed, say­ing that this policy takes away both responsibility and culpability from the students .

Many students did no~ understand

Computers From Page 1

the need for such a regulation, since all student organizations are required to go before the Student Budget Ad­visory Committee each fall and jus­tify their expense requests .

"We already have to go before the SBAC every fall," said Leaman. "If we already have prior approval, we should be able to spend that money when we need to."

Students also objected to the fact that the regulation was passed down effective immediately with no prior warning or student input.

According to Holmes, senior Steve Bumgarner, the Student Government president, was informed about the policy when it was first applied to all faculty members in December.

Bumgarner said he was aware of possible changes forthcoming, but not to the extent of what was pro­posed.

AfterthemeetingFriday afternoon, during which the students expressed

these concerns, Holmes said he be- this proposed policy outlined to Ken gan speaking with Gilsenan and other Zick, the vice president for student administrators about possible alter- life and instruction resources, at the natives. beginning of the week.

He said he is close to reaching an Studentsbelievethissystemwould agreement acceptable to all. be parallel to the one that operates

"Since I heard from the students on within other university bodies, such Friday, I'm close in my own mind to as individual departments, and it will some other possibilities," he said. provide an adequate check on the "What'shappeningiswe'restilltalk- person who controls the organiza­ing about the policy and exploring tion funds. some other ways of accomplishing The student leaders said they are what we need to accomplish." satisfied with the conununication

Students leaders said they would with Holmes and Zick since the like to see a revision of the policy so policy was first proposed, and they organizations with their own hierar- believe that a solution will be abies for dealing with expenses can reached. continue to utilize this system. The "(The administrators) understand only revision to this would require our points, and I think it will be treasurers or business managers to resolved," Bumgarner said. "We've get approval from a faculty advisor beeneffectiveinthewaywehandled for their own expenditures. it."

Bumgarner and junior Brian - The policy is still in limbo, as an Uzwiak, the editor in chief of Old official solution has yet to be de­Gold and Black, sent a memo with cided upon.

without the e-mail system, he said. be in charge of this process. Pta5zynski also said this system has attracted

good students to their MBA program. There)s no business school anywhere that has a computer system as capable as ours, he said.

The reai question, Hoglund said, is about the advisability and necessity of having every student with a stawJard leflSed.Fomputer.

According to Ptaszynski, this increase was cut­ting it close. The school ran into a major problem when it re~lized it had initially underestimated the amount of memory that was needed for the stu­dents, he said. "Deciding which cpmputer at what pdce is real difficult," Ptaszynski says .

These may be some of the incentives for the undergraduate school to implement a similar sys­tem.

"Everyone realizes that over the next five to 10 years, all major universities will need to do this," Brown said. "The question lies in when does the university do it and how," he said.

He woufe pre~r ~o s~e a new course, he said, geared to~¥d teaching ~tudents how to use com-puters. .,v -

"I don't think students have been well informed as to what'~ out there," Hoglund said. He said he is in favor of. anything that would enhance student's and faculty/,s knowledge and use of computers.

AccordiJ,l~. to Hoglund, there are many pro­grams that n~n be applied in the classroom that would provide an advantage in learning. But he is

not sure if this could be achieved by requiring all students and faculty to have the same computer with little formal training.

According to Brown there are a few other bugs in the MBA computer system. Brown says there have been incidents of stolen IDs and profane messages on the e-mail, not all professors are yet using the computers in their classroom proce­dtires, 'and :~e system is Apple !;lased while a majority of businesses are IDM basedi

Overall though, the students and faculty gener­. ally say they do not know how they would operate

"We are thinking that if we are one of the first, we will be able to get price concessions from either IBM or Apple that will be a great advantage to students," he said.

There are a thousand and one details to be worked out, Brown said.

It is facts such as this that are of concern to Kenneth Hoglund, a professor of religion. He said he feels a sense of frustration that nobody seems to

John said he thinks computers could be used everywhere .. At the same time, he said, "I'm desperately looking for a reason why having a standardized machine is a good thing.'' · freshmen or sophomores. . · · · of the day. Students were again in­

. , Attendance at the Speak Out was vi ted to tie ribbons on the Quad in : . i"~!.!ired for pledges this year as part n!membnince of rape victims at the ; ...,. ~f.O,Ceek 10_1, <,i series ~f four pro- .. end the pri:Jgi:~ Tru;;t nighf. . T,echn9logy tors in the future," he said. ''Rjghtnowwe . ~s that auns to educate over 400 Twenty student!) attended 1. ~ don't provide any real support except for

: stud,ents 'involved in the pledging Tuesday's Dating Game program, providing a pathway." ;' jltQcessofbo(h inen' sand women's . which was designed to break down . From Page 1 One man who thinks the idea has merit - Greek organizations. ·- stereotypes and:' foster improved is Wayne King, a lecturer of journalism. , , -1\pcording toMary Gerardy, the communication bet\veeir the .sexes. . . . . King recently invited Pulitzer Prize win-- : ~si$tant vice president for student Senior MarkSchofieli:l, anincom- to be ~'ramped up with electrorucs" .in ningjournalist Sydney Schanberg to give , life,. the program will most likely ing co-chairman of PREP AR, said order fpr teleconferencing to worJ<. dne a lecture on the movie based on his expe-co~tinue to be a part of pledge .edu- he was disappointed with the atten- obstacle standing in the way of the idea is riencesln Cambodia: The Killing Fields.

, .~a~o.n, . · . . dance at the ·Dating, Gani.e, but. the rrioney: · . • . _ · ~ · ·: · . Schan~rg would not come to campus, ; ·~ "It'sreally important that students fonnat of the program was benefi- · "It's not cheap to do," Bayiiff'sirid. but he was willing to talk via satellite. _ h!l~~ an opportUnity to hear this. We cial and enjoyable for those who did "We're talking about several tens of thou- . King said he thought the lecture went live in this community, and it seems attend. PREP AR gave away free sands of dollars worth of equipment.'' well .

. . pe~ceful, but we are. easily lulled dinners to the winners of the pro- He also said there would have to be King gave two reasons for wanting to · _ l'!to a false sense of §ecurity ." gram. some sort of coordinator to help in ad- set up a teleconference. · - Sophomore Amanda Baxty[z a,· .. _. r_h~MoFk!frial planned for today mlim!~~dr~ng .fR!l,§_Y.!t~_W,.~'?.!Mt }t ~~~~eHfS,

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6 OLD Goto AND BLACK THUiSDAY FEBRUARY 23,1995

·' OLD GOLD AND BLACK The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University

Founded in 1916

EDITORIALS

pean's dispatch shows disregard for students Last week Dean Harold Holmes What there is to be learned through

sent a memo to presidents of stu- involvement in student organiza­dent organizations requiring that tions is to be learned by doing. all expense voucher requests be This includes student control of cleared through the organizations' their group's expenditures. faculty advisers. This memo came It is disturbing that a university not in response to any charges or which receives the majority of its suspicions of misspending by stu- operating budget from students' dent organizations, but as a result tuition payments would then not of an earlier memo, this one from trust student leaders to appropri­the university's controller, Tho-'• ately spend money appropriated mas Gilsenan. J• for their organjzations. In his

The letter from Gilsetlan, adr memo,Holmesistellingthepresi-' ( . ) l dressed to "All DepartmentS," 1s a dents of all student groups on cam-

reminder of the CO!flmon-sensl- pus exactly that. principlesoforganizationalspend-, If the university allocates an ing. It says simply that expense amount of money for the annual reports must be approved by "de- expenses of certain organizations, partment chairs, heads, supervi;.; it follows that the officers of that sorsortheirdesignatedassistantsl": organization should then be al-

P and that none of these reques~ lowed to manage that money. A should be "self approved." TheSe group that is considered worthy of requests are only reasonable. university funds should not then

Holmes, thedeanofstudentser- have to make every financial deci­vices, translated these instructions - sion through its faculty adviser. from Gilsenan and passed them on Holmes' officious decision­to student organizations. While his memo reads, "This procedure Gil sen an's recommendation to "all is effective immediately," in bold­departments" only stated the obvi- face type- was made withou't the ous, Holmes' memo goes much consultation of any of the student further, requiring major changes groups to whom it was sent. This to be made in the way student disregardfortheopinionsofthose organizations pay their bills. . affected by his_dispatch is as troll-

Supervisors' signatures, as re- blingasthecontentsoftheineino. quested by Gilsenan, would be When a decision like the one those of the student organization's contained in Holmes' memo is presidr.nt or treasurer. By asking made, the presidents, editors and instead that these organizations leaders of the organizations af­make every expenditure through fected should always be consulted. their adviser, Holmes is asking that Hasty decrees are certainly more every student-run organization at convenient than group discussions theuniversitybecomelessstudent- or opinion collecting, but failure run. to consider the opinions of the

Th~purposeoffaculty advisers . students affected by such .deci- . ,, "I •·•-L, , • •o• '·• • , ' •· •. ' I • ''•' •I) •'', • 'f..J,• l

for student grpups IS s1mp\y to., .slons.makes.cOQperatlOnbetweJ:.n.,; .. advise from the outside. Student studentleadersandadministration -leaders are to ask for advice, con- impossible. Certainly students' suit with their adviser about the needs would be better met if projects and the progress of their Holmes took more care in his de­organization or just use their ad- cision-making. viser as a sounding board. Ad vis- If anyone in the administration ers should not become faculty di- shouldbeconcernedwiththeopin­rectors, faculty co-presidents or, ions of students, it seems it ought as decreed by Holmes, financial to be the dean of student services. babysitters. The newly-tapped dean of the

The mission of a university is college, Paul Escott, Reynolds not to lead its students by the hand Professor of History, is becoming through their learning experience. part of an administration that too It is instead to provide the best oftenfailstoconsultstudentsabout possible resources, faculty and matters that will affect them. framework for students' education Escott is to be commended for and then to let its students learn. his plans to remain in the class­This extends to student activities room. He, like other members of as well as course work. the administration who continue

The educational value of stu- to teach, will be able to remain in dent organizations lies in the plan- touch with the needs and concerns ning, delegating, electing, orga- of the student body as his role nizi ng and deciding itself. It is not shifts from educator to that of edu­enough to form an opinion and cator and a policy maker. Escott then pitch it to a faculty member. It should seek the input of students is not worthwhile to simply be whileservingasdean,andHolmes nearby when the decision is made. should follow his lead.

OLD GOLD,AND BLACK J l

·Brian ·Jl; Uzwiak EditoPiin Chief

Lori Donath Managing Editor

,u_

Robbie Zalzneck Business Manager

News: Brian Dimmick and J. Hunter Tart, editor5; Shannon Bothwell, Danielle Deaver and Lisa Martin, production assistants; Andy Ferguson and Jennifer Fowler, copy editors. , ·~

Editorials: Chris Gatewood, editor;JCharles Starks, assistant editor; Michael Armstrong, copy editor. "

Perspectives: Sarah Knowles, editor; Meredith Miller, production assistant. Arts and Entertainment: Michael Janssen, editor; Gray Crawford, assistant

editor; Anne Burkett, production assistant; Allison Reid, copy editor. Spo~: Steve Welgoss, editor; Karen Hillenbrand, assistant editor. Insight Page: Mark Stewart Hayes, editor. Copy Editors: Terese Mack and Cayce Butler. Electronic Edition: Jason F. McBrayer, editor. Photography: Allen Strum, editor. Graphics: Nldrew Jatinen and Susan Roberts, editors. Advertising:Jinuny Myrick, sales manager; Bill Ferguson, production manager;

Jamie Womack, production assistant.

Tite Old Gold and Black encourages members of the Wake Forest community to address current issues tbroug!ltenen to tbe editor. To reserve a guest column call the editorials editor at ExL 5280 at least on week 'in·'advance of publication. -We do not accept public thank· you noles. Comcticns will run in tbe corrections box on page two. All letters to the editor must include lhe nuthor"s name and phone number. although anonymity in

print may bemjuested. Submissions should be typeWritten and double-spaced. We OJipmiate connibutions submitted via floppy disk or the university network. Letters should be

delivered to Benson SIS. mailed toP. 0. Box 7569 Reyno Ida Station, Winston-Salem. NC 27109. sent via electronic mail to letters@ogb. wfu.edu. or faxed to (910) 759-4561. 1lte Old Gold and Black reserves !he rightto edit, without prior notice. n_ll copy for grnnunatical or

typographical errors, and also 10 CUI letters liS' needed I~ meet layout teqUJrements. The deadline for tbe Thursday issile is 5 p.m. the preYJous Monday. _ The Old GOld~ Bind: is publis!ied each Thwsday during the school year, except during examinations,

su;rpner and holidlly pe:ioa. by Newspaper Printers Inc. of Winston-Salem. N.C.

••

'. 'It,.:'

·Will PPC' s technology aid teachi~g't''l I n practice, how are we to realize the unques- · !:D~iL~IP:_e.K~O::::ND~E:::P::.;VD::::.:::I:,_ __ -:-:-'--.--.,.-

- tionably important recommendations of the - . oum CoLUMNIST • · Program Planning. Committee? The proposal .;;:.;;::.:.;~;;;;,;;;;....;.. ____ ...... _~--

. is other th;m le~i~g how tO operate tlie'~~t • computer.: · .. · . · · ·· · · ·- ·· ;_.,·:· •

that is cwre~tly being discussed is a big one: a laptop in every lap and a network in the wOodwork. _ Every student ~d faculty member is to be given a laptop, the same laptop, probably mM: The laptops and the software are to . be upgraded every two

· . In my opinion; ~e f~t ~at ~e need a tgtal of : 17 support staff 1s an m~catio~_tllat-the ~ :

.parameters and press enter. · · . · . · · Jl(>sed techrioiogy is not 84variced eno11gh and tt- ! 2. Adjust the feed roller pressure to suit the thick- will ge~ iri the way. How ~uch sup~ ~~9o .ness of the copy paper. · · we need to drive o.ur C&r.! fuU.of ~cm:;hi~'? 3. Select number of copies and press enter. ·, How muc.~ sitpPQ~ staff"!i!> we:~ f~r 1he

years. . . . . . . . . . 4. Press print and feed paper one page at a time. pbotoeo~ytngmachinestliatareevery~h~and l This technology is in your way; it is actually inter- ~lephones· that are ~etworke_<l to al,l the ':Y?Flc:l7 : t'ering and adding to your work.· It is easier to write· . The proposed n~twork. CllllJlot supportdi!f~-, -• the syllabus on the classroom bO~. The present- · ent computet:S easily. This aloJ!e_ ~~ tAAl ~e.: ; day :Xerox machine only needs to know bow many Mac users wlll have t? leafll ,tc:>.o~r:ate ~'f<l OF : c_opies are to: be made. It d~ ali. the rest, "in vis- vise versa. ~e proP?~ network w&ll ~Cl~~>the : ibly." . . _ . way ofm.any. ~~wng peop!eto ll?lliil-liow..to ..• . Here is another example. If I want to discuss the use more opa;au~g srstems ,IS _particul~l)' un •.

