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Vol. LXIV Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, September 12, 1980 No. I Objections halt film screening

Ailne&te Kavanaugh CU chose the film because it represented a landmark in the develcp­ AsaiatMt Editor ment of cinematography, particularly in its use of the moving camera, A scheduled showing of ''Birth of a Nation" wu canceled Tuesday Reese said. evening by College Union after the Afro-American Society voiced ob· "To show the fDm outside of a proper forum puts emphasis on the jections to the film's racist content. substance of the film and not the technique,'' Eure said. "I don't think the John Korzen, chairman of the CU fUm committee, said members of ·film committee considered the consequences of that substance." Afro-Am contacted him on SUnday evening to ask for a meeting. CU timed the showing ol. "Birth ol. a N'tlon" very poorly in light of the According to Korzen, Melissa Exum, president of Abo-Am, said, iD JI'CSent trial concerning six Ku Klux Klansmen and Nazis charged with essmce, "We don't want you to show 'Birth of a Nation."' the murder d. five Communist Workers Party demonstrators In KOrzen relayed this request Monday morning to Tim Reese, director of Greensboro last Nov. 3, Palmer said. CU. The meeting took place Monday afternoon. The presentation of such· a film solely as entertainment revealed in· ApProximatelylO members ofAfro.Am attended the meeting, as well sensitivity on CU's part, he said. as Larry Palmer, director of minority affairs, and Herman EW'e, "'lbere are some students here who have had little contact witb blackB. assistant professor of biology and faculty adviser to Afro-Ani. Korzen, They really don't know what is stereotype, what is myth. Unless (the Reese and Mark Crabtree, CU president; heard .Afro-Am's arguments film) is presented in an open forum, with the opportunity for discussion, it against showing the fUm. · is a risk we can't take," Palmer said. Marjorie Donaldson, vice·presldent of Afro-Am, explained that "Birth Eure and Palmer came to the meeting in ·a solely supportive role, of a Nation" portrays black people in a demeaning and stereotypical way. Purnell said, although they did voice their opln.lons. "It shows blacks in the Senate with no leadership abllity ... eating "'Ibey were speaking far themselves, not for all black professors or all chicken in the Senate and chasing women. It portrays all black men as black administrators," