Volume73No.17 , Winston-Salem Friday, February 2, 1990 Report Finds Guard's Action Discrimimttory

By Rocky Lantz guard'sactionwasdiscriminatory,hewasnot required to show their I.D. 's before entering News Ediloi intentionally biased The report also said rec­ the gym. Guards now patrol the gym and may ords of gym security guards show they are ask for I.D. 's from random persons. Leon Corbett, the vice president for legal more suspiciousof black people than white Bob Prince, the director of university secu­ affairs, released a report yesterday about the people. rity, said he agrees with the findings of the Oct 27 incident in which a black Wake Forest Brian Eckert, the director of media rei a­ repon. Heal so said a new system ofchecking law student was arrested and removed from .lions, said, "Although no disciplinary action, I.D. 'sat the gym door will be more effective Reynolds Gymnasium after refusing to pres­ suchasdemotionorcutinpay,hasbeentaken, than the present system. ent his studenti.D. to a security guard. th~ officer and all members of university Eckert said, to the best of his knowledge, Thestudent,JohnMcl.emore,saidtheguard security will be requited to receive additional McLemore hasnotfiledany action against the was racially discriminatory in checking for training in procedures and racial sensitivity." university. identification. Charges against McLemore University security's Regina Lawson, who "(Corbett) tells me he believes the investi~ were dismissed after security realized he was directs the organizing of training, could not be galion has come to a successful conclusion, a student. .reached for ci>mment. · suggesting ways to improve our operations," The report states that, although the security The report recommends that students be Eckert said. Trustees Raise Tuition To $9,700 for 1990-91 By Harriet Chapman informed about the increase until they read about. it . Head Copy Edilor · in the newspaper. She said the cost of printing the letters was borne by the rnediarelalions budget and Wake Forest's board of trustees voted Jan. 26 to was minimal, since W akeForest's print shop did the increase the tuition of the undergraduate and gradu­ work, and the letters were distributed free of charge ate schools 10.2 percent for the year 1990-91. The in campus mail. · increase amounts to $900, which will make the base PresidentThornasK. Hearn Jr. wrotetheletterand price of undergraduate education $9,700. With this enclosed with it a list of tuition comparisons with increase, under~te tuition at Wake Forest has otheruniversitiesandagrnphillustiatingpercentage risen47.0peJCeDtsince 1986-87, whenitwas$6,600. increases infmancialaid to WakeForeststudentsfor The trustees also approved an increase in fees, the past decade. Hearn's letter to students said, · withincreasesinhousingfeesaveraging8.5percent. ''These two priorities-faculty salaries and fman­ A letter informing students in the college and the cial aid - will consume most of the increase in school of business and accountancy of the increase revenue." andexplainingtherationale for the action was placed Theuniversity'sfmancialreportfortheyearended ineachstudent'spostofficeboxalmostimmediately June30, 1989,statedthat"tuitioncontinuestocover following the vote, which took place around 9:30 slightly less than 70 percent of the educational and am., said Sandra Connor, the vice president for general costs of educating students, with the balance Jaatl._ public affairs. She said that she called Wake Forest's received from gifts" and income from the endow­ Blowm' in the Wind · branch of the post office as soon as she knew the ment. About 60 students attend a rally for divestment, coindding with a meeting of the Board of Trustees, Jan. 26 organized outcome of the vote to instruct that the letters be John Anderson, the vice president for administra­ by StudentsAgainstApartheid. The rally, which wasoriginaUyto be held between Davisilouseand the Benson Student disb'ibuted. tion and planning, said the proposed budget for Center site, was moved to the area between Davis and Taylor Houses when organizers discovered the trustees would Connor said the office of public affairs decided it 1990-91, which the trustees will vote on at their was worth the risk of a different outcome to print the be parking there. Rally partici~nts wore black, held ~gns, sang songs and shouted, ''Divest now!" meeting in March, suggests an increaseof22 percent letters beforehand and have them ready, because in financial aid for students. students in the past had complained about not being See Tuition, Page 5 U.S Air Group Agrees to Sale of Foriner Piedmont Headquarters to· BoW:rhart .. Gray By Jennie Vaughn Bowman Gray/Baptist Hospital Medi­ inspect the buildings and can back out Bowman Gray has already under­ in July, Glance said. Glance said the school's growth Associate News Editor ca! Center, would not release the sale of the deal ifofficials find structural or taken a building project that Glance Despite the addition, the school is over the past few years has been "phe­ price for the complex, which consists other problems, but that is unlikely, called"thelargesthealthsciencefacil­ tight on office and parking space. nomenal" and the school's research The Bowman Gray School of Medi­ of twin buildings and a parking deck according to the Journal. ity ever undertaken in North Caro­ Glance said the Piedmont Plaza will growth has been "dramatic." . cine has agreed to purchase Piedmont which sit on a 7.6-acrelotattheinter­ · The medical school plans to use most lina." The project includes a six -story provide about 1,000 parking spaces. He said the patient census consis­ Plaza. the former corporate headquar­ section of First and Miller Streets in of the space for offices. "We're trying addition totheHanesResearch Build­ Bowman Gray employees already use tently remains at 90 percent ters of Piedmont Aviation, from the Winston-Salem. to see which units would function just ing and the construction of two other some of the parking deck spaces. The Glance said that in 1988 Bowman US Air Group, according to an article Glance said the building's new oc- . as well off-campus," Glance said. buildings. Construction was recently school has set up a shuttle system from Gray jumped nine places to 35th in the in the Winston-Salem Journal. cupants could start to move in in mid­ Glance said that school officials completedonapatientfacility,the 15- the pl,ua to the Bowman Gray's nation in the research grants it earned Bill Glance, thedirectoroftheoffice March. Under the agreement, the would determine this in the next six story North Tower. A clinical science Hawthome campus less than a mile among schools that receive funds from ofinformation and public affairs at the medical school has a few. weeks to weeks. building is scheduled to be completed away. the National Institutes of Health. Chamber Announces Production of Film at Fonner RJR Building By Mike McKinley Mlnaging Editor

TheWinston-Salem Chamber of Commerce announced Jan. 26 that the former RJR/NabiSco World Headquarters building, whichisownedbyWakeForest, willhostamajormotion picture starring James Belushi. The movie, tentatively titled Mr. Destiny, will be a "comedy­ fantasy," said a secretary at Grapeshot Productions Inc., the producer of the film. Buena Vista Pictures Distribution Inc., a division of Walt Disney, will distribute the movie. J. Jeter Walker, a spokesman for the chamber of commerce, said production crews will begin to shoot the film in late March and should finish by the end of May. Walker said the company has begun to cast for the movie, which may require some student extras. He said one scene in the movie requires a large crowd, but he did not know the composi­ tion of the crowd. In addition to Belushi, the company has started to recruit other big-name talent, Walker said. "Top talent is being put together on HWiltr·lleYftChlo.Jewd this movie in an attempt to get top return at the box office." The campus design created by the firm of Hunter-Reynolds-Jewell was featured in the December, 1989, issue of Landscape Architecture magazine. "A headquarters building adjacent to a large industrial plant is important to the movie," Walker said. The industrial plant is Whitaker Park, which manufactures cigarettes for R.J. Reynolds Campus Design Will Change During. Upcoming 10 Years Tobacco Co. By Rocky Lantz architecture firm of Hunter-Reynolds­ and Reynolds Library, she Scales Fine Arts Center to the left. News Edit<>r Jewell in Raleigh, was featured in a said. The chapel's steeple is an orienta­ Faculty Drive will branch out into a Correction campus-design story in the December, tion point from every campus location. road passing in front of Olin Physical 1989, issue of Landscape Architecture The biggest change in design will be Laboratory and a road passing between In last week's lefthand editorial , a press conference con­ A campus design created last spring should be completed within the next 10 magazine .. . the removal of Wake Forest Road be­ Winston and.Salem Halls. cerning the tuition increase was identified as a question­ The design was planned to meet the tween Davis Field and Davis House, Leake said an amphitheater may be and-answer session for students. This meeting was meant years, said Lu Leake, the assistant vice president for administration and plan­ suggestions of the program planning Leake said. At the lower end of Davis built on the field near Taylor House for for the press only. committee, Leake said. In creating the Field, the road will divide into Faculty outdoor student activities. A search for a We apologize for any inconvenience this may have ning. The design, created by the landscape design, the flrm gave special emphasis to Drive to the right and an access drive for See Campus, Page 5 caused. 2 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 2, 1990 WFU Graduate Leads 32 Men Into Combat By Chadwick Clark patrol there in the best of times. It was the quarter from a rooftop and from the comers of a buidling at Spcoiol to the Old Gold and Black where the Panamanian Defense Force and their street level. "Dignity Battalion" auxiliaries offered the strongest One of my squad automatic riflemen instantly e were about four hours away from land­ resistance. returned fire, killing the man on the roof. Another ing at Howard Air force Base in Panama For some reason the initial scouting missions man ran across the street pumping rounds at us with W City. Rumor had it that we would be boosted my confidence by a mile. I discovered that I a shotgun. The same gunner killed him. From the landing under a mortar attack. As the adrenaline was not a frightened college student but a battle­ comerofthe building another Panamanian opened up began pumping, I began thinking about how I had ready platoon leader. Panama didn't scare me; nei­ with an Uzi. One of my riflemen wounded him and Be!Wec gotten myself into such a situation. ther did the thought of being shot at or even killed. shot another in the knee. . ' I am 22 years old andgraduatedfrom Wake Forest Situations still made me tense and cautious, but I I told my lead squad leaderto bound forward toone stereo~ all of seven months ago. Now I was about to lead 32 could work through the fear and it faded away. The side of the buiding, and I called the situation into my from a lc men into combat, convinced that nothing in life superb performance of my soldiers had a lot to do company comman~er. Since the frrst squad was probably' could have prepared me for this day. I had done about with it. Christmas night would show just how good having trouble maneuvering, I decided to employ ~ocklh as much as anyone could do in a seven-month Army they were. leadership by example. We bounded forward in short career. Airborne School, Ranger School and the Air During the day of Dec. 24 my platoon (Second rushes, taking the buildling in textbook style. When Four" Assault Course were all under my belL I had been the Platoon, Company C, First Battalion, Ninth Infantry we reached the building, the remaining enemy sur­ · conrainec: honor graduateofthelnfantry Officers' Basic Course Regiment) cordoned off the streets in the Curundu rendered. p.m. Jan. and the Infantry Mortar Platoon course. sector with barbed wire and stayed pretty much out Weshouted"Buajatuarrnos"and"Manosarriba." . Hall.' Yet during all of this training, I had not been taught of sight That night we claimed the streets with active (I knew that language requirement would come in These to take over a platoon and lead them into combat five patrolling. I kept thinking about the line in Tom handy.) They were searched, silenced, segregated st()len frc days later. Clancey's novel C/earandPresentDanger, "Ninjas and quickly taken to the rear. In the final analysis we ~Wt;and Was I scared? There were moments when I would own the night." Well, the Ninth Infantry Regiment took nine prisoners, killed two and wounded two Thethi have traded places with anyone else on earth. Inside are the "Manchus," and the Manchus owned the without receiving a single casualty. The whole affair taken.bel I was a nervous wreck, but I was relieved to find that streets of Curundu. lasted a little over fifteen minutes. froinasb outside I could project the warrior image. I talked to Our patrol began about2:30 a.m. Christmas day. It wasn't until afterward !Pat the significance of the all of my men, assuring them that they would pull The platoon had been out about 40 minutes staying event hit me. My heart started to pound, and I started H8n. through it. They were members of the best-trained, out of the beams cast by the streetlights and using a shaking inside. It's son of like narrowly escaping Thefo best-equipped, strongest and toughest army in the modified wedge formation. being involved in a car wreck. I was relieved to know gymnasi1 world. I knew that when the time came, they would Suddenly an automatic weapon opened up on us that I was able to perform as I was supposed to-as contiliuitl know what to do. from a rooftop to our front. My men immediately a leader under fire. It was as if my self-preservation As it turned out, our landing in Panama was went prone, scrambled to the nearest cover and instincts were placed on hold and my training in­ Abicy1 uneventful. On Dec. 23 and 24 my platoon was returned fire. stincts took over. All this happened without my firing in front 1 involved in bringing order to the seediest part of I got up and ran to the lead squad leader. As I ran a shot. While directing, leading, shouting instructions Music To My Ears weeks. T Panama City - Curundu. The people there lived in forward, Uzi tracer rounds bounced at my feet. It and talking to the company commander, a platoon Freshman Derek Taylor provides free musical entertainment as he backwh~ government housing or in shanties they had thrown made no difference that I was being shot at; my leader doesn't have time to shoot it will be together. It was a haven for _low-lifes, drug dealers, concentration was focused on the mission and the Christmas 1989 will be a day I will never forget. plays the piano in Taylor lounge. murderers, thieves and prostitues. Police did not security of my men. We were receiving fire, both See Panama, Page 5 A car< passenge it was se Clubroom Improves Schedule Students Spend Semester In Taiwan where'it1

By Jeanne Wussler for activities led to the clubroom's be the same as last semester's. The By Todd House and Banks. "I was disappointed at by Banks on the cultural ecology of · Twom Old Gold and Black Rcpom:r problems,.he said. Because of the legal drinking age will be enforced, Old Gold and Black Reponcr first, but not once I got there," he said. China. In addition, the students at· . given tre clubroom's sporadic scheduling last and students must order food with Fisher cited many advantages of tended weekly afternoon lectures on : theywCli Campus bands Indian Summer and fall,studentsdidnotknow whether the their beverages. The first fall Semester in China pro­ going to Taiwan instead of to Beijing. various topics regarding China and its and Babe Little Snippets.provided the entertain­ clubroom was opened or closed. "ARA has been a big help with the gram, which was originally to be held He said his Chinese education was people. tion. ment for the reopening of the Univer­ This spring the clubroom will be entire idea of the clubroom and has at a university in HeaJmg, was moved better, because he learned the Ian- Each participant lived in regular sity Clubroom Jan. 26. open 3 p.m.-12:30 a.m.every Friday helped to make the concept work. We because university officials deemed it . guage without the Beijing accent. university housing in a room with one : A rout Senior David Vann, the former co­ and 6p.m.-12:30 a.m. every Saturday owe them a lot of credit," Kahn said. unwise to send students there due to Fisher also said, "I was able to better other American student and one native · at Reyno chainnan of the Student Union beginning Feb. 17 .It will close during The following is the schedule for instability and urtreSt in the area. The interact with the people because I was Chinese student, providing for a great : the vehic Clubroom committee, said problems spring break and Easter weekend. the clubroom through March: altemateprogramwasheldinTaiwan. not separated from them by political dealofleamingoutsideofclass,Fisher : havereq occurred with the Clubroom last se­ Seniors Seth Kahn and Mark Ford Tonight -Imitation Fun Night Although the program was spon­ hesitations." said. . . automati mester because operations were under­ aretheco-chairmenoftheclubroom 's Feb. 9- Rev. Billy Wirtz sored by Wake Forest, junior history In addition, he said the travel oppor­ The last minute changes did cause : Thepe staffed. Vann was in charge of over­ entertainment· committee this semes­ Feb. 16- Marty Province major Nevan Fisher was the only par· tunities in Taiwan were greater, and some problems for the students, be- : foundtre the weather was more comfonable. cause the program in Taiwan was not : seeing all Clubroom operations, in­ ter. Feb. 17 - Pretzel Logic ticipant enrolled from the university. warning. Another student was a 1988 graduate, The purpose of the trip was for the as well established as the one in Bei- ; cluding enforcing rules, booking en­ "Last weekend was a great start to Feb. 23-Easily Suede and give Feb. 24 - Camel City Comedy Im­ and the remaining 15 were from a swdents to learntheChineselanguage. jing,Fishersaid. Thestuden15haddif- : tertainment and coordinating sched­ get off to," Kahn said. "Everyone impound ules with ARA Food Services. knows Indian Summer and is sure to provisation consortium of Southeastern schools They studied at the Chinese Cultural ficulty getting adequate professors and ; "Essentially, last semester was an cometoseethem. We'veworkedreally March 2-3- Spades Tournament with which Wake Forest is associated. University in Taipei, the capital of as a result did not get as far as planned ; experiment, and now we can expect to hard to make this an enjoyable place March 23 - The Gathering The group was led by Pendleton Banks, Taiwan. Thestudentsspentfourhours in the written language. "The first few : Skism I do better," Vann said. for students to come to, butitcan 't and March 24 - Steve Curnutte (tenta­ a professor of anthropology. every morning studying the written weeks were difficult because we kept : Kitchin The unavailability of the Magnolia won 'tsucceed unless people show up." tive) Fisher said the change in plans was and spoken language. Two afternoons getting the runaround, but after that : Jan. 28. Room staff and the lack of preparation The clubroom's alcohol policy will March 30 - Matt Kendrick UniL a disappointment for both the students each week they attended a class taught everything smoothed out," he said. ; Unive 22-28. T dent/con Anthropology Department Offers Summer StudyTp_p to Syq!l'!ll

