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voo1o·,n ... ~_ UNIVERSITY

DooneJbury cartooniii ga<'e thii year'J Commencement Ipeech. See the Ilory on page I.

~agazine June/1986 ------~------Garry Trudeau urges graduates to ask ttnperttnent• • questtons•

Ar Commencemenr cerem omes on May 19, Garry Trudeau, crearor of rhe Doonesbury comoc srnp, urged rhe 1,030 graduating seniors ro ask impertinem as well as pemnenr quesrions. H e r old graduares rhar rhe perrinenr quesflons­ "'hich ofren ha\"e impernnenr answers-are useful fo r separarmg rhe whear from rhe chaff. Bur, "rhe •mpertinem quesrion is rhe glory of human inquiry ' and rhar irs nlue is self-e"idenr-ir IS rhe "core of our polirical and culrural characrer as a people." Trudeau cauflono:d his audience rhar asking imperrinem quesrions has inherem risks, and reminded rhem of rhe fare of rhe rwo engmeers who proresred rhe launch of rhe shurrle Challenger Bur. Trudeau said. asking rhe imperrinenr quesrion makes people self- aware rarher rhan self-absorbed, and ir is only by askmg rhe impertinenr quesrion rhar anyone can choose berween omperfect op rions He told rhe graduares rhar if rhey bad rhe courage ro ask rhe lal••""'""''e-o•not spe.Lter Garry Trr~de= (righll satd that, b~ed on the amo11nt of tome n takes to read one fo•r-pmel imperrinem questions, rhey would be able ro 'make •"" thef..a that Ron.Jd Reag•n rea:U ec ery comiC nnp"' the IT'atbtngton Pos~ Reagan has spent ele

Consin•ed on page 1

W'ake ForeJI Unit·erstt)· MagJZine WAKE FOREST Garry Trudeau conti"'"" UNIVERSITY

Before the bachelor's degrees were awarded, President for Health Affairs and Executive Dean of Magazine President Hearn awarded five honorary degrees. the Bowman Gray School of Medicine Richard Historian John Hope Franklin received the Docror of Janeway presented a citation to Professor of Medicin< Terry Hydell, Editor Humane Letters; Robert T. Handy, scholar, writer, Ross L. Mdean. Provost Edwin G. Wilson ('43) and Henry Sloan Coffin Professor of Church History presented a citation to Professor of Romance Volume 32, Number 6 at Union Theological Seminary, received the Doctor Lanaguages Anne S. Tillett. Associate Professor of of Divinity; scientist Ruth Patrick and Robert G. Pediatrics Alanson Hinman and Professor of Surgery WAKE FOREST Univertily MiJg.u;ine is published Petersdorf, vice chancellor for Health Sciences and Frank R. Johnston received their citations in abrenlia six times a year in August, October, January, dean of the School of Medicine ar the University of On Sunday, May 18, Robert T. Handy preached the February, April, and June by Wake Forest at San Diego, received the Doctor of baccalaureate sermon in Wait Chapel. He told his University. It is mailed free to alumni, parents, and benefactors of Wake Forest Univer:siry-the only Science; and Garry Trudeau received the Donor of audience that they should "realize the power of price is a correct address. Send editorial Letters. words, savor them, use them thoughtfully and correspondence, changes of address, and alumni As is traditional at Commencement, retiring faculty carefully, redeem them" rather than using them "as news to 7227 Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, members on both the Reynolda and Hawthorne substitutes for aetion, as evasions of duty, as NC 27109. Second class postage paid at Winston­ Campuses received citations recognizing their basic changes." Salem, NC. Additional entry at Greensboro, NC. surrogates for making USPS 664-520. ISSN 0279-3946. POSTMASTER: rontributions and service to the University. Vice Send address changes to The Wake Forut Univertity Mag,u;i,., 7227 Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, NC 27109.

Typography by rype/desigo

Printed by Triad Press

Among those providing information for articles in this issue were lume/J Brantley ('45), Director of Communications }amer R. Bullocle ('85 ), Assistant Director of Alumni Activities Mary Nell Burlee, Development Office Assistant Gareth Clement ('84 ), • Staff Writer, Office of Development and U Diversity Relations Sandra C. Connor, Director of Foundarion Relations and Faculty Research Development }uliur H. Corpening ('49), Assistant Vice President for Development Lyne Gamble, Director of Lawyer Alumni Activities Bill Joyner ('66), Vice President for University Relations Kay Doenger Lord ('64), Alumni Officer Bob Millr ('7 1, MBA '80), Assistant Vice President and Director of Alumni Acrivities jacqueline L Peeerron, Administrative Assistant, Alumni Activities Office Jan e Robe rron ('81) , Assistant Director of Communications Claudia Stitt, Director of Records and Support Services Bobby Thompron ('82) Director of the College Fund leanne P. Whitman (79) Retiring Profeuor of Romance l...anguger Anne S. Tillett receiver a citation from Pre11dent Hearn. Assistant to the Provost

page IWO Walee Forert Univenity Magazine Garret B. Trudeau generations and rhat rhe Dooneibury characters change even as we change; Remembenng, gratefuUy, rhar Doolleibury Appreciating, perhaps above aU, rhe began on a college campus wirh B.D. waiting refreshment and the humor rhar come every for his compurer-selecred roommate; day from chose four little picture panels on an Remembering, also, the ocher characters, now otherwise somber op-ed page- our familiar friends, who followed: Mike We thank Garry Trudeau for coming tO rhis Doonesbury, , Duke and Wake Forest Commencement, though knowing Honey and Zonker, Joanie and J.J and Boopsie, he may find here new objects of for his Dick and ; imagination; Knowing that in his com1c srnp are recorded, We reluctantly forgive him for the rwenry­ for our learnmg and our laughter, the years of one months from January, 1983 through Nixon and Ford and Carter and Reagan and of September, 1984 rhar wiU be forever missing the1r contemporanes who amused or angered or from our memories; scared us; And we present him for the degree Docror of Recognizing rhar rhe chronicles of Lerrers. Doone~bury are rhe srory of our own passing

Art department chatrwoman Margaret Supplee Smtth hood! Garret B. Trudeau.

John Hope Franklin

Hisrory is a record of rhe pasr for rhe present and for rhe furure. In read1ng h1Scory we come co hear and rhen co understand how we have arrived ar coday; and if rhe rexr is accurate and wise, we extend our vision into tomorrow. John Hope Frankltn is, for all rime, a historian. He has caught history ar Sr Augustine's College, at North Carolma Central in Durham, at Howard Universiry, at Brooklyn College, ar rhe U niversiry of Chicago, and, more recently, at Duke Umversiry. He has written history in many separate volumes, including From Sl.u·ery to Freedom, regarded as the most brilliantly authentic account of rhe passage of black Americans. And he has made history in Montgomery, Alabama, and in Washmgcon, DC, wirh public srarements for racial justice. Born in Oklahoma, educated ar the grear institutions of Fisk and Harvard, John Hope Franklin has devored his life ro impeccable scholarship, to excellence m reaching, and co courageous and intelligent national life. In all these roles he has walked wirh grace and marched with glory. In certain hisroric places and at certain historic rimes, ir was enough to say, John Hope Franklin has been here. When hisrory needed prophetic words, John Hope Franklin spoke them; when histor)' needed an interpreter, he caught; and when history needed an exemplary leader, he was there. He IS presented for rhe degree Doctor of ]oh11 Hope Franklm (/eft) and }osepb BratiCh, chief ;umce of the North Carolma Supreme Court and chatNnan of the Humane Letters Umt erllf) Board of Trusteer

page three )tme/ 1986 \f/.,ke Foreit Umreritfy l\fagazi11 e - Ruth Patrick

If the earth is ro be understood and to be lived on in security and without fear, if it is to endure as a clean and habitable planet, we will require the work and the public voice of scientists like Ruth Patrick. Throughout her distinguished career she has srudied the land and the water, aquatic communities, and the ways in which ecosystems develop and change. A native of Kansas, Professor Patrick was educated in the South, first at Coker College and then at the U niversicy of , where she received the PhD degree and where she was a fellow srudent with Wake Forest biologists Elton Cocke and Walter Flory. At the Academy of Narural Sciences in Philadelphia she was founder and chairman of the Department of Limnology and chairman of the Board of Trustees. She has taught at the University of Pennsylvania and has served on scientific panels and commissions for Pennsylvania's governors and for Presidents from Lyndon Johnson to . Ruth Patrick has won many honors, including the prestigious international John and Alice Tyler Ecology Award. She has also been President of the American Society of Naturalists and has traveled and spoken widely about ways in which rogether we can achieve a Babcock Profeuor Ementus of Biology WalterS. Flory hoods Ruth Patrick. better environment for aU living things. Ruth Patrick is presented for the degree Doctor of Science.

Robert T. Handy

The hisrory of in North America has had no more sympathetic or more objective interpreter than Robert T. Handy, the baccalaureate preacher for this year's Commencement exercises. He has brought tO his definitive Oxford University Press and Scribner's srudies the meticulousness of an experienced scholar, the expositOry skills of a writer who loves the language, and the realistic commitment of a man of faith. Professor Handy was educated at Brown University, at Colgate Rochester Divinity School, and at the University of Chicago. Since 1950 he has been on the faculty of Union Theological Seminary, where he is now Henry Sloane Coffin Professor of Church History. Generations of Union alumni, including several of our own faculty, remember him as a superior teacher, a compassionate counselor, and a man of conscience who worked actively in behalf of the powerless. Among his major achievements at Union was his leadership in establishing a program in Afro-American religious srudies. In this year of hisroric debate within the denomination, Wake Forest takes particular pleasure in welcoming Robert Handy to the campus. He understands and honors the Baptist heritage out of which this university was shaped. We count him as a companion in learning and in faith. He is presented for the Umversity Profeuor of ]ames Alfred Martm adjtiJJI Robert T. Handy's hood. degree Docror of Divinity.

page four Wake Forest University Magazine ]unej/986 Robert G. Petersdorf

Robert G. Petersdorf has an outstanding reputation for strong and effective leadership to academic medicine. He is one of the few people in the world with such stellar qualifications in academics, medical college administration, and hospital direction. Currently Vice Chancellor for Health Sciences and Dean of the School of Medicine at the University of California at San Diego, a position he has held five years, Dr. Petersdorf recently was named president and chief executive officer of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). Dr. Petersdorf received the BA degree from Boston University and the MD degree from , where he was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha, honor medical society. He took residency and fellowship training at Yale, Harvard, and Johns Hopkins Universities. Dr. Petersdorf worked his way through the medical school academic ranks, then was named chairman of the Department of Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medietoe, a position he he let with distinction for fifteen years. He served as President of Brigham and Women·s Hospital in Boston from 1979 to 1981. An editor since 1968 of the preeminent textbook, Harrisot•'s Principles of Internal Medicine, he has published more than 300 Preudenf Hearn congrat11lateJ Robert G. PeterJdorf. papers, ch iefly in the field of infectious diseases. A distinguished administrator, scienrist, clinician, and scholar, Robert G. Petersdorf is presenred for the degree Doctor of Science.

Presidenl Hearn congratulates retlri11g Profeuor of Medicme Rou L McLean. Presidelll Heorn confer~ 011e of/,030 bachelor'! degreeJ-and IbaleeJ o"e of/,030 hand1.

}une/1986 Wake Forest U11iversity Magazine page five CamQus Chronicle

The five-year campaign, which will benefit rhe Medical School and Baptist Hospital, Class of 1986 tops last year's RJR Nabisco gives Medical began a year ago. Besides research facilities, the School $4.5 million expansion program includes a new five-story clinical record campaign services building, an eleven-story patient tower, and the remodeling of more than 280,000 square feet of existing space. The remainder of the financing for A S4.5 million gift from RJR Nabisco, Inc. to the Over 64 percent of the Class of 1986 has pledged the Sl20 million project will come from the sale of University's Bowman Gray School of Medicine gave to support the College Fund during the three years bonds. an enormous boost to the Medical Center's S 120 following graduation. By doing so, they have topped million Equation for Progress expansion program. the precedent set by last year's seniors in the The grant, which is the largest single corporate gift University's first Senior Class Campaign. Wake Forest has ever received, the largest RJR About 250 class members celebrated their success­ Nabisco has ever given, one of the largest corporate and celebrated Commencement a little early-at a gifts in , and the largest ever in this area party at Baity's on April 23. The Student Alumni of the country, was awarded to the Medical School to Reinhardt A ward established Council sponsored the party which included free hot support construction of research facilities. dogs, door prizes, and the announcement of the This latest gift brings to $26.5 million the amount The University has established the Jon Reinhardt results of the campaign. Seniors Jennifer Gibson, of raised in the $40 million Equation for Progress Award for Distinguished Teaching in memory of Jon Atlanta, GA, and Peter Rodes, of Garrett Park, MD, campaign. Reinhardt, who taught politics at Wake Forest from organized the parry. They congratulated their University President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. praised 1964 until his death in 1984. The award, which will classmates on becoming alumni and urged them to RJR Nabisco's support of medical research and be presented for the first rime at opening become active members of the Alumni Association. expressed Wake Forest's appreciation for the convocation next fall, recognizes a senior member of Seniors Kim Helmintoller, of Salem, VA, and Paul corporation's continuing interest. the faculty who is a distinguished reacher in the Moore, of Dayton, OH, were 1986 Senior Class "This is one of the most productive and effective broadest sense of the word-one who not only Campaign co-chairpersons. They thanked the class for corporate-university relationships in higher education performs well in the classroom but who also its generosity and loyalty to Wake Forest. today. At Wake Forest and in Winston-Salem we are exemplifies the ideals of a liberal arts education. "Our goal," Moore said, "was to top 1985's continually grateful that RJR Nabisco is such a Active and retired faculty members who have held campaign. Sixty-three percent of last year's seniors responsible corporate citizen." the rank of associate or full professor (or its pledged to support the College Fund, and we weren't The six-floor addition which is being built on top equivalent) for at least a year are eligible for the going to let our class stop until we'd hit at least 64 of the Hanes building will double the Medical award. Recipients will be selected by a committee of percent." The members of the Class of 1985 pledged Center's research space. The addition will be finished faculty and former and present students from more than $27,000. in 1987. The gift to Wake Forest, which was made nominations submitted by alumni. The 1986 Senior Class Campaign began in through the company's philanthropic foundation, was According to its founders, the Jon Reinhardt February when over 100 volunteer agents called on announced by J. Tylee Wilson, RJR Nabisco's Award "has been established as a memorial to the their classmates and asked for College Fund pledges chairman and chief executive officer. countless hours of personal contact that he had with payable during the three years following graduation. J. Paul Sticht, who is general chairman of the his students, his ability ro remain a student in spirit Those not reached in person were telephoned in Medical Center's Equation for Progress Campaign and in fact, and his unique and captivating teaching March and April. Alumni office intern Denise Joliffe and Wilson's predecessor at RJR, said the gift will style." Reinhardt received the BA from Birmingham­ ('86) directed the campaign with the help of a ten­ result in "far-reaching health benefits for people over Southern University and the MA and PhD from member steering committee which recruited and the state, the region, and the nation," and that it Tulane. He joined the faculty in 1964 as an instructor supervised the volunteer agents. illustrates the corporation's "long interest in and and rose through the faculty ranks, beroming "We are grateful to our generous classmates for support of the life sciences, medical education, and professor of politics in 1982. their support," JoUiffe said, "and to those who biomedical research." Contributions to the Reinhardt Award should be worked for the campaign as steering committee Richard Janeway, University vice president for sent ro the Department of Politics, 7568 Reynolda members and agents. Next year's seniors will have a health affairs and executive dean at the Medical Station, Winston-Salem, NC 27109. Checks should be hard rime breaking our rerord!" School, said that the gift from RJR Nabisco is made payable to Wake Forest University-Jon "Letting students know about the University's need valuable, not only for its support of viral research, Reinhardt Award. for alumni support was an important part of this but also for the example it sets for other major effort," Helmintoller added. "Now we seniors have a rorporatioos. place in the future of the University. We plan to help "When RJR Nabisco contributes to the Piedmont's We're Having a Wake Forest remain one of the nation's leading leading medical teaching and research center," said universities." Janeway, "it pays a dividend to all of us who depend Celebration Seniors received their first pledge reminders last of our Medical Center for the best available health spring. care." In November, the Wake Forest University RJR Nabisco, Inc. has supported previous building libraries will celebrate the acquisition of the programs at the Medical Center with gifts totalling collection's one millionth volume. To mark this more than S5 million. important occasion, a special book will be added Among irs corporate contributions to the Reynolda to the collection during ceremonies open to Campus were Sl.5 million gift for the Music Wing of alumni, friends, and the University community. the Scales Fine Arts Center and a gift which For more information, call or write Artom established the Reynolds research leaves which Collection Librarian Elen Knott, 7777 Reynolda provide financial support for faculty sabbaticals. Station, Winston-Salem, NC 27109, 919-761- 5478.