In addition, the camp11,$:is to be exttMively net­worked. To make this network work,, 10 academic and 7 hardware support staff are to be hired. An increase in studerit tuition is to pay foi: all this. _

More extensively tlian telephone scX:kets, net­work s()(:kets wiO be installed everyV.there :--even a socket for-every seat in every ~lassroam. Connect your laptop to this network socket and you are on the information highway. Mynad_ revolutioruuy ways to educate the students win be available to the Furthermore, ifthe network can o.dy faculty at the university; . . .• •

Actually I it is not so straightforward. It is not as . support mM, then mM will dectde simple as hooking up your .telephone - which is what the future tuition increases Will also a network that can connect you to almost any · part of the world. For the laptop, you need to · · be, not the Board of Trustees. _ "configure the local network" correctly, "assign proper addresses" and "iristall compatible network software," especially if you use a PC.

In the discussions on this proposal that I have relationship between two quantities by drawing a attended, the issues drift randomly between ques- curve, I find it simpler to use the chalkboard than to tionsofcostandbetterwaysofusingthemoney,PC set up a computer in the classroom and input- the versus Mac networks and on and on without a clear numerical values· of. all the parameters, input the . central idea. Detailed responses to the multitude of commands to define the function, arid the coin­comments on these issues only adds to the volume marids to plot it, m~ng sure that all the ciommils ofthisunproductivediscourse.Befqremoredetails . and the brackets are in the right place, All this are discussed, I think we must address one basic because the available technology cannot draw a. question: When is a new technology appropriate graph withou~ numbers. for ubiquitous use in education? When we have an But I can imd I do use graphs without numbers to answer to this question, we can look at the proposal explain many importanfpoints. The present state of to see if it is appropriate. . · technology actually. takes more ofniy class time to

Certainly we are not the first ones to confront this get the simple point across to my students and adds question. In fact, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, to my work.lt gets in my way. That the curve on the one of the most prolific creators of new technolo- computer screen is the "exact cuzye" and it is more gies, wrestled with a somewhat broader question: colorful than the curve on the board is beside the When is a new technology appropriate' for ubiqui- point. The point is the qualitative relation between tous use in society? the two quantitieS. · _

The simple answer, or guiding principle, is this: So, before we. discuss more details of the pro-a technology will be ubiquitously used if it can posed "Laptop in.every lap and network in the provide you all its power and get out of your way. woodwork," we must know if the propoSed tech­It should be a technology that is so powerful that it nology is powerful enough to make its power is virtually invisible. available to us and getoutofthe way. Can we walk

Considerphotocopying, a technology that is ubiq- into the classroom, tum on the network ari.d get on uitously used in education:, ~a~ .;¥,~!1 .. }'f~t lo -give,· .. ·-~~ oUr teachin~?The question is.notif a profes~or your- studenlNhe-·syll'abtls ·of your course. You m history, chellllstry, or French 1s adequately In­simply type it, go to· the photocopying machine, formed to operate the latest, networked computer. press a couple ofbuttons and you have all the copies Any university professor is capableoflearninghow you need. Your job is done. The technology has to operate a computer. made itself available to you and it was not in your The question is whether the proposed computer way. On the other hand, when you go to the photo- network is good enough for ubiquitous use in copying machine, if you find that the display says: education or will it simply get in the way ofprofes­l. Please specify the copy quality, toner and ink sors who have a job to do- which, in most cases,

wise, if not futile, m viewofthefactthatm a{ew yeaci "common platform" ,cpmp~t~rs th~,$ function both as Macs and PCs will be-appeltr~ . ing. A network that can supPort only one type of

. comp)lter is, in my opinion, primi~v~. . ..•... _., -·The eXisting network supports both ~ llll4

Maes. Why can't "!'e continue using it?Filither~ more, if the ne~orkcanonly sup~rtmM; then ffiM will decide what. the ·future tuition :in,.· creases will be, not theBoardofTrustees. :Wout(l we be willing toinvestin an exteiisiveel~trl~ network that can orily support electrical_ applj ... ances made. by Genef<ll Electric? ·

It WOUld be aC()lOS~ WaSte of student money if;_ after· spending millions on the prowsea. project, :we 'find out that the proposed netWo(k, actually gets in the way of teaching and so is n.ot_ 'IJ.Sed-however dazzUng it might appear,to,th~· visiting parents and the Board of Trustee$, . : ..

Ourobjectiveis not simply to buytbe state-:Qf­the-art technology for a great price. It is. to enhance our "capacity to aecess intellectu~ ·!let~: ·works and to use the appropii.ate databases for. analysis" as the Progr~ Planning Committee­clearly stated. We should thirik of a more.cau-. tious way of implementing the Program-Plan­ning Comxpittee's recommendations.

One possibility is for the sellers of this·new. technology (IBM, Apple or other) to establish-a. network prototype on campus and for the stu­dents and the faculty to see if this new'techtiol­ogy, though "state-of-the-art", is actually 'ad­vanced enough for general claSSroom use. It- is . ait academic matter and should be treated as: such.

Perhaps the university could share a part of• the cost of this initial set up. The sellers have-to,· prove the technology's capability to us. They. have to first show us that it will provide its power

· tous and get out of our way. Only then is it fit for • ubiquitous use in education. . .. ..

• ' I J

Dilip Kondepudi is an associate professor·of'· chemistry.

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Human nature Existence is neither good nor evil -it simply is. In fact, good and evil are meaningless religious tenns, just

Every time I read an atheistic evo- as right and_ wrong are meaningless lutionist who uses the terms "should," -moralistic terms. The only semantic "must" or "by necessity," I am struck alternative is the language of science; by his apparent inability to. under- that is, beneficial and detrimental. stand his own position. We cannot skirt around this di-

He cannot logically say, as Mat- lemma by saying that helping others thew Gilley does, that "the primary is our reasonable imperative, for our focus of our politics should be to only reasonable response is to seek to create a ... harmony with the natural secure our own safety. Our world can earth." ("Humanity, nature must re- be no less "tooth and claw" than the connect," Feb. H)). _ Jurassic. The only difference is that

It is this religious awareness that provides us the moral imperative to help those in need; science alone can­notaccount for this (other than to say that altruistic behavior seeks to pre" serve similar genes for future repre­sentation, but I doubt many of us would accept this scientific explana­tion of human compassion).

Western values Though he told us three weeks~·

ago that he is "an accomplished .·; psychologist" . who can "judge· • people, often quite accurately ", within a very short time," senior · Michael Armstrong nevertheless·-' seems to have taken too short· a time with me and my poor le'tfer-•... ("Self-delusions upset intercon~ · nected universe," Feb. 2)• He says···. thatlhave"anembarrassinglyhuge· ' dependence on classical, western,·. · and eurocentric values." ·: · ' '

Harmony with the earth, whatever today "tooth and claw" bas been re­that means, is not intrinsically better placed by "pen and bank statement." than discord with the earth. It is only For example, Turkey is trying to better in Gilley's mind insofar as it monopolize water- ho1TW erectus allows the most people to live in rela- rnonopoUzed fruits and berries. The tive comfort. Why this is to be de- thirdworldcannotutilizeitseconomic sired, he does not say; perhaps this is advantage- Neanderthal could ·not one of his assumptions about the na- utilize its size advantage. ture ofhuman existence. In his view, We should feel as sad for the starv­however, this is not a "religious im- ing infants of the third world who perative," nor is it a "moral impera- cannot compete in this time of eco­tive." · nomic advance as we should for the

Sorry, Matthew, but I see no other mastodon that could not compete in explanation, because any asstmption its world of glacial retreat. . of imperative necessitates a right and · . Fortunately .very few people take a wrong. Implicit ih his reasoning is atheistic evolution to this, its logical

. that the preservation of mankind is a extreme. We all somehow fe'el that good thing. This belief cannot be ac- we are more than a bag of chemicals. counted for by evolutionary theory We all somehow know that Jove is because humans are merely a random more. thaiui meitns by which our genes collectionofatomsniostecologically- 'are-to be present in the next genera-· fit to sustain life. . tion: -

' ''

This fundamental fact must be con­sidered before any rational discourse on the "reconnectingofhumanity with the earth" can take place. Now, per­haps Gilley can explain that enig­matic phrase. As I understood it, he was S!lYing that world socialism and Gaiaistic Romanticism will enable humanity to release itself from the shackles of"anger, hate and other ills · of the past.'\ Please. We wouid do better to learn from what history has shown us about human shortcomings andfactorthis into our political plans. A mystical harmony withmothi:rearth is a mindless idealism even if it is to be seen as a means to an end ofhuman pain and discomfort.

The fact of the matter is, we share this earth with animals .and plants; both chemically striving-for creature comforts - our most basic common link as humans should be in our quest for meaning in what modern science tells us.is a meaningless world.

·Josh Dixon

It is unclear how to' take this: • -. who is supposed to be embar~ · ·:' rassed? Perhaps I am, though ldo · · not feel embarrassed. Perhaps Mi.:.' Armstrong is embarrassed for ine. · '

· If so, I appreciate his ·concern, but· must add that it is a little odd com-··­ing from one who is so certain of·· the prominence of technology :in.·· the ''next millennium." ' - · ·

"Absolutely," he writes, "wlll'i(­. play a huge part in the next millen'-· :

nium." As I pointed out in my la5t- : letter, however, the extension an~f '

. expansion of technology (which, pl~aseno~e,originatedinthe West) ..

. IS unposs1ble without the breaklng · down of cultural differences ·ancf·; the westernization ofotherpartliof ·: the world: · . . · , · · ·

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Page 7: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

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OLD GoLD AND BLACK 1'HuRsoAY, FEBRL ". 23, 1995 7

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• R.USsia: ~conomy of quagmire ~ ClwtLEs STARKS

CA~, t'A""'oNAL. S~Vtc:.e.. M\ .. tf"\UI"t W ilr_is o~en a rather lirilitiri~ :

expenence, at least for et- AssiSTANT EortciRJAt..s EDITOR vilians, But the Cheehens, :=:::;.:.:;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;..-;;;,;;; __ _

they know from experience that "re­fonn" is usually code for something like, "Hi, we're sending all your relativ~s to the Gulag.". WA~ F.AISE:S

Attl> GA"'i P..' Gf\"B .. :----'"

:Edu.ca~ion .chal1~nges faith ·:l.n .,Ood; 1r.aditi0tial beliefs,.riQ longer 'sUffice

whose seeiningty'hopeleSS fight for indepe:ndence frbm· Russia has dragg¢donforovert'womonths.now, have haa a 'chofce: .stay i~ the city and be shOt; or go to the co~l'ltry and starve. Joseph Conrad calledthis sort

· ofthingachoicebetweennightmares. At any rare, it may be over. As I

write ibis~ a shaky cea5e-frre is in place in the grildge matdi between the Chechen .chickenhawk'luid..-the once-mighty Russian bear:' But it is 'hatd to say Whethertl:\e Russian army is really putting a 'way i~ toys orjtJst . pretending in order to please the ma­tronly woi:ld·corrimunicy ..

Now that the seent of olive branch (or at least.fig leaf) is in the air. we must ask: What is reruly going on over there in Russia? True; 1995 is

, already a bistory-maldl)g year of the

I. t 'has been hard for me to understand why God BRiAN CORNELL highest order'- imagine the trial of· ·'

:would have lis do certain things and Wouldn't have. ;::Snm;=:;:iNT~C..;:o;.,.LUM;;.;. :::NI::..ST=;=,.--.......-~-f--,----::--- the century within our very midst! 'i:ls"do other'things; When I was choosing where to But when President Bill Clinton

atterid·college; ~·submerged the whole topic and deci- · ' refuses to play ball with Russian sion in prayer.lnever heard what one would call a 'lreturnedtoschoolandfinallymyexteriorcaughtup · president Boris Yeltsin, you kitow 'sign'·orvoice'fromGoddirectingme.onmydef!ision, with my interior. It was apparent that my support something is up. Itrnay_ be argued s·orfigured that the choiCe I would inake'would be the· system had failed, not only to me, but to anyone who that he simply does riot want to lose otie··GOO wanted me to make. I made a decision;· caredtolookcloseenough.Inolongerhadsomething afew·daysoftheOJ.Simpsontrlal oontimied to. ptay about it, and never experienced to believe in. So I ran away, and this time, I did not coverage while in Russia for a sum-anything that would have led me to think God wanted . waste any thoughts ori prayer. ' mit this May. ·Butthemanhas enough something else for me; , Transferring to a "southern school" was supposed to · marital problems of his owri;· I doubt -Spiritually·, Ifelt well prepared to attend college. My be my spiritual salvation. By falling back on something he has the time to follow someone

prayer life was good, my scriptural studies were ha- ·.traditional,~ was supposed to slip back quietly into the else's. bitual, my understanding of my faith was solid; ih- faithibadonceheldinhighschool.Onlyproblemwas, No,Clinton'srefusaltomeetwith general,! felt very close to God and comfortable about that faith was too sritaUfor me now and God wanted me Yeltsin signifies art unfortunate ten-

'lowed into the presidency, will strain relations with the West and bring . ,both paliticat opponents ~d capital-. isttefonns upbeforeth~fmngsq~ad.

That may be what Russia thinks it wants. But it is alsO exactly what the venerable old bear. cannot afford. The rest of the world is fil;st ~m­ing a dyriainic capitaiiSt state, -Are­surgent "evil empire" would be little more ·than a_ socialist theme park. where ali the rides are free• but none of them woi:k.

And in the thick: of all this .sits poor, beleaguered . Chechnya. ·The Chechen economy llas always been dismal at best, and the fighting has · pretty much .shot down any ·pros­pects ofgiowth_there in the immedi-

Refonns take time to work; you carinot quit Leninism cold turkey.

· Besides, freedom and personal pow~r. ca,n ~ very .disconcerting­just ask Bill Clinton. And it is hard to think rationally about the govern~ ment when the ci~ is out of potatoes again ·and each ruble is worth 15 percent less than it was last month.

So where will Russia get -:~e . moriey needed to. stabiH~ . ~oth Chechnya and the Russian people? Well, it co~ld always try what has . worked in the past: sen nucleattech~

· nology to third-world nations like . our old friends the Iranians. But I

doubt that many in the West would view this as a particularly good plan.

Anyway, that solution, like most others proposed, rests on the assump­tion that the root of the problem in

· bothChechnyaandRussiaasawhole is economic. In fact, it is psychologi- · cal: •how do you move ·an entire nation from a communist/fascist mindset to a capitalist/democratic one11Refor;ms.,take time to woJ;k; you fann~ quit }eninism cold tur· key. . ·

It is easy for ~s~o shout, "Gi~e me atefuture.Butthiswarmayputmore liberty or give· me death!" to high: than that isolated _province in the hea~en, but we've had 219 years of ·dumpster. -experience; And for half a millen~

his·Will for me. 'So I went to college ready to reap the , to· grow: . . ' ' dericy of the WeSt. to deal with the benefits oh close relationship with God. I ·h!ld· become too satisfied With my own· spiritual Chechen' conflict liS though Russia

h didn't take four months for my ''finn understand- achieveiilents·in high school, and God was prepared to were a child having a temper tail-ing" about myself, my faith and my God to crunible pusbandshovemeintogrowing·llirgerforabetterand trum:ifitwillnotgotoitsr<lom,then around me. Ifl perpetuated the iimige of remaining The) closer relatil?ilS~p with Him. I resisted. ainl only later slap it and hope it behaves.

· If the cease-ftre falters, Russia's nium: before that, the British idea of military sjleoding will almostcer- indi~~ual rights was drilled into the tainly have to be inc:reas~:tLif it sue- skul~.of our founders' ancestors. ceeds, rna5sive reinvest:Jrient will be . In 1'776, Russia was into the feu· needed in Checlinyajust to make the dal system, with serfs, lords, knights,

· ruined republic halfway livable and all therest.ManyRussianswere again. Either way, Russiapicks up a essentially serfs until about 1990, very expensive tab - which leaves tied to their cities and toiling for less money for real11ew investment. their government.

And Yeltsin' s wa:r whoops have -What Russia needs now is an en-· sanie on the outside,mostofthe notions I had held were has the gift of introspection and spiritual shock treat- Now, Russia's political and eco-knooking abourand smashing up: on the inside.'· ·· · ment allow~ ·nie to see'this. · · . nomic infrastructures niay well be in

My· understanding of the Bible 'radically changed, My inner countenance did notinagically rekilit itself their infancy. But you do not slight a thanks to a very gifted professor and two scripture together by changing localities; You cannot unlearn child who tias nuclear weapons. · classes. My perception of religion changed, watching ·something you have learned without lying to yourself. NATO's eastward creep through the the. actions-of the two "Christian'' groups· on campus as · Tliis .is a spirituill cancer, because you 'can no longer tatters of the Iron CUrtain is bad well as participating in various other religious groups~ tnist yourself in other areas of your life, and neither can enough; thinks the Russian. But now actiVities. My firm' hold on personal. and ''universal" those around· you.:·. :,: · the West refuses to talk to us? I truths became a slippery slope whicH continually slid By the grace- of God and facing some undeniable ··thought we were not enemies any-

: furtbe'i" down. truths, I have. turned arofuld to· face my religious more. , .&ce the interior structures collapse, it does not take inadequacies as opposed to running from them. But it When the man on the street starts . long for the exterior to crumble.- I held off most of the has been a long, hard and arduous journey. I still have thinking this way, you have got a : apparent damage the first year by escaping mentally ·far to ira vel. · · country with a _one-way tic~(lt. to : through a timely excuse of "rooinmate conflict." The ood speaks in many ways, and often.says things we reactioriari politics a Ia:· V1adiniir ; truth. of the matter was, I had· developed a·-. serious· donotwanttohear.-Insteadofsaying;''Wher'eareyou, . Zhirinovsicy. True, the Uml Moun-. personality conflict within myself; and the mother of God?" maybe we should spend our time saying, "How tain daredevil (most recently famous ; all spiritual battles was continually raging in my heart. do I get there, God?" Life. is not about remaining the for demanding sex for an interview : - I temporarily patched up my cracks that summer by same and·. the we are not called to be perpetually with an American reporter) does not · relying on friends and submerging myself in the comfortable with our faith. A life requirc~s wieldtoomuchinfluencethesedays. : comfortability ... predictable religion: Yet I still was.. some growing pains, but these rnak6the spull.luw But there are other bal-d-liners in :: lacking true for tht; outwl\rd beliefs .I> pro- "rests" more · · · d~~~)~ are not as given :! feSsed to l~Ja:)~ ~ :107~ ~V.t push you typeS, if al-

unquestionably lessened his desire lightened despot, a Pinochet of s~. . for capitalist reforrn.S. U.S. News & Petersburg, if you will. Ei"nesto World Report tells us that Yeltsin's Pinochet was Chile's head of state new head of privati2ation has said for about 2o year8. His rule was thatdenationalizatiortofstateindus- harsh; many of his critics are now tries was ''reckless" and "has dam- worm food. But his policies encour­agedRussia'snationalsecurity."Not aged outside investment and per­exactly the words of a dedicated re- sonal saving, and he stepped down former. . five years ago after holdingfreeelec-

Still, it is easy to talk about Russia tions. as though it were merely a textbook These days, Chile is the freest, modelofgovemmentwithoutaclue. most stable Iand-in Latin America. But 160 million people live there. The u.s. may invite it to join' the And not a whole lot of them are North American Free Trade Agi"ee­ex~c~y wetting their pants with glee ment. Meanwhile, Russia teeters and over the reformers' agenda. totters and is mired in an intractable

Frankly, they are running scared. little war. But at least it has free For70y~,tbeywereassuredjobs, el~tions, right? In other words, its money. health care and a place to people can choose their nightmare, live, They ladgh when told to "giVe just like the Chechens. Tha~ is a the refOfi'#s time·to·'Wo'tk~~u~n,,!rtrrulge kin~· of fteedbm~ ,:. ~·:'"· - · ·

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we· should take caution with decisions, conunitments that touch others' lives :Many things influence and Ql()ti- JoHN PARKER com~~e'lt !s in!!.de,~i~.;~ne~1,..t.or:_one- . Buthowlongisasufficient~ou11toftime We contemplate the path we.intend to : vate us through life's e.~~ors. SruoENT CoLUMNIST self. · . . ... . . ·; ~- ·,. · . ~.\. ·\- : . . to know someone long enough? What type of continue walking ~n life. In short, we ex-. Our motivations are:connected Usually, no one is iitv~lved iri '~s agree-. _q!lality time is best? When will yow signifi- anline our ways and the Way. : with our ultirnate.goals or interests:; Moti- . ment to commit except 'for the person com." -'cant other show his or her true colors? No one AU of us are motivated and influenced : vations may be logicaJ.! emotional or a. ' :::s y committing, you should have made the mitting. How long does this co~jtrnent said it was going to be easy. If it tal<:es more thfoughout our lifetimes. Everything is · dynamic interpla:Vbetw.een the-tWo. - , t;onscious decision to fulfill the cornriritrnent last? How many rnetamorpho~1~ties .this work than you think it should or you have contextual. Perception isreality.Itallcomes · Our families may_~ the strongest).,nflu-!i. "through tim~, work and effort. Comriii~ting,: commitment make? ·People gell_!lr~Iy can ac- , : simply grown apart from your partner, that down to interpretation. We may or may not : en,ce ~drnotiva~~}.!1:&:.ll!ise we leaprabo~t ' mean~ you have alre;tdy ~J!e it in yo-gr_}lllrid;: cept breaking a comrliltrnent Iilm>this. They "·should be acceptable, right? be aware of all of the sources ofinfluence. : society, value,s;jlijd,'~ w()rld around us Now you must put it int(})aylion, A oommit.?-_ . can make tl:te conuil,i.tj:nent agai~. and again, I! seems the American. society can accept · Knowing yourself and others as well as · from thein frrS,t. Tiiis-e.tcultiira,~on'occi;Jis :ment must J?e strong. Ir.reqpires a foeusthat . but.~ever follow tl),roligp·tomple'tdy, '· .• divorce. Maybe a lifelong commitment to attemptingtounderstandyourmotivations . directly w(d,f~n~tly at' an:~:~~~ age.:_ goeS f~beyo~d ~t\tent;;.It~ll or may.im.pact The second ill~lf~tio~ iovolyes_~ore than ~otheris too~uch to ask. Th~a~ov~ill~stra- is just as valuable as knowing your limita­. Through this prqcess, our per~pnilfi~~s ll;fe •. ·£1thers. How wtlht af[ect_~ern ~.Do $_eY,;l<~~VI'· one person. ~ ~!_1\~tlition of m~ll,ge does ·'·'lions may be different, but the pnnc1ple ts the tions. This takes awareness. To me, aware­: created. · · .. :- ~' , ·.: .. · / you have made a -~~Jment? ~t IS ~,: not hold the weight il~ed_to. Unttl death do same. . ness is an organic play between knowl-

Many other factors influenc£us once we ·.:commitment t<r thetn? A connhltmeritJo,)ne~ us part? With a·diVorci5tate ·of 50%, America . People change. Situations change. Com- edge and intuition. : begi~ to learn ~4 s.~~e wi~ others: Th,e ~s~ deci~ion that cai{,o~JY~en11tdec~lien ~e~e- seems. not(~ tak~;i,_his c~trnent seriously. mitll!-~-~ts are b~ken. Afte:they are bro~en, a Throughout this walk, run, jump, spin, . media, group mtele!lf$; peers, self mter~ . IS agreement amo~ tile lplnd, heart and spmt. Here IS a srtuation ·wh~~-two people have · negative tone anses that signals the senous- rise, fall, live and die journey we call the . ests, dreams, our splntuality and imagin~~ , .. Asill~tra~ons, l~t ~s l&ok aftwo different supposedly had enoilgh;expetiences together ~ss ofthecontract. whetl}erthecommitment huiil• :t experience, it is obvious to me that . tion affect our• ~xP,f!ri¢rices. Through the- degrees Qf coll]mitnient,- ~yecy,one, at sorn<:? to ~ow thatthey want t9 make a life c!)mmit: was completed or broken, there is a positive . the ends may not justify the means. The · decision-makingp~;.wemakechoices. p!lintoraribther.in.theirlife~;J;llakesacommit- mertt to each other. If'any~·social cbanges effect that comes into play. joarnev itself proves to be the rewarding Making decisiorts)ritiy'or :may not include_. rnent 'to improVe them~elves. rrus commit- ~ould be improved within American society, Regat'dless· of the outcome, by putting experience. Communicate. Awareness is oth~rs,DMaldng the.declsion to co~t is ment inay be·-a welghttralnlng program, at- I would 'vote for a ctlange•in the attitude· thought and feeling into action, we grow thekeytoperceivingthernethodofputting. taking the decision process to another level. tempting to quit smoking, or a new diet. This towards marriage. personally. We reinforee or alter our identity. thought and feeling into action.

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Fortben'lucb-heralded ~global vii- position implied in such· a statement. matter. However, the statement still ; .· . '. (1n her defense, I will say that Of- campus aren't a major concern.

' Deplorable acts : lage" to be truly "global," someone Likewise, Mr. Armstrong wants waits to be refuted, while several ficer Johnson did spray in a particu- Pit Jams are going to be replaced : in.South-Arnerica, if not our previ- to transcend th'e aged traditions- of professors, in . due response ta lar area, unlike the other officers by ·~ymJams," parties to beheld in ously mentioned fanner, will have to his culture, even to the pointofbeing Mr.Armstrong's threats, creep The longer! stay here at the uni- who sprayed theentirePitwhilethey thelqiWergymintheReynoldsGym~

. be-qoqked into the "infonnation su- embarrassed by those who do not, around campus in bulletproof vests. versity, the more bitter I become. joked to each other ai:Jout how well nasiurn. Well, excuse me for not · perl)ighway" or some other form of while I -am condemned to hobble Finally, regarding the matter of a Believe me when I tell you May 15 they can clear a room.) There needs getting excited. First. of, all, these · tec,hnology that shortens the distances around, cursed by my particularity. personal attack: I do not know how will not get here soon enough. After to be some type of race sensitivity Gym Jams won't begin until the-fall : between distant places. Whether he rose to this position sub one can divorce a thinker from his· reading several articles written in the training that all campus officers semester. But most importantly, no '· Or-; one could note the McDonald's specie aeternitatis (please - for- thoughts. If my statements seem to past few weeks concerning the Pit should be required to complete. The problem is being addressed. It's sim-: in B)ldapest, which does play its role give the Latin) has, admittedly, been be merely inane name-calling in an Jam that ended with innocent people fact of the matter is that what the ply moving the problem from the Pit · in the '·'international economic corn- called into question. attempt to get attention, perhaps Mr. being sprayed with pepper spray and officers perceived to be a "danger- to the gym. Until Campus Police go : municy," but could not exactly be· Moreover, it looks as if Mr. Annstrong should think more about · Ken Zick's (the vice president for ous" situation wasn't, at least it through race sensitivity training, : sai4.to.be furthering Hungary's cui- Armstrong is painting me as a lover why I used the names I did. student life and instructional re- wasn't until the pepper spray was who's to say the now infamous pep-: tur~ b.eritage. The "global-village," of the Greeks, one with faith in the They were attempts to-describe sources) letter about a black student emitted into the air. Asaresultofthis per spray incident won't happen · I dare say, is o!lly an imagined pos- rationality .of science, a denier of the lofty position necessary for one receiving a letter-from a coward who pepper spray incident, Pit Jams are again ?To the student who received a : sibilicy for·those with technology in moral or ethical biases in anything. to know, honestly, the many things wasn't woman enough to confront now a thing of the past My question letter from another student who ex-:their hflllds.lt is not a r~ty,.much This is indeed reading in a good bit. that Senior John Parker claimed to her about joining a predominately is what are black students and orga- pressed her feelings about not want- . · less- even a possible dream; for our Now, perhaps I should have been know. ("Random thoughts on mean- white sorority, I decided. it was time nizations to do now? Because there ing a black sorority sister, I am really : Souin American fanner. Thus it is a warned, for Mr. Armstrong did say ingfullife," Feb. 2). I should add that for me to speak out on how I feel are no more Pit Jams, black students sorry. It's amazing that something : bit odd when Mr. Armstrong says, in his column three weeks ago, "I am Mr. Parker' squestions (for example, about race relations at Wake. don't have a social outlet that was like this could happen in 1995'on·a . ''th~. ;'Global Village' is happening, a god. I can change the truth." It is "Do you know the difference be- I am a member of Delta Sigma once available to them. Also, Pit campus supposedly filled with some · and.-,v~ cannot stop it, nor should difficult, I admit, to be in debate with tweenmaki.ngloveandplainol' sex? Theta Sorority, the sorority that held Jams were major fundraisers for the of America's best and brightest. AI.