Old Gold and Black Friday, February 2, 1990 3 Black Author - ' . . . ' SECl)IZITY. BEAT~ . ·BRIEFLY - .. To Lecture •Jan~ 22·28 • MBA Students Win Scholarships Be&WeenJan.20andJan.22,anAM/FMcasseue On Sunday Six students in the Babcock School of Manage­ ment Evening MBA Program have been awarded · stereO ~ equalizer valued at $750 were stolen scholarships. from.a focked car paJted in Lot 1. The car was· Five of lhe students received $1,250 scholarships proba!Jly. opened with a wire or a tOol used to from RJ. Reynolds Co. They are John McDOnald, u,nlock the door. Jacqueline Fleming, the aulhor of CPA; John Sarcone, Office Works Computer Cen­ Blacks in College andF earofSuccess, ter; Curt Fanner, First Union Bank; Ken Smilh, Four wallets were reported stolen. One, which will lecture on ''The Choice: A Re­ Continental Credit Insurance Co.; and Betsy Smith, · contained $5, was taken between 10:30 a.m. and 1 sean:h ViewofLifeinBiackandWhite Wake Forest University. · p.m. Jan. 23 from mi unattended office i~ Winston Colleges" 7:30p.m. Sunday in Brendle David Gmgan, a Bowman Gray School of Medi­ Hall. . . Recital Hall. cine employee, received a $2,500 scholarship from The second wallet, which contained $30, was Blacks in College is lhe result of Cellular One. stOlen from an office in Reynolda Hall between 8 seven years of research funded by a ~;and 11:50 a.m. Jan. 25. : $700,000CamegieCorporationgranL • Summer Program Announced The third wallet, whichcontained.nomoney, was In her lectures, Fleming addresses ·taken .between 10:10 a.m. and 11:10 a.m. Jan. 27 · strategies for more effective educa­ The University of New Orleans will sponsor its froinastudent'sunlockedroominEfirdResidence tional communication and cohesive­ 15th annual International Summer School in H8n. . . ness. Innsbruck,Austria,thissummer.Studentscanchoose The fourth, containing $1, w~ stolen from the from60coursesandeamupto lOcreditsastheyleam Fear of Success describes her re­ about cultural, historical, social, political and eco­ gymnasium. An investigation of wallet thefts is search of standardized test scores, contiliuing. nomic issues of United States-European relations. comparing how black and white stu­ All instruction is in English and the faculty in­ dents perfonn on college and graduate cludes professors from lhe Universities of New AbicyclewasreponedJan.24tohavebeenlying school entrance exams. in front of Reynolds Library for one and a half, Orleans, Florida, Georgiaandlnnsbruckand visiting weeks. The bike, which has a locked chain on the Fleming is an adjunct professor in professors from other universities. BarnardCollege'sdepartmentofpsy­ For more information write 10: UNO­ back wheel, was taken tO the security office where INNSBRUCK-1990, International Study Programs, mentashe it will be kept until it is claimed. · chology. An expert on how personal­ ity sparks individual motivation dif­ Box 1315, UniversityofNew Orleans, New Orleans, LA 70148. A car driven by a student, with other students as ferences, she teaches undergraduate passengers, was stepped at 1:30 a.m. Jan. 2S after courses on the psychology of racism B Courses Offered In Hungary it was seen driving at a fast speed on the Quad, and human motivation. Watch for Falling Rocks Tip Galli']' ran where'it nearly struck a pedestrian. Fleming holds a doctorate in psy­ The Council on International Educational Ex­ 0 Freshman Stephen Owen reaches the top of bis climb at Moore's chology from Harvard University and changehasannouncedtwostudyabroadprogramsat l ecology of · Two men not affiliated with the university were Face. abachelor'sdegreein psychology from · majoruniversitiesinHungaryandPolandbeginning students at- . given ttespass warnings at 7:50p.m. Jan. 25 after Barnard College. in the fa! 1of 1990. 1 lectures on they were found· trying to sell perfume in Johnson Sixteen-week programs will be offered at the Karl :hinaandits and Babcock Residence Halls wilhout authoriza­ Its mission is is something that really in Atlanta and magically know what's· Marx University of Economics in Budapest and at tion. will change · - going on at Wake Forest," he said. the Central School of Planning and Statistics in l in regular . Eckert people~s lives." During his free time, Eckert plays Warsaw. omwilhone' A routine licensech~ of acarparkecJ in Lot 17 FromPage2 Eckert's job __ tennis ~d golf and referees high school The Council on International EducatiOnal Ex­ 1donenative ; atReynoldsGymnasium at3 p.in.Jan. 27 disclosed requires him to basketball games. Toearii his license 10 change is a private, non-profit membership organi­ 1g for a great : act as a spokes­ become a referee in New Jersey, Eckert zation which maintains offices throughout the U.S. the vehicle had a stolen license plate and did not ·lowing week he was asked to cover a class, Fisher : have required liability insurance •.A loaded semi­ manfortheiUli­ had 10 serve a two-year apprenticeship, and in six countries. stmy. The Voiceof America broadcast versity. He said three For more information on eilher program contact . automatic rifle was underneath the seaL isbeardbymorethan30millionpeople attend night school hours a night es did cause : The people who brought the car to campus were he receives six for 10 weeks, take a national written Juliette Shapland, Academic Programs Departtnent, :tudents, be- : around the wodd. to 24 phone examination and score at least an 88 CouncilonintemationalEducationaiExchange,205 found trespaSSing inside the gym. Written trespass Eckert said he returned to his alma wan was not: warnings were issued, the license tag was removed calls each day perr-..ent and pass a floor exam. East42nd Stteet, New York, NY 10017,(212)661- :one in Bei- ; mater because he's "always had a re­ 1414. . and given to the city police and the vehicle was from people all After 11 years, Eckert said his role as Ients had dif- : "ally deep affection for Wake Forest It over lhe nation askmg about anything a referee has been a character building :ofessorsand ; impounded by university security./ isn't like any other institution that I from student life to faculty research to one. He said he has been trained not to • Line Gives Schedule Changes have ever seen. If as planned : institutional functions. react to irate fans, and he tries to take The first few : Skis and boots valued at $400 were stolen from "It's an interesting and lively place Eckert said he will ttavel around the complaints as exuberance in supporting WakeForest'sOfficeofPublicAffairsoffersa24- -it's a wonderful community to live 1use we kept : Kitchin House between 6 p.m. Jan. 27 and 8 a.m. country to inform lhe national media a team. Eckert said he often had objects hour snow line that provides the latest in schedule and to work in. It's one of the few tut after that : Jan. 28. about Wake Forest so that it may as­ thrown at him, and he once had to be changes on the Reynolda campus. t," he said. genuinely good causes that a person sume the role af a national university. escorted by police to his car after a A recorded message provides information regard­ University security responded to 107 calls Jan. can believe in these days. I really want He said he wantsforWakeForestto be Catholic Youth Organization league ing changes in classes, administtative office hours 22-28. Thirty-three percent of lhe calls were inci­ to do something in my career that has included in articles on campus trends. basketball game. and special activities. Information about the law and dent/complaint reports, 59 percent were for secu­ somelhingtodowithmakingtheworld "I wouldn'tclassifymyselfasasales­ Eckert was recently licensed by the business schools is included. nd rity services, 6 percent were for alarms and 2 a better place. man, but at the same time I know that The snow line number is 759-5935. . North Carolina High School Athletic .. ~ . ,, . . percent were medical calls. . "I thfuk that coming back and help­ it' simpossible fora news organization Association, and he referees one or two ing Wake Forest communicate what a£h Ness;-to ; to,be~WashingtonorinNewYorkor games a week. 1. The focus Jl'e through­ he relation-· 1 the ancient ' !d as a sum-: ARE YOU lSsignments: ly. Students: dit. Partici-: INTERESTED IN . 1from appli-. • • d Standing Up Leadership lOllS Peace while he was .,_Why have father at home people Scholarship 1 Travelscene rilked A Bar A Ranch lable to go 10 tlwirjobl, Are you looking for an exciting and rewarding their hoiiiiS, 'hot dogs and their familie!J . summer job? The A Bar A Guest Ranch is even pri1on to tlke a stand Cor 180,000 priVate acres of southern Wyoming, Social Jll!&ce? This ia ym.w chance to find surrounded by national forest to WestGer­ out. The Standing Up far Peace :la, the Carib­ and wilderness areas. Contest inviles you to talk face to We have openings in all areas of guest service. td,HongKong face with IIOIIII!One who has nfueed InvolveDient? to fight In wu:.-pay taxes Cor war, or We would like to talk to you about the possibility ravel joumal­ build weapona for war, and then to of working with us this summer. xlucerofNew ·expreiS what you think. and feel The manager of the ranch, Bob Howe, will be about what you heard thmugh writ- ~gnewsshow conducting interviews on campus l.nr;, art or music. . If So, Delta Sigma Phl ~tor for West The c:onteat Ia open to YOIIJ18 peo­ Februmy 8, 1990. You may arrange for an VJJZinMount ple agee 15-23. The deadline fOi en­ Interview at the Career Planning and Placement Could Be For You! ffairs director tries is May 1, 1990. Office, Room 8, Reynolda Hall. WHSP-TV in To enter, eend for the Steding Up for Peace Contest boolclet, FeUow­ ebip of Rec:onciliation, Box 271, Ny· ing journalist NY10960 . ·d in England. 'Y Foundation e'd communist DELTA SIGMA PHI nand Eastern tdhespenttwo :August. ., WHERE LEADERSHIP DEVELOPS ;ted the Voice .in London for THROUGH BROTHERHOOD there. After a ed to help out i, and lhe fol- . .t:...o~p _,....,. ..c, --.1 FOR MORE INFORMATION . . ,_.....,~."­