page Jix Wake ForeJt University Magazine Campus Chronicle

First annual Alumni Career 2. A ten to rwenry-member class committee will year tmprovement in 1974, and received a special be creared to ser goals and plan srraregy, to carry citation for superior performance tn alumni fund Conference held on rhe fund raising acriviries, and to plan a ga la ratsing lasr year. Stanford, Penn, and Yale are among reunion during Homecoming weekend. rhe re n other finalists. Fourteen successful Wake Forest alumni rerurned 3. Each class will conduce a person-ro-person In 1984-85 over 43 percenr of Wake Forese's ro campus on February 28 for rhe first Alumm Career campaign for classmares who may be able ro make 32,500 alumni contributed $2 million ro the various Conference. They calked ro srudenrs about their a much larger than normal gift on chis annual funds of the Universiry. Alumnt gtving ro all careers-which included commercial banking, anmversary. areas rota led $2.8 million of rhe S 12. I million journalism, hospital adminisrrarion, counseling, 4. Members of the class will recetve a quarterly received in contributions from all sources psychology, and law-and suggested ways for newsletter with news about fellow classmates, "Wake Forest's being a finalise in rhe CASE/ US srudenrs ro enrer chose fields. The program, called plans for the class, and quarterly additions to rhe Steel competition is a great rribure to the Finl Slepr, was sponsored by rhe career planning and College Fund honor roll. University," College Fund N ational Chairman Byron placemenr office and will be an annual evenr wirh a 5. Homecoming/ Reunion weekend will begin on L (Pere) Davis Sr. ('40), of Sr. Augusrine, FL, said. new theme each year. A lunch, held in rhe Magnolia Thursday (one day early) for rhese classes and will "But an even grearer accomplishment is in becoming Room, gave srudenrs, sralf, faculry, and alumni rhe include many special acriviries. The months of a finalist for the thirteenth rime in seventeen years; chance ro meer and ralk informally. personal conracr and the expanded schedule will quite a record! We extend our thanks and Alumni who participated in the career conference guarantee the most successful reunion weekends congrarularions ro Wake Forese's nearly 3,000 alumni, included Jan Wuerrenberger Blackford ('68), senior ever for each class. parents, faculry, srudents, and friends who are vice president, Wachovia Bank & Trust Company; These ambitious plans will require eighteen dedicated volunteers and generous donors for our Jon Bolron ('73), stockbroker, Smith Barney; Linda months of special attention if rhey are to be carried various campaigns and programs." Carter Brinson ('69), book page editor, Winston­ our successfully. Representatives from each class The awards will be made in July at the CASE Salem ]ouN~~JI; John Deans ('48), owner, Deans & attended an organizational workshop on campus on Annual Assembly in San Anronio, TX. Associates; Jim Gadd ('71), operarions manager, April 16, 1986. The Anniversary Reunion Class Southern Bell Telephone Company; Jeff Kies ('79), concept was explained and rhe workshop participants accounranr:, RJR Archer, Inc.; Ina Blackmore Kuhn began making plans for their classes. ('77), program direcror, Advanced Technology, Inc.; Caroline Spratt Young ('65) is general chairwoman John Lambert ('67), owner, John Lambert Associates; for all of rhe Anniversary Reunion classes. General Cebby Bolz Mann ('74, MEd '75), counseling chairpersons for the individual classes are adminisrraror, Mecklenburg Counry Yourh Services Bureau; Rick Mende ("74), financial analyse, RJR 1937 1967 Archer, Inc; Melvin Scales ("76), senior brand Berr Shore Fred Williams Law Alumni Executive planning assisranr, RJR Nabisco; William T . Smirh Birmingham, AL Franklin, TN ('58), vice presidenr personnel, RJR Archer, Inc; Don Committee meets, adds VonCannon ('67, JD '71 ), parrner, Allman, Spry, 1947 1977 members Humphreys & Armenrrour, Attorneys ar Law; and George Anderson Sreve Coles Thompson Wyan ('75), psychologist, Marshall Raleigh, NC Lexington, KY The Law Alumm Executive Committee mer jointly Psychological Associates. wirh rhe Law School Board of Vimors as parr of 1957 their spring meeting on Ma rch 21 and 22. The rwo Marvin Gentry groups ha ve discovered rhar their joint meetings give King, NC them the opporruniry ro discuss and debare numerous issues. Reunion class giving is new The establishment and implementation of long fund raising program range development goals was rhe primary discussion ropic. The group also saw borh the Veritas projecr (see the story on page 19) and rhe recently produced Wake Forest has a new program which will greatly Law School video (see rhe srory on page 9). expand rhe Universiry's annual resources and will Will this be lucky 13 for the In or her business Henry A. Harkey (JD '75 ), of give alumni an unprecedenred opporruniry ro renew CASE/US Steel award? Charlotte, was elected as the chairman of next year's friendships wirh one anorher and wirh rhe people ar Law Fund Campaign. Don Cowan Jr. ('65, JD '68), of the Universiry. Greensboro, will succeed D. Clark Smith Jr. ('72, JD The projecr is called the Anniversary Class Reunion Following a hard-earned rradition, Wake Forest's '75), of Lexington, as president of rhe Law Alumni program. Many of the successful alumni programs in alumni annual giving program is a finalise in the Execurive Commirree. the country (including those at aU of the Ivy League Council for Advancement and Support of Education The rerms of five members of rhe Law Alumni schools) build their annual support programs around (CASE)/US Sreel Alumni Giving Incentive Awards Executive Committee will expire chis summer. They inrensive efforts to solicit and entertain special competition. This is rhe thirteenth time in seventeen are H . Grady Barnhill Jr. (JD '58), of Winston-Salem; reunion classes. Wake Forest's nationally-recognized years the Universiry has been a finalist in rhe John C. W. Gardner Sr. (JD '56), of Mount Airy, NC; alumni program has not included chis kind of projeCt, competition which is based on giving figures Norman B. Kellum Jr. ('59, JD '65) of New Bern, bur the Anniversary Class Reunion program is an submitted for rhe 1984-85 fiscal year by over 1,100 NC; Mary I. Murrill (]D '75) of Monroe, NC; and ideal way ro increase rhe level of support and ro help colleges and universities. Clark Smith. Six new members will join rhe alumni renew rheir conracrs with Wake Forese Wake Forest, which competes in a classification Commirree at rhe summer meering. They are Nelson with orher major privare universities, is a finalist in friends. M. Casstevens Jr. (JD '65), of Charlotte; C. Banks Plans for the Anniversary Reunion classes include: rhe sustained performance category. This category Finger (JD '50), of Winston-Salem; Dan W Fours as a special reunion honors institutions for continuous increases in alumni I. Every class will be created ()D '58), of Greensboro; Ladson F. Hart (JD '68), of its renrh, rwentierh, dollars and alumni donors over a four-year period. class on rhe anniversary of Brevard, NC; Gerald F. Roach ('80, JD '82), of year since The Universiry placed firsr in this caregory in 1984 thirtieth, fortieth, and fiftieth Raleigh; and John H. Vernon Ill ('64, JD '67), of The classes of 1977, and finished second in 1980 and 1981. The graduation from Wake Forest. Burlington, NC. I%7, 1957, 1947, and I937 are the first classes ro Universiry also won rhe first place award for one- fall into rhis category.

Wake Forert U11iversity Maga zine page reven Jrmej 1986 ~ - Campru Cbr~mick -- Thirty new Alumni New Alumni Council' Members La" Councilors begin terms Stephanie Decker Roach ('81) Thomas K . Carlton Jr. ('59) Richard Thomas Howerron ill ('73) Raleigh, NC inn Salisbury, NC Charlotte, NC The University Alumni Council has elected durty joseph Stephen Rowell ('75) new members, acrording to Alumni Association Ashby Morris Cook Jr. ('71) Rebecca Melton Kafer ('68) Winston-Salem Tht president Alex Sink ('70), of Miam~ FL Their three­ Greensboro, NC New Bern, NC lute 0 year terms will begin on July 17, 1986 at the Alumni Susan Rivenbark Samuel (68) Council's summer planning conference, held at The Rebecca McDonald Currence ('61) Barbara Sudduth Kincaid ('78) fUll High Point, NC !l(cell Cloister at Sea Island, GA. New Orleans, LA Winston-Salem The Alumni Council is the official leadership Nau '83) C. Gilbert Smith ('54) organization of the University's 32,000 alumni. james lee Darden Jr. ('45, '47 MD) William F. laporte ID ('79, MBA Court Winswn-Salem Raleigh, NC During rheir three meetings each year and in the Ahoskie, NC Court work of their numerous rommirrees, the Council Tht Roberr lee Davis ('57) Roberr Scorr long ('81) Edmond Viaor Smith ('61) srudies issues important to alumni. These issues mod i Wadesboro, NC Charleston, WV Reidsville, NC include srudent recruitment, fund raising, regional sro

Rebekah lou Howell ('70) Westerville, OH

September. Construction on the building, located near exhibits and the lower level will house the curatorial Museum of Man gets new the German House and Palmer and Piccolo residence laboratories and storage space. halls, began in mid-March and should be complete by Eighteen srudenrs are working on the exhibirs for home August. the formal opening, the Museum's firsr exhibit since Museum direcror and curator Linda B. Robertson it put its collections into storage last June. The If all goes well, the University's Museum of Man said that the building is being built on rwo levels. exhibits will focus on some aspecr of the human life will move into irs first permanent home in early The upper level will house an activity gallery and cycle in the Asian, African, South African, North American, Mesoamerican, Eskimo, and Oceanic cultures. There will also be special exhibits on early life in North Carolina, archeology, and human evolution. Once the Museum of Mao is settled in irs new quarters, it hopes to resume irs public programming. Some programming was possible this year, and representatives of the educational department visited thirty-three area schools and conducted programs for more than 5,200 students. Robertson said that the additional space in the new building will give the Museum a chance to add to its collections. Negotiations are underway for the purchase of major collections from China and Japan. Items in the collections include sillr robes, "lily" shoes for women with bound feet, kimonos, gera, a Mandarin cap, Japanese netsuke (ivory) carvings, and cloissone boxes. The Museum is also trying to buy African attifacrs, including traditional masks, a Hausa robe, elaborate shell-covered jewelry, and a ceremonial fly whisk. Native American anifacrs under ronsiderarion include horn ladles, baskers, and bead work.

The Mlue•m of M.m h~&~ movetl olll of its Rqno/Ja Vi/Jage home •"" will move itJio tJ

page eight Wake Forest University Magazine ]lme/1986 Campus Cbronicle

Law School teams compete You won't see it on MTV, alumni have earned outstanding reputations m legal, business, public, and pnvate seaors. in moot court; mock trials but the Law School has a The v1deo explains rhe elements of the 440 Plan video that make Wake Forese special. First-year students are taught in classes smaller than chose m virtually The Wake Forest moor court and mock tnal teams any other law school in the country. A legal research have outstanding records of achievement in many Why shou ld a student choose Wake Forese Law and wricing course is one of rhe School's specialues. years of national competition. Some of rheJ r recent School? There are fou r other law schools in North Attorneys write for a living and th1s requtred course successes include the American Bar A ssociation Carolina and more than 170 1n the nat ion. How do helps srudents hone their writing skills. The clinical National Mock Trial CompetitiOn, rhe Craven Moor students decide v.•here to go to ger the best legal program IS unique m some respects and extraord.tnat)' Court Competition, and rhe lnternarion al Law Moot education? To help prospective students make that in others. Wake Forest is on the leading edge of all Competition. Courr choice-and ro encourage rhem ro choose Wake law schools 1n computer-assiSted research And the The American Bar Association sponsors a na tional Forest-the L aw School has entered a world curriculum focuses on enhanced corporate and trial competition each year to encourage law mock dominated by popular mus1cians lr has made a video. busmess mstruction to develop their litigation skills Students students The Lau· School Story IS narrated by Provost The video explains rhe Law School's admissions law schools in each of rhe COUnt f)'s eleven from Edwin G Wilson ( 43 and was edited and produced goals, its aggress1ve placement program, and ItS rry a case m a round robin tournament The regions by Lmda J M1chalsk 1, the Law School's direcror of continuing legal education commitment Student rop reams in each region compere in rhe nati onal rwo professi onal and p ubli c relat ions. The LJw School actlvuies are listed, including the honors and awards . This year, more than 100 schools pa mcipated finals Story describes the m osr salient features of legal students consistently win for their school m national in rhe mock trial competition. education of Wake Forest and is an accurate, up-to­ competitions. Wake Forest's ream-Vtrgirua Boyd (from date, s ingle voice story of the School w hich is The v1deo p rofiles a faculry known for its NC), Chalone, NC), Richard Moore (from Oxford, available ro prospective students, employers, alumni, exceptional teaching ability and for the dedication ro and Willie Nattie! (from Newberry, FL)-finished and members of the professional co mmunity. students which helps cr eate good student-faculty among rhe rop eight teams in the nation in this The video is pa rt of the new image of the Law relationships As student comments indicate, Law year's competition. They won the regtonal School called for m the 440 Plan. Wake Forest Law School faculty members have been examples, have competition in Memphis and the right to compete in School is a regional school w1th a solid base in N orth molded minds, and have chan ged lives-they have rhe national finals in San Antonio, TX on March 22 Carolina. The School has a great deal ro offer to made a difference. They reached the national quarter finals before they students from all parts of the country, but out-of­ The final stateme nt in t he video captures the lost ro the eventual champions, rhe Washington state students often don't realize that Wake Forest essence of Wake Forest Law School. "T he evolution University of St. Louis ream. has a law school. The video helps defeat one of the of an institutiOn involves a blend of pas t achievement Teams from Wake Forest have placed either first School's biggest adversaries-anonymity. with a clear vision of the future. We at Wake Forest years, or seoond in rbeir region for rhe last seven The production begins with the Law School's r ich are committed to making o ur School of Law one of giving the Law School one of the most successful heritage and its spirit of academic excellence in legal rhe best law schools in the country at the same r ime records in the nation in this competition. This year's education. At Wake Forest, students are introduced ro preservmg its tradition of warmth and closeness." ream was advised by Associate Professor of Law principles and ideals which influence them for the Wilson Parker and Adjuna Professor of Law Charles rest of their careers and their lives. Law School Taylor. On March I the Wake Forest Law School ream won the Craven Moot Court competicion. This competition was begun in 1978 in honor of the late J. Braxton Craven Jr., a Fourth Circwt judge, and is held annually in Chapel Hill. Teams from thirty-two law schools considered rhe problem of a li bel acrion filed by a religtous culr leader. The issue was whether rhe culr leader was a public figure for rhe purposes of Turn Yourself In! libel law under rhe Constitution. Members of the winning ream were Donna Sisson (from Roanoke, VA), Melanie Stevens (from HOME lNFORMA TION Pinsburgh, PA), and Scorr Lovejoy (from Chicago, Been promoted? Honored? Have a new job, N a mes(s) ------Class_ lL). house, husband, wife, or child? Send us all rhe l'lew Address ______Wake Forest's International Law Moor Court Team news. The Wake Forest University Magazine placed rhird in rhe regional moor court competition wants ro keep you in much with your in Knoxville, TN, on February 15 and 16. Wake classmates and friends. Spouse'------­ Forese also won second place 1n the brief And keep watching. Our deadlines are early, Telephone ------­ roo late for one tabloid issue compemion, and Susan Sparks, from Charlotte, NC. bur news received Effective Date ------­ will definitely appear in the next one-and was third best oral advocate. The ream mcluded BUSINESS lNFORMATION Anderson (from Old Mystic, CT), Marguerite tabloids are published in October, February, and Wade Job Title------Phone______Cameron (from Atlantic Beach, NC), Lori Privette June. So fill 1n the form below and send it co (from Kannapolis, NC), and Chris Tisi (from Lake Alumni Records Employer's Name ------Mailing Address ______Grove, NY}. Professor of Law George Walker was 7227 Reynolda Station rhe ream's faculty adviser. Winston-Salem, NC 27109 The International Law Moot Court Compemion Matching Gift Company?___ y es ____.., o. was named after the !are Philip C. Jessup. lr is unique Is this new mformation? ____y es o. in char ir requires rwo briefs, one for each side of rhe hypothetical case before the lnrernatlonal Court of Justice. This year's competition problem mvolved claims over ownership of cultural property and extradition

page nme }lme/ 1986 uv.. .e e For~ II Unu erut;• Magazme Campus Chronicle

manner," Constance F Gray, chairwoman of rhe held an open fo rum ro continue the dialog begun ar Board's srudent life commirree, said. "The Trustees rhe proresr. About fifteen srudenrs arrended rhe Students protest tuition were very impressed ::,y rhe students." fo rum and participa ted in a frank and full discussion tncrease President Hearn said, "I chink rhe concerns they of rhe tuition issue. Open forums are sponsored by broughr were entirely legitimate and imporrant rhe student government and are held throughout the ones." year. Most of the time, Wake Forest srudents ignore the During rhe week after the Board meeting, Hearn meerings of rhe University's Board of Trustees. In facr, they are probably unaware char rhe meetings are taking place and wonder why, on four weekends dunng rhe school year, there are unfamiliar faces in Reynolda Hall and parking spaces are more difficult ro find. But, when rhe Board mer on February 20 and 21 tO discuss nexr year's budger, 1,294 students nor o nly knew rhar the Board was meering, they opposed the planned 10 percent increase in ruirion. On Thursday evening, about 50 srudents held a rally protesting the proposed rui rion increase. T hey gathered ourside the Magnolia Room in Reynolda Hall where rhe Trustees were meeting for dinner, and carried signs which criticized the proposed ruirion increase. University President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. calked with rhe srudents and explained char ruirion increases are necessary to meer rising cosrs. "We're working on a whole series of issues," he said "Every dollar we ger is spent on your educarion." Sophomore Scorr Schneider, who organized the proresr, said char srudents realize char some ruirion increases are "a necessary evil." Tuition was S5,050 in 1983-84, $5 ,5 50 lase year, and is S6,000 chis year. The proposed increase would make nexr year's ruirion $6,600. Schneider said, "We'd like to know why and have some input." He said that students are President Hearn ta/Ju with Jtudents who are protetting the propoted 10 percent tuition increate. concerned chat raising ruirion would move Wake Forest roward becoming an elirisr school. Hearn told rhe srudents rhar the U niversiry needs more money for a variety of reasons, including pay Three-year Tuition raises for faculty and increased srudent aid in the face of federal cutbacks. Despite the 10 percent ruirion Comparison; Selected increase, revenues will increase by only 5 percent nexr year. Hearn pointed our ch ar ocher North Institutions Carolina private schools, including Duke University Two--year and D avidson College, will raise ruirion next year. School 1984-85 1985-86 1986-87 Increase And, he said char Wake Forese makes fi nancial aid Davidson $6,390 $7,130 $8,380 $ 1,900/3 1% The Wake Forest available ro chose who n eed it. "We're rry ing very Duke 7,380 8,270 9,180 1.800/24% hard to keep rhe school available," he said_ Emory 7,550 8,400 9,250 1,700/23% Deacon Club Furman 5,344 5,984 6,656 1,312/25% At Friday morning's meeting, rhe Trustees Nonhwesrecn 9,615 10.380 11,031 1,416/15% Join to help finance discussed ruition for abour rhirry minures and chen Richmond 6,750 7,155 7,575 825/12% approved rhe 10 percent increase. They also raised University of North Carolina:• • athletic scholarships room rent 9 percent. Senior Linda Colwell, rhe In-Sr:uc 773 794 818' 45/6% srudenr member of rhe Board, was rhe only Trustee Our-of-state 3.393 3,714 4,085' 692/20% University of Virginia:• • who vored against rhe increase. She also presented In-sta re 1,370 1,560 1,746 376/27% Complimentary Season Tickets rhe Board with a petition, signed by 1,294 srudents, Our-of-srarc 3,880 4,410 4,976 1,096/28% Priority Seating opposing rhe increase. The peririon also asked char Vanderbilt 7.500 8,500 9,300 1,800/24% Priority Parking significant progress be made toward the compl erion Wake Forese 5,550 6,000 6,600 1,050/19% Deductible Gift of the proposed srudent center, char facul ry salaries Washington 6,515 7,100 7,600 1,085/ 17% &lee Deacon Magazine be increased, char rhe srudents be informed of the Washington 8,600 9,200 10,500 1.900/22% provisions of a ll proposed budgers, and thar rhe Universiry THE DEACON CLUB adminisrarion bold f orums to get srudem and f aculty Williams 9,200 10,050 10,850 1,650/18% 7265 REYNOLDA STATION input. Colwell said char she vored against the increase College WINSTON-SALEM, NC 27109 ro demonstrate h er concern char students had nor • Esrimared fo r C ha ~l Hill campus; ocher UNC campuses have simila r charges. been rold the reasons for rhe incr ease. ••Public universities. In spire of their decision, several Trustees said char Source: Admissions office of in.sti tudons. Charges represent the students had ma de a point. "I chink the students ru.irion and re l a u~d fefi only, nor cocal coscs. handled their grievances in a very consrrucrive