we;,'.' yet is much concerned that one a god, much less with one who hears . Does your partner?") did not exactly the party which ended in· several black organizations on campus. though I personally had no desire to : not be ,"eurocentric" or "western." what he wants. refrain from the personal: Moreover, campus officers unnecessarily spray- Now that we no longer have them, join a white sorority, people are en- ·

Furthermore, regarding Olympian Nevertheless, it still remains to be I do not know what in my letter could ing a crowd of students and campus how are the black sororities and fra- titled to seek membership in what-· declarations and omniscjence: I sim- demonstrated how my statements have gotten me much attention. visitors with pepper spray. How any- ternities going to fund their campus ever organization they choose. So : ply regard statements ab;out the "next could be taken to the extremes that Besides, there are many easier one can ju!ltify. this happening is to- and community service projects? why isn't this the case at Wake? : millennium" as more than a human Mr. Annstrongprofesses. If the truth ways of achieving that~ if it is one's tally beyond my comprehension. (For those of you who don't know, When are we going to wake up? : bemg \s capable of making.· be known, I think the technological goal.lhave been told, though I dare .. What really surprises me is that it all black Greek organizations are We need to stop thinking of race and · Or. when someone says that "we extension of science can sometimes not say who told me for fear that he seems the administration is missing community service oriented. Social race relations as taboo and deal with : are III}gered and offended easily ... be the death knell for morals. I took too might be shot, that one who says, the issue here. This was clearly an activities and beer -gtlzzling aren't the issues that are plaguing our cam-. because of, laws and societal rules the claim that the Greeks "first began "I am a god . :. I can change the truth" issue of race discrimination. our sole reasons for existence.) The pus. Only then can we eliminate the . that are ingrained in our minds and what we know as science as well as -indeed, such a one can in no way Of course. Campus Police denies administration has failed to address stereotypes, prejudices and miscon-: frameour values," I wantto know by the very concept of 'nature'" as com- fail to get much attention. · this vehemently;their reason being this issue, which leads me to believe ceptions we have about each other. what feat he rose abOve his ·own monplace. Were it shown to be false, that Sgt. Ruby Johnson, a black se- that the problems ~nd issues that go society's laws and rules to the lofty I would not lose any sleep over the John H. Hayes curity officer, was the first to spray. on in the black community here on Andrea R. GambreU ....

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Page 8: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

,j i.D GOLD AND BL!.CK INSIGHT ..

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY '23; 1995 8

-==========================================~~~

At the Crossroads •MMWi~n sllai~~;·'"'<~kas ·.· ···· · ~:f ·(_~~:~;.-,,_:.·: \ ::·:: ;.:;:<~ >•:.:·:,:1· . -:·,_ .. · <·_::>v.~i~f~;i~;;~{r:;?;)_:·. :·_:::! : ..

·Mullen reflects on 27 years as _deaQ,.: .. ·"allout lrber~cl .'arts ... eulmcatten . .. BY BILL BISHOP on three research projects. Mullen admited this is a difficult task,

·;'_::· ' :-:·~-) '' . : . .· ' ' ', ' .. . . ' :· ' ' ' ' . ;~. ' :~·;·:.~~:;::~;_~:~<; ; ,; ' .· . _: ' ' :.: ~ COtfiRJDUtlNG REPORTER When he returns from London he plans to but also said he usually has a good idea of what qu~ities he i~ 'looking for in·a ·

·i.: •. ~11zb~E: Mullen, ·tM,d&:m of the · Somehriw.~iriewber~.between · ; ··· .. '< ~Q.llfige,since:i968, stiiti'his.·basic beliefs freSim:ian orientatioht~d graduation, ' ' < ~- about the purposes ~~ ~ liberal a;ts : .·' coileges ~.is,6ii$~~:t<l bring; the most' ' ; :. '

~ducptioh liave changed little .over the desultory stud¢nt.to·the point oftakirig:a '·: •'::&~iii's, ' '. ·. ' ' ,··.' ' ' ' ' s~condlook:at'liin)selfani:l th~ac~derruc : :

":fie. w:rfiie:'an e~s.Qy'ex[ifuining -his ' game b~ is· playing~ '' ' : ·, ,, '. '\ vision'o/the'liberldans education for ' ~t i~ the,~~spon~jbility;,oftbe colleg~ to ·: . .tki)969 i:Iow,ler. ~ ' . · .·~ . drive, peiSU:!ide, oi tiicfliim ~to·askilig, ·· :. : · Portions of ihe essay are rc. ',rinteJ himself; 'What am I doing here? what is

F ew names are greeted with as much genuine admiration and respect as that of Thomas E. Mullen.

After serving as dean of the college for 27 years, Mullen announced be would resign that positioll' and return to teaching last faiL

Though best known as the dean, Mullen said some of his fondest memories at the university are from the classroom.

continue teaching in the history depart­ment.

While talking to Mullen's collegues,one word that seems to be repeated is respect, both

"Wake Forest has a sou) that many people professor.

here understand. It is a commitment not to gainin~ for the individua1, but for the whole community."

Thomas E. Mullen Dean of the college

."I want buman.beings who Cafe about other hinnan beings,'~ Mullen. said.

belOw. _,.... ') . · ' · the use of my going io college? Frqm·the· · ··· ·

1 · · · :: perSpective of five years· after gfud~a-

. In my o:Wn view ~eheart of , .ral tion, or maybe 10, what will lilY fQitr Mullen said that during his history classes

he often would ask his students if they his respect for others and the respect others award him.

"A teacher must be sensitive and be willing to go the extra mile for their students. Teaching is not only about having a great mind, b~t a1so about communication and caring r~r your students," he continued.

.. education,· arid therefore ti:ie · ntral ye~ ofundergraduate'life have been. . ~u8iiie8s:dj.ilietiberal arts colieie~:is. . .. . . worth?' .

· • cliailge: But what! refer to is nof «hlinge . By his senior years. at the latest, every 'for its own sake. Iris change in· particu- . student should be able to find some '

cared if a visitor taught the lecture for the day.

When they replied "no," he would step

Patricia Adams Johansson, an associate dean of the college, said, "(Mullen) is one of the wisest and most respected people I

Mullen is just as pa.Ssioriate about his care for the wli.v~rsity and its traditions. Though the modem world of academia 'is known as much for stiff compe­tition and worse, Mullen sitid be believes the school retai~s·a

'~~-·dliections and for a partic,!jar' : encouraging ans~el:s to these ques~ons. pf,iiiciple. J· . · He should be able:to recognize profes-. ·That principle is nowhere getter ., , sors,notasenemies·bu_t as fellow .

' expressedJban in the phiase Pro < • • ' 'laborers in the intellectual vineyard, .. ~::;qilditate?f('j 6t ma~·specifi'c;I tfUDk:- ge~&ratib'it'glip~~i-·ii<>:·:.' · ....... ·- ·· · · · · "· · .: ;:~:~liD- goal of WakeFoce~(College '' <AboVe all,)!~ S~P.UAd find within ' ' < .. is-to'pro~deco~ditions.col}duciv:e to himself, and notin the demands'of . . c~~ changes in its sti.tdent5: · courses of catalogs; not,in 1he expecta"'' · ·. -J\.d~tte(lty there ate plenty ofnon- · tions ofparentS: oi:frien~, ~e motiva- .. . 'shiderlts i4'th~:colleg~ ~otnilluitiiy• who . . tion to learn,. to investigate; to think . • : cqill4 ~tiip~)lfew c~i\nge8-too. But it is uj)on the meawpg of thing~ and,:Pon!ler .... ·. ' ''hb(tbeJ:''*bo. iive the eo}lege its reason thefii.iri his i:teiirt~ . ' . . ' .. :. ' .. · ' ' : fotm~terice: Nor do'J mean to iinply . . . If t!}e college years are ·a ume for. . ·.

· ·:that ·students ate so many hapless gUinea finding orie' s well-sprlrigs of ai:tion, they ··pigS..o;;wh(lm the 'facultY practice their· ofterat the same ttmeair~pportujllt;y to . pedagogical experimenfs. . . enhance one, s br,eadih ariillibenilityof

. Thedianges I have in mjnd-come outlook,... . .· .. · · ·. . ?bO,ut-o:itly'if students accept the.m as . . It is SUrely ,true thiit coUeie offers .

:.'deBiraple ends and pat:ticipate .voluntarily riwst:st:Idents ~eir fust oppottimity _to in achieving them. TheSe changes, . meet, talk, and'make..tpendS with:people . r¢duc¢ to. theirlowestterins: have to do from a good numbef:'offoreign couriiries ' . ·with three things: motives, outiook and as well as from many distant American ·

· ·capacity for enjoyment . states .... · · · My acquafutance with three genera- Living and working and engaging in

no'n~·ofWake Forest undergraduates ' b.uil sessio,ns wiJ;h $~ P,et,erQgeneO.us: ,,.·, : .. dic~es,~ c'Onclusioxtthat.th~,QW,~ .of .;, •. ~ populatiqn ·oiia coU~)::htripus:cofupel~ · . 'strideiits who enter this college have · one to look again, ~ore ciitically, at

. little notion ofwby they come. Someone his own views and prejudices.

outside for a moment, change outfits and return dressed as Napoleon, Martin Luther, Bismark, or· some other character from the annals of history.

That kind of enthusiasm for teaching explains much about Mullen's popularity and his success as dean.

I f intelligence. enthusiasm, respect, and a deep care . for students and faculty are

the qualities of a successful dean, then WakeForesthas.been blessed for the last 27 years with Thomas E. Mullen serving as dean of the coHege.

The intelligence of Mullen is unquestioned. Just sitting in his office, which actually should be called a study, the walls covered by bookshelves containing nearly every history, it is apparent that Mullen is a true scholar.

' ' unique atmosphere. . . ~

"Wake Forest has a soul that many people here understand. It is a commitment not tu gaining for the individual, but fqi~e whole community," Mullen said.

W hen he firstcarne to the university, Mullen said !ill he

brought were a few persp'nal ' . '

items. He had no furni~. except a $10 bed he purr;h~ed from his roomate during -graduate school.

Mullen said he met with the head of the history department

· he'Ji"rl'~ci way ,,...~.r<'f~''·~·~· ~ .... " r.r ..... ~.. ... . . bed at the ~lway

station downtown .

· 'paid the freight, so· they are here. ... Personal experiences- a ch<l!lce . · ... We au know students (and nor only . · friendship with someone ora different

Mullen received his bachelor of arts in history from Rollins College in 1950, and his master of arts and doctoral degree from Emory University.

Steph Goldstein

MuiJen will continue teaching history after he resigns as dean.

Mullen said Stroupe, the department chairmen, took time out of his schedule to get a truck

and drive Mullen downtown to piCk up~ his bed. Mullen said Stroupe then heliJtid !rim to carry the bed up five flights of stairs to his apartment

·fieshinen) who seem to devote their best race and culture, a bus tour to New York effort and ingenuity to finding the path with someone whose political notions of least academic resistance. They see in seemed absurd until explained in depth,

At Emory, he specialized in European diplomatic history studied and researched for one year in London.

have ever known." Other colleages expressed a genuine

respect for Mullen. every 'free cut' a reason to celebrate. the reactmg of a novel ~ith whose hero

The extent of their effort in a given one could closely identify despite his course is rigorously restricted to 'mini- being 'suckled in a creed outworn~-

Mullen began teaching history at the university in 1957, just two years after the university moved to the present campus. Mullen said much of his work

involves interviewing applicants for faculty positions, one of the

main responsibilities of the dean.

"I don't think many professors at other universities would have done that. People at

mum.requirements.' ... The only motive such experiences probably occur more of such 'students,' apparently, is to frequently arid strike us with more obtain a degree, if indeed they are kept telling force in the college years than at in college by anything but inertia. any other time of our lives."

He became dean of the college after then­dean Edwin G. Wilson became provost Mullen has continued to teach history since he became dean in 1968. After Mullen's retirement as dean this spring, Mullen said he will return to London for a year to work

After a 30 minute session with the applicant, Mullen said he must decide if he · thinks the applicant has the credentials to be a professor at the univesity. .

Wake Forest care," he said. · The year 1968, when Mullen was :. .

appointed dean, was a year of many changes within tbe university's administra­tion, as the president, the provost, and several other deans resigned tbeir P?Sitions

Escott brings to deanship extensive research, organization skills BY MARK STEWART HAYES

lNSIGIIT Eut roR

P au! D. Escott, Reynolds professor of history, said he remembers the

from the beginning decided to look within 'the faculty to replace Mullen.

Describing his impression of the search for a new dean, Escott said,

recognition, the university has also continued to espouse the "teacher­scholar" ideaL

The ideal is based upon the premise that the more research a

professor does, the disappointment he felt back in 1974, the year he finished his graduate studies at Duke Univer­sity, when the job market for professors bottomed out

"When you've had one person in the role of the deanship for 27 years it will obviously be a fairly strong change, even if not intentionally. The dean will come in with different ways of

better he knows his subject and can teach it. By choosing Escott as dean, the university has made a powerful commitment to that ideaL

Though he did not gef a job at the University of Guam, one of several positions he applied for,

.accomplishing things." ) i While maintain-

Escott said he was

' .,.

lucky to be hired at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.

"Only three of us were able to get jobs that year by graduation, so I · was very fortunate," Escott said.

T his summer, Thomas Mullen, dean of the college and

professor of history, will resign as dean, a position he has held for 27 years. Escott will take his place, ending a _long search for someone to replace Mullen.

The announcement marks just one of many changes that have occurred over the past few years and under the leadership of Thomas K. Hearn Jr., president of the university since 1984 ..

Perhaps in recognition of the magnitude of these changes, and the anxiety so often accompanying rapid change, university officials

~ I

J. Howell Smith Chainnan, department of history

ing a full teaching load, Escott's national reputation as a historian has continued to grow.

"Some people probably thought the institution was having enough change and maybe ought to look for more continuity."

Escott said since he has taught at the university since 1988, he will be familiar with the "institutional values" of the university.