_,.._,~ .... .,,..,.{,.... Matt Zuntag • Rush Chairman • 315G Taylor • 759-6535 lalls Bill White • President • 405A Taylor_• 2_59~48 coordinator of RUSH CALENDAR iscontinued its 21 22 23 24 25 'Z1 he end of last Mounllzin fxcurslon on aluminum ROOM ROOM formal Personal to the Football Place your Fried smoker Rush with the RUSH RUSH Oaks Chic.'rm 7pm follow-up brothers .. ;a big problem Spm 8am 8:30Pm Noon • papers. Han­ ' of the papers 28 29 30 31 1 2 3 announcement order at Superbowl Skiing Informal Sorrano's Rylng Ill we had. The BOWLING Cookout will be plenty XXIV Smoker 5:30 pm Leave night COIOIS 5pm 7pm 3pm 8:30 Noon House if the student the College Bookstore! 4 5 6 7 8 9 goes through 1e its recycling Semi and ~ih- PLEDGE finals pool BID Silen1 Days 'other projects toumament ~- NIGHT University Stores "On the (:Ampus" are owned and operated for . 4pm NIGHT ~:30 . · · the convenience the students, and [House . 4 Old Gold and Black February 2, 1990 . . . . _i' ·,, . ' ' Report ,·- WV"ORLDWIDE -- FromPagi ' .· ' . ' . . . ' - From Page 1 ' . ' .~, .. CROSS CAMPUS • Azerbaijan Invasion Questioned ' .special monm Reynolda and The student has stated that he felt the officers were prejudiced MOSCOW-- Members of the Soviet Parliament ways, which v against black persons, that blacks were checked for identifica­ Jan. 26challengedPresidentMikhailS. Gorvachev's ~ field. tionwhenwhiteswerenot,andthatherefusedtoidentifyhimself justification for sending troops to Azerbaijan and The Magno because he felt that he was being discriminated against. An 11 a.m. Amnesty International Meeting demanded an immediate session of the Supreme > ' ,: construction·~ investigation and response were promised, and this is the re­ (Tribble C316). Soviet to draft more democratic controls on the restored as an sponse. FRI handling of domestic emergencies. 11 a.m. Music Department Repertory Hour Theareawi Mrs. Beth Hopkins, who is the Equal Opponunity Officer and l'l'bru.u 1 2 , Yuri N. Afanasyev, a leader of the parliamentary Reynolda Hal (Brendle Recital Hall), free. opposition faction pressing for rapid political change, also a member of the staff of the legal office, investigated and Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). Benson Cente reported. 3:45 p.m. MOA After-school Program: said that by ordering the army into the secession­ -A fountain It appears from her repon that there was a pattern of enforce­ 7, 9:30, midnight SU Movie: LElHAL "Talking Bones" (Museum), admission .. minded southern republic without consulting the WEAPON 2 (Detamble Auditorium), novice Parliament, the Kremlin had repeated the Patio, she sai1 ment which was discriminatory in fact, although there is not with walkwa) intentional discriminatory practice in the security deparunent. admission. 4:30 p.m. Theatre Lab Play (Ring Theatre), pattern of the SovietinvasionsofHungary, Czecho- Nevertheless, it appears that in the patrols of the gymnasium the admission. slovakia and Afghanistan. . Leakesaidt officers had encountered a number of intruders from nearby 8 p.m. SU Movie: CRY, BELOVED Defense Minister Dmitri T. Yazov said that the this fall and " black neighborhoods, and they haddevelopeda pattern of think­ SAT COUNTRY (Detamble Auditorium), free. army. moved into Baku, the Azerbaijan capital, to will be locate ing that black persons in the gymnasium were more likely to be destroy the organizational structure of the national­ courts. intruders. ist Azerbaijan network of 40,000 militants that was Mterthep11 It is true that their records reflect trespass warnings to both Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). WED on the verge of overthrowing Soviet power in the ate departmeJ white and black persons, but the pattern and a number of reports 8:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. ROTC Operation Free­ ' h:bru.tn· -:- . _ . · republic. Carswell Hall tend to bear out that they were more suspicious of blacks than dom Strike (Oak Ridge Military Academy). There has 1 whites. Tnough this was not intended to be racial discrimination Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). • Mandela Appeals to Government building betVI 3 p.m. Student Recital: Kate Lambert, on their pan, it is in fact discrimination based on race. soprano (Brendle Recital Hall), free. 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Teacher Fair (WSSU (· Thequadbc That is wrong and will not be tolerated. The entire department Campus). JOHANNESBURG, South Africa- In his first will have ele1 has met as a group and received this admonition. Active steps 7, 9:30, midnight SU Movie: LETHAL major public pronouncement since he was impris­ door furninm have been taken, and will be taken, to insure that it does not WEAPON 2 (Detamble Auditorium), 7:30 p.m. Women's Basketball vs. Virginia oned for life more than a quarter of a century ago, (Reynolds Gym), free. Nelson Mandela has appealed to South Africa's The additi< happen again. admission. behind the bu First, we have asked that the system of gymnasium security be 8 p.m. SU Movie: STIR CRAZY (Detamble white rulers to move urgently toward negotiations 8 p.m. BSU Student-Faculty Talent Show for majority rule so as to save the country from "civil Leake said changed to require J.D. checks at the door, rather than patrol of (Brendle Recital Hall), admission. Auditorium), free. the gymnasium, to challenge and remove unauthorized persons. strife and ruin." future, and an That will reduce confrontation. The a~ by Mr. Mandela, who is seen by professional< Arrangements have been made for the security service to THU millions of South African blacks as their symbolic Trees wili I SUN leader, was at once insistent that blacks would at lhe profess receive ttaining in racial sensitivity from the North Carolina lebru.lt\ 4 ' , · rebru,1t 1 K - , DepanmentofHuman Resources. This will be required annual accept nothing less than majority rule and implicit! y Additionill training for the entire staff. Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). sympathetic toward whites' concerns about being laurels, will l dominated by blacks. The office also undertook early in the fall to create a student 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Video Mock Interviews would be left' advisory board. That group has been appointed by the Student 3 p.m. Faculty Recital: Pamela Howland, piano (Brendle Recital Hall), free. (Reynolda 223). the campus' 1 Government this week. It will provide an avenue for awareness • Kashrnirs Protest Abuse Theconstrl and for problems to be aired without resorting to confrontation. 5 p.m. Folk Concert: Lee Murdock, folk 11 a.m. Thursday Morning Worship: Marmi Jordan '87, Coordinator, Inter­ MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan- Several thou­ tory, the tracl A similar faculty and staff advisory group will also be insti­ singer from the Great Lakes region panofthede tuted in order that the office has the opportunity to gain the (Reynolda House), admission. Varsity Christian Fellowship (Davis sand demonstrators vowing to "liberate the Ka­ viewpoints of other parts of the university community. Racial Chapel), free. shmir Valley from Indian imperialism" thronged in Theposto 7, 9:30 p.m. SU Movie: LETHAL the capital of the Pakistani Kashmir Jan. 26 in one the Quad tor composition of the advisory boards will be an important compo­ WEAPON 2 (Detamble Auditorium), Noon Law School Federal Taxation Work­ nent. shop (Soule Conference Room), free. of the largest anti-Indian demonstrations the city A system This incident illustrates that it is not only possible, but easy, to admission. hasknown.Kashmirinationalism has been building directions wi stereotype without even realizing one. is doing so. The patterns 4 p.m. Physics Seminar: R.F. Wood, Oak fueled by rumors of atrocities against Kashmiris in said. which were fallen into here were discriminatory patterns. An Ridge National Laboratory, "Magnetic India MON interaction models of high Tc supercon­ TheKashmirpeopleweredividedbythepanition awareness of those and a sensitivity can be enhanced in the I ebru.1t1 ii ·, ' present security staff through the training which is being done, ductors" (Olin 101), free. of British India in 1947. The modem nations of but that will not solve the entire problem. Itis something we must Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). 8 p.m. Writers Reading Series: Gerald India and Pakistan, which the partition created, I·Pan2 also address as a community. Stern, poet (SFAC A102), free. have fought three wars over the former kingdom, We will seek members of the black community to be a pan of 7:30p.m. Theatre Lab Play (Ring Theatre), mostofwhichisnowonthelndiansideofthecease­ F!omPag the advisory groups. We will seek the continuing assistance of admission. 8 p.m. Art Lecture: Ruth Beesch of fire line. Wake Forest's Equal Opponunity Officer and its Minority Weatherspoon Gallery will speak on 8 p.m. SU Movie: BORN IN FLAMES "Florida Visionaries: Homer, Inness, • Rumanians Protest New Rulers Affairs Officers. We will search for ways to make the corrective (Detamble Auditorium), free. Sargent" (Reynolda House), admission. pattern a permanent part of the structure of security at Wake :Later Chris Forest. BUCHAREST, Rumania -Shouting anti-Com­ munist slogans, about20,000people marched Sun­ rrien was pn Those involved in security admit the problem and invite the TUE given first aic rest of the community to share in our efforts to learn from this _ Febnrat} h · . "'~ · day to the headquarters of the ruling Council of All inquiries should be directed to the had tried to a incident. National Salvation fora rally that revealed the wid­ Art Exhibit (SFAC Gallery). Office of Public Affairs at 759-5788. ening split over the c:ountry's political course. were found n We invitecommunityscrutiny. Wetrustthatif weare success­ was covered ful in correcting our problems, the rest of the community can learn and profit from these approaches as well.

1\ing 'Day 'DeacO:i S liop 'Iuesday, !february 6, 1990 11:00 a.m. -3:00p.m.

9'our cfass ring representative wi{{ be fiere to Foo· assist you in oriering your c{ass ring. to fre

'University Stores 'On the Campus' are ownei and operaterf 6y tfie 'University for the convenience of tfie stuaents, facu!ty, ant£ staff.

Delta Sigma Phi Fraternity congratulates Scott McDonough as the winner of the 1990 Senior Scholarship Award

Bob Weatherman, president of Delta Sigma Phi Alumni Advisory Board, presents a check for $500 to Scott ·--- McDonough. Scott was chosen by :sl.l the Alumni Advisory Board as the •IIJTsn 1990 winner. The award is based :FOOl upon a brother's contribution to the fraternity, campus participation and L••• a minimum of 2.5 GPA. This is the ...... second year the award has been presented by the AAB. •Sl•I •II 1 11TIII I• Rill...... J Old Gold and Black Friday, February 2, 1990 5

for an increase in the income that will make the burden on the operating budget less," Anderson said. He also Campus Tuition said it will costabout$2 million a year From Page 1 to maintain the425,000 square feet of FromPage 1 building space that will open on cam­ pus. This space includes theOlinPhys­ "We moved this time to begin peg- · icsl..aboratory, the Benson University tioned special monument for the amphitheater is taking place on the ging our scholarships as a percentage Center, additions to the library and Reynolda and the old Wake Forest campuses, she said. Walk­ of tuition," Anderson said. The budget Winston Hall, and the professional arliarnent ways, which will be raised on hillsides, will be built around the contains the first of a multi-stage plan center. rvachev's ~ field. for increasing partial merit scholar­ A staff member in the office of ca· aijan and The Magnolia Court, whicli serves as a parlcing area for the ships-suchas theCarl>well, Alumni, reer planning and placement will work Supreme consbUction·workers in the Benson University Center, will be and Poteat scholarships- to 50 per­ with employers on campus and stu­ 'Is on the restored as an undergraduate quad, Leake said centof tuition by the conclusion of the dents who require jobs to coordinate their employment and fmancial needs, The area will be framed by the Magnolia Patio at the rear of capital campaign, he said. amentary If approved, this plan will allow the Starling said. Attention will also be Reynolda Hall, the outdoor eating patio on the east side of the given to students' career goals when alchange, Benson Center, Tribble Hall, Babcock Hall and CarsWell Hall. annual base stipends of such scholar­ ships to rise $500 a year until they they apply for such positions, he said. ecession- ·A fountain h3s been suggested for the area below Magnolia reach 50 percent of tuition. Th~ plan Starling said there has been a long­ ulting the will Patio, she said. The undergraduate quad be crisscrossed will not be 1-etroactive, however, and term notion within tlile administtation ~eated the with walkways, and additional sitting areas will be provided. •,Czecho- those merit scholars who receive that the number of native North Caro­ Leake said construction will begin on the professional center $2,500 or $3,000 a year as their base linians at Wake Forest should stay in id that the this fall and will take about tWo years to complete. The center award will keep that amount, Ander­ the 30- to 35-percent range. capital, to will be located between the water tower and the indoor tennis son said. Future partial merit scholars ''There has been some discussion mational- courts. also will not see an increase in the base that the national and North Carolina tsthatwas Mtertheprofessional center is completed, some undergradu­ amounts they receive as freshmen. constituency has expanded just beyond werin the ate departments and classes will be moved to Babcock and William Starling, the director of the borders of the state. I think it also Carswell Halls, Leake said. · admissions, said scholarships should includes a category of candidates who There has also been a proposal for an additional classroom increase along with tuition, but the are from contiguous states ... for in­ rnment building between the two halls, she said. merit-based stipends have not in­ stance, students from small towns,from <·· Thequadbetween TribbleHallandB(:nson University Center creased because a finite amount of middle-income families, whose par­ n his first will have elevated sitting~ and additional dark green out- money is available. Starling said the ents did not attend college," he said. as inlpris- door fwniture, Leake said. · stipends should increase as additional Beginning in the fall, 1988, the admis­ nturyago, The addition to the library will extend over the parking lot money becomes available during the sions office has sponsored several 11 Africa's capital campaign and from tuition receptions for potential students behind the building, she said. ~gotiations revenues. throughout North Carolina, he said. iom"civil ·Leake said cars' will not be allowed to park on streets in the "The university is very concerned to The admissions office uses a variety future, and an additional parking area will be created at the new preserve a policy of need-blind admis­ of resources to recruit students of di­ .s seen by professional center. , sions," Starling said. Anderson said verse backgrounds, Starling said. These rsymbolic Trees will be added to the parking lots behind the chapel and thepresidenthasafflrmedaneed-blind resources include: the College Board's ;ks would at the professional center for aesthetic purposes, she said. admissions policy, and the university search services, present students, Iimplicitly Additionill trees, such as hollies, maples, dogwoods and attempts to furnish students with suffi­ alumni-in-admissions representatives bout being laurels, will be planted all over campus. She said the campus cient funds to fmish school. and admissions counselors who travel would be left "naked" ifan oak blight occurred, because most of The proposed increase in the alloca­ to metropolitan high schools. ''Current the campus' trees are oaks. tion for financial aid will apply toward students and faculty are our number­ college grants, merit, partial merit and one seller, though we ha~e not capital­ The construction ofthe student center, Olin Physical Labora­ need-based scholarships, federal and ized on this in a structured way," he •eral thou­ tory, the track stadium and the addition to Winston Hall are all state money, and the establishment of said. te the Ka­ part of the design, Leake said. · a centralized work program. Holder Anderson said revenues from the hrongedin . The post office, bookstore and Deacon Shop will remain on Pinball Wizard said Starling requested a line item in tuition increase will also contribute to ,.26inone the Quad to retain student activity there, she said. Freshman Jason Ma'luf polishes his pinball-playing skills in Davis Lounge. the proposed budget to replace some the first of a three-step plan to increase ns the city A system of signs that will identify buildings and give loans with grants and scholarships that faculty salaries to bring them to the top ~nbuilding directions will be placed around campus this semester, Leake...______..,.. ______;... ______. do not have to be repaid in order to 20 percent of the faculty salary rating ashmiris in said. continue getting 30 to 35 percent of of the American Association of Uni­ North Carolinians. versity Professors(AAUP). Anderson he partition Anderson and Carlos Holder, the said that, in previous years when Wake nations of him didn't help. I sent him to see the her "Feliz Navidad." She asked who be received; we were treated as sav­ controller, said students should not Forest increased faculty salaries,so did m created, (·Panama chaplain. I felt sorry for him. we were and I told her, "We're young, iors.IneversawaPanarnaniancivilian expect tuition increases at lower rates comparable institutions, and "our posi­ r kingdom, Besides the sergeants in my platoon tough and good looking. We're the whodidn'twaveorsmileandthankus during the years of the capital cam­ tion (in the AAUP rating) was not fthecease- F!omPage2 and myself, everyone else was be­ Commando Raiders (the Company C for being there. paign. "I do not foresee a decrease (in getting any better." tween 18 and 20. When I was an 18- motto)." She laughed, agreed and tuition's rate of increase) until (the Wake Forest's rating by the AAUP year-oldfreshmanatWake,l was more thankedAmericaforwhatwehaddone. conclusion of the capital campaign). is important because "it is the only Rulers concerned with beer and girls than the That is why we put the expected 10 comparison we have (for faculty sala­ PDF (Panamanian Defense Force). percent increase in the annual bulle­ This lady and her two children re- ries), and we have agreed to use it. The anti-Com­ :LaterChristmasmorning,oneofmy tin," Anderson said two most important factors in academic nien was pretty shaken up. He had This was the general reaction of the mindedmeofmyownfamily. I hadn't "We are affording (increases in fi­ trched Sun­ Panamanian people. They brought us spoken to them since the deployment excellence are excellence in the faculty Council of given first aid to the two wounded and About noon I was walking around nancial aid and faculty salaries and the and in the students. The increases in had tried to assist the two others who our area checking security when I saw gifts, cooked food for us, brought us had begun five days before. Though I upkeep of new buildings) out of the ledthewid­ ice water and asked us to marry them. couldn't call, I wished them a Merry tuition go toward these," Anderson :ourse. were found to be dead. As a result he amotherwitb twochildren.Shewished operating budget. If we have an in­ said. Resaid these factors are reflected was covered with blood Talking to me "Merry Christmas" and I wished I was worried about the way we would Christmas. crease in the endowment, we can hope in the goals of the capital campaign.

presents The Carolina Ticket Bash VVednesday,Feb.7 Line up and performances in East Lounge

Midnight - Ticket sign-up begins. 1:00 am- Uve comedy performance: Guilty Children 2:30am- Alien We promise to keep you awake with 4:00am- Aliens these Sigourney Weaver thrillers. 6:30 am- Douglmuts Hot drinks and snacks available all night. Footlong Steak and Cheese Sub. If you want a sub that's hot, you want Bring your own pillow! to get to Subway for our footlong Steak and Cheese. It's 12 inches of fresh-baked bread crammed full with delicious sirloin steak and melted cheese, all topped off with your choice ol Subway's free fixins. The University Clubroom Ymmmmmm. Not that's some hot stuff. presents Imitation Fun Night COLLEGE PLAZA-Across from the Coliseum 722-1400 Airbands, Imitators, & Lip Sync REYNOLDA ROAD- Old Town 924-tl009 $50 prize WALKERTOWN-center Stage Shopping Center 595-2131 Owned and Operated by the Fahning Family Drop by the Student Union office before 4:00 today for details and sign-up sheets.