page ten Wake Forest University Magaz it~ e ]une/ 1986 Campus Chronicle

the University of Maryland. He has won teaching "We believe this research will help us reach better awards at rwo universities: the Quantre!l Award for medicine and give better care, now and in the Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching at the future," Janeway said. "In addition, we can help University of Chicago, and the Distinguished Scholar­ Dornier find new ways ro use thelf innovative Teacher Award at the University of Maryland. He technology." has been a special consultant for the National Science Foundation's History and Philosophy of Science program, was a Sigma Xi National Bicentennial Applications up 9 percent; lecturer from 1974 to 1977, and has been an invited lecturer in several foreign countries and at over 200 minority scholarships colleges, universities, and conferences in this country established Shapere is a member of rhe editorial boards of Philosophy of Saence and Studies m HIStory and This year, the University received a record 5,000 Philosophy of Science. He has written numerous applications for 850 places in next year's freshman articles and books on the philosophy and history of class. That figure is a 9 percent increase over last science and other subjects. His most recent work, The year's total and the number of applications the Concept of Observation in Science and Philosophy, is admissions office receives has risen 30 percent in the forthcoming from Oxford University Press. last rwo years. Director of Admissions William G. Starling ('57) said that he was surprised by the increase. "It does Medical School chosen for amaze me. In the face of a declining population of eighreen-year-olds, we're experiencing an incredible lithotripsy research increase in applications. It's a tribute ro the whole of Wake Forest," he said Dllliley Shapere The Bowman Gray School of Medicine has been Of those who applied, 1,500 ro 1,600 were accepted selected to participate in a collaborative research and SO to 52 percent will choose to attend Wake program with Dornier Medical Systems of Munich, Forest. Starling said that because so many West Germany. applications were received, the University admitted a Shapere lectures on the Under rhe two-year program with Dornier, smaller percentage of applicants and that the quality Bowman Gray scientists will conduct studies designed of those admitted is very high. "There is no universe of modern science to derermine if the lirhorriprer can be used to safely question," Starling said "The quality of these and effectively treat diseases other than kidney students is better than ever before." stones. There will be abour SOO men and 300 women in Last spring, Dudley Shapere, the University's Z. The program was announced jointly by Richard next year's entering class. The number of women is Smith Reynolds Professor of Philosophy and History Janeway, vice president for healrh affairs and about LOO fewer than rhis year because of the of Science, presented a series of lectures on the executive dean of rhe Medical School, and Werner availability of residence hall space. Universe of Modern Science. Schwanze, a physicisr and research coordinator with The University is also making an effort to increase The first lecture, Appearance and Reality, discussed Dornier. the number of black students on campus. The the world we live in-its variety and puzzling David L. McCullough, professor and head of rhe number of black undergraduates enrolled at Wake fearures-aod gave listeners an overall picture of the Section on Urology, will head rhe research ream Forest has declined steadily in each of the last five present universe according to modern science. which will study the effectiveness of lithotripsy in the years. This year, only 99 of the 3,350 undergraduates Modern Physics and the Origin of the Universe treatment of such problems as solid rumors and are black-<>r roughly 3.3 percent. presented evidence for the Big Bang theory and its calcium deposits at other sites in the body. Also This trend is not unique ro Wake Forest. Duke new connections with physics. Sha pere also discussd participating will be Charles E. Welander, associate University, Guilford College, and the sixteen the fundamental forces of nature, Grand Unification professor of obstetrics and gynecology (gynecologic campuses in the University of North Carolina system theories and cosmology, and symmetry breaking and oncology), and Michael E. Berens, research instructor also report a decline in the number of black students the early universe. and an expert in tumor cell tissue culture_ on campus. Some experts say that high ruirion bills The third lecture, The Evolution of the Material Dornier developed the lithorripter, which has and dwindling financial aid programs are responsible, World, conrioued the discussion of the structure of revolutionized the medical management of kidney while others claim that more black high school the universe and the origins of that structure. stones. It uses high-energy shock waves ro graduates are choosing military careers instead of Shapere also traced the later stages of the Big Bang disintegrate kidney scones, saving the patient the going to college. and talked about the lives of rhe scars and the cost, pain and long recovery period associated with In January, the University announced a minority evolution of the chemical elements. major surgery. scholarship program which, administrators hope, will Life in the Universe was concerned with the origin Dornier has designed and is building a special increase black enrollment. Using a S600,000 grant of the solar system and the earth. Shapere considered research lirhotripter for the Bowman Gray School of from the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, the the conditions for the existence of life and the Medicine. This lithotriprer, which will be used for University will offer seven full tuition minoriry possibilities of life elsewhere in the universe tissue rulrure and small animal experiments, will be scholarships in each of the next four years. According In his final lecture, The Pate of the Universe, the only one of its kind in the United States. It will to University President Thomas K Hearn Jr., Shapere discussed alternative cosmologies, black be installed in June. In addition ro rhe lithotriprer, "Recent trends in education have not encouraged holes, and rhe death of galaxies, stars, and particles. Dornier has agreed ro provide S 140,000 to support financial aid programs for minority srudents, and He also talked about the life and the fare of rhe the research over a rwo-year period. that is why we at Wake Forest believe that we must universe and the possibility of rhe survival of Schwarrze said, "Dornier is quire interested in persist in our efforts ro promore such programs now" Admissions officers hope that the minority intelligent beings. having the lirhorriprer used for treating many generate more applications from Shapere received his BA, MA, and PhD degrees diseases, if that is possible. We have carefully selected scholarships will students. from Harvard University, and before coming ro only a few research collaborators and Bowman Gray black high school minority scholarships are alseady Wake Forest taught at Ohio State University, the is the only research sire where such extensive Several partial Forest. University of Chicago, the University of lllinois, and research will be conducred." available at Wake

page eleven ]lme/ 1986 Wake Foreil University Magazine Campu• Chronicle

Goldberg and Lee lecture at Law School

From March 22 co March 25, the Law School lecrure series, The Supreme Co11rt-Advocacy and Decuton , presented a first-hand view of the country's htghest court from both sides of rhe bench. Rex E. Lee, former solicitor general of the United States, spoke on Oral Argument-The Solicttor Gener al's Vtew at the annual Law Day Banquet on March 22. Lee said that attorneys should keep three tmportant points in mind when they make an oral argument. They should know rhe record, answer questions, and keep to their intended course and know when co stop. As solicitor general, Lee represented the federal government before the Supreme Court for more than four years. His record as chief lawyer before the Court is impressive. He won thirry-one of the cases Arthur Goldberg he argued, and his office won more than 80 percent of its cases. Lee has been praised and criticized for his independence in choosing issues co appeal. He said that his role as solicitor general "was to win Law School selects Class of cases in the Supreme Court and to maintain the 1989 Fletcher scholars starure of tbe office." On March 25, Arthur J. Goldberg, secrerary of labor, associare jusrice of the Supreme Court, and The Wake Forest Universiry School of Law has ambassador to the United Nations, gave a lecrure selected Vicki L. Harden and Charles Richard Splawn ritled Reflections of a Former Supreme Court justice as the two AJ. Fletcher scholars for the Class of and talked informally with his audience abour the 1989. Supreme Court. Harden graduated in May from Oklahoma State He said that the Constitution is a living document Universiry with a BS degree in political science. At and must be interpreted through tbe ages-it is not OSU, she was a member of the Mortar Board, Alpha merely a record of what our fo refathers thought. Lambda Delta, ODK, and the Orange and Black Quill. Goldberg said that "time works changes" and pointed Harden was a Regent's scholar, a Hannah Keenan our that the 1930s court was a more activist Court scholar, and a Lutheran Brotherhood scholar. She was than either the Warren Court or the present one. He president of her social sororiry and a member of the also said rhar we shouldn't expect too much of the srudent council, the Homecoming Committee, and the United Nations but should see it as a "mirror image Greek Week Committee. Harden also worked as a of the turbulent and imperfect world we live in." hostess for the OSU athletic department. Goldberg was admitted co the practice of law in A 1985 graduate of UNC-Charlotte, Splawn earned a BA degree in biology/anthropology. From 1979 to 1929 and, during his career, he has been in private Rex Lee practice, has been special counsel for numerous 1984, Splawn attended UNC-Greensboro where he unions, has taught law and has held many was a member of the Harriett Elliott Lecture distinguished professorships, and has received New soccer coach appointed Committee, a srudent representative for the numerous awards, including the honorary Doctor of anthropology department, and a member of the In February, George Kennedy resigned after six Laws degree from more than rwenty universities. He Anthropology Club. He was on the Dean's list from years as the Universiry's soccer coach. Kennedy did has written four books and numerous scholarly 1982 to 1984 and on the Chancellor's list both not say whar he plans co do, but said, "J have enjoyed articles. semesters at UNC-C. Splawn withdrew from UNC-G my association with Wake Forest and the academic and worked at a variery of jobs before completing his comuniry here, but I feel it is time to pursue other degree at UNC-C. Since graduation he has worked for of my Harper Scholarship areas which would be in the best interest Carolina Biological Supply Company of Burlington, family and me." He planned to coach yourh and NC. until July. established communiry soccer in Winston-Salem The AJ. Fletcher Scholarship was made possible Chyzowych, a In March, the Universiry hired Walt through contributions from a charitable and World Cup team A bequest from George G. ('42) and Georgine M. former United States Olympic and educational foundarion esrablished by AJ. Flercher who has been Harper of Rocky Mount, NC, has established the coach, to replace Kennedy. Chyzowych, Recipients are selecred by the Scholarship Committee national coaching director for the US Soccer George G. and Georgine M. Harper Scholarship on rhe basis of academic excellence, promise as a very exciting Fund. The scholarship is made possible by a Federarion since 1983, satd, "This is outstanding members of rhe legal profession, and challenge for me. The ACC IS the elite soccer chamable rrust established in 1984 which yields personal interviews. Financial need is nor a crirerion. conference in Americ•. Being here is as good as being approxtmately 511,000 per year. Scholarships are Two Fletcher scholarships are awarded for each with the New York Cosmos." awarded on rhe basis of financial need and scholastic entering class. The scholarship pays $27,000 ($9,000 Athletic Director Gene Hooks ('50) said rhar the abtlity per year) for rhe three-year degree program. Summer Universiry plans co increase its soccer scholarships co Steven Burgess, of Nashville, NC, and Sharon school is nor included. To rerain the scholarship, rhe the NCAA maximum number of eleven and to Pitman, of Rocky Mount, NC, are rhe first recipients recipienr musr be in the upper 25 percent of the upgrade its facilities. of the Harper Scholarships. class.

page twelve Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/ 1986 Campus Chronicle

Hinze, Noftle give papers, chair meetings

Professor of chemistry Willie L. Hinze presenred a paper ar rhe thirry-sixth Pimburgh Conference on Analytical and Applied Spectroscopy in Arlanric City, NJ last March. His paper is on the Use of Organized Media to Enhance Sensitized Chemil11mmercence Re.aiom. He also presided ar a session on HPLC­ Comptlterr in Data Acq11irition and Control. In April, Hinze organized a symposium on the Use of Ordered Media in Chemical Separatiom for rhe 191sr national meeting of the American Chemical Society in . He presided at one of the symposium's sessions and presented a paper at another. Hi.nu holds the BS and MA from Sam Houston Stare and rhe PhD from Texas A & M. He has been at Wake Forest since 1975. Professor of chemistry Ronald E. Noftle is chairman of the division of flourine chemistry of the American Chemical Sociery. He chaired rhe division's first rechnical session ar the ACS meetings in New York City in April. Willie L Hinze Noftle received a BS from the U Diversity of New Hampshire and a PhD from Washingron University. He has been on the faculty ar Wake Forest since 1967. Ro,.,JJ Noftk

Cross-country runners compete in Austria

A Wake Forest cross-counuy team, composed of five men and five women and roached by women's track coach Francie Goodridge and head track and Wake Forest has been invited to nominate three cross-country coach John Goodridge, represented the candidates for the Luce Scholars program. Fifteen Scholars United Stares ar the fifth annual World Universiry are chosen by the Luce Foundation each year. Cross-country championships on March 27 in Graz., At the heart of the program are internships and job Austria The Deacons were the only American team opportunities arranged on the basis of professional interest chosen fo r the world championships and they and background. Running for ten months from mid­ September until late competed against squads representing nineteen other July, these assignments - where feasible, in East and Southeast Asia - are mtended to be nations. learning opportunities. "We were rhe only country represented by a single The competition is ngorous. Nominees are expected to universiry," John Goodridge, who coached a ream of have an outstanding academic record, a clearly defined US women ro rhe 1985 World Cross-country career interest in a specific field, other than Asian studies championship, said. "The ochers were national all­ and international relations; strong motivation and potential star reams, and since runners up ro age rwenry-eighr for accomplishment, especially in the stated field of interest; were eligible, we were the youngest ream there as evidence of outstanding capacity for leadership; openness well." to new ideas; and a special sensitivity to other people. The Deacons didn't expect ro bear such keen Nominees must be American citizens who wll hold a comperiuon. The women finished renrh in a thirteen­ Luce bachelor's degree and be no more than twenty-ni ne by September 1, 1987 They may be current seniors or recent ream field and the men placed sixteenth 1n a field of Scholars Program graduates. current or recent graduate students, or current nineteen. Bur they didn't just run another race JUnior faculty members "We took time <0 visit and ralk with all the YEAR IN EAST ASIA Anyone interested in being nominated should consult athletes abour our common interests and emphasized Jane Carmichael, c/o Provost's Office, 7225 Reynolda our ties," Kim Lanane, a senior and recenr recipient Station, Winston-Salem, NC 27109, for information and of the ACC Award for Academic and Athletic application forms Applications must be returned to the fuccellence, said. "Bur we also talked about our University by October 15, 1986. differences. If more countries couJd sit down and talk as we did, ir would help so much."

fulge thmeen ""'e/1986 W dke Foreit Univeruty Magazme Campus Chronicle ( Jorizzo, who was elected rhe Outstanding Faculry Member for 1983 ar the University of Texas Medical White wins award for Branch, intends ro develop a strong reaching program in dermarnlogy. His primary research interest is rhe research in cancer treatment causes of skin inflammation. The department, in addition rn irs reaching and research responsibilities, will rrear patients with J Courdand White, an associate professor of l disorders of rhe skin, hair, nails, and mucous of biochemistry ar the Bowman Gray School membranes. The department also will have a new Medicine, has won a national award for his research Moh's surgery unit for rhe treatment of complicated in cancer rrearment. White received rhe Leukemia skin rumors. The unit will be staffed by Sociery of America Scholar Award which is designed dermatologists, plastic surgeons, otolaryngologists, encourage young invesrigarors ro sray in cancer ro and oprhalmologisrs. The development of a psoriasis research. He will receive $200,000 over rhe next five day-care center is planned. Plans also call for rhe years. recruitment of three additional dermatologists during White specializes in experimental therapeutics, an the next three years. area rhar mixes rhe fields of biochemistry and Jorizzo was a magna cum laude graduate of Boston pharmacology. He is studying rhe anticancer drug University, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. cyrosine arabinoside, or AraC, ro determine how ir is He also received the MD degree from Boston transported across cell membranes. AraC is highly Universiry and was elected rn Alpha Omega Alpha. . effective in che treatment of adult leukemia He completed residency craining at North Carolina White uses computer models ro determine which Memorial Hospital. patients will respond rn AcaC and which will nor. By He was awarded the William Reed Traveling feeding biomedical data into a computer, he hopes rn Fellowship in 1979 and studied ar St. John's Hospiral be able rn simulate what would happen if rhe drug for Diseases of rhe Skin in London. He has served on were given rn a particular patient. That way, patients rhe faculty of rhe U niversiry of Texas Medical Branch who would nor benefit from rhe drug could be spared since 1980. rhe discomfort and rhe expense associated with ]oieph L ]orizzo Jorizzo is secretary / treasurer of the Southern raking ir. Section, Sociery for Investigative Dermatology. He White said rh_ar he also hopes ro devise berrer ways was edirnr of the book, Urticaria and the of administering AraC. By using computer models, he Inflammatory Reactive Vascular Dermatoses and is hopes ro determine which chemotherapeutic drugs co-author of a rexrbook now in preparation. He has or diminish irs effectiveness. He said char he enhance written fourteen chapters published in textbooks and also plans rn srudy rhe order of administration in has made more than sixry ocher contributions rn rhe which rhe anticancer drugs are mosr effective. medical literature in dermarology. White, who came ro Bowman Gray in 1980, received a bachelor's degree from Eastern College and a doctorate from rhe University of Virginia. He has been a National Insrirures of Health posrdocrnral fellow ar UNC-Chapel Hill and at rhe Medical College of Virginia. Celebrating 152

years of excellence. • Ar W:ake Forest University we continue rn strive for excellence. Our Jorizzo joins Medical School reputation reflects char goal. faculty W~ have many outstanding faculty whose accomplishments are a source of pn_de. By recognizing these faculty, we are meeting rhe challenges and reachmg the goals of tomorrow. We are investing in rhe future. Joseph J. Jorizzo has been appointed rn rhe faculry Pleas~ consider making your investment in rhe future of Wake Forese of rhe Bowman Gray School of Medicine as professor . Forest in your will is an excellent way ro and chairman of rhe new department of dermarnlogy, Umvers1~ Remembering Wake mvesr 1n 1rs growth in rhe years ro come. according rn Richard Janeway, vice president of significant have been reachel:l because of rhe thoughtful health affairs and executive dean. Jorizzo comes co Ma~y goal~ plann1ng of generous fnends-scholarships, professorships, and general Bowman Gray from rhe University of Texas Medical endowment ass1srance. Branch ar Galvesrnn, where he was an associate For more information about planned giving opportunities, write or call: professor. He succeeds Charles M. Howell Jr., Juhus H. Corpening professor emeritus of dermarology, who for rwenry­ Assistant Vice President for Development and one years headed rhe section on dermarnlogy. Esrare Planning "Dermarnlogy is a medical specialty rhar has grown 7227 Reynolda Srarion tremendously," said Fairfield Goodale, dean of che Winsron-Salem, NC 27109 Medical School. 'That's why our section on (919) 761-5224 dermarnlogy has been elevated ro full departmental srarus."

ptJge fourteen Wake Forest University Magazine ]unef/986 Carswell scholars help n1ake Wake Forest a special place

by Gareth Clement

Since 1969 Carswell scholars have been a presence on the Wake Forest University campus. These students, chosen for their academic ability and leadership qualities, chaUenge their faculty and peers as they confront the status quo. They do so in the spirit of Pro Hu11UZ11itate which asks that knowledge and values be examined in order to understand the nature of service to mankind. Established by the will of the late Guy T. Carswell of Charlotte, NC. and guided by his widow, the late mcluded Charles Bagwell (Carswell '72), assiStant Clara Carswell. the Guy T. Carswell Scholarship professor of pediatric surgery, University of Florida; program recogruzes talented students who Hannah Hardgrave, department of philosophy, Wake demonstrate academic achievement, extra-curricular Forest University; Michael Kilby (Ca rswell '86); and contributions, and leadership potential. Mr. Carswell Darlyne Menscer (Carswell '75 ), assistant director, (BA, JD '22) established the program with a bequest department of family practice, Charlotte (NC) scholar, a Marshall scholar, and a Truman scholar­ of $1 million in january, 1968. In December, 1985, Memorial Hospital. Tom Phillips (Carswell '74, MA typical of the achievements and futures of these the Carswell Fund had a value of $3,348,000. '78) was moderator. The symposium was open to all students-Carswell scholars are more than a group of Since it began awarding Carswell scholarships, the students, faculty, and staff. intellectuals. The senior Carswells have graduate and University has made over 1,500 awards totaling later that evening a banquet honoring the senior professional school acceptances from Harvard, Yale, approximately $2.5 million. This includes basic merit Carswell scholars was held in the Magnolia Room in Cornell, , and Georgia Tech, among many stipends, currently set for new students at $2,500 Reynolda Hall. The banquet also honored Clara others. Variety is evident in the summer grant annuaUy; occasional extra merit stipends for Carswell, who died on March 13, 1986, at the age of experiences these twenty-nine seniors have had. They extraordinary students; need-based funds that go ninety-three. William Lloyd Miller (Carswell '70), have done special research at Yale and Woods Hole; beyond the minimum stipend; and, since 1978, associate professor of family medicine at the studied law in Scotland, New Wave music in London, summer grants of up to $1,000. For University of the 1985-86 Connecticut, was the evening's speaker. medicine in Guatemala, Yeats in Ireland, and IBM in academic year, the Scholarship Commirree awarded Susan C. Rogers (Carswell '86) gave the senior New York; and worked in government from 116 Carswell scholarships. response. Washington to Parliament. Their range of majors is Originally, the University used the Carswell Without a doubt, the Carswell scholars are an broad as well. English, history, mathematics, program to recognize extraordinary admitted elite academic ability with outstanding high school records, computer science, economics, psychology, the natural at the high school level. In 1974, the Scholarship generally in the top I percent of the class. The ten sciences, and business/ accountancy are aU Committee extended the year recognition of Carswell Scholastic Aptitude Test score for Caswell respresented. Music and art are also increasingly scholars to include upperclassmen. Since 1978 recipients is near the 1400 mark, also in the top 1 common majors and minors among these students. Carswell scholars have had the opportunity to percent nationally. A sampling of Carswell scholars reveals that they undertake independently designed summer projects In the spring an on-campus interview with a panel have had very different experiences at Wake Forest. funded by the Scholarship Committee. from the Scholarship Committee narrows the Andrew Tuttle ('87), a physics major from Wake The Carswell Society, inaugurated on April 12, hundreds of applicants to approximately seventy. Forest, NC. admits he wouldn't be at Wake Forest if 1978, on the tenth anniversary of the first Carswell From this group, forty scholars are chosen. The it weren't for the scholarship. "When I came for my scholarships, offers Carswell alumni the chance for a University also selects a limited number of interviews the treatment they gave us won me over closer relationship with the program and the Upperclass Carswell scholars, recognizing to the school. I partirularly enjoyed the class visits University. One major function of the Society is the achievement at Wake Forest. Renewal of the they scheduled," Turtle said. "My freshmen year I annual symposium and banquet. On the afternoon of Carswell scholarship requires campus leadership and lived in a suite with six other Carswell scholars. April 14, 1986, the Society presented a program on academic success, generally in the B range or better. the current problems of ethics in medicine. Panelists Although the Class of 1986 includes a Rhodes Comin11tti on pagt /6