Because he will be a liaison between the administration, faculty and students, Escott said he plans to follow Mullen's example by teaching at least one class a semester. Escott said this will help him to stay current with the needs of the faculty and the students.

"I think this reflects that (the administration) wants the faculty, and I want the faculty, to feel included in the administrative process and to feel they are a part of it," Escott said.

As the university has struggled to receive national prominence and

His vita includes of long list of works published, such as authoring or coauthoring six books, editing five books, and writing numerous articles in publications and books such as the Journal of Southern History and the North Carolina Historical Review.

E scott's ability to balance those tasks certainly played a role in his being named

dean. David Brown, provost of the university, said a "key factor (of Escott's being named dean) was his strong scholarship .... "

J. Howell Smith, a professor of history and the chairman of the history department, said Escott has maintained his heavy teaching load and national reputation as a histo­rian because he is a well organized and disciplined man.

Smith also said Escott has a

passion for research, such as when he became the first historian to discover the state of North Carolina drafted soldiers during the Civil War.

Speaking of the rapid turnover in leadership the university has experienced, Smith said, "Their departures mean that the continua­tion of excellence in their style of quality that they represented will be dependent on how well they convince their successors of the values of their qualities." · Though the "old school" is so

often immortalized on campus, Smith pointed out there have always been some tensions in the adminis­tration of the university, such as during the years of integration.

"When you've had one person in the role of the deanship for 27 years

and students," Escott said. In this respect, Escott comes to

tbe job with experience gained by working on the program planning committee.

The PPC's initial release of ideas for the educational direction of the university included many controver­sial ideas, such as increasing class sizes.

The final report recently released, however, has been much better received and recommits the university to the goals of maintain­ing strong faculty and student relationship and small class sizes.

Since these changes also will require significant tuition hikes, Escott said the university remains committed to the principle of admitting students "regardless of

perspectives and hear their ideas," Escott said. "I think students have a lot of ideas that could strengthen . our planning." · ·

' .

E scott, a native of St.'tpuis,. Missouri, graduated C/!m :

laude from Harvard Univer­·sity in 1969 with a bachelm of .:arts in history. After teaching fqr a' . couple of years at a private~s'ePond­ary school in Vermont, he wel1t on the study history at Duke tJni~r- · sity, receiving his master oJ arts in 1972 and his doctoral degree in· 1974. . •

Esr.ott came to the university' after teaching at the University ·of North Carolina at Charlotte for 14 years. He has taught here for six yea,rS. · Popular courses he teaches include

classes on the· Civil : War and Reconstiuc+

it will obviously be a fairly strong change, even if not intention­ally," Smith said. "The dean will come in with different ways of accomplishing things."

"I plan to consult students on a lot of things. I want to get their perspectives and hear their ideas. I think students have a lot of ideas that

tion, southern history, and other Am~nc;m : history classes: , . Though Escott- . · conceded he will- be ; teaching and nisearcl;l-

As dean, Escott will be responsible for

could strenthen our planning." ing less he said he ~

Paul D. Escott hopes to set aside Reynolds professor of history some time fO-\: iJ~Ing :

many different aspects of university adminis­ --------------------- an historian. · · , tration, including being involved in recruiting, hiring, and evaluation of faculty, being involved in various student life and education commit­tees, and supervising university budgets and faculty salaries.

"The dean must an advocate for the educational needs of our faculty

his or her ability to pay." Escott said he hopes many of the

ideas of the PPC report are eventu­ally are implemented by the university, though he said he will continue to solicit student input.

"I plan ·to consult :;tudents on a lot of things, I want to get their

"It's important for; me personally that! keep trying. I: want to see myself as a historian, ; not just an 'administrator' ,"he sai(l.

Escott said he became very , interested in history in his juqior : year of high school, and decided t<) become a professor while ip- .. college.

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·OLD GoLD AND BLACK ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT _ ...... ,-... "."''I ...

·~::?: .. Q.:.~. · 'TIS AN ILL WIND WHICH BLOWS NO MINDS.- MAl.ACLYPSE THE YoUNGER THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1995 .. ~ .. ~ ··~~'"'"'•··::::::"" ===:::::=::=============================:::=::::::========================== Top Girls prOvides food·for thought but suffers .from fast pacing

Bv CRArlf"JoSEPH of different time periods and actual opinions and. her life outside the of-~ GoLD AND BucK REviEWER paintings. fice are witty and engaging.

· · · Additionally. the use of wigs and Newcomers junior Shannon Poe-. A van~cy'_o'fepgaging ch~cters differentdressstylesaidstheactresses Kennedy and freshman Colby Orant . andwhiflwin~scenescharacterizeTop in creating a variety of characters. are equally as effective. Poe-Girls, the University Theatre's cur- SeniorCatherineColemanandjun- Kennedy'l!boyishcharmasPopeJoan

:. 'reht· mainstage production directed . ior Mindy Tischler put forth espe- turns the horrifying tale of the preg­' · ; :by Kareri ~obinson. : cially strong performances, Coleman nant and. martyred woman into a cap­. '·· •.,,J)le. pJay fqcuses on Marlene, a presents three 'Very distinct charac-. tivating crowd~pleaser, and her.por­. ,.J~ri~shwomanwhohasjustbeenpro- ters, ranging from the delightfully trayal of the stolid Louise contrasts ·· mqt~ to the head pOsition at the Top eccentric Isabella Bird to Marlene's well with the other office women.

Girls Employment !Lgeocy. pathetically frustrated sister, Joyce. Grant makes excellent use of facial · · ·To· celebrate; she invites famous Her portrayal of Joyce is especially expressions and body language in her · · wonien from art, history and litera- skilled, given her ability to command silent role of the waitress. Later, she is

' , .. • Jure to dinner but soon .finds herself audience reactions of disgust at first convincing as the child, Kit, and dis­·• .. : frpstratedbytheirvariousmethodsof and later, sympathy, as they begin to plays excellent comic timing as a

.•. ~aping from patriarchal societies. understand her plight. young woman trying to lie her way .~arlene, by contrast, has success- Tischleralmoststealsthefirstscene into a job.

. . fullyassimilated herselfinto the mod- as the grunting and piggish Viking As Marlene, junior April Arden is · ·· "'e'ni male-dominate4 business world, Dull Gret, yet _is equally· believable · very successful in portraying the de­

... ,,'· ·and the rest of the play~ full of scenes later as Joyce's daughter, Angie. With terrnined, driven career· woman who , · from the office and flashbacks, pre- just the right combination of childish- has asserted herself in the male-domi­

·v· .. ~nts the choices ·and deeisions she ·ness and understanding, Tischlerpor- nated business world. . ·Jias.had to make, . trays the slow girl with instincts that Arden delivers her lines with ag-

. . . lJ!e play climaxes with the con- all is not well in her family. gressive precision aJ,ld makes effec-.. · frontation between Marlene and her Juniors Becky Childress and Tara tive use of her glare and authorita.

sister, revealing the most disturbing Sparks are somewhat constrained by body language. However, she is son'iif· "choice that Marlene has had to make their demure characters and lack of what unconvincing as one who has · ·iri Order to 'pursue her career. stage time in the chaotic dialogue of had to make difficult choices con-<· Technical director Jonathan the first scene, but both rise to admi- . cerning.herfamily life. · ·.Christman's set design ·is appropri- rable heightS later. Iri light of the harsh treatment that

.· . , ,a~ly: simple and functional, keeping Childress switches from the mousy, . the other characters sufferatMarlene's ~ . ·, <\tte}ltion on the dialogue of the show nervous Jeanine to the cigare.tte~tout- hands, Arden's closing performance

·· ·a:n~. ·providing for turntable scene ing, bitchy Nell with remarkable ease .. is less than adequate in convincing 'changes that keep the show moving. Sparks, as he~ office ~;ohort Win, hu- the audience that she has had the

The costumes, designed by Ka~n morously presents a woman who is · slightest bit of remorse in leaving her • '~, Grillo, show tremendous attention to perhaps not~ classy and successful daughter behind,

· · ··.detail in their mirroring of a number as the others; her blunt expression of · Her emotionallxeakdown and her

offers to take Angie back do not ring true and, as such, Marlene comes across as somewhat condemnable in a play that does not seek to make a judgment about her. .

Perhaps one reason this happens is because the production seems to stay at one quick pace until the final scene. Certainly, this is necessary in the open­ing scene, but perhaps more effective timing throughout therestofthe show would allow for a more realistic, emo­tional portray~! of Marlene and the people with whom she deals. · The rapid-fire dialogue in scenes

that are already quick-paced set Marlene up as a one-dimensional per­son wh,o has little sympathy for,any­one else; certainly, she has made a decision, but we are never given any indication that there were other con­siderations outside of herself .

Given the very natural and believ­able portrayals of Joyce and Angie, the audience is almost predisposed to look down on Marlene.

Interpretive questions aside, how­ever, the University Theatre's pro­duction of Top Girls makes for a great evening of solid theatrical work. The cast and crew are to be commended for their work on this challenging, modern and thought-provoking play.

Top Girls will be performed at 8 p.m. tonight, Fri. and Sat. aqd at 2 and 8 p.m. Sun. on theMainstagein Scales Fine Arts Center. Tickets are $5. Call Ext. 5393 for information.

Lady Nijo (junior Tara Sparks) and Pope Joan (junior Shannon Poe- __ Kemnedy) carry on a conversation in Top Girls, the Mainstage Theatre's production which examines the role of women throughout history.

.-Naturalist Abbey sticks lip for Nature, inspires others to do same BY BRIAN SMIT!f

Ow GoLD AND BLACK REviEWER

, ~t ;probabiy happened as I was huddled under a scanty shade-giving juniper over­looking Upheaval Dome in Canyonlands Na­tiprial Park. Utah. There I was in the August

' · ·desert heat, each of my cells losing water. fas~er than I could drink it down. Reality became rock, sand, sky, sun, a most simple

, . combination of elements. · _ · . It was here that I finillly understood the

he lived in the f!U(fe'ffcaJn \ljrest P~r~-tiTnP• n~''" ranger .. full-time.helhaiser.

• . Desert Solitaire was written in 1968 while .... h~ was a summer rangerin Arches National

· Mon-ument, about two hours north of · · .ClJnyonlands and right off Interstate 70 in· ·'Utah: · · My traveling companions and I had visited the park a few days earlier, enamored with the

prospect of tramping around in Abbey-land, but quicldy left because of the intensity of industrial tourism. .

This was the phenomenon Abbey had envi­sion~ 27years earlier in his book-immense nUJ!lbers of visitors confined mostly to the · two-lane blacktop, the gift shop and the com­fort stations

It was the concentration of motor vehicles in particular and man­made gadgetry in gen­eral that Abbey feared

sive ahou·t the conse: · quences.of the interac­tion between the de­structive nature of some

of mankind's innovations and Nature. Motor homes and desert would fall into this cat­egory. Hiking boots ~nd rock would not.

Upon examining Ralph Waldo Emerson,

one finds many similarities between the New England Transcendentalist and the free-liv­ing desert rat. The call to "Study nature" is a prominent theme in Desert Solitaire, as Abbey's naturalist background shines through.

It is in the very manner in which Abbey has obtained his scientific background that ech­oes Emerson; he obtained his knowledge not from stale books on some dark shelf but from li in Nature.

Per'harJs Abbey's blossoming underground was capped by his novel The

tevwr.enc:ll Gang and the subsequent en­!!).~llUl!ro~X~:Wili~J\t.Ill!P.lli~~!l.T.henovel

•~o-•vu, where a . practice their own brand

· of activism. Disabling huge Caterpillar bulldozers and

setting fire to monstrous dump trucks are all the ingredients for a militant cult classic.

While admittedly not his best writing, the novel's influence was felt by many and be­came manifest in the charter of Earth First! This radical environmental protection group

practices spikingtrees •. ~abotaging earth-mov­ing machinery and generally breaking lots of stuff in the defense of Nature.

While it is now not politically correct to condone or indulge in these practices, one must admit that this brand of deviltry can be an effective means of venting frustration as well as for the alternative fulflllment of one's higher principles (unless you happen to own one of those expensive yellow machines).

Many mainstream environmental organi­zations have distanced themselves from these extremists, but one must recognize the power­ful.inf)uence:Ahbe.)'.~~. writing must•have had to inspire caring indiYiduals .to cut down bill­boards, pull up survey stakes and commit other felonious acts punishable by fine, im­prisonment or exc()mmunication by one's contemporaries. It takes a lot of guts to go against the grain, anq this is what Abbey lived, wrote and inspired. ·

Though Abbey was certainly not the busy man about town, one cannot dismiss his writ­ings as reJlresentative of some weirdo hippie

freak. He was a social worker in New York. City. lfe was an English professor and a military policeman.

Taking a look at The Fool's Progress, a largely autobiographical work, one sees the vast range of his life: the contrast between his experience in the arid west and his roots on a Pennsylvanian farm.

Abbey tried on lots of different shoes, but the pair that felt best were for walking through the sand, sun and sky above and nothing ahead but·miles of exploration.

I doubt if Ed would have sought to be .. remembered·as the one responsible forradical

environmentalism or the prophet of industrial tourism in America's national parks.

Most probably he wouldn't have cared one way or the other, and I hope I have done him justice in this respect. His 62 years were not spent fruitlessly.

What he left was the inspiration for oth­ers-the inspiration to live naturally, eat meat without fear and hunt and dance like a pagan around a fire under the clear desert night sky.

The Dean Hamilton Blues Explosion? Local band Running From Anna, from left to right: sophomore John Hamilton, Jeff Reinhardt, Joe Tappe and Randy Johnson (both Class of '93), and Don JenRins. The primarily acoustic quintet will be playing 9:30p.m. Wednesday at Ziggy's. William Hamilton, an associate dean of the college, is also scheduled to take the stage, banjo at the ready. Cover charge will be $5 or $3 with a student identification. For more information call 748-1064.

Contest to showcase musical talent BY DAVEED GARTENSTEIN-Ross

OLD GoLD AND BLAcK REVIEWER

Local talent will be showcased on Feb. 25 when 17 students will turn out for two different categories of the 18th Annual Christopher Giles and Lucille S. Harris Competitions in Musical Performance.

The first competition, Music of the Romantic Period, begins at 1 p.m. with an organ performance in Wait Chapel. The cash awards for this stage of competition are $500 for first place, $300 for second and $100 for third.