Lethal Weapon 2

·------~·------~ :sl~oooFF ~= ::sl.oooFF ~§= : 1 1111 S1UK I CIIBE ~"~ II lilT STEAK I CIHSE """',::.,.. 1 : FOOll.u.lll : : FOOTlONG StiJ : L--········~··••••JL ••••••••••••••••• J ~-~------~--~~-·------~ tS1• • 00DFF. ~~-=~=-..:. :.:Sl11 • 000FF ·""~":'-=~::. :1 Fri & Sat 7:00, 9:30, 12:00 I lilT mAIC I CI&SE .....,::.... lilT I1EAK &CIIBE -,:.=.... !. Rlm.ONGU :: FOOJLONGSIII : Sunday 7:00,9:30 "' $1.50 ~-··••••••••••••••JL ••••••••••••••••• J•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~•

'· 2, 1990 Dormitory Freshmen Residents: OLD GOLD AND BLACK Tuition . Percentage of the The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University ·cost Founded in 1916 In-State and Out-of-State Students

20 Year Year In-State St EDITORIALS Out-of-State Percent Class Total Trend 1988 Males 104 305 25.4% 29.6% Females 125 239 34.3% ....,y 1987 Males 99 296 25.1% 30.9% ,.~ Increase Females 116 185 38.5% tuition and ra• he board of trustees approved a 10.2-pcrcent Males 98 Monds increase in undergraduate tui Lion for the 1990- 1986 374 20.8% 31.6% Females 153 home, T 91 academic year Jan. 26 at armind 9:30a.m., 170 47.4% passiOJ and everyone received word through the mail by II tion. a.m., thanks to the efficient post office. 1985 Males 100 327 23.4% 29.7% Well At this time, discussing where this money will go Females 131 221 37.2% is difficult, because the trustees will not approve a tbesdl budget until March. Even then the general public Soun:e: ConttolleiaOffice Source: Admissions Office . teally! (namely the students and faculty) will probably not loans;: be able to get a complete copy of iL Four major And expenditures were mentioned by Vice PresidentJohn Forest' Anderson: increased faculty salaries, an increase in i'De.OO.ums fro THE ED:iTOR. ·. ·.. ···. · • · ... , .. .·. •. . ••. · ·.. ·... feelsst financial aid, the rising inflation rate and increasing f • .: • ~ ' • • • ' • .. • • ' ' latest !I 1 0 costs of maintenance and housekeeping due to the ~ ' '' , : •• , • •• ~' ,• " .~ '• I c ' ' J 1 • • • ' .., • ' • • • ' • • ' lbalb new buildings. lasty~ not be upset that I took one of the many Gentility is one custom I hope will President Reagan was shot People stayed It is unquestionably true that a university will have pa~g Appeal? Not Hardly open spa ·es in the lot, I parked in the never be watered down by feminism glued to television sets and called home to (· increasing expenses. Inflation makes it impossible to closest o en space to South. especially in the South. If, as Miss Melton see if family members were all right. It is operate the school on a static budget. Administrators If you are one of the many students of Not ir.rending to be there for more than might prefer, we rid ourselves of these Democrats and Republicans prayed, provid have also pointed out that 425,000 new square feet Wake Forest helplessly irate over the ice­ fifteen minutes, I turned my flashers on customsofsirnpiepoliteness we would be "Don't let this happen again." 8UiaCt will be opening up on campus. Because of this addi­ cold appeals process, you probably have and left my trunk open and proceeded to left with 'men and women' rather than The people of Dallas paid a high price abigb tional space, a portion of the money will go to many more stories similar to mine. The get my bags. Upon my return, about five 'ladies and gentlemen.' I hope this has not for JFK 's death. For years afterward, the winnel maintenance and housekeeping. Granted, more money fact is that rules are rules, but I did not minutes later, yes, I found the ticket left already happened. heart attack and suicide rates were triple wanLl will be needed for these two reasons. realize that the student handbook was on my windshield so proudly displayed that of the natural average. Around the the ere Another reason stated for the tuition hike was a written in blood. Can you guess whose? by one of the security officers. .Jimmy Broughton world, the mere mention of Dallas caused planned increase of faculty salaries. This year's in­ Upon reading that fine piece of litera­ Did theofficerrealize what I was doing? people to say, "Oh, that's where Kennedy crease is to be the frrststepof a five-year plan to raise ture, the one about parklng on campus, I Could he not see that I was not taking the was shot." Think about the implications salaries and attract higher quality faculty. Fine. realized that I could avoid parking fines last space for the next day student who Give Idea a Chance for Wake Forest had Bush or Dukakis To the credit of the administration, an increase of by parking at Biscuitville (lot #437) and wouldenterthelot?Common sense would been shot while here for the presidential A 22 percent in financial aid is being planned. The logic walking to campus. But I, like many of have told him that I was loading the car to debate. .- -. For several years, one of the most of raising tuition to increase financial aid, which is you (too many of you with cars, actually), go home; but I guess I forgot that I am Assassination is nota game. It disrupts common topics discussed on these pages needed partly due to the increase in tuition, is still decided to try my luck finding a space on talking about university security, and any the democratic process by not allowing has been the o{iening of a university very vague. Accompanying last year's tuition hike campus to park. common sense that they might have is different opinions to be heard. Public ·T was the promise of increased financial aid. In a Several years ago on Thanksgiving rarely used with students, (but only with clubroom-a place where students could officials should be chosen by the ballot go on the weekends to relax, find quality auedl December, 1989column, Stephen Dillingham showed weekend I got up the courage to park my high ranking faculty officials who park box, not a bullet. That is the essence of entertainment and drink responsibly if totlChc that financial aid increase to be a financial sleight of car in an orange space, and with my four­ along "no parking" and "fire lane" zones.) democracy. they areo1denough. Unlike many of these Our hand, amounting to only 1.2 percent more aid per way flashers on, proceeded to help a friend This attitude surprises me, and that a !tis appalling that Wake Forest Univer­ discussions, this one led to action,and last Co., VI student. load an amplifier into my car. We were quality university such as Wake Forest sity (which employs a president's son fall the University Clubroom opened. UptoV~ gone no more than TEN minutes, and you cannot provide a better service to its stu­ whose father was the object of two assas­ Plans are also currently in the works to increase When it flfSt became operational, there biand can guess what I found under my wind­ dents. Reluctantly, I paid the $1 Ooffense, sination attempts) should condone such a such scholarships as the Carswell, Poteat and Alumni were some problems, especially with the smoke to reflect a percentage of tuition rather than a set shield wipers. I saw something with wings knowing it was not worth the frustra"li.on recreational activity. At the very least, it is cigare on its feet dash out of sight, but could not of getting involved with the processes of speed of service and the atmosphere. We tacky, and in the light of our very violent amount. While this change is welcome, the planned saw complaints on these pages fora couple able Ill catch up with it. university security. American history, it is highly insensitive. alterations arc not retroactive. The impression many of weeks. Another major complaint was smner To make this short, I went through the The students of Wake Forest Univer­ If students here are that desperate for a fun scholarship students received was unfavorable. It that the days and times that it was open PlaJ appeals process and was shown in the sity are tired of the senseless and careless activity, might I suggest a stimulating looks as if the the university is more interested in were not very consistent- students could ofoub handbook exact! y where it said that I auitude of the security officers and hope conversation? attracting new students rather than assuring that the never be sure if it was worth the time to advoc could not park there like that for more that they will, in the future, be altered to current students may continue their studies. walk all the way across campus, only to editor than FIVE minutes. My note read DE­ include a little common sense and under­ Peggy Beach This brings us back to the oft-asked question, find that all the lights were off and there alsoj< ''What is happening to the middle-class students here NIED ... and have a Happy Thanksgiv­ standing. "The ing. Someone's turkey that year was $20 was nobody home. at Wake Forest- the middle-class students from As it turned out, many students re­ Cable Detrimental locall North Carolina and surrounding states, termed as the bigger than mine. Anonymous Next issue- fire extinguishers. As you ceived these impressions ofthe Clubroom Excuse me if this seems to be a stupid (blac' 'historical constituency' ?"The administration cites and never went to see for themselves. Sad hoWC1 the changes in the scholarships in its effort to keep have recently noticed, many of us have question, but what exactly does cable these handy devices hanging invitingly to say, it happens that many of those television have to do with us as college On this constituency at Wake Forest. However one can Policy Is Inflexible would-be critics are the same people who munit see from the graph on the far rightofthis page that this on our suite walls, screaming, "Take me! students?Cable with HBO in every room? Discharge me! Pleeeaaassee!" A friend argued so persuasively to open it in the Wake is sounding more like an exclusive mostc constituency has decreased as tuition continued its The legal affairs office will soon be re­ first place." Aclubroom is S\)mething that rights meteoric rise over the years. three floors up had one emptied under his country club rather than an oj>en-minded, door into his room on not one, but two, leasing to the Old Gold and Black a pre­ the campus desperately needs, but only if forward-looking university. We already single Price is a very important factor in deciding on a occasions - several hundred dollars pared response to an incident in the Rey­ we can get our beers within two minutes have a "Polo" field and the "fashionable" Bla college. It is on of the first things that prospective damage. Recently someone noticed that noldsGymnasium involving a law school of asking for them." Granted, the service Magnolia Room. What is the next step ProblE students investigate. was not good, and the hours were not thef(J ours had been discharged also; a few days student who charged the University Secu­ after cable: saunas i~ every dorm and Many members of the "historical constituency" later we got our fines. I could not resist rity personnel with racist intent. Although consistent-we agree that there is no point room service? being make a quick comparison to nearby state universities trying the appeals process again ... DE­ it is University Security policy tluit an in going out to a place which isn 'tany fun. Here at the end of Silas Creek Parkway As: and cannot justify spending an additional $8,500 a NIED ... read your student handbook­ officer may not contact the press, as an This semester, those of us who are we want to create our own little isolated natior year on a Wake Forest education. denied especially when not immediately alumnus of the Undergraduate School, I involved in this project are working very world of comfort and luxury while there is conse Wake Forest has long been committed to recruiting reported. feel that it is my duty toward the Wake hard to correct those and other problems. a world outside which demands our atten­ group southern middle-class students and providing them I guess I will add that to my listofthings Forest community to put myself in· the ARA has been made aware that the serv­ tion. The education we seek is not a effort with quality educations. Implicit in this policy is the to do in the morning: shower, shave, breach by submitting my knowledge of ice was not adequate at the beginning of commodity or one more possession. In­ For notion that these students give a distinctive character brush teeth, and ... uh ... check the flre the gymnasium policy and the Legal the semester, and those of you who went stead it is meant to open our eyes and give make to the university, which is a great part of its appeal. extinguisher for possible discharge. Affair's attempt to side-step responsibil­ there later in the semester should have us the means to effectively fulfill an obli­ womc Recent and future tuition increases close Wake Whoever installed these must think that ity for their own policy. seen noticeable improvement. As far as gation we have to the world. We then withiJ Forest's doors to many of those long-valued students. we have nothing better to do than station Nevertheless, I do not take to attacks the schedule, we will have one with at realize we are global citizens. But here on on tiM a 24 hour watch on them for possible upon my character ,and it is wholly unfair least the open dates by the end of next University Parkway, in Winston-Salem, _pregn Members of the board of trustees have their day week, and those will be available at the jobs, no matter what they decide about Wake Forest. trigger -happy intruders; and being on first for the university security department to North Carolina, USA, we want cable TV. Ne1 Information Desk. As soon as all the dates They seem to realize this and do not carefully con­ floor Kitchin, we get a lot of these. Why vicariously take the blame for a policy Of course, you may argue that cable has ketini that did not originate within ourselves. are programmed, we will provide a calen­ sider the welfare of the university. could these devices not have been in­ wonderful things like CNN, etc. Sure, but Whet! stalled like normal ones behind protec­ Thelegal affairs office implies that our dar of those events, and until then there some students do not know most current marla The trustees of this university should remind them­ officers operated with "a pattern" ofbeing should be no lack of publicity telling you given selves that the "national" reputation of a school is tive glass instead of being installed with events from the outside world. With HBO, more suspicious of blacks than of whites what performers and events are in the how many will watch the news? True, Uptm only as good as the quality and diversity of its "Free-:-Take One" signs on them? Maybe works. · · . . the school was looking for more ways to in checking identification at the gym. I entertainment has a necessary place and Bill students. Our goal this semester is to make the raise fines. was a gym security guard for nearly two cable in the dorm lounges would be great. - _Maga I wonder if the school has a box specifi­ years. The legal affairs office dictates Clubroom a place where students can ·But in every room? It sounds like a Holi­ peppe cally labelled "Denied" to check when directly its policy to the security office. have a good time without the disadvan­ day Inn. Some of us do not want or need invil1 handing out its requests for alumni dona­ My operation in the gym was consistent tages of fraternity parties and off-campus cable TV and yet we may be forced to pay mind, establishments. We believe that there is a OLD GOLD AND BLACK tions. with this policy, and there was no racial for it regardless. ·_playei bias in removal of unauthorized persons need for such an atmosphere on this When you, the student, are asked to from the building. This goes for my suc­ campus. Those of you who believe the Alan Pringle Rick Schroeder vote on the prospect of cable TV, consider cessors who had this duty for which Uni­ sameshouldcomeseewhatwe'vegotthis what you want Wake Forest to be: a Editor in Chief versity Security has been held liable. I semester. The Clubroom cannot be suc­ country club or a university. Rampant Stupidity? forewarned my department of the possi­ cessful if nobody goes there, and we are Mike McKinley bilityofracistcomplaintsduringthe spring confident that the events of the upcoming Will Coley Managing Editor The parking ticket which I received on 1989 semester. semester will make it an enjoyable place November22, 1989, wasreluctantlypaid Now that the legal affairs office has a· to go. Hopefully, you will all come see for News: Rocky Lantz,editor;jennie Vaugh!\ associate editor; because of the lack of time necessary to problem with a policy that has been docu­ yourselves. Correction Charissa Wong, assistant editor; Candace Thomsen, deal with University Security and their Worldwide editor; Elliot Berke, production assistant. mented to be flawed since 1978, the blame dent] appeals process. Both previous experi­ is being passed down the chain of com­ Seth Kahn and Mark Ford Kimberly D.Lucas' s letter, which was Editorials:Amanda Eller, editor; Ashley Hairston, assistant ence with University Security and the mand to finally rest at the line level. This Co-chairmen printed in last week's issue, contained talkill editor; Marne Arthaud, production assistant. pears general attitude of fellow Wake students is vintage bureaucracy. Clubroom Entertainment Committee· errors in the last two paragraphs. These Perspectives: Kelly Greene, editor. has portrayed that the ignorance and in­ paragraphs should have read as follows: Hall! Sports: Clint Pinyan and Matt Smith, ed itor>;Clark Pinyan, competence of Wake Forest University David A. Norton My personal relationship and living Ma production assistant. Security is hard to change. This incident Class of 1986 Murder is No Game with two white women has made me and" Arts and Entertainment julie !loutwell, editor;Jay Woodruff, was no different. The ticket which I re­ Nightwatchman aware of my own prejudices. I found that mystc assistant editor. ceived was for being parked in the day Words are powerful. The truth of this I, too,carried my share of stereotypes and unoff Copy Editing: Harriet Chapman, head copy editor; David student lot adjacent to South Hall. Al­ oft-quoted maxim was brought home to that not every white person from Bir­ out o Styers, Dianne Kueck and Pat Auld, copy editors. though I admit to being parked in this lot, Quite a Tiring Trend me this week when I saw signs around mingham wants to keep black students CreQJ Compu terStaff: Stephen Dillingham, computer manager; I feel the circumstance for the issuance of campus advertising "The Assassination out of predominantly white schools. I Thl David Stradley, graphics editor. the ticket displays the general apathy of Marissa Melton in her editorial last Game," which offered me the chance to have learned that the differences between they Production: john V. Sinclair, production manager; Alison the security orficers. week stated that we in the South are "kill my friends." The sign had red ink blacks and whites (sorry, Mr. Barnett, but Iemel Preston, office manager;john Gray, advertising produc­ Being the day before the Thanksgiving "clinging to old outdated values and be­ splotches designed to look like blood. there are differences) are to be appreci­ tion assistant. jay Womack, production assistant. secom holiday, many students such as myself liefs" that somehow "betray an uncon­ Now, I know that most of the students ated. These are not differences in mental they'! Photography: Steve Lar>en and janet Ramey,editors. usually make several trips to their car scious prejudice.". on this campus are conservative Republi­ faculties, but differences in attitude and I did Business: jeff Hagen, business manager; Steve Combs, with their luggage. Since my car was Essentially she said that it is sexist for canswhoaretooyoungtoremember John socialization. undel advertising manager. parked in !he farthest comer of the lot women to expect men to change their F. Kennedy,RobertKennedyand Martin It is dimcult and sometimes painful to behind South, I decided to bring my car Luther King Jr. However, I am sure that u TheO/dGoldandBlack. C:tlC:OUI'O!ge.hcd each Fnday during the school year, except come for classes because half of the lot one extreme. I would only hope that in the Hotel while his aides frantically pointing writer for the errors- the editors. sepd dunng exarnmat1ons, summer, o1nd hol1d .~y pcnod~ by Newspaper Publishers wasempty.Now if there were only one or midst of what seems to be a continuation to the direction of the shots; a million Inc. of Wanston-5.ll~m.. :-.J.C two spaces available, I would not have of the women's movement there would be Beatles fans outside the Dakota holding Un Op1mons t>xpr('SS('d m thlS newspaper Jre lh<'~ .... f the ed11on.1l staff or con· Opfi.lionated? Interested in tnbutorsto ~he paper and do nor n('tessanly ri'lll'u the op1nionsofthe stlldf'nt taken one of the day student's spaces. a place left for some of these so called candles and singing "Imagine." issue body, fo~cuity, ~;taff or ~drrumstration of Wake Forest Uni\:ersity. But, feeling that any day student would outdated traditions. I alsorememberhow tim estopped when . ep;i.\on~twritin ? ~aJ1.S.280•. unfa1 isoril 1990 7• s:

1assTotal 29.6%

30.9%

31.6%

29.7%

iss ions Office

eoplestayed lledhometo (· re all right. ms, prayed, a high price 'terward, the s were triple Around the lallas caused ~reKennedy implications or Dukakis presidential Attention·for 'Uptown' Shows Bias e. It disrupts woweebago, ~Ieftbandcolumnon,tbis page 1ot allowing · ~ the. issue of Martin ~Luther IGng•s Nick Cianciosi . ~ard. Public T birthdaybeingsingledoutasabtackholiday.ID >Y the ballot an editorialla9t week an event was: mentioned that ======. e essence of totldlescmasiali18r occurrence witbil.ltliehealth~ Many majorsportingeventsare backed by theadver- Our benefactot-so-dear. the R.J:~ Reynolds Tobacco · lising of one of the major tobacco companies. Gralited. >rest Univer- Co •• was planning to test market anew cigarette Dilmed opposition to sucb.ads in print media is rising. but why . sident's son UptowninPhiladelphiabeginninginFebroary. The new were they allowed to rise to silcb promine~ even )f two assas- biand is not a high-tech gimmick like. Premier, the dominance, within the blue-collar lifestyle in the first ~done such a smokeless wonder that failed misembly. It is justa plain place? ery least, it is cigarette •. Even so, it has createdasensationofconsider·_ The problem is not this limited. Given the increasing very violent able magnitude. Why? It is aimed squarely at black em;. health awareness in this country and the resultant de­ 1insensitive. smners. crease in tobacco usage. producers are going overseas to :rateforafun Planstointroducetheproductwerescuttledintheface find· new mmtets. In the Far East, coun.tries such~ stimulating ofoutcriesbyminorityandcivilrightsgroupsandbealth JapanandSouthKoreahaveproventobeveryprofitable advocatesinPbiladelphia.AsmentionedinMr.Horton~s marketsindeed. 'eggyBeach editorial, the Secretary of Health and Human Services Therealtravesty, though.istheunbridledforaybythe also joined the effort. tobaccocompaniesintoThirdWorldcounlries.Govem- The major problem was basically summed up by one mentseagerfortaxrevenuetakeminimalstepStocontrol tental localleaderwben she said the product was"damagingto distribution and advertising. Radio and television are . "I CAN'T ·HElP tiT, .. , . MY f'.tmiER.WORKS FOR 11£ GOVERNMENT I" o be a stupid (blacks) as !l people." No specific part of the ad copy. . often fair game for spotS hawking cigarettes. · does cable however. was mentioned as being offensive. Citizens of these countries are not nearly as aware as 1s as college On tbe health side, opponents claimed the blacltcom- we are of the riskS these pioducts pose. Those nations ,every room? munity suffers "disproportionally" from~. but have few. if any. consumer or health advocates who an exclusive most oftheanention was focused on ministers and civil could change this. . pen-minded, rights leaden who claimed that blacks were imfairly . So why does the ~paratively small test marketing Refinem.efit. . ·- Adds to Character. . We already singled ouL . . effort behind UpiOwnreccivemoreattention than large- fashionable" . Blacks are but one group touched by the smoking scale international distribution? Rpare for the shock wave~! am about to :he next step problem. Other groups are singled out and~ to by Uptown was singled out because it was aimed at a liveuptomy~onagain.l abouttokick Ashley H~irston ry dorm and the tobacco c:ompany. Their damaging products are nuu:ketsegment that was black. Is marlceting a cigarette P being peddled to other vulnemble market segments. . ·to one group less ethical than marketing a cigarette to dog. anothersl(leping.ormaybe~ sh dsaydrowsy, ======eekParkway Asyouiead this, they are beingWbistedacrossin~- aitotheron the~ of the group's race? Lastweek,MarissaMeltonbrougqtopsomerather. Valkyrie attack you for saying "huMANity" or little isolated nalionalbonlerstopeopleill-equipPedtodealwithlheir Statisticsdopointtobighercancerratesamongblacks. humorous and interesting points ~ the subject of "MANkind." God forbid that you say something like wbile there is consequences. Yet marketing efforts aimed. 81 these butwberehumanlifeisconcemed,nwnbers should not feminism(lcannotbeiievelactnallyprinted that word "The guys and GIRLS went to the mall,.-you might ndsouratten- groups do not seem to receive the same attention this matter. This was not the crux of the oppOsition•s arp- in a column of mine). Miss Melton has uncovered a get an Amazon•s arrow through your throat. ~k is not a effort has received. ments anyway. . mther intriguing side to this issue: ~expectations of I get accused of sexism every so often. and it really >ssession. In- For example. two ne'Y brands, CaJ?ri and Malibu. Cigarettesareequallydamagingtoallpeople. Thereis many Women of the liberated, "l·need·men-only-for- shocks the Jiving daylights out of me. I have enough eyes and give make no bones about bemg targeted directly at young no question of degrees or of race' here. and there should basic-sPecies-Jll'OP88lliPl,. variety.'Jt does~ that trouble dealing with people from security to pub row 'ulflll an obli- women;Incideotally,thisistheonlypopulationsegment notbeone.. thewomen'smovemenl,l\asgoue~qiilteoutofhand,or whoareprejudicedagainstblackswithoutcookingup rld. We then within ~cotinttyin whichcigarette~ption~still . The civil rights groups of Philadelphia have wrongly . 81le8stbeyond thew~ Poinwfsensibility. waystotakeawayolberpeople•srigbts.Ireall.ydonot s. But here on on the nse •. Also, the fact that smoking can complicate · mixed racism into the witches' brew of this problem. Icllnjustseemyfemilefriendspgfortheirguns wantanynastyresponsesaboutmy"subconsciously,. nston-Salem, . pregnancy JS no secret . Health authorities chimed in obediently with the nom- now.solsupPosclshould~abi~1iorallofmylife sexist thoughts either; 1 hate pop psychology. You antcableTV. Nevertheless,' these brands have passed the·test mar- . bers about bigher caneer rates among blacks; and the I have been reared in the. great (altbough somewhat knowquitewellwhenyouhaveaprej~dice.andiknow that cable has keting stage and ha~e moved into mass distribution. media turned up the heat. confusing) tradition of ~hivalry. Whether or not I these snap judgments of men are ridicrilOWI. Women etc. Sure, but Where were the media and health forces when the~ We should not allow this to happen. The health prob­ practiceitcorrectlylcannotsay.butltfunk:Ihavecome probablylosehalfofdteirpotentialfriendsbywriting most current ~arketsfortbese~~were.stakedou~?The~uon ·lemsassociatedwithcigarettesareeveryone•sconcem. close enough to ·~ ~ su~jedt. Strang~ly • the off men for no real reason. d.WithHBO, gtven, if any, was miDimal compared with that gtven to Other groups should be given equal time in the battle womenofl,lly~y~tttto~as.wayoflife,and Yes. Miss Melton. you are quite right. This is the news? True, against these products. . .I~ntothinktt~.,methirigtq.one sc~ter. South and old habits do die bard. As long as we ary place and _uptown. . . ·· · Blue-collar white males.a-e ancllber popular market. n....~.:~- 1:-a;.w.ill et .,..,.; .. tu .__ • • .,..,,..., Whil~ I was learning t!tese ~tl~anly tralts. the Southemers are supposed. to be stubboiD. h(Jwever, I ould be great. li.A'A-...:-..n • to· · .. ~...... e th ·· _. ..v' staliSbC known tl? God or man, For men also. the idea of a cWsic role adds some­ 1as made me and were either very impressed or very disgusted. This narrow h"beral dogma" and that they are "open-minded ~~en~mtoeverycloselyknitgroupofmen thing. No woman or man should~ subjected tO a :s. I found that mysterious stack of papers is none other than the second to all viewpoints, as all of us should be.'• (unagmea~~~r-no.o1fense. guys), and narrow-minded. beer-guzzling. erode barbarian who .ereotypes and statts b~~g ~ucal ~el! and candi~ buries himself in ridiculous machismo. Humankind is unofficialundergroimdnewspaperevertotunnelitsway · I recently read on a desk in one of my classes that ~ver an 1ssue lik~ abortion {speaki~ of the ~ru<>!' meant to be much more than it has made itself. and :on from Bir- out on to the conservative campus of Wake Forest -Cream Cheese is "merely an attempt to be the liberal >lack students 1• JSSUe, ~Y act as ifall 'women have~ agree With theJr radical groups like the one Miss Melton ridicules Cream Cheese. rebels at a conservative institution." Funny, I thought pro-choice stance). . · (thankfully) make us a lot less than we could be. ite schools. I The prob~ with undezground newspapers is that this was a liberal arts institution. Liberal, according to Ithasreachedthepomtwbereyouc!imnotevenspeak · · , ~nces between they are often misinterpreted and misunderstood. I Webster: "designed to develop general cultural inter­ the King's or English witliout having some Hairston is a sophomore. lr. Barnett, but remembethearingaStudentcommentafter"theCheese's" ests." . . to be appreci- second issue, "Well I respect what they're doing, but WboeverwrotethlspearlofwisdombasanobvioUsty nces in mental tbey•re doing it in the wrong way."I am no expert, but confoseddefinitionofwhataliberalis.Iamj~asmuch n attitude and I did not know there was a wrong way to produce an a Republican as George Bush, but I still know the underground paper. difference between those that rebel and those that ate mes painful to Underground papers are supposed to fire up the open-minded. it is necessary I. Racism must reader, slap him in the face. and make him ·so angry that All of us, Republicans and Democra!S, libemls and le must realize be begins to really think about what be has read and conservatives. should remain open-minded to all opin· ;, black people respond. They specialize in honest opinions and unique -ions, even if they do differ from our own. That is what . A friend once outlooks, not bland. impersonal articles and features. In college is supposed to teach us . no matter what this aspect, C.ream Cheese , with its decisive and unique So next time you see the immortal cow looking up at am inclined to style, has more than succeeded in my eyes. · you from the pagesofCreamCheese.pick up a copy and The staff of Cream C~ese independently publishes read iL If you like it. write a letter to the editors telling wlogies to the the paper with its own money. The only compensation them so. If you despise it or are even offended by it. do ~editors. thatitn:ceivesisfromtbe~nsivelettersthats!Ddents thesame. , send in after every issue. · · Whether you lcive or hate Cream Cheese, however, at !rested in Unfortunarely, the staff slated 81 the end of the last · least show it the respect it deserves. · issue that response has been very limited. favorable or Cal1S.280~ unfavorable.MaybethisisthereasonwbyCream6'heese . . isorilytbe~undergroundpaperevertosurf8ceat BerkeisafresJo.rnaJt. ·, ·' OLD GOLD AND BLACK ERSPECTIVES 8 .-Friday, February 2, 1990 0: -Frid Reyn-olda House Gets Renovations -

ByTaJ ·$5.5 Million Canipaign Announced Old Golll By Keny GreeDe Paspcctivcs Pditor . Wal suffer~ hesmeUsofbreSkrastwaftinguptbcslaitcaseandtheSOwtctaofvillagcrsalreadyal·wOJtwouldbaveawabned ofNor guestsofRichardJoshuaandKatharineSmithReynoldsin 1917, theyeartbeymovedintoReynoldaHouse,thcir Chape Tnewly-finished country bungalow. · . . · · , . game; TodaythehouseboastsAniericanworksofartand.educaiionalprogramainsteadofguesta. Wake:J;fom~tUniversity,. Demo which now owns the adjoining Reynolda Village, hu developed a summer an comsc with the museum. ·, TarH · Next January the buzzing of drills and jackhammers will teplacc dOceaas, or m~ guides, while c:mPenters · they\1 renovate Reynolda House, insl8lling an environmental coatrol systein 10 jlrotectils c:ontents. · playez The museum will lock its doors, but its programs will comin~J!', and its most ~t painlingS willgo on tour. Fou '~ Barbara B. Millhouse, the president of the board of directors of Reynold& HoUSe, Museum of Amezicau Art, · theclll · announced a $5.5 million fund-raising campaign Jan. 23 to pay for the improvements. . . . into811 L.M. Baker Jr., the president and chief executive officer ofWachoviaBankandTrust Co., was named the chairman five. F 1 of the campaign, the first in the museum's 22-year history. · · · thega · Two of Wake Forest's·administrators are also on: the sleeting committee: JoimP. AnderSon, the vic:e president for ' administration and planning, and G. William Joyner Jr., the vice piesidcnt for DDivetsity relations. · · Baker said that gifts and pledges from the museum board, the Mary Reynolds Babcock ind Z. Smith Reynolds foundations, and individuals have met more than half the C41DPBign's goal. · ThecommitteeplanstocampaignfordonationsinHighPoint, 'l'honudvilleand.Grcensboro;thenappealtonational foundations, Baker said. · · - . John West, the acting collections manager, said more tban$~ million will be spent on the renovations and more than $2 million will be used to set up an endowment fund to m&intain the new systems. · . The first renovations should start in September, the same month that a group ofpaintings will start a country-wide