/lme/1986 Wake Forest Uni11ersity Magazine page fifteen Carswell scholars Continued

financially. For me the scholarship was an incredible Although we were nor your typical homogenous thriving. Many returned to Winston-Salem for the blessing. It enabled me nor to have to work for two group we were able to live rogerher in peace and annual symposium and banquet. tO Rica and harmony. Each person went his own way. Four of us Alumni seem to share many memories with the summers and I was able ro go Costa Belize with [Associate Professor of Anthropology pledged fraternities (a ll different ones) and we all current Carswell scholars. Sherry Leblang ('72), of David) Evans for overseas research," Miller said. An were studying a different field. It was fun and I think Charlorte, NC, was one of the first class of freshmen Miller confessed, I grew a l or from that experience," Turtle Carswells. "It was a great opportunity. The Wake anthropology major at Wake Forest, 'T m a physician now but an anthropologist at heart." commented. Forest experience has meant so much to me. I reach scholars, Upperclass Carswell scholar Mary Beth Surton college now and I don't think I could have received a Most importantly, however, Carswell represent the ('861 sa1d rhar the scholarship came at a very good better education," Leblang said. A Spanish major at wherher rhey are alumni or students, ume financially for her family because her sister is a Wake Forest, Leblang would encourage her children hope and love char make Wake Forest University a freshman here. The senior English major found that to artend Wake Forest and apply for the Carswell special place. Carswell scholars are outstanding the interview process gave her the opportunity to Scholarship. citizens, campus leaders, prominent alumni, and good meet people during interviews rhar she had nor met William Lloyd Miller, the speaker at this year's friends of the U niversiry. As recipients of one of the in her three years here. "I enjoyed going through the banquet, was one of the first U pperclass Carswell University's most covered scholarships, the Guy T. interview process because it made me think things scholars. "Receiving the Carswell was a total surprise Carswell scholars grace their surroundings with their through. It really rested me," she said. to me. I didn't even realize I was competing and rhen intelligence, their service, and their leadership. A physics major from Lincolnton, NC, Corby I got a lerter," Miller laughed "Receiving the Hovis ('87) has a gram to do physics research this Carswell did wonders for my ego. It gave me more Gareth Clement ('84! i1 a Jta/f writer in the summer at Cambridge, England. "Being a Carswell confidence in my ability, nor to mention freeing me UniverJity relation! office. has meant a chance to interact with other students who share with me com·mon intelleerual interests," he said. Also Hovis enjoys the academic respect he gets from his peers and professors because he is a A Classic Black and Gold Offering Carswell scholar. from the Wake Forest Student Alumni Council Ingrid Kincaid ('89), a freshman from Charlotte, NC, hopes ro work in Parliament for a summer. Like Cross fine writing instruments are many freshmen, Kincaid has already changed her valued for cheir qualicy and craftsmanship. The disdncrive Classic about her major. Originally pre-med, she is mind Black scyle wich che Universicy seal now considering a politics major with a music minor. carefully reproduced in gold is the "My experience ar Wake Forest has made me realize perfect gifc for ch ac special Wake [ enjoy other cultures. I'd like to use what I have Forester. Available in ball pomc pen, pencil, Wak~" forttt learned so far and develop my talents for a career in t.:n1~1'nuy-' or ball poinc pen/ pencil sec and reproduced 1nd international business," Kincaid said. "I don't feel handsomely gifc boxed. pt-rmancndy different because I'm a Carswell. I act, dress, and do affia-td 10 dip. things like normaL There's no reason for me to be P.S. You mig ht wane co order an overproud. At the same rime I'm glad I have the extra set for yourself scholarship. It proves to me I'm worth something," Kincaid s.Ud. This special offer from che Wake Forese Srudenc Alumni A history major from Cincinnati, OH, Maury Council IS available for a lim iced cime. Proceeds from che sales Tepper ('88) performed at the Carswell banquet as will fund Council programs and services. Please endose your parr of the jazz ensemble "Then Again." The group check or money order, for che full amounc of your purchase, made payable co the WFU Scudenr Alumni Council. of one other Carswell scholar, Virginia is composed Merchandise will be mailed to "ship co" address below. Each Brown ('87), from Blacksburg, VA, and a Hankins item is shipped in an anractive presemarion box suitable for scholar, Andy Mitchum ('86), from Newton, NC. gift-wrapping. Please allow six co eighc weeks for delivecy afcer Tepper also mentioned the interview process as an receipt of payment exciting parr of his Carswell experience. "The panel Inquires abouc your order should be sene co Scudenc Alumni Council, 7208 Reynolda Scacion, Winscon-Salem, NC 27109. interview with five other applicants and five Scholarship Committee members was a unique experience. It was interesting to try and ear lunch and answer quesrions at rhe same rime," he added. I wish co purchase che following merchandise Tepper feels rhar his Carswell experience has Tocal encouraged him to develop in ocher areas and has Order Form Items Quantiry Price Please prim clearly. If "ship co" address is different, Classic Black Pen/ given him a chance ro do so. Tepper, who thought please accach shipping address co order form. he'd study business, has decided ro add a music minor Pencil Sec $39.95 ro his history major and he plans to go to law school. Name------Classic Black Pen $19.95 Tepper also plays saxophone with the Piedmont Address------Phon"'----- Classic Black Pencil $19.95 Airlines jazz ensemble. While he contemplates a Sub-Toea! summer project, Tepper will continue his work as Cicy ------Scace__Zip__ _ the Hamilton County clerk in domestic relations for Shipping/Handling S 1.00 per icem Court in Cincinnati, OH. Grand Toea! Carswell alumni live and work around the world, from medical centers to college reaching, from the Make check payable co WFU Srudenc Alumni Council. Mail co WFU Scudenc Alumni Council 7208 Reynolda Stare Department in India ro rhe New York Times. Scacion, Winscon-Salem, NC 27109. ' In addition, the Carswell a!umni network is alive and

page IixteetJ Wake ForeJt UniverJity Magazine ]une/1986 Production manager joel Southern and announcer Eileen Lee are part of the Ita// that keepi WPDD on the a1r. From 10 to 100,000 watts- • WFDD has changed 10 25 years

WFDD celebrated its twenty-five years of WFDD has also made significant programming by ]on Healey broadcasting on March 13, 1986 with a reception and changes during its twenty-five years on the air. It a party that included a massive birthday cake. once was a potpourri of music and information, WFDD-FM, Wake Forest University's radio Acrually, November 18, 1965 may be a more serving a wide variety of tastes. Now, Statton officials station, spoke to Winston-Salem for the first rime on significant date in WFDD's history than March 13, say, the byword is consistency. March 13, 1961. Before then, rhe station's news 1961. That was the day the station announced its In the 1960s and 1970s, WFDD's broadcasts programs, lectures, popular music, and classical plans ro join the Friends of Fine Broadcasting and included the congressional hearings on Watergate and performances were heard ohly on campus through a made a commitment ro expand its classical music the Alaskan pipeline, student documentaries on closed circuit network. At 6:40 p.m. that day, the broadcasts. That commitment, coupled with the abortion and drugs, and live coverage of West Federal Communications Commission gave WFDD establishment of the National Public Radio network Germany's national elections. Wake Forest professor authority to begin test broadcasts, and twenty and federal support for public stations, shifted of speech communication and theatre arts Julian C. minutes later the station went on the air with a news WFDD's focus off campus and increased its audience Burroughs Jr. ('51), who was director of WFDD from program. to an estimated 39,000 listeners. Contmued on page 18

page seventeen }une/1986 Wake Foreii University Magazine WFDD has changed Continued

public stations, although Congress has set aside that in 1965, the station's mission totally isolated." To meet that demand, the station 1958 to 1981 , said money through 1987, Callison said. to balance programming in carries a bout five-and-a-half hours of news and was two-fold. "We had The station has three other sources of revenue: the the hope we could please both the U niversiry information programs each weekday. Most of these Universiry, its listeners, and businesses. The ampus listeners," he said. programs are provided by the National Public Radio commu niry and off-c University's support has provided a steady foundation "(,enerall)• the theory was to devote about three network and include Morning Edition and All over the years, Callison said, making up about 25 hou rs each night to educational programs and two Thm gs CotJiidered. percent of the station's budget. Listener support for hou rs to a record request show aimed almost entirely Late night JaZZ and Saturday night folk programs WFDD has grown from 2 or 3 percent of the at the srudents " also give WFDD listeners an alternative to classical station's budget to 45 percent, Callison said. The In those days, WFDD had a I 0-watt transmitter music. Skillington said the main reasons WFDD increase in listener contributions has allowed the and broadcast only at night. In 1967, the Friends of carries jazz are that "it's an a udience that wouldn't station to improve its sound with new digital fine Broadcasting helped WFDD increase its power otherwise be served-and it is compatible with equipment such as compact disk players, he said. The to I 0,000 wattS and begin daytime broadcasts. The classical music." station's next goal is to invest in digital recording Friends raised money for a new transmitter and, in The folksy A Prair•e Home Companion and the equipment for state-of-the-art recordings of local exchange, WFDD promised to devote more time to Fiddle and Bow Sociery's programs of traditional classical music. Burroughs said chat the agreement string music on Saturday night are compatible classical performances. One source of revenue that has a lot of potential was not a compromise for the station. "My position because they appeal to many of the same people who as a manager was, we would basically decide what our listen to classical music, Skillington said. A Prairie for growth, Callison said, is underwriting by programming would be and let the listeners come to Home CompanlotJ is so popular that the station businesses. So far, WFDD has been conservative in us, rather than necessarily going out and asking the carries it on Sunday afternoons as well. this area for fear of seeming commercial and turning listeners, 'What do you want?' In other words, we Other factors in the station's evolution were its away some listeners. Even with the threatened loss of made decisions about what we thought should be on association with the National Public Radio network federal support, Skillington said, "I don't see us being the air, certainly in response [to public concerns). We and the money provrded by the federal government. faced with the question of extinction. The question wouldn't ha ve responded to Friends of Fine The National Public Radio network was put together may be, how much will we continue to grow? And Broadcasting if we hadn't wanted to respond." in 1971 by a group of college and public radio that's not an unhappy question." Burroughs said that he thinks a station associated admini~trators , including Burroughs. The Corporation Callison said the station has increased its audience with a universiry ought to be interested in the fine for Public Broadcasting, which Congress established not because of an increase in classical music's arts. "It can be called an elitist point of view in in 1967 to support public radio and television, populariry, but because WFDD's programming is programming," he said, "but ]' m one that feels this is provided hundreds of thousands of dollars to make more consistent. Clearly, WFDD is not about to the point of view that has been more often than not membership in the network affordable to public attract new listeners by adding programs that appeal neglected in this country. stations. Burroughs says that funding from the to the masses. As Burroughs put it, "If you have to "I think there is a large body of work that comes Corporation for Public Broadcasting was essential. start providing popular programming... then you are under the heading of fine arts that generally "There's no doubt about it; public broadcasting and in danger of missing that target which has been the Americans are not exposed to . ...Americans alternative broadcasting in this country could not target throughout much of the history of [public generally are illiterate when it comes to the fine arts have developed without federal funding." radio's] development. . . . . Many people saw the alternative system as In addition to indirectly aiding WFDD through its "My view of broadcasting," Burroughs said, "is emphasizing that sort of thing." support for National Public Radio, the federal somewhat along the lines of the BBC Third Program. For the next twelve years, WFDD tried to government gave the station almost $115,000 in 1981 The Third Program idea was, 'We'll provide this kind maintain the uneasy balance between music programs to increase its power to 100,000 watts. When the of high-level programming and hope to develop an for students and fine arts programs for the general increase was made on September 10, 1982, WFDD audience, and not water it down. Let that audience public. In 1979 and 1981, however, the station cut out began to reach radios as far as thirry-five miles away rise to the level of the programming, rather than the last four hours of student music productions and and the station's audience has grown to an estimated bring the level of programming down.' I think that's since then has tried to streamline its programming 39,100 adults each week. It also has done wonders for what public broadcasting ought to be all about­ into a pure fine arts and information format. the station's fund raising campaigns.WFDD broadcast raising the standard of taste, rather than Howard Skillington, who has been the program its first appeals for money in 1977. The pledges have accommodating the standards that are already there .. director for WFDD for seven years, said public radio grown from S41 ,000 in 1982 to $147,000 last fall. . . The popular arts are going to survive without any stations across the country have been doing the same The increase in power and the affiliation with help. They're going to survive in the marketplace. things that WFDD has done. Skillington said public National Public Radio ended the student-produced The fine arts generally need a sort of subsidy. And I radio stations once tried to be like public television music shows, although students continue to work as look upon the public broadcasting movement basically stations, scheduling a hodgepodge of programs that announcers and to produce bits of local news and as a fine arts movement, or it should be.'' appealed to different audiences. In WFDD's case, that interviews. "The fact is, the station has become a meant starting the day with two hours of progressive much more professional station over the years," This article appeared in the March 9. I 986 im;e of rock, followed by an hour-long talk show and an hour Burroughs said. the Wimton-Salem Journal. lt is reprinted by of instructional programs from the Forsyth Counry Skillington doesn't think that the next five years permission. schools, then switching to classical music. Audience will change WFDD's programs as much as the last research studies convinced public radio stations, five have. Instead, WFDD will concentrate on including WFDD, that people do not rune in to radio "matters of refinement," Skillington said-things like as selectively as they rurn on the television set, keeping listeners runed in as one program ends and Skillington said. And that research made public radio another begins. stations interested in a consistent format. A bigger issue for WFDD is financial solvency in By the time research studies were spite of federal cutbacks. T. Cleve Callison Ill, completed, WFDD was clearly defined as a classical WFDD's station manager, said that about 15 percent music station, Skillington said. But the station also . of the station's budget comes from the federal learned from the audience surveys that "even the government. And President Reagan has repeatedly most devoted classical music lovers don't want to be called for the government to stop giving money to

page e~ghteen Wake Forest University Magazine ]unef/986 Harvard and Wake Forest La"W Schools create first interactive laser videodisc la"W '-School ExeC~~~•~• Commlllee member Norm•n Kell*m ('j9, JD '6j) .utJ OJ defeme .Uome, •J (/eft lo right} ucond-ye•r l•u• nudenl Polmer HMffJletler ]r. ('84), LJu School Bo..rd of V11i1orJ member Albert Z•glar. LJw School Exec11tne Committee lessons 111ember Polmer HMffrlltler ('j9, ]D '61 ), •nd LJu School Bo.rd of ViHtorJ member MM""J' GreOJon 09. ]D '62) w.:J/ch.

The judge, who had temporarily abandoned h1s answering. While this methodology was fine for library services, Wake Forest played the lead role in seat on the bench, sat with a group of some of North courses like evidence, these exercises were useless in this project. Using a script prepared ar Harvard by Carolina's most distinguished attorneys and carefully courses designed ro reach srudents how ro be effective Tim Hallahan, Sally Irvin, computer and media watched the television screen images of a prosecutor trial advocates. In a trial, an arrorney must be services libranan, produced and directed the filming questioning a witness. A mood of camaradene and prepared ro object immediately afrer the opposing of rhe mock trial Local attorneys, including alumni, cheerful ceasing overlay the Intense concentration as counsel bas asked a question and to give rbe legal helped make rhe production realistic and successful everyone in the room watched rhe judge play the role basis for his or her objection in response ro the The rapes were edited and rhen pressed into a of a defense attorney tn an acrual trial. As the judge's request. Interactive video gives rhe srudent a videodisc (each disc srores approximately 40,000 prosecutor asked questions and the witness more realistic learning medium. frames) Irvin then programmed rhe lessons for raponded, the judge would occasiOnally hu a key on In the summer of 1985, after using rhe extant personal computers. a computer keyboard which lay on the table in from computer-assisted legal instruction programs and This breakthrough puts Wake Forest and Harvard of him Invariably, the judge on rhe screen responded, reflecting upon rheir limitations, Wake Forest Law at rhe forefront in providing rechoologically-advanced "Sustajned. What IS rhe basis for your objection, School, Harvard Law School, and rhe Massachuserrs instructional eJCercises in law. Other attempts ar oounselor?" The judge then chose the grounds for h1s Commirree for Public Counsel decided to create producing an interactive video in law have been objection from a list displayed on rhe screen. Only exerCises rhar would better prepare srudents for made, but, until the Veritas project, none had rarely would the ocher auorneys burst into hoots over practice. The developing technology of the laser-disc, succeeded. a wrong answer used mainly for music videos, helped make the Wake Forest and Harvard are rhe leaders in The judge was a member of the Wake Forest Law Veriras projecr a realiry. The technique, called providing h1gh-qualiry, pedagogically sound School Board of Visirors He was using an 1nterawve interactive video, allows the srudent ro watch a mock 1nsrrucrional eJCercises in law. A recent atticle in The video program jotndy produced by the Wake Forest tnal 1n progress and ro parncipate as a lirigaror. The Nallon.Ji Lau· }OMrT141, a respected and widely Law School and Harvard Law School It is rhe only student musr object in a timely fashion as the circulated legal newspaper, recognized Wake Forese s '·ideo program of irs kind designed for commercial quesuomng of witnesses proceeds and musr respond comm1rment and achievement. The Veriras proJect distribution, and is ltterally on rhe curring edge of ro rhe judge's questions JUSt as he or she would has enhanced rhe Law School's name and image high technolog~· and of legal instruction. And, it just dunng a real trial rhroughour the legal profession and has solved the happens to be produced by one of the mosr highly The equipment needed ro run the program is a problem of effective computer-assisted legal automated and technologically advanced law schools teleVISIOn monitor, a personal computer, and a laser Instruction. in the country, rhe Wake Forese University School of d1sc player. Since most law schools and law offices Law have rhe first rwo, rhe only necessary eJCpendirure for The advantages of using computers to reach rhis cost-effective method of instruction is for a srudems have been recognized for many years. reasonably pnced ($650 ro $3,000) laser disc player During rhe past decade, over fifry different computer­ The program comes on a standard floppy disc for the assisted legal instrucrion exercises have been personal computer and a laser disc. The disc is produced and distributed. But, all of rhese exerCises bonded and is virrually indesrructable and never suffered from the same problem-they were based on wears our. written fact siruarions and resembled a law school Under rhe leadership of Law School Dean John D. examination Srudents could peruse quesuons, consult Scarlett, Associate Dean Kenneth A. Zick, and notes, and d1scuss rhe problem wirh ochers before Thomas Steele, associate profes~r and d1rector of

If/ake Forest Unit,ersity Magazine page nrneleen Deacon basketball­ Di remembering last season

by John Justus

As the 1985-86 baskerbaU season began, no one knew what ro expect from Wake Forest. The ream was CPmposed of young, mostly unproven players and had a head coach who was not well-known in the Atlantic Coast Conference. What people did know was not to expect too much_ Only rwo players, juniors Tyrone Bogues and Mark Cline, had more than one year of experience with the Deacons. More than half of the players on the preseason roster were freshmen, and six of the scholarship players were first-year team members. This was rhe team coach Bob Staak had to challenge what may have been rhe strongest ACC lineup ever-a contention supported by rhe fact rhar three league rivals were ranked number one at some time during rhe season, and three others were frequent members of the elite top twenry. Bur, the 1985-86 Deacons had something that their more talented opponents could not match, a special something called resiliency, or tenaciry, or bravura­ or just plain guts and spirit. The season's first exhibition game showed rhe Deacons' abiliry to adjust under trying conditions­ and may have been an indication of the way the season would go. The game against the Irish National ream, scheduled for Memorial Coliseum, had to be moved to Reynolds Gymnasium when moisrure on the court delayed the start of the game. In spite of the delay and the disruption, the Deacons won the game, 71 to 58. Cline, the veteran starting forward, did nor dress for the game with the Irish National team because of a back ailment. Neither he nor the rest of his teammates realized that his physical problems were also a harbinger of things to come. Sophomore Staak and Bogues ref/ea the frustrations and disappointments of the season in the final seconds of Wake Forert's ACC Charlie Thomas, the team's only experienced inside 1ournamenl lou to Duke. player, hurt his ankle on December 29. He missed six weeks, Freshman Arthur Larkins replaced Thomas on the starting five for two weeks, then broke a bone in his foot and was sidelined until late January. Even walk-on Drew Boggs was lost for several weeks after freshman Mike Scott, a promising center who started had defeated a Wake Forest team that included Scott, he had an emergency appendectomy. And Cline, who the first sixteen games of the year, left school on Thomas, and Larkins by thirteen points. This rime began the season with back trouble, fought a yeat' January 17, pleading a case of homesickness. capaciry crowd gave the Deacons a rousing ovation as long battle with back spasms and a case of the flu Less than rwenry-four hours after Scott's deparrure, rhey left the floor, losers by a point bur only on the that skewed his normaUy pinpoint jumpshot. Wake Forest played narionaUy-ranked North Carolina scoreboard. And if the medical problems weren't enough, the Stare in a regionaUy televised game at the One week later, Duke came to Greensboro. They ream had ro contend with an emotional ailment when Greensboro Coliseum. A month earlier, the Wolfpack had defeated W alee Forest 92 to 63 the first time the

page twenty Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/1986 teams met. After fighrjng off the Deacons in a 68 to 60 contest, Blue Devil coach Mike Krzyzewski said, "We're happy to beat a team that plays so hard. I'm amazed at how hard they keep playing. You always The §tar-§ Will want to give credit to the coaching staff, but it's also really a credit to their young men who just keep on fighung." 13e Uut One of chose young men was a junior named Alan Dickens, whose name hadn't been on the roster rwo At tl()Diet:()mina/ weeks earlier. Dickens, a 6'8" JUnior pre-med major from Greenville, NC, volunteered to be a practice player after Thomas and Larkins were InJured He 12euni()n l<;tS() began to practice with the team on January 20 and, two days later, played fourteen minutes at Vorginia He started tn the game against Duke and quickly became the most popular team member taller than 5'3" No one who watched the Deacons could forget that Alumni l?evu 5'3" fellow Muggsy Bogues added to his national reputation with his ourstanrung play and a tremendous effort in every game. He led the team in rebounding with eight in a wtn over Davodson. He set a school record with seventeen assists at Norrh Carolina. He guarded 6'8" All-Amenca Len Boas man­ to-man. When Staak replaced Bogues with just a few seconds left on the clock in Wake Forest's ACC tournament loss to Duke at the Greensboro Coliseum, the 16;000 speCtators gave Bogues a well-deserved standing ovation. Of course, others deserve mentoon, roo. Thomas played in pain during rhe last month of the season and scored seventeen points in the tournament loss to Duke. Freshman guard Rod Watson, who led the Deacons in scoring with a 12.8 points-per-game average, was one of the league's finest young players. And Dee Calvert, a walkon and the ream's only senior, consistently matched rus skills against taller, I: vents stronger opponents-and he never stepped back. Fnday, October 3 Finally, there was the coach He heard the same Homecoming Buffet, question all winter: "Did you think it would be this Reynolda Hall Second Annual Alumni tough)" Bob Staak could have snapped back, but he Revue, Brendle Recital Hall didn'r. He could have hung his head and complatned the season with excuses and alibis, but he didn't away Saturday, October 4 do that either. What he did was meet every new Nimh Annua.l obstacle and challenge with vigor and drive that was Homecoming Parade Exrravaganza.. reflected in his team's play. C.mpus Quad If people didn't know what to expect from Wake Individual Class Reunions Forest before last season, they know now. There Wake Forese · Virgmia won't be any quit in this team. There won't be any Foocball gam< 1986 Reception following the self-pity. When the Deacons rake the floor, expect foocball gam< forty minutes of effort and excitement. And, before Football Schedule Stpttri:let 6 .,.,..,.....~ ...... roo long, expect another winning basketball team...... &o.coqUn.Yna~rr ...... Stpctmbrr 20 NCSa1c ..., ,. ~pcnnbeY n ...... Onobcr 4lH~J) Vorpnu ...... John Justus 11 director of sports mformallon. UNC...... ~obc711"""""" .. .., ...... ""'-' ... , No~rnba I) """'usc ..... , ...... ll CooeofauT«t......