Studentscompetingin this category include seniors David Starmer, or­gan, Catherine Coleman and Beth Fisher, sopranos; juniors Pressly Ann Wilson, violin, Rebecca Goodrich, soprano, and Beth Stroupe, flute; sophomores Kaiya Cloud and Nikki Blackmer, sopranos, Kim McClintic, flute, and Charlotte Opal, viola; and freshman Allison Cole, violin.

Scheduled to accompany on piano for this event are Jean Blackwood and Ann Ustokin, staff members in the Department of Music.

Romantic period composers whose

work will be perforn1ed include Leon Boellman, Giacomo Pucdni, Johannes Brahms, Henri Duparc, Johann Strauss, Jean Batiste Accolay, Franz Schubert, Giacomo Rossini, IvanEvstaf' evich Hanoshkin. Gabriel Faure and Wilhelm Popp.

The judges will be Robert Franz, an oboist and conductor who received both his Bachelor of Music and Mas­ter of Music degree in conducting from the North Carolina School ofthe Arts; Winifred Garrett, who has per­formed as a harpist with the likes of See Giles. Page 9

Page 10: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

OLD GolD AND BLACK TIIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 199510 .

---------------------------------------~mollimoo~--------------~---------..-.-.--..-.-

Maya • • . of Earth, the Heavens, andtheGods:ThroughAprill at the Museum of Anthropology. This pho­tographic exhibit treats fundamental themes ofMayan history and culture. Free. Ext. 5282. African Arts Festival: Through March 19 at the United Arts Council of Greensboro. This exhibit is a cel­ebration of the contributions of Afri­can Americans to our society. Free. 333-7440. Artists and the Community: Hope Sandrow: Through April 4 in the Potter Gallery at SEC CA. A collabo­ration with students from Wake For­est and Winston-Salem State Univer­sity, this series is related to personal and contemporary issues.$2 students, $3 adults. 725-1904. Elsie Popkin: Opening 6 p.m. Fri. at the Artworks Gallery, Inc. Popkin's new landscape paintings in pastel represent well-known areas around North Carolina. Free. 998-2623. -y

Bus Stop and the Low Road. $5. Friday, B-Glad Benefit. $10. Satur­day, Pegboy with Picasso Trigger and Hellbender. $5. Wednesday, Trailer Bride. Cat's Cradle is located in Carrboro. (919)967-9053.

Music

Ha~del and Haydn Society: 8 p.m. tonight in Wait Chapel. Founded in 1815, the society is the country's oldest ·continually performing arts organization. The society uses 18th century instruments, original scores and bases their performances on ell­tensive historical research. $9. Ext. 5237. Mark O'Connor: 8 pm Sat. at Sa­lem College's Hanes Auditorium. Mark O'Connor will play a solo con­cert of fiddle, guitar and mandolin. Gram my winner and Country Music's Instrumentalist of the Year for the last four years, O'Connor is consid­ered to be country music's finest vir­tuoso. $13. 650-9522.

Clubs - Theater •

Ziggy's: Tonight, Mi~ty Mightyi, Bosstones, Face to Face and WaxJ Saturday, Solar Circus. Tuesday, George Clinton and the P-Funk Allstars. Wednesday,Running Anna featuring guest star Dean liam Hamilton. 748-1064. Cat's Cradle: Tonight,Black4

Top Girls: 8 p.m. tonight, Fri., Sat. and 2 and 8 p.m. Sun oii the Mainstage in Scales Fine Arts Center. This con­temporary social comedy ressurects famous females to addre~s the place of the woman in history and current society. $5. Ext. 5393. .-My Castle's Rockin': 8 p.m. Fri.

,,''

and Sat. and 3 p.m. Sun. at the Arts Council Theater. Written by Larry Parr, this "marvtastic" musical cel­ebrates the story of the electrifying blues singer AlbertaHunter.$15.Call 723-2223. Presenting Mr. Frederick Douglass: 5 p.m. Sat. at SECCA. Host Fred Morsel! will perform his highly acclaimed one-act play about freed slave Frederick Douglass. $25. 725-1904.

Movies

Dr. Bethune: 8 p.m. tonight at the Stevens Center. Donald Sutherland portrays Dr. N()rman Bethune, the pioneering Canadian surgeon whose ideology and skills were practiced in both the Spanish Civil Wa:r and the Chinese Communist Revolution. $7.50. (704) 873-4995. White: 8 p.m. Sat. in Tribble A-3. This film, the second in Kieslowski' s trilogy, features Julie Delpy in a comic story about a hapless divorcee. Free. 32 Short Films about Gknn Gould: 4 p.m. Sun. in TribbleA-3. This beau­tiful and innovative film consists of 32 vignettes based on the life of ec­centric pianist Glenn Gould. Free. Barcelona: 8 p.m. tonight in Pugh. Two Americans venture overseas and fall in love with two women who harbor anti-American sentiments. From Whit Stillman, the director of Metropolitan. Free. Ext. 4421.

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Giles From Page 8

the North Carolina Symphony, Stevie Wonder and the Universal Symphony in New York; and David Pegg, who is the Director of Music at Centenary United Methodist Church and has served on the faculty of High Point College, UNCGreensboro, Kent State University and Greensboro Music Academy.

The second competition is Piano Music of Johann Sebastian Bach and an Eastern European Composer, which commences at 7 p.m. in Brendle Recital Hall.

pressiveness awarded. . tition is just fun for her. · · ' .· ·; ': The students entered include se- "People should be encourage.cf to.

niors Cathy LaCava, Tammy Plyler, conie because it's interesting to see Joseph Desiderio, and Alice Pickens; people you go to class with oi; ·set; · sophomoreJamieMiyares;andfresh- every day, and you see this entirely; man Hannah Oettinger. differentsideoftheminperfOI"IllaQce,'1

. EastemEuropeancomposers whose Fisher said. . . . . work will be featured beside Bach's Goodrich, who won the comp~ti­includeSergeiProkofiev.~laBart6k, tion last year, haS a slightly differ~h~. AramKhachaturianandLeosJanlicek. perspective. : . :

The two judges for this event are "It is nerve-wracking and a h~ary . pianist and musicologist Victoria competitionbecauseyou'reripagainst Fischer, whohasdegreesfromCente- the best people in the departmen,~". · nary College of Louisiana, Univer- she said. "The judges are fotlowi.iig , sity of Texas at Austin and UNC along and they know when you ~ak;e . Chapel Hill, and is on the music fac- a mis~~r;; ""' .. , , ,., ulty at Elon College; and Tim Fisher iiddea 'that Puccini, whoSe, Lindeman. an Assistant Professor at work many of the singers. are ut,iliz­Guilford College, who received a ing, is pretty well-known. . · • . Ph.D. in music theory with a minor in "People who don't know oper~t can · piano from Indiana University. at least know sort of what Puccfui:s ·

Fisher, who has not entered the pieces are about," she said. ·· · Prizes for this category are $500for

frrst place and $300 for second, with an additional prize of $500 for the Ward Virts Prize for Pianistic Ex~

competition before, said she comnetitions are ppen to the. .. ~-~#5 d,!..;.l,i.td,.._li<.J• :c..:.,..JJllJ\..o ..l.JUtl.-::.

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Page 11: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

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~ .. ',!':I " ••••

. {· -; ;'"" '

-SPORTS . ~.·

•.'· ,. _, ,.

' . .t· THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1995 11 rl_.,·.

I)&i~bil~\po~tihtu~·hdi Stre~:.Wlth ()4~52 trOunCing of overmatched Clemson ?L .... ~:.,,;l\:~B\-.s~w~~ ... _ .. ff.;J ......... -gJtrftf.~in thls-.blill g~e,!.'! sa1d•Head Co~6h ., foul line,'' Odom said. "We started calling finished withagame-h~gh 19poin~;ending a them.Banksmadethree-of-fivefor.sixpoint~, ~·~'- · ·' ·· ~. •· ·• '::.~>fivrroR'·· •- : .. · · · ····Dave Odom. "They showed.aio.toftoughness - some Inside plays to build up somefouls. We string of three games Without reachmg double fr~h~an Tony Rutland had all etght of ~1s ;; (-~]~~ ·.j~j;;;./;,_ T-J,> . .::::., .. .j' i. r --_: . :. ••• . .. "down the streu:h/' : .. ,: .• . . . ~ , : ,.. felt like their strategy was.to foul Duncan as figures. . pomts 1D the fin~ 2:22 ?fthe firS~ h~lf to gtve #ftl~jo~~G:~~~ ~l~on.:~~C .. ~SS:~.:.:·:;::nt¥~ns enjO)'ed asix~point leacl. a~ the ~(?on ash~ got· it, and we wanted to go with him He also had five blocked shot~ to pass the the Dea~ons ~err cush10~, and JUnior Rusty

no~~~- a1,#~,~~~Y.P,l~fpr ~e, J:?eac:o"s. to ... ,halftime~(eak: which_fu.eyexteildedtomne55 . eacly,.budd up .. ~e fouls an~ then fin~lly get century !llark for the second straight season, L_aR~ehit_a pwofthrees m ~ee attempts for plaY,_m·~·l!llSU.~o..seaso~s, but :this Y~ has .i• second.s mto~ the second half off of a ·three- · Randolph to the ltne and I think that prud off." along with 11 rebounds. The ~ouble-double h1~ SIX pomts. Soph?rnore Ricky Peral had a bee~ .veft~~¢renf~, ..... / · ['.. 1 \ · . ': .. ·:-- ·< poin.~~r fro~ fi¢~Jin!,ari J~rrY;:_Bra~W,el.l. ' · The strategy did v:ork, as Clemson picked was Duncan's conference-leadmg 14th of the parr to show fr?m his two ~hots. . _ 'flriss~on tlie team en~red:t¥ b~lding as :Brasw~ll fimshed the mght WJth five pomts m • up 13, persona1fouls m the second half to send season. • A!tho~gh C:bildress con.tinued to have d1ffi

the ~o.lQ-:~ed's,quad·tn. the, nation, ~d justl2~1jli~ .. : .... . . · , · : , : the-Deacons to the charity strip~J3 times. · The team as a whole shot 53 percent while c~lties w1thhissh?t, he still does aU the other des~itea.t®!cysecon'tl·~f~f:fo!1-thephO~id '··clemson then ·went on a 14-3 run 'that,. They wer~ successful on· all. 13 tries, and holding the Tigers to a paltry ,36 percent, thingsthatmakehimsovaluable.Hegrab?ed why tb,ey .arr\!!mke4.]9Jl~; by display~~g SP.artf!edA•I5 tcr·cantl}re a 40-36Jead, and it fini.shed ~he game at 95 percent- by hitting on including just eight-of-24 from outside the fo~ rebounds. ~d handed ou~ four ass1sts theif-Win t~ Wirrwitl'f'f'ollgh·de(eng and:ex~ .. ·was "obviolis 1hat :'2:lian in~i'tlie Deacons' · · · 18.:-of-r9 overall. · . . . . arc. w1thout conurutting a turn oyer m ye~ another ecu~o~.rt:om -the.fotif.line~:: ··. ( ... : . ... . .. -···~ffensive: p~os{n)h~ wa:.Jieeded quickly in .. . . .. Despite strUggling from theJ1oor .through- Merl Code was the Tigers' high scorer with ironman perfonn~ce, playmg 39 mm~tes. . .B¥ ~~tl~~ ~!e!Jl~n;·to 'just·, ~our_ poi~ts ·: :~rde~}o ch:ang~ the.tide. .· : · ·. ; . out. the. c;ont~st; Childre~s ~as back to old 15 points, while freshman sensation Greg The DeacoQs Will now try to use the1r mo~ ove~ ffi~ ~ri¥:.4;~ilf6 ~?CPOS ~~re ~ble to:; .... ~·Wt$.pqt!~~Qne,oi1;$.e other •. bench who · forn by racking up 11 pomts m 12·shots from Buckner was held to eight points and nine mentum ~ .~ey prep~e to host the 11th extend a ttgh~ ~l.~.~dvantageout to ~~.final cquJd effectively tnatch up against the 6-10 the fr!!e-throw line. He also hit a three-pointer rebounds. Andy Kelly was their only other ranked Vrrgm1~ Cavaliers. margin of. 64-52:,1· .. , _ ' :. .:.". · · Dune!!:~!,, Odom ~.aw to ittliat ·the. Deacons .. that took a crazy oounce high off the rim and effective scorer, hitting four-of-seven for 10 ~~We have. a b1g Kam~ Sunday ~emoon and

"Iftlri~ (sef!i?r) ~dq~h (~liildress):~d poundc;d the ball'inside to keep the. 'riger~ off :. fell through, finishing the night with 18 points. points in 26 minutes. . I do hope ~;fans back.ho~e w~ll turn out for (soph~JllOr'e) Tl.mmy(DUJ1can) and (seruor) .balance. • . ,: · . : ·.. Duncan had·more success with his.shot WbileChildressandDuncantook20ofthe that game, Odom srud. I thmk our team Sc<J?~(!~~! and:~~ Q~e~ g?t tog~~r '·.·!.'.One oj;ih~ Jhings~~e wanted to Jn $.e ' connecting on :•six-of-nine to. compl~ment ~ team's 38 shots, the remainder of the lineup deserves that- they've worked awfully .~ard and ~e~L)CS!Ud Hey, .this ·ts ~e ,time, w~ ve second hillf ~as. establish ourselves . the perfect seven-of-seven from the· stripe. He, made their shots count when they did take and we only have two home games left.