11 . Xrk ... ex;::d42 paintings will tra~el to Florida, California, New YOJt, Tennessee, Texas and Dlinois before returning · Reynolda House wiU close next January for renovations to maintain its coUection of paintings, prints an~ . . . . sculptures. - to an unproved Reynolda House. Tbe landscapes and portraits ~the mtd- 18thcenturytothe.present.hesaid. ______. ___ .. ______Some of the ~artists represente,(ib the collection are Jolm Sfugleiriil Copley, Georgia O'Keefe and Andrew Wyedt. · Mi1lbouse said: "Tbe imponanceof tbis noovation is to meet pro&ssional museum standards. and it aJso provides an opportunity for the c:oiJeclion to gain national visibilitY...... When the works are emptied from the museum, carpen1m wi1l restore the interior and exterior of the 73-year-old bOuse, enclose a semi-cin:ulaf pon:h facing Lake KathariJie to fonn a new lecture room, and add a new n!ception area to the front entrance. · · West said, "Basically; anything that is not nailed down will be stored or · ' shown in local art galleries." He said he had not heard about tliC rumor .that some ofthefmnitureand paintings would be loaned to the President's House. An:hitectEdBouldin, whoworksoutofReynolda Village, is overseeing the conservation work, West said. The environmental control system, called for by the Arnerican.Association · of Museums accreditation committee in 1982, will cause the most dramatic cbanges in the museum's progtamS. Nicholas B. Bragg, the executive director of.Reynolda House, said, ''The environmental system will regulare temperature and humidity year-round, protecting the works ofart from deterioration as well as making the museum more comfortable for visitors and allowing the house to be open for evening programs during the summer months." · Program time should increase by 25 pen:ent with air-conditioning, he said. West said the ODJ.y air-conditioning in the house now cools offices and one lecturef001D. The two-story living room and other areas where the majority of. the house's 125 paintings. prints and sculplUreSarecxhibiledhave no controls lril:wnu- over heat and humidity. . . Bragg said the new syste~ will not Ollly protect the museum's own A porch overlooking Lake Katharine, shown here from Reynolda ViUage, will be enclosed as a lecture room for paintings, but "it wiD also make the museum a more viable atlraction for Reynolda House's educational programs. ttaveling exhibitions and loans." . , The loans can furtherexpandReynolda House's edu· calional programs sttch as American Foundations, a summezgraduatecoursetor:reJalingliteratureandmusic withthebouse'sworksofart. WakeForeststudentsoften attend the intentisciplinary course, which includes a trip to New YOJt City. Thepiogram will sti1l be here this year; in 1991 it will. be moved to the New Y01X Catskins for the summer Sopbo beforeretumingtoanair-conditioncdReynoldaHousein 1992. . . . . The museum will continue many of its programs with lectures and courses in new locations._ including Wake I Forest. Also planned are four ttips to national museums to vie\v the House collection; two 'tours of the teDDvations;Jutuan internships in his dec Som lUi!!!!!!".I!-' _the collection. . . the rna said. "Reynokka as it stands today is not the Whe result of random events or accidenlll bappeaiDp. The men·~ house, the fumisbings, tbO art and the programs that fiB winnil1 tbesehallstbroughouttheyeararetheresultoflbcioghtful andtfu craftsmanship, loving care for tine art and beautiful thehtlll architecture, andeduca1ional ~constructed with The bani work, pe:rseveiance and mtelligent leadership. only p "'The product of Reynolda is an enlightened mind, a coach, renewed spirit and rededication to the process ofleam:- coach~ iog," he said. . render~ ballpr. Ifyo coache

Many paintings hang and antique furnishing are displayed mthe liviDg room of Reynolda Boase, wbkh Win receive. a iaew enviromnental·toDtrol system after a $5.5 million capital campaign tbis year. . . . · :·· 2,1990 OLD GoLD AND BLACK PORTS Friday, February 2, 1990 ·9 Women's Team Drops ACC Contests Against Tar Heels, Cavaliers

ing a pressure game. And in reality they sim· With 9:51left, Carter answered an inside Heather Thompson got another basket in . - By Tamura Coffey frontcourt player Jenny Mitchell was sent to the lane to make the score 58-56. . Old Gold Bl&c:k ply wanted the ball game more than we did move by Tar Heel Sheri Anderson with a ...s SaU« Repc>~W the bench at lhe 2:39 mark; and senior leader Williams tied the game at 58-58 after 'Cathy Wille committed her fifth foul with tOnight" driveofherown matching the Deacon lead of sev-· eral opportunities on one possession by tbe Wake Forest's women's buketball team · only :40 left to play in regulation. Wake Forest seemed to gain momentum five, 54-49. · suffered a disappointing loss to the 'Far Heels ' During overtime, Beth Davis fouled out of mid-way through the second half as they Davis converted a beads-up defensive play TarHeelswith5:28left.Afteralongscrarnble.: for the offensive Thompson ofNorthCarolina. 75-87,Wednesday~ghtin thegametoleaveonly onesUirtertofinish the pulled ahead by seven uru:lez the direction of ·and steal into a driving lay-up to extend the rebound, came . Chapel Hill. j.ftJ:t fighting back to tie the game for the Demon Deacons. Lisa carter and Davis. lead to 56-49 with 9:22left to play. up with yet another rebound and scored. put- game at 7()... 70 and send it into overtime, the · AbrightspotfortheDeaconswasDavis' 27 Henson put the Deacons up by one; 48-47, Carter matched that seven-point lead with ting the Tar Heels up by two, 60-58. : ... Demon Deacons were outscored 17-5 by the points and 12 rebounds before fouling oul off an inbounds pass froni Wille at the 12:10 another drive down the lane, 58-51 with8:18 The Tar Heels built upon their lead by Tar Heels during the overtime period while . -Demon Deacons' Head CoachJoeSanchez mark.· left. converting free throws during the closing _ they were without the services of some top creditcdthelossto(oultrouble,lackofinten- Seconds later, Davis pulled down a long The Tar Heels went on an offensive re­ minutes of regulation,but the Tar Heels failed playess. . · · sity and piessure from the Tar Heels. rebound and took it the length ofthecourtfor boundingtearduringthenextthreeminuteSto at the line down the slretch to give Wake . Foul trouble haunted the Deacons during "Foul trouble .was the key," said Sanchez. the fast-break lay-up, 50-47 tiethegameand then to gooutinfront,60-58. Forest a ch3nce to get back in the game. theclosingminutesofthegame,forcingthem "Mitchell was on the bench. Henson was on On Wake Forest's next possession fresh­ Frontline player Kareema Williams began Davis monopolized on that chance. . - intoanovertimewithoutthreeoftheirstarting the bench. And as a result :we did not execute manSabrinaSlonefoundDavisinthelanefor thescoringoutburstwithareboundandstick· The sophomore guard knocked down two five. Freshman Vickie Henson fouled out of as we should have. . two more points and tlfe Deacons went up by inatthe6:42mark,closingthegaptofoui',58- clutch free throws with :29left to pull within . the game with four minutes to play; fellow "We have to give Carolina credit for play- five, 52-47. S4. . See Tar Heels~ Page 11 tesi~tlent for Reynolds ~UVA Downs Deacons On Last-Second Shot By CllDt Pinyan ahead with 1:07left after he rebounded a missed Kenny Sparu EdiiM Turner three-point attempt and charged the leng~ of the court for the lay-up. Virginia •s Bryant Stith sank a 16-footjumper with :03 The 68-661ead was the last the Deacons held as Stith left in overtime to defeat the Demon Deacons 71-70 in cemented the Virginia win. . . to LawrenceJoelVeteransMemorialColiseumSunday. The On the next trip up the floor, Stith hit an 18-footez jUst loss kept the men's basketball team in last place in the inside thethree-pointcirclewhile being fouled by Carlyle, ACC. who fouled out on the play. He hit the free throw with :42 Stith ignited the Cavaliers with his 37 points and 10 left to convert the three-point play to give the Cavaliers a rebounds. Ten of Stith's points came in the overtime 69-68lead. period as he paced the Cavaliers to the win. After a Virginia time-out, the Deacons could have held Robert Siler led the Deacons with 27 points and spar­ the ballforthelast shot, but Siler lofted an 18-footerwith kling defense as much of the game revolved around a :26 remaining to give Wake Forest a 70-69lead baUle between him and Stith. That left just enough time on the clock for Stith to hit a Siler's five three-pointers helped the Demon Deacons 16-foot off-balance shot along the left baseline with :03 storm the Cavaliers from three-pointrangein the game, as left to give the Cavaliers the win. they shot nine-of-14 for an amazing 64.3 percent, an Wake Forest Head Coach Dave Odom said: "If you accuracy record for Wake Forest The old record was 58.8 have to lose, its better to lose to a deserving team like percent, set against American University Dec. 30, 1987. Virginia. I can say that because I know what they put into Virginia Head Coach Terry Holland said, "Bryant Stith the game. If(Stith) is anything, he's deserving. We'renot wasn't going to let Virginia lose, and Robert Siler wasn't equipped to stop one man like that. .. ·going to let Wake Forest lose." Virginiajumpedouttoaquickfirst-halflead,andWake. The teams traded the lead throughout the overtime Forest slowly dug its way out to a two-point halftime lead, period before Stith's final shot sunk the Dyacons. 28-26. Virginia held a stable three-point cushion, 66-63, with Virginia started the game with a nine-point run, going 1:58left in overtime. as Stith bit both ends of a one-and­ up9-0with 17:06leftinthefirsthalfonanAnthony0liver one after he was fouled by David Carlyle on a rebound of lay-up off all inbounds pass, as the DeacOJlS were unable a missed Ted Jeffries free throw. Stith was 17 -of-18 from to hit any of their shots early in the game. the free-thiow line far the game. · · With 11:44 remaining, Virginia held a commanding Virginia'sleadsoonevapomtedastheDeaconscharged eight-point lead, 17-9, butoverthenext8: 16, Wake Forest back with five unanswered points over the next :51. mounted a 14-5 scoring run. The streak was spurred on by On the next possession, Sam Ivy, who scored 12 for two Ivy buckets down low and three-pointers by Carlyle Wake Forest in the game, was fouled by Jeffries on a 6- and Siler. The Deacons' spurt ended when Anthony Tucker foot attempt from the left side of the baskeL Ivy bit the hit a 13-footjumperin the lane toputWak:eForest~. second free throw to put the Deacons two points behind, 23-22. 66-64, with 1:44 remaining. Virginia threatened to take a lead into the locker room TheDeaconstiedthegameup,66-66, with 1:26remain­ at the half, leading 26-25 when Wake Forest in-bounded ing when Carlyle hit two free throws after he was fouled the ball from the Virginia baseline with :04 left. But J-lllomq by Stith on a rebound of a missed Jeffries l()...footer. Derrick McQueen, who had entered the game with 7:51 Sophomore Anthony Tucker drives around Virginia's John Crotty in Wake Forest's 71-70 loss to the Cavaliers. Carlyle,whohad16pointsinthegarne,puttheDeacons See Cavs, Page 11 Odom Should Be Given More Time To Prove Himself and His System

ecently there has been ~ lot of criti­ 10-17 and 11-17 iri the next two years. starters coming back, the eligibilty of sopho­ be a simple task. cism directed toward Wake Forest's From the Pressbox Terry Holland, under whom Odom was an more transfer Anthony Tucker and the open- The team has also suffered two key injuries RHead Coach Dave Odom regarding assistant for seven years, went 12-13 in his ing of a new coliseum. · that have hurt the team greatly-Sam Ivy's his decision-makin5 and coaching ability. By Matt Smith first season with the Virginia Cavaliers. Many fans were expecting a definite win­ shoulder injury, whichhasjustrecently healed, Someofitmaybewell-founded,butlthink N.C.State'sHeadCoachJim Valvano, who ning season and an NCAA bid. The team and Derrick McQueen's ankle injury. the majority certainly is nol Sports Editor guided his team to the 1983 NCAA Champi· receivednationalattentionastheywereranked Odom said these sorts of injuries to key ·When a team as talented as Wake Forest's onship, posted a meager 14-13 record in his 18th in the preseason by The Sporting News. players could not happen ifthe Deacons were The.~ wP.re v~ry ~t men'<~ haske.tbalL.tl:a docs not nrodnce~ von would find Jbat their fiTSt season or even first year. hillh expectations for a to produce a season. winning record, there is going to be criticism their first few seasons were not that stiCcess­ .Dean Smith, unquestionably the greatesl· program that hall nm posted a winning recoro 1 ne process or unptementing anew system and disappointment, usually directed toward ful. coach in the ACC's history, had a losing sincel985. has also proved ~ult for the new coach. the head coach. When Bobby Crernins first came to Geor­ record in his first season (8-9) and did not At the beginning of the season, Odom said: Players are still leaining and adjusting to ·The Demon Deacons' basketball team has gia Tech in 1981-82, his teams went 1()...16 make it to post-season play during his fmt "Our first goal would be to have a winning Odom 's offensive and defensive schemes. only played 18 games under its new bead and 13·15 in his first two seasons, finishing five years at North Carolina. season, something which I don't think is as­ Implementing a new system is one of the coach and a judgment on the quality of the eighth and sixth. respectively, in the ACC. In A basketball coach and a baslcetball pro­ sured by any means. I think we can achieve greatest challenges facing a new coach. coaching or the team can certainly not be his third year Crernins led the team to an 18- graril can not be based on the coach 'sfirstyear that, but in order to do so we must have a very "The thing that I am most concerned about rendered at this early stage in the new basket· 11 record and went on to six post-season at the helm. It takes time to develop a good good preseason, stay free of injuries and is that we build a basketball program, not a 1 ball program. appearances and one ACC title. program and a good team. implement a few technical changes in our basketball team," Odom said. ' 1 would like Ifyou were to look backattherecordsofthe In his fust year at Duke, Mike Krzyzewski Certainly expectations were. high at the team which we believe can make us better." for us to establish a program that feeds off coaches in the Atlantic Coast Conference. led the team toa17-13markbuttheteam went beginning of the season with four of five Odom saw that a winning season would not See Odom, Page 11 Nationally Ranked West Virginia Defeats WFU; ·chapman and Powell Take Deacons' Sole Win By Randall Duncan tion, PowelllosttoBradKelly, 6-2,6- Old Gold end B!Jdt Repa!lcr 2. Erik Simanis, playing the number­ The men's tennis team traveled Jan. six position, was defeated by Rick 26toMorgantown, W.Va, where they Jacob, 6-3,6-3. dropped their season-opening match The number-one doubles team of 8-1 to 24th-ranked West Virginia. Sedeno and Dilworth fell6-2, 6-2, to The single Deacon win came at the Foley and Kelly, the lOth-mnked number-two doubles position. Justin doubles team in the country. · Chapman teamed with Brian Powell Freshmen Brian Martin and Justin toeasilydefeatRon Mercetand Mark who is the fifth-ranked player in the Harwoo~ lost their number-t}Jree Booras,6-3,6-1. nation. doubles match by a 6-2, 6-4 score to The young Wake Forest club faced West Virginia's Joby Foley, the Westoo and Ken Holsclaw. a very experienced West Virginia 12th-ranked player in the country, Crookenden said all the matches team, whichplayedfourseniorsinthe defeated Sedeno, 6-2, 6-0. · were exciting, although the scores did top six seeds. Team e<~ptain Michael Dilworth was not reflect the quality of play. The Deacons were forced to adjust poised for a huge upset over 28th­ "We are looking to peak for the. their line-up due to the illness of top­ ranked Paul Mancini of the Moun­ ACC matches-that'sour goal," be seeded Gilles Ameline. taineers. Dilworth took the opening said. ' set, 7-6, beforedroppingthenexttwo Ameline will leave for the koiex Head Coach Ian Crookenden at· sets, 6-2 and 6-4, to Mancini at the National Indoor Inten:ollegiateCham­ tributed the Deacons • loss to their number-two spot pionships Wednesday. He will com­ relative inexperience. "Even though pete in the third leg of the collegiate it was the opening match for bOth Atthenumber-threespot,Chapman fell to Patrick Westoo, 6-2,6-1. Grand-Slam next weekend teams,ourplayess were probably more The Deacons • tennis team gets a netvous," he said. Mercer topped Lawrence Kiey, 6- long break before it travels to Sooth Sophomore Jorge Sedeno tilled in 2, 7-5, at the number-four spol , Bend, Ind, to take on Colomdo Feb. at the number-one spot for Ameline, Playing in the fifth individual posi- 15 and Notre Dame Feb. 16. ,j ••