Come "home" to the campus, meec your old friends and classmaces and enjoy the S«

page twenty-one June/ 1986 Wake Forest Umversity Magazine gerting ready to begin his junior year. I could see the pressure that was being put on him to be here, to be yonder, from so many different people. Because he was so intense in wanting to fulfill his goal in golf, ·Lanny he wanted to be everywhere. That's the only time I had to remind him to get himself in check a little bit. "But that spring (1971) he won five collegiate Wadkins-a tournaments and you just don't hear of that. He talked with me many times about what he should do, turn professional or not. He was the oldest child in cobra on the the family, and it was the time when he could begin making a contribution, not only to himself but to his family. That was the thought going through his loose mind." Wadkins turned pro that fall and earned his first prize mooey-$3,378--<>n October 31, 1971 at the by Smith Barrier Sahara Invitational He woo the Saraha again in 1972. He continued to win, in spite of illnesses and injuries, and his victories included the 1977 PGA and "When Lanny is on his game, it's like having a World Series of Golf; the 1982 Phoenix, Tournament robra in a basket with the lid off." of Champions, and Buick; and the 1983 Greater It was early in 1985 when Tom Watson made that romment, and Lanny Wadkins (72), the 1985 PGA Greensboro Open. Wadkins is a determined player who is never player of the year, was a robra on the loose. behind-as his comeback defeat Wadkins had scrambled and scratched in the intimidated by being ninery-hole Bob Hope Desert Classic. With five holes of Craig Stadler in the 1985 Bob Hope Desert Classic attitude doesn't surprise Haddock. left, he trailed Craig Stadler by four shots. He caught demonstrates. His 0 he's a fighter. He always thought up, and, on the fifth extra hole, he won $90,000. ] "He's never down, ''I told myself to keep plugging," Wadkins said U) that way. later. "1 wanted to make a rouple of good swings and ~ "His win in the Desen Classic reminds me of the ?i NCAA his sophomore year (1970). He did not win get back in it. There could be two-shot swings, and ::<: the national championship, John Mahaffey beat him. all it takes is one of those flip-flops." That's the way unusual golf swing­ lAnny W adkim ha.r always had an We had just lost Jack Lewis ('69), Leonard Thompson Lanny Wadkins thinks. even a.r a college player. Two weeks later, at the Riviera Country Club in ('69), Joe loman ('70), and we had finished second in Los Angeles, Wadkins was slapping 63s, 70s, 67s, and remembers. "He had won the National Pee Wee the NCAA. Believe it or not, we were leading the 64s at the fraterniry and beating them to a pulp. He championship in 1963 and 1964 in Florida. Mac NCAA the next year at rhe end of rhe third round on finished a record twenry under par, and he left the McGrew, a reporter with a Richmond paper, was the Scarlet course at Ohio State, and we're not even field seven shots back, winning $72,000. On CBS rv, covering a football game at Wake Forest and he told supposed to be in it except for Lanny. We had great Tom Weiskopf was saying, "Lanny is one of the best me about this thirteen or fourteen-year-old boy who guys, good players, but nowhere near what we had front-runners in golf." had gone down to Florida and set a record winning lost. Wadkins' explanation was a bit more specific. "The the Pee Wee. The ciry was having a golf banquet and "''ll never forget. Lanny said, 'Coach, let me know bigger lead I have, the bigger lead I want. If I have Lanny was among those being honored. Mac asked how we're going at the rum (final day). We can win four shots, I want five. lf I have five, I want six. So, I me if I'd drop him a little note or something they this thing.' He kept saying we can win this thing. I just kept the pedal to the metaL" could read at the banquet-you know how they read never heard him say I can win, always we can win. I That's certainly aggressive thinking, even on a golf telegrams and letters. Anyway, I did, and at the end said, 'You're in there, you just take care of Lanny and rourse which can reach up and grab even the best of the letter, I wrote something like maybe one day, I'll let you know.' This was very rare, lot of guys may swingers in the world. But walking down the fairway it will work our good for Wake Forest and you, when say it but they don't mean it. Lanny meant it. that January Sunday, Wadkins told Steve Melnyk, you get ready for college, and that was it." Wadkins "He's fighting for the lead, and I see him running another of the former PGA Tour players with CBS, came to Wake Forest in 1968, the Universiry's third thorugh the crowd at the ninth green, trying to find "You work all your life for something like rhis and recipient of the Buddy Worsham Golf Scholarship. me to learn how the team's coming along. We're not I'm enjoying every minute of it." Wadkins' golf swing was unusual even then, but doing so well, so 1 don't let him see me. At the In those first three tournaments on the 1985 tour, that didn't bother Haddock. "I really wasn't thirteenth hole, I'm going to tell him. He's reached Wadkins played seventeen rounds of golf, winning concerned with his swing," Haddock remembers. "I par five in two, spots me, and I signal him that we're $183,850--<>r $600.82 a hole. He won two of the said to myself, the guy's doing something right. out of it. He did nor win that individual title, but I'm tournaments, setting a scoring record in each. In one, Maybe it could have been a little bit like Sam Snead still convinced, if the team had been playing well, he came from four down with five holes to play. In said. He saw Wadkins play for the first time when he he'd have won that, too." the other, he lapped the field. And, after his win in qualified for the Master's as a Walker Cup player­ Haddock sums up Lanny Wadkins' golfing talents Lns Angeles, he became the ninth player to won more while he was still a student at Wake Forest. Sam said, wirh this. ''I've had some of my players on the tour than S2 million on the PGA Tour. (It is interesting 'You know, he doesn't look good with that right hand come to me-this must be the best, the most to compare Wadkins' career with Arnold Palmer's ' 1 on the club, but when he gets to the rop, it's respected marks a fellow can have, coming from his ('51). It tOOk Palmer thirteen years and two perfect."' peers on the tour-and they say to me, 'Coach, you've months-and fifry-two tournament victories-to Wadkins played on three ACC championship teams got to say that Lanny is one of the top three become the first $1 million golfer on the PGA Tour with the Deacons and was ACC co-champion his shotmakers on rhe tour, day in and day out, week (in 1968). It took Wadkins thirteen years and three freshman year. He was NCAA runnetup as a after week. And, coach, right now I won't tell you months to win $2 million-a level Palmer never sophomore (to John Mahaffey of the Universiry of who the other two are.'" reached.) Houston). Well, really who could they be? Wake Forest golf coach Jesse Haddock ('52) knew "His game kept improving," Haddock said. "I Wadkins long before he was a $2 million player. knew things were getting to him after he won the Smith Barrier is former executive sports editor of the "Funny how I got to know about Lanny," Haddock US Amateur in September, 1970, just when he was Greensboro Daily News.

page twenty-two Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/1986 Groh hopes sprtng• practtce,• Venuto's return, recruits equal success

Quarterback M•ke Elkmr 11 ready for another rucceJJ/ul football reason

The Deacon football team finished its twenty and srill holds nine passing and coral offense records. for a year and has been a graduare assistant ar rhe spring practice sessions on April 19. For rhe second The ream had an 8 and 4 season in Venuto's jumor U niverstty of Pittsburgh for rhe pasr rwo seasons. spring, head coach AI Groh ended rhe season with year ( 1979) and he was named ACC player of rhe On February 12, Groh announced rhe signing of three scrimmages insread of a game. The scrimmages, year. He completed 53.9 percent of his passes thar rwenty-three recruits for nexr year's foorball ream. held on consecutive Saturdays, emphasized instruction season for a total of 2.597 yards and rhrew seventeen Twenty-rwo are freshmen and one is a junior transfer and execution in specific stituations. rouchdown passes. student. ''As we do every spring, we approach this time of In the 1980 season, Venuro passed for 2,624 yards Groh said, "We had cerrain very demanding year as the first rwenry pracrices for rhe upcoming and rhrew rwenty-one touchdown passes-a srandards when we srarted rhis process and are very fall season," Groh said. "We did have rhe opportunity conference record that srill srands. pleased to sign a group like this and maintain rhose ro experiment some, which we cannor do in Augusr, After he graduared, Venuto played professional ball standards. This class possesses excellent speed and is bur to a large degree whar we emphasize now is all for rwo NFL reams, rhe Baltimore Colrs and the New also dominated by guys who have played in a lor of parr of our regular season prepararion." York Jets, and for rhe USFL's Birmingham Srallions. championship games. lr can prove ro be a very strong Junior halfback Darryl M~ill and sophomore He also was an assisrant coach ar Appalachian Srare class for us." The recruirs are lisred below. quarterback Mike Elkins had good spring performances. M~ill looks ready ro succeed Michael Ramseur in rhe backfield and Elkins, who srarted lasr fall after both Foy Whire and Jamie Harris were Backs and Receivers Tight Ends and Linebackers injured, should be the Deacons' starring quarterback. Alec Chalmers 6'6" 215 Charleston, SC Height Weight Homemwn Groh should have rhirty-rhree lettermen back in Jackie Copeland 6'4" 210 Rutherfordton, NC Warren Belin 5'11" 195 Marshville, NC the fall-eighteen offensive players and fifreen Ralph Godic 6' 210 Ease Lake, OH Bradford Benson 6' 180 Seneca, SC defensive players. Eight of rhe offensive unit veterans Kevin Graham 6'3" 225 Wantagh, NY Dwayne Brown 5'10" 168 Clifton Forge, VA are srarrers, led by All-ACC receiver James Brim. Jerome Rice 6' 215 Spartanburg, SC Four members of the defensive unit srarred last year. Sreve Brown 6'1" 175 Washingron, DC The Deacons open rhe 1986 season on September Mike Hudson 5'10" 170 Wilmington, NC 6 in Groves Stadium against Appalachian Srare, and, Spencer Jenkins 6'1'' 160 Alexandria, VA Linemen when they do, rhere will be new faces on the Rick Miller 6'2" 190 Forr Lauderdale, FL Joe Ellison 6'1" 250 Columbia, MD sidelines-both in and our of uniform. Rickie Proehl 6' 175 Belle Mead, NJ Robbie Lingerfelt 6'2" 275 Hickory, NC Pormer Deacon quarterback Jay Venuro ('81) is Marty Mason 6'4" 270 Aliquippa, PA back on rhe football ream-rhis rime as an assistant Quarterbacks Mike Smirh 6' 250 Olney, MD coach, replacing Pete Warson Groh said, 'Jay is very Mark Williams 6'3" 235 Hursr, TX Phillip Barnhill 6'2" 200 Washingron, DC brighr and perceprive, and a grear comperiror. He has Will Blair 6'1" 185 Fork Union, VA had excellent exposure to foorball for such a young Kickers man. He broughr a lor of excitement ro Wake Forest Dale Backus 6'1" 195 Chardon, OH foorball once before and we are very excited ro have Dave Behrmann 5'11' 165 Silver Spring, MD him back wirh us once again." Venuto had a memorable college football career

page twenty-three ]u11ej 1986 lf/ake Forest Umversity Magazine SHEVILLE • ATLANTA • BIRMINGHAM • BOSTON • CHA Miami '1\YETTEVILLE • GREENSBORO • GREENVILLE • HIGH Over forry Miami-area Wake Foresters attended a EXINGTON ·-ria~ • HOUSTON • MIAMI • NEW YOR reception honoring U niversiry President Thomas K. Ch Hearn Jr. and his wife Barbara on March 26 at the Biscayne Bay Marriott. Local officials on hand Th NWa~ll~ • sfBORO • DURHP. Alex NORFOLK• RI1 included National Alumni Association President spnn H ft l'ft Byrd Tribble Sink ('70), new alumni council member Our I ('54), and Parents' Council representatives Bill and ~K ~ I ' N • LEXINGTOl lMf Caryl Cullom. For more information on activities of '.tt the Goldcoast Deacons, write to dub president Bud HIGH POINT • LUMBERTON • CHICAG Boyce ('75) at 1016 North 13th Avenue, Hollywood, VILMINGTON • PHllADELPinA • RALEIG~ FL 33019. • SAN FRANCISCO • SHELBY • TAMPA • WASinNGTON • Burlington UCHMOND • ROANOKE • ROCKY MOUNT • CHARLOTTl The Wake Forest Club of Alamance Counry held its spring dinner at the Alamance Country Club on Kinston Dallas April 15. Forry-five Wake Foresters heard remarks from special guests Head Golf Coach Jesse Haddock University President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. was the The Wake Forest Club of Lenoir/ Wayne Counties ('52), Assistant Dean Billy Hamilton, and Assistant special guest of the newly-organized Wake Forest held a barbecue dinner on April 3 ar rhe Shrine Club Director of Alumni Activities James Bullock ('85). Club of Dallas on March 15. Over thirty Wake tn Kmsron. Guests from the University included Local guests included past Alumni Association Foresters attended the reception at the Energ)' Club. Professor of Hisrory Da vid Smiley, Assistant Athletic president Bill Flowe ('41), club president and former Hearn was introduced by former alumni council Direcror Bill Faircloth (" 64), and Assistant Direcror alumni council member Nancy Hemric ('73, JD '83), member and club president George Knox (75). of Alu mni Activi ties James Bullock (" 85 ). Area and new alumni council member Becky Walker ('72). Barbara Hearn and Assistant Direcror of Alumni alu mnr council member Bill Powell ('58) also For more information on future club activities, write Activities James Bullock ('85) also attended from the attended. For more information on future activities, to Nancy Hemric at 2419 Pineway Drive, Burlington, University. wm e ro Ray H od ge ('50) ar 1170 Wrndsor Ro ad, NC 27215. Kmsron, N C 28501. New club officers are Keith ('75) and Karen ('76) Sherman, co-presidents; Greg Slaron ('78), vice president; Susan Bray ('83). secretary/ treasurer; Dan Orlando Stewart ('78, MBA '82), alumni-in-admission$ Statesville representative; George Knox ('75 ), alumni career Over sevenry Central Florida Wake Foresters assistance program representative; Sumner ('78l and Iredell Counry Wake Foresters held a reception and arrended a reception ar the Winter Park Racquet Club Cheryl ('78) Chase and Cheryl Blackwell ('83 ), dinner at Reeo's Restaurant on April 22. The group on March 23. The event was organized by alumni-in­ members-at-large. heard remarks from U niversiry guests Martha admissions representative Ali Sattipzadeh ('84) and For more information on future club acriviries, Allman ('82), assistant director of admissions; Bob Parents' Council representatives Thorn and Mary write to rhe Shermans at 519 Cordova, Dallas, TX Mills ('71, MBA '80), assistant vice president and Rumberger were the hosts. Officials from the 75223. director of alumni activities; assistant atheltic University included Julius Corpening ("49), assistant directors Bill Faircloth ('64) and Charlie Patterson; vice president for development, and James Bullock and To'Il McConnell, assistant basketball coach, who ('85), assistant direcror of alumni activities. For more demonstrated his "Jim Valvano speaking style." Local information of future activities, write to Ali Houston officials on hand included past president and alumni Sartipzadeh at 644 Knowles Avenue North, council member Jim Apple ('75). For more Apartment 3, Winter Park, FL 32789. Houston Wake Foresters gathered at the home of information on future club activities, write to club Larry ("65, MD '69) and Lynn Conrad for a reception president Costi Kutteh ('73) at 122 North Mulberry, on March 16. The group heard remarks from James Statesville, NC 28677. Bullock CBS), assistant director of alumni activities. Tampa The group is tentatively planning another event for late summer or early fall . For more information on President Thomas K. Hearn Jr. and his wife future club activities, write to club president and new Roan,oke Barbara were greeted in true Suncoast Deacon style at alumni council member Andy Utter ('81) at 2303 Mid March 25. SLXty Wake Forest Virginia Wake Foresters the Centre Club on Lane #F20, Housron, TX 77027. Over fifty Southwestern alumni, parents, and friends attended the reception attended the annual spring dinner on April 24 at and dinner. Local officials on hand included alumni Hunting Hills Country Club in Roanoke. The group council member Graham Denton ('67), past alumni heard remarks from several Universiry officials council member Ed Wilkerson ('26), and past club Greenville including Gilbert MacGregor ('71 ), academic president David Walker ('62). Also on hand from the adviser/athletics; Margaret Smith, chairwoman of the Universiry was James Bullock ('85), assistant director Seventy-five Wake Foresters attended a reception art department who gave a slide presentation on the of alumni acrivities. The event was organized by honoring head golf coach Jesse Haddock ('52) on London program; and James Bullock ("85), assistant outgoing club president and new alumni council April l. The reception was held at the home of director of alumni activities. Local officials on hand member Sandy Rief ("66), and his wife, Didi ('66). Charlie ('59, MD '63) and Pat Duncan. For more included former alumni council member Billie Wall For more information on future club activities, write information on future activities of the Wake Forest ('56) and present alumni council representative Bev to new club co-presidents David ('80) and Carol ('80) Club of GreenvillefSpartanburgf Anderson, write ro Lambert ('65 ). For more information on future club Stefany at 4308 Robin Lane, Tampa, FL 33609. club president Sam Cobb ('75) at 35 Faris Circle, activities, write to club president Dan Gryder ('56) at Greenville, SC 29605. Route 7, Box 223, Roanoke, VA 24018.

page twenty-four Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/1986 Clubs Contmued

Charleston, WV Charleston, SC Columbia, SC

The Wake Forest Club of West Virginia held irs More than thirty CharlestOn-area Wake Foreseers More than forty Wake Foreseers welcomed spring event at the Coonskin Park Clubhouse in attended a reception and dinner at the Colony House Umversiry Provost Edwin G. Wilson ('43) to the Charleston on March 13. Over forty Wake Foreseers Restaurant on March 11 University Provost Edwin March 12 meeting of the newly reorganized Wake and prospective students attended a reception and G. Wilson ('43) was the club's special guest. College Forest Club of Columbia. Joining the Provost ac the heard remarks from two special University guests, Fund DirectOr Bobby Thompson ('82) also attended downtown Summit Club was College Fund Director Ass1srant Direccor of Admissions Martha Allman from the University Bobby Thompson ('82). New club officers are Lewis ('82) and Assistant Director of Alumni Activities The club elected new officers during 1ts meeting. Henderson ('76), president; Hugh Jacobs ('75), vice James Bullock ('85). Local officials on ha nd included They are Boyce Cox ('63), president; Jerry Massey president; Cathy Cooksey ('85), secretary/treasurer; outgoing alumni council member Jim Spencer ('43) ('71), vJCe president for alumm acuvicies; Bryan Steve H einer ('82), alumni-in-admissions and new alumni council member Scott Long ('80). Hassell ('64), vice president for che Deacon Club; representative; Bill Long ('83), alumni career The club is planning another event for lace summer Teri Epting ('72), secretary/treasurer; Ed Ledford assistance representative; Robby Brown ('76) and or fall. For more informacion on future club activities ('62), alumni career assistance pro,gram Jullian Ruffin ('7 1), alumni council members; Jack write co Sara Long ('81) at 1304 Lyndale Drive, representative; Jim and Macy-Bern Decker, Pa rents' and Sarah Smith, Parents' Council representarives Charleston, WV 25314. Council representatives. The evening was planned by For more information, write to H enderson at 506 outgoing president Dee Hughes Leroy ('57) Wando Street, Columbia, SC 29205. For more informacion on future club activies, write co Boyce COx at 100 Bull Street, Charleston, SC 29401.