~awae1~r~ €i1.~an~· !'·, · ... :~-·. ,:.;' ,::.~:·:", ~· i\ ' .. ·: ~'.' ; :' ...

pae~ "tea,TI effort peacoris.sting Yellow Jackets· 73-62

' '

~~MicKEY. KAA'YNYA~ i ·~~tch againsi:':the Orangemen 0w oOr.n mo BLAcK Ra>aam · with straight -set 'singles wjns at ~. - .. -.fi·~· '···· _, .. ,.'!c,:: ~:.; .:. ; . -Nos.-4~·5 and 6fas'junior Patty'

bast-fall, women's tennis team ·'·Murren, freshman·Lule ·Aydin;· · head cQ8Cb Lew Gerrard, .stated ,and sophomore Maggie, Harris that his teatn had two gorus for ,;all held their respectiv~, Qppo" the_,upcomink'spring ·season: nents t9, rriinlin'!l success. ASi~orOing ~: GeiJ:~4. the sq!Jad Jierrard :said tha:( Murren · "is Wi!SJ~i~ng, ~jh to c;~~e the starting to play weJJ. now." · · . ACC!titr~. and fiitish ranked The only Deacon to kl,se her . among the top 10·t'eams' in the . ·singles m.atch ~gaipst S}'racuse. country. · wasseniotDanaEvaris, who fell

Nii\V, coming off a weekend · to Erica O'Neill ,6,2, 4~(), 1-6 at dUrlDg' which the Demon Dea.: · No. 2. According to Geirard, COli,~. fqr the seco,nd time in tw!) :, Evans, though she played well, V.:~~~; roljed .oyer.~ pair ~f' ~adtheunforttinateluck,o~play- . highly.:.tanked opponents., 1t mg both teams' No. 1 smgles woofd ~p{>ear as ~:hough· tlielat- · players. ' · . · : .. ter~o~ is'growingprogressively · .. · TheOrang'e!penaisomanaged more lilcely. 'to notch a win at No. 1 doubles,

:rNs. weekend Syracuse and ·:"where Syracus¢'s top team of William and Mary became the O'NeillandJaiti'tStrnadovadis­Deacons1 iate5t victiins, as the missedtheDeac'ons' national'iy­te!!lP-. traveled to Williamsburg ~ed duo of Evans and Aydin for. consecutivb-day matches 6-1, 6-2. agiriiisi the Orangemen and the Sunday, found the Deacons Tribe. Wheri ·the team left Vir.; · William and

., . BY STE~'E WELGOSS

SPORTS EDITOR

baskets helped us to get o't!r tempo going, get us into the game

Ccimingoff.the heels of an inspired and get us rolling," victoryr~over Maryland,. the Deaaons ; Childr~s then de-

"played Ji§!le~s .c!ef~nse in th.e first half. cided that he was versus the Georgia Tech Yellow Jack- through g~ting.JI:te.

· ets.Btitwiththepossibilityofreaching shot~ fo( everyone the prestigious top lOin theAPpoll,as else' and ;that it was well as first place in the ACC regular- time to create some season looming, the Deacons picked · magic of, ~is own. up the intensity -in the second half to Despite ,struggling . cruise to a 73-62 win in Joel Coliseum from outside at dif- · · Sattirday. ' ferent tidies during ·

· Fighting off the wear and tear of a the seasoti., Childress grueling conference schedule, theDea- has · alw.ays been . cons puttogether enough pieces of the there for the ·big "

_puzzle to constr4ct a winner.· shots as b:e was ver-"What you saw out there was two sus Tech:'

~earns who wanted to play we11, both Pushing the ball just absolutely exhausted," said Head quickly up the court Coach Dave Odom. "Neither team had it was evident to ev-

. their legs, and tlie·crowd seemed some- ery~me in' the arena ,. what fatigued as well.'; ; ... - . . except the rech de- ' TheDeacons(l7-5;8~4)enteredthe fenders . that

game in fourth place in the ACC, and Childress was going the Jackets (16-9, 6-6) were hungry to to shoot; and the steal a win and make up the· one-game . Deacons took their deficit in the standings. frrst lead of the sec-

when his giriia 'Siili.day ; .• e.v.eri!*&·diJ.ciY. · owned a 4::'0 tecortf.lffl~C't

f!~~~~~~!!!!~~~)~~~~~~~~~~~t~t:~~~~~!!~~!!~~~~::::::~~~net. · han~l: on· eyery·.single. possession," "I tried to force the ·• ·and everi with two hands the Deacons issue with a lot of

play -could ,not co~taln him. Best finished transit~onjusttogive and (s<>phomore Christina lion against th~ Deacons. with six three-pointers and 29'points. us some shots and Capi?.s, both of whom won the Zawacki and:caparis, in im- .·With 14 points at the break, Best that's what I did in two ~*gles matches in which prov.lltg'th'errdu~fmar'ch~()lrls' i 4elped the Jackets open up a 34-30 the second half," ' they~'yed. to. 4-0 'on· !lie'-season,·. again lel'!d':The n;I'ai'gin swelled. to five points Childress said. ZaW,~ki began play against notchid \\i,in~ for the :Pea~ons( .· ./at 38-33' \\lhen a television time-out Orite they gained

Syr~~e with a straight-set win The· form~r $traight-setted op- ~ allowed Odom to remind the team of the lead the Deacons over~~ Orangemen's ~icole p~:m~ni~mnq~~~~I.-1~6@; ',what he had seen in the first half and builtariathenrebuilt S~~'tva. al tile.~~: } _,smgles. ,6-t, ~~)~ <;,aJ?,,~.~·~O,PP,~.her,,_~ hOw the:{ could open the offense up. the lead to seven pos1oo~~-::'·"l. ·. ·:'~~i:s:;f,-1· )t : •. · · · :"'tifSt sef•ijefpre 'J:$tAI~lbl'!ck.to '· · ·, · ····~we, cy.an!t·.~.~·tbeY,'·Y,.e~ gett.ing· -'•·piJ~n~, and the sec-

s~Q'.t':&, · ,)f86Itt6'riian,~1 ;}Win,·· v~t.;o'' ·neht?#f.oiiiuiii'a·( · ~~c,f 0~~e{eks~~¢aus·e.~ey:~~ ~~-).)o?f1: time Childress age ~()hl.;ji0· ' <:agrunst'-•hei -~·~cine~-3::6,J~~::<t~'\,·S .: r·::::': ·: reason. to ~ .. 'We:\Were so ·lethargte.m· . dfoppep the game-Dea<t,Q~. opponent, falling }P . . Murr.~~· AY4i:Jl,, anc;I Hap-is . g~.tti~g ~~.ball up the .. cour;," Odom sealing. bomb with Zawru!ld 6-3, !H .... 1 · • ·• meanwliile;agam alH:totclied · ·· sru.li.· · ' ·' . : · ' another three.

Analda House ca{Tpris was equally impres-:.:·: ; wins ·iinlie .bottom 'h3J(of.the · ·' · Mterthe time-otitt~e Deacons capi- Chiiclress and sive ~~nst her S7facuse oppo- singles draw., ~v4!g,~ De~qn . · -,tali~ed c;>n the weakness, exploiting the LaRue were .. not Senior Randolph Childress shows his long-range form to Matt Harpring who is too late to nent,~ she prov1ded the day's Deacons a 5-1 winning margin, · Jabkets to the tu~e of a 17-7 run that alon~ on offens~::r . stop .the sharpshooter from knocking down one of his four three-pointers Saturday. bigg~;~urprise~IJ. n~chiJ!g_a·~ . ~nd rendering d.o!lbles-competi- · spanned seve!! rrunutes. Jumqr. ~harp- tho~gh: Forth~;Jhi;~d" <;hildress tr~ated the Joel Coliseum crowd to a 73-62 victory over Georgia Tech with a team-1, 6-4.wm over Jana Strnadova.. tion an academic affair. shooter ~usty LaRue ope~ed thmgs up stra1ghrgame senior ·.· 'high 15 points. . · Strn~ya, ranked lith in the Ofthefourwinssofar,Gerrard whensemorRandolphCh1ldressfound Scooter Banks and.. · n~tio~y~e!ll~er.sqJ.Ie$iateTen- ··:}aidtllatt~~~~ucc~s.againstthe hi~ with an outl~t pass ~m the bre_ak, S!JphomoreRickyPeralsteppeduptheir Senior All-Conference forward · for-12, totalling just eight ponts and ms :1!6c1at1on~ c~fcfnotpro- tough, scheClule. md1cate~ that,, -,~hich ~aRue ftpishedwith a.dl!,zzhng games whne soph91nore Tim Duncan James Forrest made his return to the eight rebounds. duce 1~ch ~glpl,l~r;QaJ]aos,·as, >"We've got-a~eam that can J.?lay reve~e layqp.. . . . . struggled. The J?iiireach went five-for-. Tech lineup, but did not start. He did The win effectively sealed up a fin-her pemon Deacon opwnent .. with any t~am in the country.'!.. "- . J'?D:t~.n s~?n~l:s later !--aR~e struCk sixfor:p points\\(hile Pe~al shut down play 32 minutes, and connected on five ish of no less than fourth in the ACC rolledtto a&:'t; ~winattite'No';· ;~t''Tiud)eacdns had better be agau~ w~e~ c;hddress fo~nd him alone the ACC s top ;.freshman, Matt ·· of his 11 shots for a total of 12 points while drastically improving their

;3 si~es pos!!!P.~..:;:·." .. '- . · · · · ' :J.able to, as lb.ey now look for- an4hit~withfl.Jepass.LaRuecanned Harpring. i . : .,. while grabbing five rebounds. chances for a run at third or even sec-G~ard waS Impressed with ward to participating today in th~longJumpercocuttheleadtothree "His (Peral's) threes were impor- Forrest's presence inside provided ond.

Cap~s· play so far this season. the RolelfiiTA N@,onal Team pomts and then :brought the crowd to tant "Odom said "but his defense on the only problems for the Deacons "I'm reall:y happy because at the ''qijtistinlt P,ljlying)'io- ,3.:pas ;; .I.ndo.~r :·, Cha~pions~ips.~ life' whe~ he ~!J.ished a one-on-one HacPring was II!,~cb. mq~e.important. other than Best, as Duncan and Banks beginning a lot of people didn't think

takeRfbig step fOrward with her . G~rrard's team had the fortune b~ With. a su~den pull-up three- We have an apptechitioq for hismove- pJayes outstanding defense to keep we were a top 20 team, let alone a top

~: -. ~--: ~ ....... ~I

' • . . ..

te~1his year," Gemild said:dr- ·~ ·or ·di~~ing Georgia, the' top-· .. po~nter ~0 tie the score. ' . . . ment. without th;,.bali'aild Ricky, for Mike Maddox and Eddie Elisma rela- 10 team," Childress said. "It's funny, his s§Phomore. .ranked. team in the count:zy;Jn: ~··:· ~~tin~ the_ball·outand runmng m · the·secpnd time Ih a ro\V, has done an, .tively quiet. because we're in the top 10 and we're ~aeons wrapped up their the first round of the event. tr:msttion,; getting a cowple of easy excelle~t job there." · The Tech duo shot a combined three- still not playing our best basketball." ::

•. .. •t·" • : ' ' ~ • ' • ' • ,' • ' .. ~ •• w ••• ;·:~ ••• \ -. ;', • •• • • • ... ~

~a.JPer poW~r~ Dl~Ond Deacoris to 3:0 st~ by crushing UME ,~vidson § ~-;~ : ~ .• • ,· • • . ! •. :: ~. ,../ . - : ,' ' . ~ • . • . _ _.... ...

:';'BY SmvE:'WEiGo5s' ,. · · walksinthreetripswhileknockingin whileDonnieCiaytondroppedto0-1. hetookaone-out, l-2fastballdeepto ";: ' SPORts Eorroa a pair of runs. Joseph Scott went the final three left field for his second career grand .);

. ~e sec?nd game featured another frames for the Hawks, giving up a run slam. From there they still did not -:1 1-2 punch"ofoutstallding pitching and on two hits, while sophomore Michael ~ease the assault, scoring two more in ~ all-out hitti,ng as the Deacons com- Holmes allowed the first run for a 'lbe sixth, three in the seventh and two .;:

. pleted the sweep with a 1'0-1 trounc- Deacon opponent while pitching the m the eighth. ::;",.::

' . . ,·~: . -~~~~~~.~~~~tn;~i:~~~;~~W~·~~~s:i~~iru. ,.~~t;P,.e~~~t~~Port ~:~~)'sblrili:t.J.~mo·ve

fifth, .. ang, w~n~,.ti}~r., Jhe -~~~nd, four ~n the third and one }nniitl.!!:s. t~~clq.se .~u~.~e· . eacli ~.n;!he,fourth an<,l ~ftht· . .

e:t1eF1ruta . allowedJusHwo The Hawks' John Spicer'(O~l) suf: picking up three strikeouts· ·. fe~ed most.oftli~ ab.use; .allowing"*

with R~'waiks tO earn hiS first Save· if . runs and;Se"eii hits whil(n16t surviv'~ the season. r ,; ....... ;. 4.: ing ~ough the .third inning. Wild-

Offensively, the Deacons poured · · ness plagued Spicer, as he allowed on plenty of support in case the pitch- three walks in 2-2/3 innings before ing was rusty, picking up two runs in being lifted in favor of Wayne Gray.

Gray clo~ed out,the third, but was touche~ up lor the final tw() Deacon runs. Chris· Ferrante came on and pitched·a: scoreless sixth' to keep the damage' to a minimum.

Junior ~ai~, !'-l4wec aid~d the at­tack by gomg two-for -two With a walk and a run batted in. Senior Andrew Johnson collected a double and two

ing of the Hawks: seventh. Atkins (2-0) got the win despite ::: JuniorBobbyRodgersheldUMES Yesterday'smatchupwiththeWild- going just one inning, walking two ·~· ,

·scoreless in four innings of work, cats once again featured solid pitch- without giving up a run. DePaula fol­:allowingjust two hits. while mowing ingandrelentlesshitting, with Kramer lowed with a scoreless second, and 1: . down seven. Rodgers also walked two providing the muscle at the plate while freshman Mark Seaver made his de- •. battersbeforegivingwaytofreshman seven pitchers combined to give the but with two innngs, allowing the i:

\BriaJ1 Kuklick in the fifth. fine effort off the mound. lone Wildcat run. •· .Kuklick fanned three batters in two The Deacons scored in every in- Sophomore Mike Ramseyer went ~:

scoreless innings, but by the time he ning, putting up single runs in the first two innings, Wood one, Kuklick one •· took the mound the game was all but three frames before opening up the andHolmesfinishedofftheDavidson decided. After scoring two in the sec- flood gates in the fourth and fifth. ninth. ond to take a 2-0 lead, the Deacons Kramer gave the D.eacons..some : Jonathan Coulombe (0-1) took the watched Hawks starter Donnie breathing room in the third when his loss, getting hammered for six runs in Clayton walk four batters, including two-out double scored Wagner for a 3-113 innings. Coulombe was not

: threestraight, in the third inning while 3-llead, then doubled in two more in alone on the firing line, though, as ·pounding out three hits to open up a 9- the fourth to blow things open. five other Wildcat hurlers allowed 13 0 leac;l. Seniors Jeff Drabik and Mark runs on 13 hits. :· .