10 OldGoldandBlack Friday,Februacy2, 1990 Mitchell Paints· Successful Picture For Women's Basketball Season Po" home," Mitchell said. "I have a really close family that is Old Gold and Black Reporter here for all home and away games." .Hag •' Mitchell'stransitiontocollegebasketballfromthehigh "Rembrandt would indeed be proud of the way the school game was not easy. She credits part of her current ByCHntPkl 1989-90 Wake Forest women's basketball team works in effectiveness to Lisa Dodd. Spcml!dllar the 'paint," begins the team's media guide. Were Rem­ Her freshman year, Dodd was a second-ream all-ACC brandt a basketball fan, he would surely be pleased with selection. "It really helped me thatLisaDoddplayed here. S~< Wake Forest's center Jenny Mitchell's play around the Wehaveoneofthe best centers in thecountryonourteam. meterracet basketball. When Lisa got hurt, I had to help because our team team at the] She has made a significant conbibution in painting depends so much on our inside game," Mitchell said. weekend. Walte Forest's masterpiece. "I work as hard as I can so when the outside players Powell ill W.tchell leads the Deacons in scoring and rebou.'1d.ing, throw the ball in, I can l1ml around and score," Mitchell ingtheprev averaging 15.4 points and 8.9 rebounds a game. said. Rioux in 1~ s.tie is among the conference leaders in several catego­ Mitchell was named to the 1989 Fast Break All-Amer­ The time ri~: seventh in scoring, second in rebounds, first in field ica fourth team after setting a school record with 522 inthe5,000J oo~ percentage (57.4 percent), secolld in blocks (15 a points in a season. said. gaifle), and fifth in steals (2.1 a game). She garnered MVP awards in three tournaments last "MarY(P l}er field goal percemage is good enough to place her year,andwastheACCPlayerofthe Weekaftera26-point, "In her sop 22nd in the country. 10-rebound perfonnance against N.C. State. mentinher Mitchell comes from a family that was always involved "I'm working on playing more aggressively and trying qualifying j wit)t basketball. "Both my brother and my father were to get meaner and more physical on the court. In high meter time I cOaches at one time," she said. "I played a lot with my school, I used to get a lot of points from rebounds. Now, Welookfo oltler brother and older sister, and I've been to a lot of I havetomovealotmoreto getshots,"Mitchellexplai.ned. Another I ga'q!es with them." "The college game is a lot more physical and has more Tara Hagge While growing up in Roanoke, Va., Mitchell started numing,"shesaid. "It'sayear-roundthing. We lift weights \· of last wed playing on boys' teams until she was old enough to in the off-season and work a lot more on conditioning." T!teprevio1 parp.cipate in girls' leagues. "I always played a lot against Mitchell hopes the Deacons continue to play like they Cortsin 19: gilys in pickup games and in the summer," Mitchell said. "WbatT~ 'Mitchell, a three-time all-America honorable mention currently are playing. ''We still have a chance to win the ACC regular season championship. I want to finish high martforaf in: high school, first considered coming to Wake Forest develop in~ after attending a basketball camp here before her senior in the ACC and get back to the NCAA tournament" When Mitchell is away from playing basketball, she Goodridi year. theteam'si _'~I came and met Alice Neal and Helen Williams. I kept enjoys being with friends and watching other basketball games. milerunanc in touch with Alice during the year by writing and became .Peekled the good friends with her. I liked Coach Sanchez and came to Ifthe Deacons attain the lofty goals they set at the start walch games during the year," Mitchell said. of their season, their artist underneath the hoop will "One reason I came was the school's closeness to definitely have painted a masterpiece. Junior forward Jenny MitcheU leads the Dem.on Deacons'in scoring With lSA points a game. Cav Hume Paces Deacon Track Team With 2nd Place Finish in 3,000.Meter Race FromP: B~:CHnt Pinyan 8:29.06 in the 3,000 meter race. .01 better than his best of last year. the most prestigious in the nation and attracts . · The 4 X 400 meter relay team of. Richard Sp

' . . . ' . . - . . . . - ·. . ' . ,· . _· ' - . . . .SCOREBOARD ,~ . · · . ·. . . · · . . . . , .. ·. DEACON NOTES . . ' . . . -

Standings I. PII'.IIIPIN!N-A :• Deacons Make AU-Academic Squad 7. Y* BASKETBALL Cil SIUdiJ W1M Fnllllad llcmiiNI . Rod Ferguson and Tony Mayberry, offensive linemen, Sllndln;a .... fnll 4 4 14 • 11111'13110Qn 1:30 p.a.llcltl*, YL- ~T~ 4 5 . 10 10 ts. I'.IIIPIIItB : were chosen for the team. ~18.74 WtoNodiJ w•Fn~~•~Todl !Mit 3 5 13 7 14. ...Sitt\ 7'.30p.m., Allnll : Mayberry has a GPA of 3.6 in sociology. Colina IMrd ltllr)llnd 3 5 12 7 11:21.1)6 11. Yl1ooanin Blllgn W L W L llorfl Corcfrlo I 7 10 10 1&. lllltGindbt :: Ferguson has a 3.5 GPA in the master of liberal arts DIU 7 I 17 3 Women'• O.lrllblll Ncrt!Corclna 5 I 15 8 17. LIII'IC.. :program. 1&. IIIIICitdll Sil.rdly w•Fa•ll~ Cllmlan 4 3 15 5 3p.m., IUtln . N.C.SIIIt 4 3 15 5 18. w.Hblg.U, ~ 3 3 13 7 211. Badr&,Jtb ~ ~· Wlbl'inll ~~: Keys Quits Team Due to Injury GIOI;&Tedl 2 4 12 4 INTRAMURALS 1:3Qp.m.,~C*oun ~glrja 2 S 12 8 1'1111 fnll 0 7 7 11 Mln'sTennll · Daric Keys, who has been trying to battle back from a knee TENNIS . lllndlr- RdiiiTCAindocQ injury which occurred almost two years ago, quit the Demon LMIWolll'oRIUit Women's Top Five Vl'glli;l71, .... fnll Til 1.0 1. ROTC Wcmen Slrdar :Deacon basketball team Wednesday. 1.0 2. Fldlloa ll!:n': Tcnnl: 1.0 3. Llfl FNIIyWin t)lo Women' I Tennis _ He ruptured his patella tendon in a game against UNC­ Women's Bllblblll I.Miw.i(a Aloollo 1.0 4 SOPH s.noy Walltfnllll~ : Wilmington Feb. 3, 1988. AllantiCCOIItCOnl..-.ce WllloRnMI, W•mgHol ~ 5. s.Pidt Nanllt, TIM. Let's: Powell Finishes Third in 5,000 Meters; .Haggett Breaks School Shot Put Mark

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-. . ' - - ahead, 57-56, witb4:221eftinregu1a­ with :20 left, and King grabbed the IN THE. DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE Cavs ·tion. rebound and called time out with :17 SHOPPE, DELl FRESH ace FromPage9 Both teams traded miscues and left. missed shots until, with 2:3~ remain­ The inbounds pass came to PeP.peroni >f. Richard ing,CarlylefouledStithwhilehewas McQueen, who missed an eight-foot :I Crockett , attempting a follow-up of an Oliver jumper from the baseline with :04 Pizzas left in thehalftopace Wake Forests miss. Stith hit both shots to put Vir­ left. Kenny Turner got the rebound comeback, rushed the ball upcourt .nn;,. up, 58-57. for Virginia, but fell down with the 12-lnch 20-oz. 1 with the unhindered and sank a running 25· _.... footer as the buzzer sounded. to mve After a Virginia time-out, Carlyle ball for a turnover with :Olleft. Jwarming o- reached over Oliver's back on are- WakeForestbadonelastchance to :omingoff theDeaconstheir2S-26halftimelead. bound, and the foul sent Oliver~ the get the win in regulation with the ball :on, we're "I a.m grateful that McQueen was line· where he hit the front end of a on its end of the court, but Tucker $ ridge said. able to play as much as he could," one-and-one to put the Cavaliers failed to see a wide-open Siler under­ 11g,andthe i· ~~d."Ihavealotofrespectfor ahead, 59_57, with 2:21 remainitJg. neath the basket and threw the in· In the second half, Stith and Siler With 1:55 left in regulation, Car-. bounds pass to Ivy out on the right For n will not paced their teams, as Stith scored lyle hit a from the baseline wmg. Ivy missed the shot, setting up 20 14~footer REGULARLY ••• $3.29 EACH trChampi- points and Siler had 18. to tie the game, 59-59. the overtime play. s 'th' · · aril ff Onthenextpossession,JohnCrQtty, Along with Stith, Virginia was led ti s pomts came pnm Y 0 whowasJ'usttwo-of-13fromthefield free-throws. The Deacons sent him to by Turner, who bad 12 pointson6-of- the line repeatedly down the stretch, during the game, missed along three- 10 shooting from the field, and Ol­ ~rs andhehitlO-of-lOinthehalftokeep pointattempt. iver, who had 11 points before foul­ the Cavaliers in the game. The Deacons took their time trying ing aut :09 into overtime. Most of Siler's second-half points to set up a good shot, but with just :D7 Siler was helped by Carlyle, who tewinning wereonthree-pointers,ashehit four- left on the shotclock,Crottyknocked ·had 16 points while shooting three­ >lowout.of of-four from three-point range. the ball out of Ivy's hands, and. it of-five from three-point range, and iaturday. Vir~builtupafour-pointlead, bounced .out to Oliver, giving the Ivy, who scored 12. eHILLED lCkwith21 56-52, with 5:15 left in the game, but Cavaliers an opportunity to take the Viiginia's win moved them to 12- so( play., an Ivy baseline jumper and a long lead with :55 left in regulation. 5, 2-4 in the conference, while Wake Sealtest 11uchofthe Siler three-pointer put the ·Dea;ons ·· · · Olivm rushed a three-point shot ·Forestfell·to 7-11,0-7 in theACC. ( If. Orange Juice • begin the llead. In Odom 'sfirstseason, he has done building a solid program. Gallon ~Odom just that. Odom and his staff sue- All of this set aside, we are still 7- ~oldshoot­ hree'-of-12 ceededin getting a commitment from 11 overalland0-7 in conference play. :lhitseven­ FromPage9 one of NaYi.saloneunqemeaththebasketfor Ca_yaliers' l~ding scqrer..Dawn .left, and she m~ the_®nt end of _ ~::fi:~. ~~~~-...... 7~z. the Demon the tic, 70-70 with :07 left. Staley to only six points. . tbe one-and-one. I hitting the Carolina set up a desperation play W:ith :40 left to ~laY, th~ game's Slonegrabbedthereboundf