A special offering of Wake Forest University merchandise

Hitchcock Chain ltVuke Clupel Collector's Prmt

Wall Clock Hi!Chcock Chair Chapel Prine Official Wa(ch A precision Bulova Accurron A precision elect rome quanz An aurhenuc Hitchcock chair This fine WaH Chapel wall clock by Hamilton. made from kiln-dried hard Collector's Pnm shows )'OU quartz watch ;wadable tn three sryles lad~es' pendant Westminster chimes mark rock maple Hand decorated "a differem view" of Wake watch, men·~ wnsr w.Hch, the half hours and hours. and paimed wich an o riginal Forese University The SSO and pocket wacch The dial IS Mmred solid bronze dial is des1gn of W JIC Chapel limited cdicion prints are a fourteen karat gold-finished decorated with an original Available wich hand woven signed and numbered by che repltca of the University seal. dcs1gn of Wa" Chapel rush seat or wood seat Borh anise This rend1t1on depicts Cabmer is solid Pennsylvania styles avadablc 1n black Wait Chapel, co mpleted m Prices beg•n a< S20S . cherry. S20S each harvest or coventry finish. 19S6 and named after che Cha1rs may be 1nscribed Umversicy's founder, Samuel Prices beg•n at S275 . Walt. S45 unframed; Sl 35 framed

Off•cial IIVa!ch

For more mformarion or an order form, write co Student Alumni Council, 7208 Reynolda Station, Winston-Salem, NC 27109.

page twenty-five ]unef 1986 Wake Foreu U11iversity Magazi11e Class Notes

The Class of Carolina Grange and is president of the Nonh Tbe Half-century Club The Fifties Carolina Gran8e MuruaJ Insurance Company. 0 Susie Jones is director of program suppon Ray K . Hodge ('50). pastor of Kinston's First Sixty-one 0. Sixt Jo hn A. Stevens Jr. (jD ' 17) nill practices law and evaluation-international programs, paN of Baptist Church, has be-en decred president of the with the WiJmjngton. NC firm of Stevens, EUis Aycock (BBA, JD ' 6~) and his wif< Air lie the National Cooperative Business Association. Quinn. 0 Since General Board of the Bapr.isr State Convention of McG hee, Morgan. Lennon and O' have a son, Wesley Lewis, born on July I, 198~ . She lives in Wa.shingt:on, DC. 0 Nonh Carolina for 1986.0 J . Cecil Jeffords he ret !ted as a Baptist minister, Alben Newton 1bey live in Morganton, NC. 0 Last December, ('50) retired from Jeffords Insurance Agency on Corpening (BA '23, MJ\ '2 ~ ) has held ~enteen A. Napier Baker completed a three-year term as April 30. He lives in Winston-Salem. 0 Rupen mrerim purorat~ in Illinois and . He has cha.irperson of the Mid-Atlanric region N . BIIIDton 0 I) is director of the Rutherford rwo children, Alben N. CorP"ningJr. (BS · ~2, accreditation romminee and as member of the Couory Alreroarive School 0 Johnny H. Alford MD · ~~) and Eliubend wife, Mildred, live in Raleigh. 0 Waldo chairperson of the accreditation comminee of rbe exccurive KO"CUIJ' for rbc Mongage Bankers The Class of J. Jackson ("29) is min.isrc:r of senior cirluns at A.ssociation for Cliniol Pastoral Education. Inc. A55ociation of the Carolinas, Inc. Her new Fi

page twenty-six Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/1986 Class Notes

Institute of Technology, a divisson of the Sture Charlotce oHice. D Merle Love Forester re aches 0 Jumor H . K1dd rece1ved a Doctor of Mmisrry for the Burke Consortium. last year, their ·1on, Universiry of New York She lives in New York Jt No rth Buncomb< Hogh School 0 Larry N. degree from So utheastern Bapcist TheolagicJI Pete r, was chosen ouurandmg scudenc scholar of Ciry. 0 Holcomb is pres1dem of the steel service centers Semina ry last December. He as pastor of County lhe yea r by his inter mediate schoo l. 0 Jean div1sion of Carolma Steel Co(porarion 0 Ronald Lme Baptist Church in Ruther Glen, VA 0 Coker 1s a fellow of the America n College of Mcintyre lS a professor of philosophy ar T . Melvin Williams Jr. .1nd has wife have J Probate Counsel and is regent and vice ch.mcellor California State University He lives in Grana da daughter, Jenna Adams Will ia ms, born on of th e Florida Academy of Probate and T r us t has b

Fales remembers hazing at W~ke J;orest

by Robert M. Fales ('29) 11o

Former Congressman and United Stares Senator Alron A. Lennon ("29) and I entered Wake Forest College in September, 1925. As freshmen, we were soon told how ro acr and we were reminded rhar we had a duty ro keep Wake Foresr·s traditions strong and her glory untarnished. We were rold ro respect our professors who, in rime, would learn our names. (In rhar age before computers, we were people, nor numbers.) We were also rold to respect rhe upperclassmen, particularly rhe sophomores, who had a close relationship wirh freshmen and expected more of rhem. Freshmen were required to wear small, gold and black skull caps wirh a shore beak when they were on campus and, in keeping wirh an old tradition, whenever a freshman mer or passed a sophomore, he ripped his hac ro him. Soon after school starred, we heard rumors char occasionally during rhe Alton Ara Lenno11 Robe rt Martm Faler X T, I' II I' OK-I- year upperclassmen would break down an ··uppish .. freshman·s door in rhe for LLB. D eg ree A pplicanf for B.S. Deg ree middle of the night and clip rhe hair off his head. The nexr morning rhe Applicant Wi/mwgtot~, N.C. W•lmmgto 11 . N.C. and laughed ar rhe victim until he ..,as able ro visit other students kidded "AI"' "Bobby" one of the town's barbers ro get the remaining hair on his head clipped. We were told char this was a long-standing tradition and we tried especially hard to be good fellows. Alton, who was elected class president, and I roomed together in rhe Phi Lacer that night, after they had returned ro their rooms, eleven freshmen end of the original administration building. During one of our class had their hair cur with clippers by roaming gangs of upperclassmen. Our meetings, we decided co have a ""Freshman Smoker.. to help rhe !50 class class was the Class of 1929 and rhe sophomores vowed rhey would cut members make friends wirh one another. twenty· nine heads of hair, including the class president"s, before rhe school We sec the dare for rhe smoker and gor permission to hold ir in one of year was over. rhe boarding and eating places on North Faculry Avenue. We had small Nor long after rhe smoker, many freshmen armed themselves with pistols cards printed which announced rhe day and rime of rhe meeting and rhe and shotguns. A freshman friend who lived in rhe Norrh Carolina words Freshman Smoker were printed on rhe cards in large letters. mountains brought Alton and me a double-barreled shotgun and a German lr wasn·r long before rhe upperclassemen began ro object, saying char only Luger pisrol-borh loaded. We also has a .38 caliber pistol. Upperclassmen rhey were allowed ro have smokers. The tension on campus increased, bur came ro our room one day when we were in class and destroyed rhe shocgun we went ahead wirh our plans and, on the appointed night, most of rhe which rhey found hidden under one of rhe mattresses. They didn"t find the members of the class assembled ar rhe boarding house. The meeting got pisrols because we had taken them ro class with us. underway and our refreshments-soft drinks, cigars, and cigarettes-were Three middle-of-rhe-nighr attempts ro break into our room were made, passed around. About half an hour afrer rhe meeting began, we became bur they were unsuccessful because we had created a solid jam inside the aware that a large number of upperclassmen were gathering outside the door. We used a heavy iron bar, an old dresser, and two trunks we"d house and were shouting threats-and everything imaginable-to us. The brought with us from home. The third and last arrempr to break in was rhe noise gor louder as rhe number of people ourside rhe house grew and the most dramatic. Some of the members of the 1924 and 1925 championship group of upperclassmen began ro look like a mob ready for action. football ream must have been among rhe upperclassmen because rhe door Finally rhe lady who owned and ran rhe boarding house told us char she was knocked completely off irs hinges. Alcon fired his German Luger once felr sorry for us bur char we had ro leave because she was afraid rhe mob toward rhe door and the raiders disappeared. I had rhe smaller pistol in my would damage her house. After some hesitation-a rime when many short hand and was ready bur I did nor fire. individual prayers were said-we agreed rhar, on a signal, we would all cry After this last attempt we decided ro separate and moved to houses in rhe heads of to get our of rhe house and run as fasr as we could. We used nor only rhe town of Wake Forest. The upperclassmen cur only rwenry-eighr front and back doors bur every window char could be opened. As we hair char year-rhey never did ger Alron. why, wirh all rhe stampeded from rhe house, we heard rhe shouts of rhe mob and rhe paddles As I look back on rhose days, ir"s hard ro undersrand campus, no one was shor or killed. And, I remember rhar during and sticks striking many freshmen as they ran the gauntlet. 1 don"r think I guns on freshman year, I wrote regular letters to my morher bur never ever ran so fast in all my life. We all ran in different directions and char my hecric mentioned rhe hazing incidents or their consequences. face helped us elude rhe mob.

page &weney-uven ]unef 1986 Wake ForeJI Univertity Magazine Class Notes

a third daughter and fourth child. laura Kristina., professor of science at Lord Fairfax Community FL 0 J. Michael Pulliam tS commander of a 14, 1986. Norma is a di nicaJ The Class of College an Middletown, VA . 0 Daniel G. UH·60A Blackhawk helicopter banlion in Seoul, born on January Wilshin and Marilyn Kathleen Peck were Korea. He and his family will return to the psychologist, is a member of the City of Sixty-seven Richmond Crime Commission. and is preside.m married on April 27, 1985 . They live 10 Redwood States in August but don't know where their next of the Virginia Psychological Association 0 Cliff Church in Shores, CA. 0 poSI will be. 0 .. The congregation of rhe First Bap tist Pearce and his wife have a third child. Eric G. North Oxford, MA celebrated pastor Richard Michael, born on December 31. 1985. Pearce is a Harris' fifteemh 3nniversary with a program regional sales manager for the Lane Company, a remembering rhe highlights of his pastorate. furniture manufacturer. 0 A. Ratish N. They also named the library in his honor. Ann Srivastava (MA) is a professor of anthropology Cheves Harris is the church's organist and choir The Class of The Class of and head of rhe department ar the University of director 0 Karen Brown Hawkins and Barry Allahabad, India. He holds the PhD from M. Hawkins ('69) are expecting their first child Sixty-eight Sixty-nine Arizona St:ate University and has done extensive this momh. They live io Birmingham, AL 0 husband research on tribal societies in India and oo a Sue Humphrey Hultin is a reacher in Prince Allred G. Adams (BA, JD '73)is a real estace Josephine Furgunon Aycock , her Mormon community in Arizona. 0 David R. Georg

After some "initial resentment" from state employees who, Memory said, felt that the idea of an association "was another way to get money out of our pockets,'' opinions began to change and more meetings were held with state employees to explore the idea of having a united voice on matters of occupational concern. The association was chartered in 1947 and Memory Memory helped was its co-founder. The group worked closely with the North Carolina State Highway Employees Association, also chartered in 1947, on issues affecting improve state stare employees. Membership in NCSEA that first year was a "whopping" 812. "I hate to government say this, but we'd go over to the General Assembly and the attitude toward employees' jobs us was 'get lost. You'd berter be glad you've got a job,'" Memory said "I can't say positively, but if we got a vacation it was short. You know how much money I was making then? $150 a month-and that's before ." Memory was not dissatisfied with state government-he enjoyed state service and had a rewarding career. But he wonders what state employment might have been like had the associations never been formed. "We thought about starting off as a buying cooperative. At the rime (1945) it didn't occur to us what political clout we could have. Then, by golly, state employees caught on fire ro this thing (formation of an employee association) and we were off and running," Memory said. Memory also was one of the original promoters of the state retirement john C. Memory system, founded in 194 1. He and other state employees posed the idea to John Memory ('29) remembers what working for the state government the Attorney General's Office. The Attorney General drafted the legislation was like in the 1940s. The workweeks were longer, the benefits fewer, "you and it soon became law. could be fired on the spot without appeal,'' and the prestige of being with Employee benefits began to improve and there were significant changes state government-well, it was "a job, and in those times, a job was between 1950 and 1952. The merit system was established and the Office of appreciated." State Personnel was separated from the Budget Bureau. In 1973, the state Many stare employees worked half a day on Saturdays and, to Memory's started a group health plan and later the General Assembly funded aU of recollection, the only holidays were Christmas, Thanksgiving, July 4, and the employee portion and funded health insurance for retired employees. "half a day for the State Fair." As the membership strength of the associations has grown, so has the If there was a longevity pay program on the books it was administered on clout of state employees. A ten-step merit pay system was established. a "preferential" basis only. The thought of accruing up ro twenty-five days Longevity pay became a benefit for all state employees with ten or more of annual leave as state employees now can was unheard of and little time years of service. Sick leave was increased ro twelve days a year. Holidays was given for sick leave. There was no formal grievance precedure and were increased. Hospitalization was fully funded. Annual leave was placed retirement benefits were far, far fewer. on a graduated schedule which gives some employees up to twenty-five days Memory joined what was then the Unemployment Compensation a year. State government as an employer began ro compete with business Commission in 1938 as a claims deputy. He was a young and ambitious and industry-something which probably would not have happened without attorney and people asked him why he didn't pursue a law career. "It was the employee associations. the depth of the depression and there were twenty-one lawyers in the little In 1984, the rwo groups were consolidated, creating the 50,000 member town of Whiteville. There just wasn't enough business ro go around." State I;mployees Association of North Carolina. It is the largest independent So Memory went ro work for the state government. He advanced through public employees association in the nation. the ranks of what had become the Employment Securi ty Commission, Memory is proud of state government, of his career, and of the retiring in 1978 as an appeals deputy. His career took him to Edenton, association he helped form. "I love this organization,'' he said. "It's done Lexington, Rocky Mount, Greenville, Fayetteville, Winsron-Salem, and great things for state employees, they ought to have been here in 1940. If I Raleigh. were president today I wouldn't stop until every employee on the state State employees owe a great deal to Memory and to the foresight which payroll was a member of the Association. If I were a state employee I'd be led ro the establishment of the North Carolina State Employees Association ashamed to accept my check unless I belonged to the State Employees (NCSEA). Association."

page twenty-eight Wake Forest University Magazine june/ 1986 The Class of Seventy

Fred Barden is Montgomery Counry·s teacher of the year. He teaches ar West Montgomery Hegh School and laves m Troy, NC. 0 Mike Orin 15 chairperson of the ad.ministrati,·e placemem rommiuee for the Winston·Salemj Forsyth County Schools. Ginny Britt (BA. MAEd 7}) gave the baccalJ.ureate sermon at Salem College this spring. 0 Bob Callahan has been promoted to senior research chemiSt by Celanese ~pararion ProduCts- He lives in Charlene, NC. 0 Grover A. Carrington and his v.ife ha' e J. daughter, SJrah Panon, born on JanW:ry 8, 1986. They live in Mount Sterling, KY 0 D. Wayne Ford . a chartered life underwriter at Baron Financial Inc., is a member of rhe Million DoU.ar Round Table.. He and hiS wife and daughter live in Gr~nsboro, NC. 0 Dennis Goins is president of Pocomac Management Group, a consuhing firm which specializes in oomract negotiations and litigation support for larg~ commercial and mdustrdl electric power users He lives in Alexandna, VA. 0 Larry Habegger CBS. JO ·n>. a WinSion-Sa.lem auorney and former Deacon basketball player, is back on the coun-maching the Smith Gro~ De-acons, boys who are berw~n thineen and fofte

Jim Blevins (SA, JD ·78) is regional claims manager of Amerisure Insurance Company in Opened 10 january, 1984 as a world-class faciliry, Graylyn Conference Cemer of Wa.ke Forest Umversiry received the Execuuve Retreat of Charlotte. Hr and his wife Patricia have rwo the Year award for 1985 (rom Andrew HarP"rs H1deaway Report, a connoisseurs guide 10 Jl"3C

page zwenty-mne June_,' 1986 lf/ake Forert Univer~ity Magaune Qass Notes

--does btl> '1 From basketball to are I uen div~ PepsiCo-hard-driving ''I Calloway makes few wh the p turnovers day by Alan Wi//is Wb