Freshman Brian Bernard and sopho- Melito also knocked in runs in the Kramer finished with three hits, his :: more pave Lardieri each singled in frame as Drabik plated a pair with a second homer of the season and a: .. ! runs i:n the 'inning while senior Jeff singlebyturningona3-l fastball, and career-high seven RBis. Drabik had ;·~ Drabi~ pl~ted senior Kyle Wagner Melitodroveafirst-pitchheatertothe twohits,droveinthreerunsandscored ~ with !I-4Qub}e ... l'he Deacons shared fence for an RBI-double. twice while junior Josh Moody went:':: the wealth on offense, with Kupiec The Deacons did not coast with the two-for-two with a pair of runs and the only player with two RBis. cozy 8-1 margin, though, as Kramer three RBis. Moody also had his first

The win moved Rodgers to 1 -0, once again spurred the offense when homer.

Page 12: New spending rules irk student groupsThe State Department of Commerce first contacted Anderson about the possibility of relocating Pepsi to Winston-Salem. Ander son then negotiated

12 OI.D GouJ AND BLACK THURSDAY, FEBRUARY23,1995

------------~~---------------------------sro~-------------------------------------------Deacons end Blue Devils dominate over Deacons

• Deacons to have jerseys retired

Two of the most dynamic players to ever don jerseys for'the men's basketball team will have them retired by the university, according to the athletic department.

Current senior Randolph Childress' "22" and Rodney Rogers' "54" will be retired in separate ceremonies. Childress will be honored after his final regular season game March 4th when the Deacons host N.C: State. Rogers, a 1994 lottery pick of the Denver Nuggets, will most likely be recognized next year when his schedule permits it.

"This is a very proud and gratifying occasion," said Head Coach Dave Odom. "There is no greater honor that a university can bestow on a student­athlete, and no two young men more deserving. Randolph and Rodney have, each in their own way, made a unique impact both on our basketball pro­gram and our university. They have represented us as special players on the court and as special people in every way. I am exceedingly happy for each of them and their families."

• Rutland honored for week

Freshman guard Tony Rutland Was awarded ACC Rookie of the Week honors for the week of Feb. 20. Rutland's key contributions enabled the Deacons to beat both Maryland and Georgia Tech while moving into the AP top 10.

Rutland led all scorers against the Terps with 19 points and added another 12 versus the Yellow Jackets. He shot 47 percent from the floor, 44 percent from three and 81 percent from the free throw line.

• Childress moves up in records

With his 18 points against Clemson last night senior Randolph Childress moved into fifth place in the Deacon all-time career scoring list.

He passes Charlie Davis who scored 1,970 points in his career. Childress, who has 1,977 points all­time, next hopes to catch Rod Griffin who holds fourth place with 1,985. Childress is likely to surpass the 2,000 point mark before he ends his career.

• Duncan takes lOth place in ACC

Sophomore center Tim Duncan has just moved into lOth place in the ACC all-time blocked shots list. With his five blocks last night at Clemson, Duncan surpasses Duke's Cherokee Parks who has 219 career rejections.

0 •

wtnmng ways at Clemson

Bv TvCELv W!Ll.IAMS

Ow GoLD AND BucK REPORTER

Although a 72-57 defeat is often hard to justify it can definitely be noted that the offi­cials were not as attentive as the Demon Dea­cons had hoped Saturday afternoon against Clemson at Littlejohn Coliseum.

After gaining control of the tip-off Clemson drove the ball down the court in an effort to score but came up short after the defensive tactics rendered by the Demon Deacons.

Sophomore Tracy Connor jammed it in for two which produced the first points of the game. Soon an aggravated Clemson squad stole the ball, scored, and also managed to draw the foul.

The first half proved to be a very evenly distributed game. Both teams played on an equal level and balanced one another otien­si vely and defensively- thus the close halftime score of 32-30.

As usual the Demon Deacons led Clemson by two at halftime, only to crumble during the last 20 minutes of the contest.

With 15:07 remaining on the scoreboard Connor scored on an assist from sophomore RaeAnna Mulholland which decreased the Clemson lead to 41-36.

For the next four minutes the Demon Dea­cons were not able to successfully score a basket, allowing Clemson to open up a 45-36 lead.

With only 11 minutes remaining in the game, Head Coach Karen Freeman fiercely called a time-out in attempts to correct the careless job of the Deacons.

As expected when Freeman talks everyone listens. Soon afterward the Deacons regained their confidence and put an end to the dry spell.

With 9:16left on the board they tightened the Clemson lead to 49-43.

Unfortunately the Demon Deacons made one too many bad judgement calls, did a poor job of rebounding, and came up short for one too many shots.

In addition to the chaos on the court the Demon Deacon bench was given a technical foul for what was considered inappropriate behavior by the team.

Bv TYCELY WILLIAMS

Ow GOLD AND BLACK REPoRTER

Just when everything ap­peared to be coming up roses the Demon Deacons found trouble in paradise Feb. 16 at Joel Coliseum against the Blue Devils of Duke.

The contest concluded with a dreaded 78-66 loss for the Demon Deacons to one their most competetive in-state ri­vals.

The Deacons started the game with an admirable amount of energy and a re­newed sense of optimism. It appeared as if the Deacons were ready to lay the Blue Devils to shame during their second tele­vision appearence of the year.

Halfway through the open­ing 20 minutes it appeared as if both teams were working on one another and were running low on fuel.

When out of nowhere junior Gretchen Hollifield launched two consecutive three-pointers to tie the game 23-23 at 5:05.

With five minutes remain­ing in the half the Deacons at­tacked the Blue Devils with an incredible display of offensive genius. The first half ended with the Demon Deacons ahead by one.

Sophomore RaeAnna Mulholland led the first half scorers with 11 points followed by sophomore Tracy Connor's six.

The Demon Deacons entered the second half as a different squad, as one that allowed the Blue Devils to take away every hope they had of winning.

With 15:05 remaining in the game it began to look as if the Demon Deacons would not be able to restore their lead as the Blue Devils led 49-40.

The last few minutes of the game the Demon Deacons fell apart by abandoning their game and neglecting their skills.

Junior Val Hodge takes an open jumper while the Duke Blue Devils run to catch up. This was not the story of the game, however, as the Blue Devils outplayed the Deacons Feb. 16 at Joel Coliseum.

Duncan, with 223, needs just 16 blocks to move into a tie for ninth place with Cedric Lewis.

The Demon Deacons were led by junior Val Hodge who contributed 14 and by Connor and sophomore Lindsay Seawright who each do­nated 13.

Connor paved the path for the De- followedbythespectacularthree-point mon Deacons by producing 18 points, shooting of team leader Hollifield who

contributed 17 points. The team plays today atFloridaState.

Men's tennis team splits matches against Appalachian State, MTSU Bv SCO'IT PLUMRIDGE

Ow Gow AND BLACK REPoRTER

The Demon Deacon men's tennis team con­tinued its pre-season play Saturday with matches against Appalachian State and Middle Tennessee State.

The day started off on a high note with a victory against Appalachian State. In singles competition, the Deacons were a dominating force in winning five of the six matches.

Victorious for the squad were junior Michael Stump, 6-3, 6-2, senior Quentin Huff, 6-1, 6-

• Men's Basketball

ACC Standings Conf. Overall

Team WL WL North Carolina 10 3 20 3 Virginia 11 3 19 6 Mmyland 10 3 21 5 Wake Forest 9 4 18 5 Georgia Tech 6 7 16 10 Florida State 5 9 12 12 N.C. State 4 9 12 11 Clemson 3 10 13 10 Duke 2 12 12 14

·.·-·

.APTop25.

1. Kansas 2. UCLA 3. North Carolina 4. Connecticut 5. Massachusetts 6. Kentucky 7. Maryland 8. Arkansas 9. Villanova 10. Wake Forest 11. Virginia 12. Michigan State 13.Arizona 14. Missouri 15. Arizona State 16. Mississippi State l~acuse 18. Oklahoma State 19. Stanford 20.A1abama 21. Purdue 22. Minnesota 23. Iowa State

0, and sophomore Josh Osswald, 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, in positions one through three. Freshman Jimmy Chou, 6-3, 6-4, at the number five slot and junior Chris Solomon, 7-6, 6-4, at the sixth position also contributed wins.

The Deacons also won the doubles point to seal the 6-1 victory. At No.2 and 3 doubles, respectively, Huff and junior Suraj Betheja, 8-4, and Chou and junior Jeff Landau, 9-7, each were victorious.

Head Coach Ian Crookenden praised the squad for its strong performance. "The team showed good poise in winning a match that

24. Georgia Tech 25.0regon

ACC Statistics Scoring Travis Best, GT 20.7 Joe Smith, Md. 19.6 James Forrest, GT 19.5 Cherokee Parks, Duke 19.3 Jerry Stackhouse, UNC 19.1 Bob Sura, FSU 18.4 Rasheed Wallace, UNC 18.4 Randolph Childress, WFU 18.0 James Collins, FSU 17.7 Cory Alexander, UVa. 16.7 Junior Burrough, UVa. 16.4 Harold Deane, UVa 16.2 Todd Fuller, NCS 15.7 Tim Duncan, WFU 15.6

Field GQal Per~entage Rasheed Wallace, UNC .677 Tim Duncan, WFU .593 Joe Smith, Md. .583

Rebounds Tim Duncan, WFU 12.2 Joe Smith, Md. 10.0 Cherokee Parks, Duke 9.4 Todd Fuller, NCS 8.8 Rasheed Wallace, UNC 8.7

Assists Drew Barry, GT 6.9 Jeff Mcinnis, UNC 6.4 Cory Alexander, UVa. 5.5 Bob Sura, FSU 5.5 Travis Best, GT 5.3 Ishua Benjamin, NCS 5.3 Duane Simpkins, Md. 5.2 Randolph Childress, WFU 5.0

they knew they were expected to," he said .. The second match of the day would serve to

be more challenging. The Demon Deacons, who fell 5-1 to a similar Middle Tennessee State squad the year before, knew that even before they stepped on the court.

In fact, the results would be similar to those of the previous year, as Middle Tennessee State defeated the Deacons 6-1. A main rea­son for the opposition's dominance was the court location. "The indoor setting was accomodated to Middle Tennessee State's big serving style," Crookenden said.

Harold Deane, UV a 4.0 Johnny Rhodes, Md. 3.9

Blocked Shot:;! Tim Duncan, WFU 4.3 Corey Louis, FSU 3.0 Rasheed Wallace, UNC 3.0 Joe Smith, Md. 2.9 Todd Fuller, NCS 1.9

Ereg Throw Percentage Duane Simpkins, Md. .867 Merl Code, Clem. .846 Travis Best, GT .835 Harold Deane, UV a .821 Todd Fuller, NCS .800 Randolph Childress, WFU .794 Tim Duncan, WFU .775

• Women's Basketball

ACC Standings Con f. Overall

Team WL WL Virginia 15 0 22 3 North Carolina 11 4 24 4 Duke 10 5 19 6 Clemson 9 5 19 7 N.C. State 9 5 16 8 Georgia Tech 4 11 12 16 Wake Forest 3 11 10 14 Florida State 3 12 8 20 Maryland 2 13 10 16

ACC Statistics Scoring Charlotte Smith, UNC 19.3 Kisha Ford, GT 18.7 Wendy Palmer, UVa 18.1 Tara Saunooke, Clem. 17.6 Marion Jones, UNC 17.3

Another agent in the Deacon loss was the absence of freshman Matt Guyaux, who suf­fers from mononucleosis. Guyaux, who plays third singles and first doubles, is expected to return around spring break. "His return will help us return to the anticipated strength of lineup which our ranking is based upon," Crookenden said. The Deacons' current IT A ranking is 50th.

Hosie, 6-3, 5-7, 7-6, was the sole victor for the Deacons in singles while Chou and Osswald combined to win 8-1 in a doubles match.

Allison Day, Duke 16.0 Chasity Melvin, NCS . 15.8 Carla Munnion, GT 15.0 Tammy Gibson, NCS 14.9 Carey Kauffman, Duke 14.5 Jennifer Howard, NCS 14.0 RaeAnna Mulholland, WFU 13.5 Stephanie Ridgeway, Clem. 13.5 Tracy Reid, UNC 13.5

Rebounds Charlotte Smith, UNC 10.5 Wendy Palmer, UVa. 9.6 Kisha Ford, GT 8.6 Laura Cottrell, Clem. 8.5 Carey Kauffman, Duke 8.2 RaeAnna Mulholland, WFU 8.0

Field Goal Percentage Chasity Melvin, NCS Wendy Palmer, UVa Allison Day, Duke Charlotte Sn'lith, UNC Marion Jones, UNC Tracy Reid, UNC Carey Kauffman, Duke Val Hodge, WFU

Free Throw Percentage Tara Saunooke, Clem. Jen Howard, NCS Allsion Day, Duke Gretchen Hollifield, WFU Allison Peercy, FSU

Assists Tiffany Martin, GT G_retchen Hollifield, WFU Marion Jones, UNC Tora Suber, UVa

.613

.599

.556

.544

.519

.512

.494

.474

.849

.843

.837

.769

.758

7.3 7.3 5.2 4.7

The setback did not mar Crookenden' s en­thusiasm towards the team's efforts. "I have no complaints about the effo~ and quality at this stage of this season," he said.

The Deacons resume play Friday at home against regional opponent Virginia Tech. Sun­day, Vanderbilt will visit the Deacons, once again at home.

The matches are expected to be played on the outdoor courts. In the event of rain, the matches will be played indoors at the Tennis Center. Stands will be provided for specta­tors.

•Baseball

ACC Standings Conf. Overall

Team WL WL Wake Forest 0 0 2 0 Florida State 0 0 7 1 Duke 0 0 5 2 Clemson 0 0 2 1. Virginia 0 0 2 1 Georgia Tech 0 0 3 2 N.C. State 0 0 3 3 North Carolina 0 0 3 4 Maryland 0 0 0 0

•This Week

Thursday: Women's Basketball at Florida State

Thursday-Sunday:W omen's Tennis at Team Indoor Cham­pionship

Friday-Sunday: Baseball at FSU . · · Friday: Men's Tennis vs. Virginia

Tech, Leighton Tennis Sta- ,_ dium, 3 p.m. ·"

Friday-Saturday: Men's, Women's Track at Indoor ACC Champi­onships

Sunday:Men's Basketball vs. Virginia, Joel Coliseum, 1 p.m.

Women's Basketball vs. NCSU, Joel Coliseum, 4 p.rn:.

Men's Tennis vs. Vanderbilt, Leighton Tennis Stadium, 10 a.m.

Tuesday: Men's Basketball at North Carolina, 7 p.m.

Wednesday:Baseball vs. Appala­chian State, 2:30p.m., Hooks Stadium

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