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nil llldlllll! Let's Do the Twist! The Wake Forest cheerleaders perform one of their crowd-pleasing timeout routines during one of the Demon Deacon basketball games. • •• ' OLD GOLD AND BLACK An 12 Friday, February 2, 1990 ·· Arts Gall =5 p.m: weetenc Cone Folk CCI · nolda 1 Americal BowS()( by Lee~ the~ door. Jazz Co . ColDlCil' ~ semorl p.m. Sal Lambert isanEilg frimiRic Piaao 1 Brendlel How lane 19th- an1 BarWck. aswoda can con Free. Blues C Brendle Unionpr Blues W of vario1 gospel, I · wellas~ ·Mise BSU F1 Show:8 Son The National Arts Centre Orchestra of Canada conducted, by Gabriel Chmura, performed in Wait Chapel Wednesday night as part or the Secrest Artist Series. The concert featm:ed clarieatest Richard ·Stoltmlall. · ' . . To 1 NationalArts Centre Orchestra Plays in Wait Chapel By RobertS Old Ga1d lllld BL By Jennie Vaughn slowest Though tragically sad, it was simple and se­ Associate News EdilO" rene. Mozart wrote the first and last movements as I Barry Dr dances, a practice customary at the time, but even they Tuesdayni~ Although clarinetist Richard Stoltzman was lhe one are far from careless. The piece seems to have been theMainU: featured in promotions for Wednesday's Secrest Artist written with the deep sadness broughton by inipending His diveti Series concert, the Canadian orchestra with whom he death. ·songs prove traveleddidmorethanmerelyserveasStoltzman'sback The concerto's three movements provided ample ' history of 1'( up. The National Arts Centre Orchestra ofCanada would time for Stoltzman to fully demonstrate his talent and . BeginninJ have given ticket holders their money's worth even skill. Having fully memorized his music, Stoltzman was · .withrockm without Stoltzman; with him the concen.was brillianL able to play to the conductor and the audience. When he ..'n' roll "sin1 The 46-member orchestra opened the concert with was not playing he turned to the orchestra and listened · ·~ Hesanga Mozart's Overture to The Marriage ofFigaro, K. 492. intently, cocking' his head and moving to the music. bits ofpem Although lheorchestraplayedaccurately theyperfonned He had a full, warm tone and could easily span the Draketok this number with little feeling and no dynamic contrast clarinet's entire range. When he played, his facial :imdlaunc:he and it seemed little more than just a warm-up. expressions portrayed enjoyment and enthusiasm; he ,bv The Bt>Jll But the second number, a concerto for orchestra that stood on his toes to play high notes. I was commissioned in 1989 by the National Arts Centre, Stoltzman's unique clarinet style has earned him an enthralled the audience in the first few bars. international reputation;· he is recognized as -a jazz Composer Michael Congrass described The Schubert performer as wellasaclassicalartist In 1986 he became Birds as "a tapestry of several dozen variations" ofFranz the flrst wind player to be awarded the Avery Fisher Schubert's Kupelwieser Waltz and his own "fanciful Conductor Gabriel Chmura was outstanding. Having Stoltzman played Mozart's Concerto in A Major for Prize,joiningsucheminentrecipientsasMurray Perahia concept of Schubert's subconscious world." This ab­ already prepared the players wellforperformance, he did Clarinet, a work Mozart wrote for a friend in 1791. The and Yo-Yo Ma. He has performed with the New York CHARMING piece was his last instrumental composition. Mozart ABLE: WAC stract, sometimes disjointed work was interspersed with not need to direct the orchestra. Chmura used his entire Philharmonic and the Berlin Radio Symphony as well Wlllldng dJsti the disturbing sounds of crying birds made by the upper body to create a picture of the music. almost certainly knew that he did not have long to live, as Boston Pops and Woody Herman. tricl,cilyOIII winds and strings. Schubert's melodies formed an eerie, When Stoltzman finally came on stage at the end of the and in this return to the instrument he had loved so much The Orchestra's final number was Beethoven's rama. Larg& 1 cacophonous counterpoint. At times players launched first half,it was apparent that the audience had been ever since he had heard it in Mannheim more than a Symphony No.7, Opus92. Richard Wagner dubbed the C8Jim.os:-. decade earlier, he expresses very deep personal feelings. into a swing session with muted trumpets and ride waiting for him. The crowd applauded and Stoltzman work the "apotheosis of the dance," recognizing the BEST AJNI cymbal. At one point even an oboist played a jazz lick. energetically bowed several times. The second movement, "Adagio," was the work's See Orchestra. Page 14 your fralsm~ aamlng$1,0 markallng PI lzad and hall IICIQ.S92·21~ Innovative Costumes Crossfire Fan Gets Heated Over Loss ofBradenj WANrED:S Trawl SaMe ableNewsNetwork'sCross- disappointment with the decision Both would have been~~ tO or Ire& Sprint fire is perhaps the best show a. publicly. No formal announcement receive than Kinsley, who looks likC lll88k pac:il8! On 1V .- ulclo, and DaJ Emphasize Dancers C currently running on TV. At from Douthit was forlhcoming, wilh a bad version of Barney Fife. Is it just lion call1-80 least it was. until a few months ago. . John Meronev the exception of his office issuing a me, or does Kinsley have By Julie Boutwell ii troubl~ Dance Company director Rebecca Crossfire, whichairsnightlyonthe L press release welcoming Kinsley to making eye contact with som!'Qne EASYWORI Ans and EnL!:rtainmcnt Editor Myers and Blain Fitz-Simons per­ prcducla ath all-news station, examines the issues the program. just when he is in the middle of driv~ 8885ut. w. formedacharacterdance to "!Want whichareonthemindsofAmericans. earlier this fall, Braden, now in his One would at least think Douthit ing home his point? · For the first time in six years, the to Be Seduced." In that sense, it is a barometer for early70s, wasinformedbyCrossfire' s could flnd a left-winger who was Despite this casing error; BESTSPRII Wake Forest University Dance Myers played a business man what we are thinking. The program producer, Randy Douthit, lhat his . palatable. Kinsley just does not do it. however,Crossfire still hits the spot: CIUiae and sl: Company performed an all-jazz dressed in a white suit, and Fitz­ meets flve times a week at 7:30 p.m. services were no longer needed. The Even liberals protested the replace- Night after night, it is consistently alxdlrfa.laml concert Saturday night in Brendle $399,00.Incl Simons playedahousewifedressed and presents two sides (and some- reason? Braden's age was becoming mtnt, saying Kinsley would be a bad engaging,particularlytheconcluding 801118mealaj Recital Hall. All proceeds from the in a bath robe with cold cream on times more) of a particular topic. a glaring detriment and Crossfire representative for their side. tag debate between Kinsley an.l:llles. on it. ' . . ' .CLASSIFIED · · ·. · The Recycling Task For-;e . .. . would like to thank the students in Davis and South Dorms for their CHARIIINO, CONVENIENT, AFFORD­ WIN a Hawaiian vaeation or blg screen TV ABLE: WACHOVIA BED & BREAKFAST. plus raise up to $1,400 lnjll!llten days I Ob­ participation in the ALUMINUM Wlllldng distance IDOfd Salem hlstOOcal dis­ jective: fundraiser. eon.n ..fi!nt minimal. trict, dly center, excellent bani and restau­ Money: Raise $1,<100. Zero investment WINTER CLEARANCE CONTINUES recycling pilot project. Hopefully your rama.Large breakfas~ no smoking. $30-$55. Campus organlza!lons, clubs, frats, sorori­ Call m.f1332. ties call OCMC, 1-6D0-932-0528 or 1-800. efforts will result in a permanent 950-8427, ext. 10. TAKEAN ALLWINTER BEST RJNDRAISERS ON CAMPUS: Is 50{)1 ALUMINUM recycling station on your rratemlty, sorority or dub ln1111881ed In HIRING:Govemmentjobs,yourarea.Many ADDITIONAL -~0 CLOTHING earning $1 ,000+ bra CIIKH\IIM!k llfi.CIIIlpus immediate openings without waiting list or campus- comments or suggestions call mark81lng pruject? You must tx:iifl;gan­ test $17,8~9,485.Call1-602-838-8885 lzed and hardwarldng. Cal/ Jenny a Myra at ext.R7310. • Always 40-70% off Dept. Store and Catalog Prices! 723-5180 110(1.592·2121. MOTHER'SHELPERneededinCiemmons, • Spring Shipments Arriving Weekly! -Bo Martin WANTED: Students II join the 1990SIUdent 2:3()-6:30 p.m. Men.· Thurs .. Some flexibility • Looking for TOMMY? He is Here! Trawl Serkes' Sales Team. Earn cash and/ In hou!ll possible. Must drive and ccok. Call Chairman Recycling Task Force or free Spring Break ravel marketing Spring 766-3335. been easier to Break packages 11 Jamaica, Cancun, Acap­ who looks like uk:c, and OayiDna Beach. For morelnfonna­ GOVERNMENT SEIZED VEHICLES from Fife. Is it just tfon t:BII..stXUUB-4849. $100. Fords, Mercedes, Corvettes, Chevys. ~~ have troubl~ Surplus Buyers Guide. Cal/1-602-838-885 EASYWORK,EXCELLENTPAY:Assemble exr. A7310. CLOTHES OUTLET with someone produciB at home. Fordlltalls ca/11-602-838- iniddle of ilriv~ 8886 9JII. W·7310. PEOPLE WANTED: I'm looking to organize Newtown Square Shopping Center ' an RPG group. rve got AD&D, Traveller, 420-J Jonestown Rd. (Behind McDonalds) Real Estate BEST SPRING BREAK TRIPS: Bahamas and Champions at hand -can run others 60-2274 c:rulse and six days orv'near beach $279.00; with time and rules. Contact Sean at 759- elxcfataJamalca$299.00;Cencunelghtdays 528701' 922-1920• .-.oo. !nc:ludea airlcrulse ao::omoda!ians, Analyst 10111emaala-•.Caii.Johnat759-6894or DAYTONA BEACH: $239.00 (quad. OCCU• Sprlngl1trNJJr Trawl at 1-800-638-6786. pancy). One week, leave March 9, PM, back March 18, AM. Transponation and first class GOVERNMENT JOBS: $59,230/yr, now OCEAN FRONT hotel -Spring Break '90 Program hiring. Call HJOS-687-6000 ext R5999 for World HO. Best lccation, best hotel, best _,kldetalllst clubs, best party. Motorccach pick up on campus direct to your hotel. For Info. call LET OUR 2·YEAR PROGRAM AFTERNOON BABYSITTER NEEDED. Yankee Tours at800-942-8890orcall Mike BE A PRELUDE TO YOUR MBA! Mull haw lralsportalicn and be available Harkness at 919-759-0504. noon ·&p.m. Days flexible. Good pay, meals Want some rock-solid commercial real estate experience lnc:luded. Children ages 2 and 4. Clil 768- BUSINESS /GEOGRAPHY STUDY TOUR before pursuing your MBA? Then consider this great 9279 v. Lord. TO ORIENT. The 1990 version leaves May opportunity with THE PRUDENTIAL, the nation's largest 23 and returns June 12. A fantastic trip and real estate ii'M9Stor. PART·nMEEUPLOYMENTNEEDED: The learning experience to Japan, South Korea, S18111c WHogle Shop, 50001lkllverslly Park· Talwan(RepublicofChina)and Hong Kong. We're looking tor energetic. ambitious.B.A.'s al'fd B.~.'s Wllf. Cllll744-9543. See Dr. Utcher(C.103Tribble/759-534) or (who are plannin·g to apply to top bustness schools 1n Dr. Ewing (C-205 Babcock 1 759-5731) as 1992) for a challenging 2·year assignment in our Real EARN MONEY TYPING AT HOME: soon as possible. · Estate Analyst Program. To qualify, you need a B+ or $32,000tyrlncomepoten1iai.Cal11-602-838- better undergraduate GPA and a strong mathematical 8885 exr. T·7310. ·Losr~:Small brown kitten with white chin and ·only 3 'legs. Green house paint aptit].Jde. An intensive training program wiD help prepare ATTENTION: EARN MONEY READING speckled on tail. Found wandering aimlessly you 'tor real estate modeling and financial evaluation BOOKSI $32,000 yearlincome potential. after Trustees meeting but lost again near assignments. F1Kd91IilscaJI1-602-838-8885. ext. Bk7310. legal AffailliOifice. Answers to "lubie. ·Call This program provides outstanding on-the-job training, 6345. MCATIIAT£RIAL for sale; KAPLAN, $100; experience, and exposure to real estate markets and top GAPS, $250; Various MCAT books neg. LYRIC OF THE WEEK: I saw her today at investment professionals. The Prudential offers attractive Cll/1773-1474bfiiWflfln S.9p.m. the reception, a glass of wine in her hand. I starting salaries with comprehensive benefits. knew she was gonna meet her connection; GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (you re­ at her feet was a bleeding man. You can't 10 apply, send your resume and a copy ci your college pair). Delinquent tax property, always get what you want; you can 'I always transcript, by February 9, 1990 to: r.,_alons. Call 1-602-1138-8885 ext. getwhatyouwant, but if you try sometimes, THE PRUDENTIAL REALTY GROUP you just might find, you get what you need. GH7310. AUanta Realty Group Otflce ·The Ro/Jing Stones One Ravinia Drive, Suite 400 PHOTOGRAPHERS WANTED: Interested AUanta, Georgia 30348 In maldng money part-time photographing ED: Think of me when you drink tea and eat Attn: Analyst Progmm people?No experience necessary; we lraln. crumpets. I miss rou lots. I hope you enjoy If you are sociable, have a 35mm SLR London. ·Isabelle C8ITI8IIl and transportalion, please call be­ An Equal Opportunity Employer IWeen noon and five p.m. 81 1-800·722- ISABELLE: Think of me when you drink 7033. Knudsen's and eat stuffed shel!s.llove you lots and hope you enjoy Babcock. ..Johnny CONDOMS BY IIAIL: 25 varieties, name The Prudential brands, sa:npl&r pad~& and gift ~llcatesl liiiCHa.LE: Ads are goln' Okay but ltllngs . Realty Grouo Free brochure. Write healthwlse, 7474 are difficult. All Is dlcng a great job but we Creedmoor Rd. 5270, Raleigh NC, 27613or miss you tons. We never meet deadlines so call 1.1J00.933..:300. come baCk soon. ·Wilma ·The~udent1al ~ 14 Old Gold and Black Friday, February 2, 1990 Recognized at horne and abroad as The Orchestra has recorded~ · Canada's national orchestra, the en­ thail 20 compact discs and was re:­ February Campus Paperback Bestsellers Orchestra semble has won consistent praise for cently awai-ded the Grand Prix _du From Page 12 its precision, refinement and bril­ Disques du Canada by the Canadian 1. All I Really Need to Know I tions f~~ school days to the advent Tyle~. (Berkley,_ $5.50) An ordinary liance. Music Council for the best orchestral ;' ' Learned in Kindergarten by Robert of femm!Sm. mamedcouplediscovershowexiiaor­ symphony's inexhaustible rhythmic The Orchestra is the resident en­ recording by a chamber of full ~r~ Fulghum. (Ivy, $5.95.) Uncommon 6. The Night of the Mary Kay c_om- dinary their lives really are. energy and drive. The work is typical semble of the National Arts Centre in chestra for their 1986 collaboranon thoughts on common things. mandos, by Berke Breathed. (Little, of the period- melodic and expres­ Ottawa and makes regular visits to entitled Canadian Classics Volumt 2. The Prehistory ofthe Far Side, by Brown, $7 .95.) More Bloom County New & Recommended sive and filled with harmonious brass Toronto, Montreal and several cities II. . . : I Gary Larson. (Andrews & McMeel, cartoons. . swells. in the United States. The Orchestra · The next performer m the Arti~~ 1 $12.95.)Larson'snotesandsketches. 7. The Sands of Time, by Sidney Digging for God and Country, by Since its founding in 1969, the has also made international tours and Series will be Spanish pianist Alic18 .Volume 3. The CalYin and Hobbes Lazy Sheldon. (Warner, $5.95.) Fo~r Neil Asher Silberman. (Doubleday, National Arts Centre Orchestra has has played throughout Europe and the de Larrocha who will perform Marcb If. .... '• ,.; .. Sunday Book by Bill Watterson. women encounter unexpected desti­ $9.95.) esrablishedareputationforexcellence. Soviet Union. 7 in Wait Chapel. (Andrews $ McMeel, $9.95.) Col- nies after fleeing a convent. The UniYersal Myths, by Alexander lected cartoons. 8. Chaos, by James Gle!ck. (Penguin, Eliot. {NAL/Meridian, $8.95.) 4. The Shell Seekers, by Rosarnunde $~.95.) Records the birth of a new Sisters in Crime II, by Marilyn Wal­ .Stuc lece, Ed. (Berkley, $3.95.) Pilcher. (Dell, $4.95.) Novel of pas- SCience. . . Stoltzman ;~yRQC:kyL sionandheartbreaksetinLondonand 9. The Card1nal of the Kremlm, by 'Ne-n J!dilar Cornwall. Tom Clancy. (Be~kley, $5.95.) The 5. Cafs Eyes, by Margaret Atwood. rescue of an Arnencan secret agent : TheGree (Bantam, $5.95.) A woman's reflec- 10. Breathing Lessons, by Anne Julliard Stting quartet; he decided to ·pJeted Jan. ~ try to be a professional musician. .conductech · :sion of soci ~ After graduating from Ohio State ·. Underan ! with a double major in music and mathematics, he earned his Master of :seven.socie: ·~ i :Jan. 1, 199 I-L!!J.t.:.ll.:-:-1~~~4.~~::::-::+.!t;~:;;--+-:;~~~l:::::~f::-::.·:-:-1' ~. Music from Yale University and :liaison betv 1llf.fTEI!. p~~f'JT>' !!=~===-J.-=.:::::...::;~-F::;:;;~~+-::---:::::--=-t--;:::--.:.;~=:lll:f,:::n.:.:.•e::.:.m;;;.;St~l.f:...ji worked toward his doctoral degree at ! ColurnbiaUniversity. :nons over~ '' TH£ BI~TH OF A : ThestudJ FHIWSOPHIC JI(:JJ€M.fNI• ! His Buffet clarinet was remodeled :ISCshould -A I'OoJ,I.·PAJOT lli!MA· ~ by Kalman Opperman, his teacher atI : Columbia · I i According to the Boston Globe,, 1-LJJ~~~uu~~?-'~~+-':7::::!!.::----tLf.f-:-.~~f=ll:::-a.l!l-=:l "Stoltzman is currently being mar-: keted as the most exciting clarinetist: in the world, what matters is that he: is." :. Stoltzman said he balances his~ perso~al and professional lives with, great difficulty and keeps up his en-·. ergy by trying to slay healthy by. "exercising, taking ·vitamins. eating good food and getting home (to.' Winchester, Mass.) as often as pos·. sible." He said his philosophy for making: music is to "do it out of love."

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