Was training for the cola wars of the 1980s carried our on the Hanes thef High School and Wake Forese College basketball courcs of the 1950s? D. 0111 Wayne Calloway-Hanes High School, class of 1953, Wake Forest College, p' class of 1959, and top man at PepsiCo lnc.--

page thirty Wake Forest University Magazine june/1986 Class Notes

does nor call h1mself a marketer, but he recognizes a clear relauonship Nancey Cameron, on Novem~r 23, 1985 Thetr between marketing, competition, and product. The Class of suh Jay is six·and·a·half 0 "The competition makes us all better," Calloway said. ""Coke and Pepsi are both better products now because of the competition." Innovation, as Seventy-two The Class of brands and developments in other PepsiCo exemplified by Pepsi's new Ralph Ro n ald Caro thers and his family are Seventy-three divisions, is the key ro marketing and competitive success. Sourhcrn Bapdsr Home M1ssion Board "lnnovauon is what distinguishes great companies from other companies, missionaries in Guaremah. 0 Thomas V.E. Joseph D . Aldrich is church adm10iscrator 3t Cowen is manager of financial analysis at IBM's Myers Park Baptist Church m Charlotte, NC 0 whether the produCt is cigarettes, soft drinks, or snacks," Calloway said. headquarters in Whire Platns, NY 0 Ron D. James Mitchell Currin Jr. ts chairman of the "The new 1deas, the new widget, the new value-added product, that's where Crowder and his wife have a son. Brian Ronald, Scotland Cooney Board of Health and is a the game is ultimately decided." born on March 6, 1986. They live an High P01nt physician at Laurinburg Famtly Practice. He and 0 Capram Elatne Hewitt and her husband, hts wife have a son, Mitchell, who is a ycar·and· Peps• is an eighty-seven-year-old company, "bur it's as fresh today as the Lleurenam Colonel Burch Clements, have a son, a-half old. 0 Fred David (85, MBA "75) h..., day it was born because we keep current, we innovate," Calloway said. Manhew Hewin Clements, born on February 24, written a book called Fundameni~Jis of Slralt!f,IC "When we created Slice, we grew a whole segment of the business. J 986 Their son Christopher tS seventeen and Management Conceplt .md Caset He is Jn daughter Tammy ts fourteen El3ine wtll soon be associate professor of management at Mlssi.sstppi "With Pizza Hut, we created Pan P1zza, and we did $600 million in sa les promoted to major Both Elaine and Butch are Delta State Uni'iersity. 0 James 8 . Dolan and the first rwo years," Calloway said. "Bur we weren't satisfied, so we came assigned to Keesler Air Force Base, MS 0 his wtfe Cheryl have a son. James Roberr Dolan our with Personal Pan Pizza in five minutes, and we innovated the whole George Lee Hundley Jr. has been promoted co ts an orthopaedic resident at the Untversicy of .LSsociate publisher of Homf! Texlrles Today, a Florida They iive tn Gainesville. 0 Charles pizza-for-lunch business. Now we compere not just with the other pizza tl"ade newspaper for the home texules tndustry Glass IS executive dtrector of the Henderson places, bur with McDonald's and Wendy's and all the other fast food places. He and his wife Sara live 1n New York City 0 (NC) YMCA Tina Wanner Glass ('75) ceachos "Look at Taco Bell ...you would hardly recognize it from the way it was Margaret Bothwell Parker Jordan and her Suzuki ptano. They have two children and ltve 10 husband Mike announce the birth of their th1rd Henderson. 0 joseph L. Goodman is head of two years ago," Calloway said. "We've added Taco Light, Taco Salad, child, Katherine Frances, on September 30, 1985. the managemem consulung department for platters ...and with Friro-Lay, we've got six new products rolling ito the They live in Gtbsonville, NC. 0 Chuck Kirk is Grant Thornton's Madison, WI office. Hts new marker right now. Innovation, that's really the key. auendmg UNC's periodontics school He and his address is 14 Pintail Circle, Madison, 53717. 0 wifo Claudia ('73) ltvo 1n Chapol Hill, NC. 0 Don H u1ehinson and Nancy Ash (MD 79) "Innovation is going ro be a big part of what we do with Seven-Up," Sharon G. Leblang and her husband Michael h.1ve a daughter. Laura, born last ~ptembcr 0 Calloway said. "We don't know exactly what it will be yet ...something new t MD '7}) announce the btrth of their fourth Marion. NC attorney Stephen R. Little (BA, JD and improved, or maybe we'll do like we did With Pepsi: get Michael child, David Alan, on Decombor 14, 1985 Thoy '77) wa.s eleeted to the city council last live in Charloue, NC. 0 Vivian Deal McBride IS November 0 James L. McCoy Jr. re

page thirty-one June/ 1986 Wake Forest UniverJity Magazine Class Notes

Humble's love of books made her a teacher

'English teachers must love to read themselves. The reading going on in a classroom should be pleasure. If it's not pleasure, something is wrong.'

it was a special program and the kids and parents accepted it. Most of my Munger by Guy students write clear sentences most of the time. They are very intelligent you ng people. They read widely. It has been an education for me." Sally Rigsbee Humble ('61), head of the English department at Raleigh's Humble enjoys reaching at the high school level. "Children need attention Enloe High School, does not believe in gimmicky teaching: "I don't think and high school srudents are still children. In college you may have a anybody." we're here to entertain student for only one semester, but here you'll have them for an entire year And she does not believe rhat the young people of today are headed for at least. I feel I make the most progress with students I know best. College perdition. "What's the matter with kids today? Nothing," Humble said. is too late to start reading, especially now when the vast majoriry of courses "You get from rhem what you expect. They do a lot so you won't be they rake in College are professional, not liberal arts." disappointed. It's a kind of feeding process. Their response gives you the Humble is impatient with fads , like the emphasis on "relevancy" of energy to do more." courses to everyday life in the 1970s. "Everything can be made relevant," Humble talked about her views on reaching last spring in an after-school she said. "Right now we're studying Shakespeare's King Lear. There's a interview in her classroom-a room with book-lined walls and a passage about which 9ne of Lear's daughters will take care of him in his old Shakespeare poster on the bulletin board. Humble's peers say that she age. One student said it sounded like today's children talking about who knows what she's talking about and the awards rhe school has won prove would take care of their aging parents. That's certainly relevant in the sense them right. of getting to where the students are." The Enloe English department has received a number of awards, among Love is also important co Humble-love of the subject, love of the them a citation for excellence from the N ational Council of Teachers of students. "English reachers must love to read themselves," she said. "The English (one of 150 schools in thirty-eight scares so honored), a $25,000 reading going on in a classroom should be pleasure. If it's not pleasure, grant from the Carnegie Foundation (shared by the entire school), and a something is wrong. You're nor relaring to it. You have ro help students grant from the Narional Humanities Faculty that paid for a two-day relate co what they're reading and help them move from what is appealing seminar for teachers. Enloe is believed to be the only high school in the to what is challenging. nation to receive all three honors. "You have co love kids-not need them, but love them objectively. I can Books have always been central to Sally Humble's life. with a lor of the things I do because I'm so short (just barely five She was born in the communiry of Bethesda in Durham County. Her get away don't feel threatened. In fact, they're kind of protective. father was an electrician at the American Tobacco Company and her mother feet) . Students to be non-judgmental, willing to listen, valuing where they're was "an avid reader who believed she should stay home and take care of the You've got You can fool a college class, bur nor high school kids. They children and not work. I got a lor of attention at home," Humble said. "My coming from. won't just let you calk. You have to do it with them. You can't set yourself mother was really one of my teachers. "When I was in junior high school I "read our' the list of books and up as the aurhoriry ." her classes. "The older you started on senior high lists. That's when ir solidified for me, and I knew I Humble says discipline is nor a problem in wanted to be a teacher." get, the fewer discipline problems you have. You develop confidence. I think Humble majored in English at Wake Forese and received an MA in 1962 you have discipline problems when you're insecure." from Duke Universiry. She taught schools in Durham; Fore Lee, NJ ; and What would be her fondest dream come true? Without hesitation, she Ardsley, NY from 1961 co 1964, then returned to Duke and got a doctorate replied, "! would like to reach half as many classes and have rime co be in American literarure in 1969. Humble was on the faculry at Newberry available to the teachers in my department to and co write about the (SC} College and Clemson U niversicy from 1970 to 1972 and taught English exciting things." at Meredith College in Raleigh from 1972 to 1981. She joined the Enloe Humble said the rypical high school reacher has thirty-six hours or so in High School faculry in 1981. the classroom every week. "Teaching is a twelve-hour-a-day job at best. You Enloe offers Humble some unusual opporrunities. It is a magnet school can't do the follow-up and evaluating when you're dealing with so many for gifted and talented srudents in all academic areas and for the performing students." arts and radio and television production. That means srudents have an extra Humble caught 130 students last fall and another 100 last spring. That"s a period in their school day during which they can take elective courses. lot of papers ro grade since her students turn in some kind of writing every The English department's special offerings include Ci1Jilization and week and a major paper every two weeks. It rakes up to rhirry minutes co Culture for tenth graders, a combination of English and world history; go over a paper, so Enloe's English reachers-like their counterparts writing laboratories; courses in creative writing ("I have one srudent writing elsewhere-spend rhirry hours or more outside the classroom every week. a science fiction novel," Humble said); and peer tutoring for the most Humble has done her share of literary research. Her doctoral dissertation advanced students, a system which allows them to learn by tutoring their ~t Duke, Faulkner's Women: Characterization and Meaning, was published classsmares. tn book form with an introduction by critic Cleanth Brooks. All of Enloe's 2,300 students cake a course from one of the school's She has also published articles on William Faulkner and on Winesburg, twenty-two English teachers and one reading reacher. Humble reaches five Oh10, a collection of short stories by Sherwood Anderson. Her most colorful classes with about rwenry srudents in each class-and she puts her very piece of writing was an essay comparing works by Nathaniel Hawthorne definite ideas about reaching into practice. and contemporary writer Alice Walker. It is called The Scarlet Letter and Humble said that progress in reaching depends greatly on "what your The Color Purple. student audience is." One reason that the qualiry of English courses at Enloe is high is because it is a magnet school: "That gave us an opporcuniry to This article appeared in the The Raleigh News and Observer. It is reprinted rewrite the curriculum and we can ask for more from our students because by permission.

page thirty-two Wake Forest V11i1Jersity Magazine ]une/ 1986 Class Note<

professor a.t Northern Ulinois UniYetSICJ' She­ The Class of Corporation in Columbia, SC.. He aad bis wde Nauona.l leasing Corporation. Mary 15 a ourse at teaehes measurement, ad.minsrration., and pubhc Susan live tn lrmo, SC. 0 James D . Hasaiop Johns Hopkins Hospital They five 10 Ttmomum, Seventy-four relations and is helpinc the lllinors Sure and Ius wife Ma.ry have a. dau.ghcer, Teresa MOO Departmeot connruet tao for psychomotor Audrey, born on Ncwember 18, 198). They lrve Ploilip R. Boi1or ud s.nll H...... ('83) sblls assessment. 0 Ronald M . Gantka " 10 W10ston-Salem.. 0 William Hin.ma.n (BA, MA _,.. martial "" Sqembor 1, t98S. Pha is • di.rector·procurernem business systems for 85), museum director ar Historic Sethabara IUidl:broka: wirb lld>i.asoo Homphtq' and Sanh Vil'linu Powe< He ti.. s tn Richmond. 0 David Park. i.s a fll'lt-year srudcot in the Babcock is assisant to .... Comroller at Faison AssociatES, A. Gu-.y u a.n a.c~DUnr executive at Dean Wiuer School's MBA Eaecutive prognm. JO&Dne Wood Reynolds in Nashville, TN He and hrs wrfe Pat real esa~ cleodopon. 1'her liTe in o..rlone, H1nma.o is a u.les associa.te at Turoe.r-Wa.l.ket NC 0 Mict..l t'. md Naacy 0. B. Braudm ha•e cwo som 0 Real Estate. 0 S. Laing Hinson lll and his wife The Class of havt nro dlildrco-Paul Miduel, born on R. Stephen Harrell and Danrda Coacci were b.ve cwo children. Matthew l..a.ing. born on Aogust 10, 1983, ud Molly Elinbcm Inc.'s New York's rustom banking diviswn. He and his Wood.lrd Bel~ born o n February 26, 1986. They tS .1 pedu.uician and Lynn u a pulmo£Ury nurse awtctiog product suppon depanment. Tom is wrfe Kothy lrve m New York City 0 Andrn. C. ln•e in Wiruton·Salem 0 Stanton B. ingram Jr. dmJcian Tbq· live in Whireville, NC. 0 Diana superim:cockot at Polk Youth Ccnccr 0 l.&st Mann 15 a foreagn service officer for the US is a broker 1n F C. Bradford & Company's Rowe Campbell and her husband have a July, Marpre< lleDjamin Clan too "'as promoted Depanmem of State He is posted co Juarez. B•rmmgh.am, AL office. He and hts wife Barbara d2.ughte.r, Manon Rowe Campbell. born on to lnvestmcoc oK.acer ac the Firsc Huntington Ma:1co. 0 Terry Matthews and Karen ue e.xpecring their second chi.ld in Septembe:r 0 February 21 , 1985. They live tn Greer, SC 0 (WV) National Bank. 0 Kathryn Pi era Cogar Matthews (76, MD '81) have a son, jonathan Gear~ M. McCormick (BA, MD '8)) and Steve Chrini.an and Liz Loden Christian ("78) 1985 Sarah ~'ftl limited edicioo aod one--of·•~k.iod Soon, born on December 6, 0 Cheryl Lee Paschal wero marrted on january 12, have a daughter, Kelly Elinbeth, born on July 4, clothiu&- Sbe will be a member of the 1986-87 Brown Otley and her husband Krrkwood 1986. George a.s a neurology resident ar the 198). Steve is ;l maruge.r at Kreischer, Miller&: Artists •n Raidcooe prognm in Solt Ulre City, announce the birth of ~ir farst child, !Uchenne Bowman Gray School of Medrcine. Cheryl Company in Abington. PA 0 Greg Cokrr and UT, a prapm •hidt is sponsored jointly by aod l1.od: has finished his Wllmtngton. NC Anne F. Plage ('76) u a real Bowman Gray They tive tn Winston·Salem. 0 Mercury-Nissan in Cbrbdale, MS 0 Anoe MS ia bpdralag or Utah SuooJ,...... ,_, J<.anopolis. NC Ja,. finn of Soundcn and Katio lS four. Bob ;. ao onistoot professor of Sbe is also a writec and ec:Ltor for the Uru.venlty ~ .. -.=:iofOtor.-1-. holf.lJ Czoohn&.Oiteid!~ ts vicep~ of llttOSpa.oe ~neerin& ar Pe:nnsyl"ani.a State of Wisconsin Jnstitu.te for Envi.ronmeocal Srud..X:s...... n...... ,.,fwthe lnizl& 1'nut Company in Dallas, TX Karen Unive<>ity and they Jj_.. in Uni....,.ity Parlt. PA. And she is engaged ro P""'r Reidt, an assistull Shelmu ('76) wotb for Telests Company and rs OJ. Uoyd Nault (BA, ]0 '78) and PhyUis Jan professor of foresay. She lives rn MadUon. WI o..,.r-ciiRaldt """ Humm Ser..ices, tn dtarge of developing an aparunent mmplex 0 0.0. HoluM> Jealcias and her husband Jeff Offia of die~ Coansd. Sbo holds the JD Rtley were married on Ocrobe< 26, 198) Phyllrs from dJe CDiwntoar Sdoool of Law, Catholic toro a «cinment bomeOJoha B. 'll'atkios Ul graduated from 'Illest Georgia College and is a ha•e • son. John Homer Jenkins, bora on Mllf 8, 198). Their dau&hool of Business w<>n. tn Charlotte. 0 larry Hardy has been promored S

page thirty-three Wake Forest Unit~ersity Magazine Class Notes

live at 6~ 1 Diver Drive in Winston·Salem, as O l oole is a sports wrner for the Vann and Susan E ll is Collins were ma rried o n The ( T ho m 27104 0 Ele Wilhelm and her husband Mike The C l ass of - Atlanta }o urna/.Comwution. He lives in Athens, February 15. 1986. Woody is an attorney with have a daug hter, Melody Gail, born on Decem~r GA 0 Donny Layne Rich got an MBA from the firm of Arthur Va nn. Su san graduated from Eighr 20, 1985. They live in Reidsville, NC. 0 Army Seventy-eight Georgia State Un iversity in 1981 and a PhD 10 UNC.Chapel Hill and is a supervi sor at R W Ca ptain Kenneth H . Winkler was involved in a marketing from Georgia Srate las t s pring. Her Coll ins Builder, Inc. 0 Ea rl Franklin Wa ll (BA, IJrbonhl ~ d Anf•ndsen Jnd his wife have a daughter, NATO·s ponso red exercise and participated in [)oio~d dissertati on is ca lled MeaJuring th ~ Perfo n rumce JD '82) and his wife Do nna have a son, Jason Hu ll) Hc:nneu Anfindsen, born on june 19, 1985. the Army's return of fo rces ro Germany and the of Fi rJI · L•'!e Sale1 Managerr: A n Exploratory Barreu , born on July 29, 1985. Ea rl is vice n.olosi> F:d .._ ··anc h sales manager for Texas Air Force's Crested Cap exercise. Winkler is a /rweJIIgal ,on 0 Steven Shane Weatherman and president at I m egon Life Insurance Corporation t!St .mnounce the binh of their first child, Lauren Len Chappell is a gentle giant !mop~ in Ross, on November 1, 1985. They live poa»t

page thirty-four Wake Forest University Magazine ]une/1986 a-Nota

The Class of to be married on June 21. 1986. Samuel is a parrner in the New Port Richey. fl b.w firm of " Eighty Williams & W illoams 0

Deborah Leigh Bennett received a Master of D1viniry degree from the Southern Baptist Theologica.l ~minary last December and works wnh children and mothers at a Banercd The Class of Women's Shelter in Raleigh She and William R. Eighty-one Reynolds were married on January 4, 1986 and they live in Wake ForesL 0 Ma.ry Boone and Edward T . Barringer and his wife Laura hjlve a Dean Meyer we~ married on Ju~ 22, 1985. son, Fritz Edward, born on May 2, 1985. Edward They are the co-authors of Th~ ln/o,..,..,,on works in purchasing at Dealers Supply Company EJg~, a book which demonnrares how office They live in Durham, NC. 0 Webb Campbell automation cools contnbute to corporate profits has finished his clerkship for a US districc court They live in Ridgefield, cr 0 Roben lia judge in the Middle Dtstrict of and ls Coleman ts a sccond-yNr resident m anesthesia an attorney in the Nashville firm of Dearborn at Walter Reed Army Mrdica.l Center in ond E"''ng. 0 John J . Cner Ill (BS, MBA '83! IS Washington. DC. 0 Cathryn G. Coles is d1rector manager of Cater's Furnirure in Palm Beach of corporate/foundation gifts for the Baprisr Gudens, FL 0 Sam Cox is a first lieutenant m Children's Homes of North Carolina Her the medacal service corps and is stationed in husband Steve ('77, JD '80) is an au:orney 10 ludwigsburg, Germany. 0 Scon E. McNul os a Anne Elizabeth Spencer and James Michatl partner in the Charlone·based law firm of Spragins ('85) were marraed on November 2, Kennedy Covington Lobdell & Hickman. He is a 1985. Eliz11bet:h works in Manufacturers Hanover mt:mber of the real escare section of rhe firm 0 Bank's imernational dtvision's accounting Martha Vertrees Jones and her husband Raben depanmem. Mike is an attorney for the- Army at are Southem Baptist foreign missionaries in Fort McPherson, GA. They live in Adanta. 0 Senegal Their address is B.P. ~9. Bignona, Gary W. Thomas (JD) is a partner m the Casamance, Senegal. 0 Wayne G. Kimble QD) Staresville law firm of Harris & Pressly. 0 has been oppointed a diSttia coun judge. 0 Li .. Teresa Vaughan and David M. Barnes ('82, JD Talley Laughlin and her husband lee have a '85) were married on May 22, 1982. David is an daughter. Catherine Lee. They live in associate m the Raleigh law firm of Poyner & Greensboro, NC. 0 Kelle Smith Leonhard has Spruill 0 Daniel S

page thirty-five ltmej 1986 Wake Forest Univeuity Magazine Class Notes

The Class of Universiry. 0 Allison Bare reaches junior high school in Char lone, NC and plans co be married get away? Alan Fox's Vacations Eighty-two in June. 0 Army first lieutenant William D. Need to Block paniclpated in Team Spirit '86, a Republic Jane Almon and John Estrada were married on of Korea/ US Combines Forces Command to Go has a deal for you December 14, 1985. jane is a research technician exercise in South Korea. Block is a platoon leader and works in the University's departmem of in the 14th Infantry, srationed ar Schofield biology undet the direction of professor of Barracks, HI. 0 Susan Elizabeth Bray has by Katharine Blood biology Raymond Kuhn. John is a post-doetoral finished her second year at Southern Methodist fellow in biology at the University. This spring. University law School. She is clerking for two they plan to move to Colombia and conunue The temperature outside is ten degrees, your car won't start, and the firms in Austin, TX this summer. D Glenn research in rhe immunodiagnosis of parasitic Royal Bridgers and Elizabeth Ann Allen were water pipes in your new house just burst. You have to get away-preferably diseases. 0 Robert john Becker is in the married on February 23, 1986. Elizabeth works . 0 far away 10 a tropical island where people spend their days eating mangoes managemem trainee program at Hare max for Hardbarger's Business College in Raleigh. Michael Amhony Conrad is a second-year and drinking pina coladas. One minor problem, though-you don't have a Glenn is an agent for the Nonh Carolina Farm student at the Babcock Graduate School of Bureau Murual Insurance Company and the lot of money left after paying the plumber and the mechanic. The way you ManagemenL 0 Perry C. Cumbie received a Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company. calculate it, your savings will take you just south of Columbia, SC. Master of Divinity degr~ from the Southern They live in Wendell, NC. 0 N. Glorrell Bullard Baptist Theological Seminary last December 0 R. Alan Fox (78, MBA '81) has a deal for you. has been promoted to assistant vice president by Lynne M. Flood has been promoted to the rank First Union National Ban!<- She is a corporate Fox is president of Vacations ro Go, a travel service that offers discounts of captain in the Army. She is a transportation lending officer in the national division of First to travelers who can pick up, pack up and go on short notice. Fox said he staff officer in West Germany. 0 Paula F. Union's World Banking Group. 0 David Garren works 10 sales at Scan Furniture in realized that there was a niche in the travel industry for cheap trips for Cantrell and Teresa Elizabeth O'Rourke were Hampton, VA. 0 Paula Hardison is a systems married on December 29, 1985. They are both in people who can travel at little or no notice. "Short-notice travel with engineer for IBM-Federal Marketing in Bethesda, the Master of Divinicy program at Harvard discount ticket prices has always been big in Europe and Canada. But it has MD. 0 Randy Husbands is assistant Divinity School. 0 Mary D. Clark and Edward administrator at Riverside Hospital in New Port never really caught on in the US until fairly recently," Fox said. He quit his M. Thompson Jr. were married on April 28, Richey, FL. He manages the marketing, 1984 0 Denise R. Coogler has gone back to marketing job with Continental Airlines in November, 1983 to start personnel, radiology, and cardiopulmonary school m work on MBA in international business Vacations to Go, which offers discounts of 20 percent to 65 percent. departmenrs, the laboratory. and the pharmacy ar Georgemwn Universiry. 0 Beverly Daugherty lor the 102·bed hospital. 0 Nancy Lee Jacquish is an analyst for Electronic Data Systems and Fox teamed up with airline expert Robert J. Carney, who is director of (MA) and jonathan Thomas Suttles were of Continental Airlines and lives in Dallas. TX. 0 Paul Agustin Diodad Texas Air Corporation, the parent company married on March 14, 1986. Nancy is a health and Carol Leigh Roche were married on Aprtl 5, Jonathan graduated from New York Air. They opened the Vacations ro Go's first office in Houston maintenance consultam. 1985. Paul works at Ernst & Whinney. Carol Guilford Technical Insurute and ia paramedic for in May, 1984. graduated from Davidson College and works for the Guilford Coumy Medical Services. 0 G.E.M.S. They live in Charlotte, NC. 0 David In the last rwenry months, Vacarions to Go has opened offices in rhirry· Ann Murray King Matthew A. King and Llew M. Dunlap is an associate in the Memphis law on December six cities and, with ten more openings planned before March 30, it is the ('83) have a daughter, Anna. born firm of Humphreys, Dunlap & Wellford. He has officer in the 6, 1985. Matt is a commercial loan a JD from the Universicy of Tennessee College largest discounr travel club in America. "We want ro be the first company Bank 1n national department at Third National ollaw. 0 Michael J. foley is asset disposal ro introduce the concept in every major market of the country," Fox said. Nashville, TN. 0 Harriet E. Jennings Meacham manager at Citicorp Savings of Florida. He lives and her husband Larry have a son, Matthew Fox opened an office in Charlotte last October. He said that the response in Palm Harbor. FL 0 laurie Stonz Furse and Christopher, born on january 24, 1986. They live from all over North Carolina. her husband Rjchard have a son, William has been very good and that he has custOmers in Nashville. TN. 0 James Stewan McGuffin Andrew. born last November. They live in Fox said he can offer the trips at discount prices because he gets them at and Nancy Jane Carson were married on April Rutherfordton, NC. 0 Charles A. Goodie is a 12, 1986.James works lor AT&T Technologies. low cost. Before he opened his first office, he persuaded tour operators, sales representative for Crown Untral Petroleum Nancy graduated from Simmons College and to let him sell unused space at in Glen Burnie, MD 0 Beecher R. Gray (JDl is airlines, hotel owners, and cruise companies works at Thalhimers. 0 Claudia Marie Miller a staff member in the newly-cre;ued state Office large discounts when the trip got close to its departure date. "It has to be at and james Edgar Plybon were married on March of Administr;uive Hearings. The office hears 15, 1986. Claudia is an auditor for Coca-Cola least 20 percent below rhe lowest fare offered through any travel agency or appeals of rulings and administrative procedures Bouling Company, Consolidated in Charlotte. of any State agency. 0 Mary A. Hague is a the the operator," he said. James graduated from Virginia Tech and is an graduate student in political philosophy at Obviously, no one makes any money when sears or cabins go empty," Fox engin~r for Duke Power Company 10 Charlotte. Boston College. 0 Linda Hales and John Keen They live in Charlotte. 0 Diane E. Nonhcutt said. "It also makes the company look good when all the seats are taken or were married on February 8, 1986. Linda is a and Anbur Eugene Clouse were married on the ship is full." computer analyst for Channel Master in March 1, 1986. Diane works for Cameron-Brown . john is an installation Despite the attractive prices, not everyone can take advantage of the in Myrtle Beach, SC. Arthur works for Xerox 0 Smithfield. NC Interior Systems. Inc. 0 Gary H. Navy Lieutenant (jg) Michael I. Quinn has coordinator for discounts. The trips are listed from one day to several months in advance. If Hayes has been promoted to senior financial completed rhe Lawyers' Military Justice course. 0 someone has to plan a trip several months in advance to ger time off from Dynamics Corporation. He Janet Berry Sanders is assistant circulation anaJyst at General CA. 0 Marie King is still work, Vacations to Go probably isn't a feasible way ro travel. "I sold a two· librarian at Elbert lvey Memorial Library in lives in San Diego. from Gaithersburg, MD Hickory. Her husband Clarence is a research and ,with mM buc has moved week European tour the day before it departed," Fox said. to Sunnyvale, CA. 0 Patry Koury works in rhe He said he realizes that the need to be flexible is a problem for some developemrn chemist for Shuford Mills, also in Hickory. 0 Norman Eli Snelgrove and Pamela pharmacology department ar Tulane Medical at 1901 Napoleon Avenue, #3, people. "A lot of people can't use a service like this. If they need six months Ann Schroeder ('83) were married on March 30. School She lives 7011~. She will enter medical to plan an itinerary, they are better off paying full price. I can't guarantee 1986. Eli received his MD from the University of New Orleans, LA school at UNC-Chapel Hill in the fall. 0 Terry them anything." South Carolina in May and begins a family practice residency at Lancaster Hospital in M. Lease is a rax consultant for Ernst and Vacations to Go charges a small membership fee, which includes Lancaster, PA in july. 0 Loretta Sutphin Whinney in Dallas. He received a Master's in unlimited bookings for a member and anyone in that household, or one graduated from Duke Universiry Medical School Taxation from Baylor Universicy last De«mber. 0 Wake Foresr third-year law srudent Beth traveling companion. Members receive an unlisted, toll-free telephone in May and begins residency in family medicine at Duke in July. 0 Gordon D. Thompson Murphy and Jay Snover ('84) planned to be number to call for information on what trips are available, where they received a Master of Arts in Christian Education married in june. Beth plans ro join a Charlone, depart from, the duration, and the price. Current trips include a three-or from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary NC law firm and Jay will work for Ferguson Enterprises. 0 R. Douglas Nelson is an Army four-day Bahamas cruise, leaving on Mondays or Fridays, for $420, and a last December. 0 Cindy Thomas Whaling and her husband Alex have a son. Forrest Alexander, captain stationed in Petersburg, VA. He recently seven-day trip 10 Hawaii for S692. born on September 10, 1985. They Jive in finished a rwo-year tour of dury in Panama. 0 The spontaneous trip-raking was designed ro appeal to young Wi~ston-Salem. 0 Sherry Diane Wright (BS, Ann Rogers and Rick Klein were married on November 16, 1985. They both work lor Channel professionals with a lot disposable income, Fox said. however, with all their PA 83) and Marqu•s (Mark) Woodrow Neighbors were married on December 21. 1985. Master Satellite Company in Smithfield, NC. 0 job constraints, Yuppies aren't people who can decide on Monday and leave Sherry is a cardiology physician assistant at the Richard C. Stanland Ill is branch manager of C on Friday. Instead, it is people fifty-five and older who have the money and Veterans Administration Medical Umer in & S National Bank of South Carolina and has recently won the Dale Carnegie Regional Sales the time to take advantage of the discounts. Hampton, VA Mark is pres idem of Richmond Primoid Corporation. 0 Championship. He is also a trustee of 'Tm not going to close the door on the Yuppies yet;" Fox said and his Hearhwood Hall Episcopal School. He lives in company advertises heavily in travel sections which are read by Yuppies. of Columbia, SC. 0 Susie Swanson is controller for The Class the Peacoc.k Comp:my in Pittsburgh, P A. 0 Eighty-three Suzanne Underberg is a rhird-year srudent at This article appe.Jred m the February 2, 1986 iuue of the Wit~ston-Salem Stetson University Law School She and Mark Journal. It is repri11ted by permusion. Andy Alcock is a graduate scholarship adviser Horne plan ro be married in rhe fall. 0 Leslie ass1gned to a fraternity house at Indiana

page thirty·IIX Wake Forest Ulliversity Magazitle june/ 1986 Class Notes

Van Hooten as in medical school ac Michigan senior accountant in the Hickory office of Wildrick (MBA) is manager of projeCt on Cary, NC. Wildrack holds the 85 Irom the US Suue Umversiry. 0 Herben W. Whitesell is Durh:am , Man in, Jenkins & Co. 0 Terry developmenr for the Robert D Swain Company Military Academy at Wesr Po inr 0

times higher than white women. From age rwenty ro thirty, compared ro the thirties and forties, the death rare quadruples in blac k wo men and triples in white women. This led me to question the cause of the mortality differential." Most of the research on h ea rt disease has been done on white, middle­ aged, middle and upper-class males. "I don't believe that you can rake the same inventories ro measure stress 1n the white male's life and apply those Myers says it's all to a woman, whether she is black or white," Myers sa1d. She studies the about being the amount of physical actiVIty, cholesterol levels, and stress 1n black a nd white women's lives. best you can be Myers did her mirial study at rhe University of Tennessee ar Knoxville w1th 150 women, ages eighteen to twenty-four, equally di vided berween blacks and wh1tes. When she screened them for the traditional risk facrors of heart disease, she found s1gn1ficant racial differences. White females were nearly rwJCe as active as black female of the same age. Black women had slightly higher blood pressure, tended to be more overweight, and had a higher sodium intake than white women. She did nor expect ro find these Barbee Myeri racial differences because she was studying college age women who lived in the same env1ronment and With the same stress. She concluded th at black women had more stress. Almost s1xty years ago, Barbee Myers' (BA '80, MA '8 I) grandfather Her nsk facror study will co nnnue at Penn State and w1ll be expanded ro worked on the crew that cleared the land for Wake Forest University 1nclude 400 women in central Pennsylv ania, ages eighteen ro fifty -four, "If someone had told him that his granddaughter would graduate with again with an equal number of black and white women. She will look at honors from Wake Forest," Myers said, "he would have bet his salary for racial d1fferences and focus on risk factors: physical activity, stress a nd the next rwenry years that it would never happen. When he told me that I environment, and the relanonship between those variables and other risk thought, how could I stop? There's no way I could ever settle for being factors of heart disease average or doing just enough ro get by. Because if your grandfather's been Myers will have ro find a s uitable measure of activity, difficult because out there cutting down trees to build a school twenty-five years before physical activity is hard ro quantify. Less active people rend ro have higher you're born, how could you do average work? You have to be rhe best that blood pressure and cholesterol levels, bur it is roo early ro tell just how you can be because of the sacrifices [your family has] made and how hard much activity is needed ro reverse these tendencies. Exercise ca n also reduce they've worked ro get you there." the harmful effects of smoking, bur 1t is nor known whether a person n eeds Throughout her life, Myers' famtly has been her strength and support, ro exercise strenuously or if a less s trenuous activity, such as wa lking, is instilling in her the sense rhat she should not settle for less, that self­ enough confidence and perseverance would help her ach1eve her goals. Stress is also an 1mporrant factor 1n heart disease. Many w omen work "They rold me to go and do what I wanted ro do because I could do outside the home and raise fa milies M ye rs wa nts ro study rhe l evels of anything," Myers, who is an assistant professor of physical education in stress women have, companng soCioeconom ic levels, mar ital sta tus, d1et, and Pennsylvania Stare University's College of Health, Physical Education, and other factors. Recreation, said. "I made up my mind ro get a PhD, and I did it. I tell rhe Myers said that, because she is an exercise physiologist, people think that students, if I can do it, anybody can. If I can get ro the number one place in she is only interested in the super-fit athlete, the type who needs her least. the country, from growing up on a farm with no material wealth, then She studies the normal person who may smoke, be slightly overweight, and there are no limitations on what can be achieved with perseverance and may nor get much exercise. She also works as an epidemiologist, sociologist, determination. It's all about being the best that you can be." and anthropologist, studying all of the interrelated facrors char influence a It's difficult ro believe that just anyone could do all that Myers has done woman's life. in so few years. For her, being the best meant making the difficult journey "I see myself as a health educatOr," Myers said. "I want ro tell women from a two-room house in a poor rural area in North Carolina to earning a about basic changes they can make, to raise their consciousness. Even my PhD at age rwenry-six. She is the only black female to earn a doctorate in mother has changed her food preparation techniques over the years. She has exercise physiology and cardiac rehabilitation, bur she is quick to add, "''m cur down on fats and sugar and tries to make everything as wholesome as not a special person. I just know who I am." she can. I can't change a woman's social environment. Bur I can help her Her family encouraged her throughout undergraduate and master's exist in that environment and improve the quality of her life." training in exercise science at Wake Forest where she concentrated on Even rhough most of Myers' research has focused on women, her advice cardiac rehabilitation and sports medicine. Myers earned her doctorate at the for a healthier life can be applied ro men as well. She plans ro work with University of Tennessee in Knoxville. Her research centered on heart physicians and social scientists at Penn Stare as she develops her study of disease in women and the cause of the mortality differential between black rhe causes of coronary heart disease. and white women. Bur when she needs to get away from her work, she goes back ro her Statistics show that blacks have higher death rates from heart disease family and they are always there for her. Her friends back home worried than whites, but no one had studied heart disease in women before Myers that her achievements would somehow change her. began her research. Most researchers said that women were not considered "I rold them that getting an education is nor supposed ro separate me likely to have a heart attack. Myers found that women do suffer from heart from you," Myers said, "but allow me to come back and help you. Nor disease and that there are differences between the incidence of heart disease everyone can go to school and get a doctorate, bur the ones who can need to in black and white women. go our and give char informacion ro others. That's the whole purpose 1n "When I looked at the breakdowns of mortality rates in every age group getting an education. My parents should have PhD's for doing their best past eighteen," Myers said, "I discovered that black women die at rates three It's all about being the best you can be."

page thirty·seven june/ 1986 Wake Forest University Magazine Oass Notes

fall. 0 Eric S. Letnes has graduated from Officer basic course at Fort Sill, OK 0 Benjamin J. personal assistant and conunues to handle his were Candidate School and has been commissioned McDonald and Beverly Anne Pearson The Class of correspondence on transporration and legal married o n February 1S, 1986. Beverly graduated ensign in the Navy. 0 Dickson M. lupo is our matters. 0 David Michael James is an associate from Louisburg Junior College and is an Eighty-f editor at the Times Record in Fayetteville, AL 0 a principal of the Charlotte, NC law f1rm of Bell, Seltzer, Park and Gibson. 0 Sarah Claire lyons administrauve assistant at Reynolda Village John Jordan is an assistant manager for I M dliccnt Austell was ordained at The First Benjamin is in the Army. 0 Sally Neal is an Household Finance Corporation in Spring Lake, and M1chael P Dalton were married on July 27, B.,ptisr Church in G~ensboro in March. She is a 1985. They live in New Bern, NC where Sarah accountant at Peat Marwick, Mitchell and p.l)WrJI care fellow :n Hospice, Baptist Medical NC. 0 Waher M. Kaden is an aerospace Company in Raleigh. 0 Karen A. Sanko is a engineer in the power systems group at RCA· works for Salem and Hancock, CPAs and Mike is Crmer, Birmingham, AL. 0 Frederick Thomas a pilot in the Marine Corps. 0 laura Ma rszalek foreign policy analyst for the Department of Cohon IV has been promoted to sales manager AstroElectronics in Princeton, NJ. 0 Jack State in Washington, DC. She lives in Falls Kalavritinos Jr. is a clerk for the Washington, lS assistant fashion coordinator at Bloomingdales lnr ConunentJI, Inc.. He lives in Longwood, FL in Washington, DC. 0 Second lieutenant John Church, VA 0 John Haddon S

Eighty-five Address=------Emmie Hay Alexander (MA) has been promoted to chief operating officer of Hayes and Associates, a division of Boeke and Company (City) (State) (Zip Code) She hves 10 Charloue, NC. 0 David W. Ammons and Amanda Leigh Sharp were married on May 24, 1986. David is an executive assistant Telephone: ------for Ammons-Springmoor Associates. 0 Lee W. Campbell is a first·year graduate student in physiology at the Bowman Gray School of D Please send me ------Graylyn terry robes @ S65 each plus tax and mailing and handling Medic1ne. 0 Jill Claymn is the North Carolina charges. Associ .:uion of Nursing Srudems nursing srudem of the year. She is a srudent at UNC-Greeosboro. 0 Muffie Cook and Mark Sandberg plan 10 be D I am enclosing a check made payable to the Graylyn Conference Center in the amount of married on December 27, 1986. Muffie teaches in s. ______the Prance William County (VA ) schools 0 luther H. Eure Jr. is a first-year scudem at the Bowman GtJ)' School of Medicine. 0 Second D Please charge my order to: Mastercard Visa American Express Lieutenant John M. Gaal is a field medical (Ci rcle one) off1cer "-Uh the 3rd Armored Division in West Germany 0 Second lieutenant Henry M. Hester Card Number: llllll~r--r---r---r-""TI--,1---,Ir-r--r-.----r---., hJ~ completed the field artillery officer ba.sic coursr at fort Sill, OK 0 Robe.n J. Higdon Jr. h.1s been prommcd m special assistant to Noeth Card Expiration Date· Month: Carolina Senator John P. East He is East's ITJ Year: ~ Signature:------

p~ge thtrt;·-esght Wake Forest Unwersity Magazme ]1me1 1986 Deaths

Alfred T. Brauer, who aught m.arherm.cia at Carroll V. Willis (MD '32) dJed on Sep

page thirty-nine ]lme/1986 Wake Forut Univerr#y Magazine Cookies and calls­ College Fund telethon sets a record

The tenth annual College Fund National Telethon ended on Thursday, February 27 wl(h • rocord $350,197 in pledges from alumn1 and pnents The Jmoum l5 a 20 percem increase over last year's cocaJ "lt was all made possible by the 450 alumni, srudenr, and

the university. Alumni gaving tO all areas totaled $2.8 million The awards will be made in July in SJn Anronso, Texas

College Telethon Surpasses Goal "Wake Alumni Giving Forest means quite a lot ro me, WAKE FOREST NEWS BUREAU In only 32 hours of calling, and to assist in iu fund raising the student J.nd illumni efforts hc:lped me to Wake Forest University has volunteers work1ng with the understand just how imponam been chosen as a finalist in two tenth annual Collt:ge Fund the College Fund is to the categories of the alumni giving Telerhan raised. a record College" comperiuon sponsored by the $350,162 ro beat their goal by All gif

The College Fund is in the news once again. This year's campaign began on July 1, 1986, with an ambitious $1,450,000 goal. June 30 is the deadline for che 1985-86 College Fund and we need your tax-deductible gift co reach our goal. "Annual giving .. .che College fundamental" is che cheme of che 1985-86 campaign Annual giving dollars co che College Fund are the margin of unrestricted support whtch makes che critical difference in Wake Forese's quality. Because College Fund givers make up over 85 percent of all donors co che University, chey provide the broad base of support which foundations and corporations evaluate when they decide whetht:r Wake Forest is a good invescmenc. And annual giving, especially from alumni, is che foundation for all of our support programs. Please join thousands of other Wake Foreseers and support our University We must receive your gifc by June 30 for it co counc in chis year's campaign. Remember-your annual giving is rhe College fundamental!

It's not too late to Mail your gift today co The Co/!ege Fund make a gift to the Wake Forest Univeruty 7227 Reyno/da Station 1985-86 College Win!lon-Sa/em, NC 27109 Fund!

Special g•ft dubs 1 $50,000 over ten years-Pro Humanicate Society I $10,000 over rcn yNrs­ President's Club 1 S 1,000 or more-Prestdenr's Association I S~00-$999- John Crenshaw Sociery / Sn0-1499-Samuel Wair Society I SIOO-S249-Arnie·, llrmy.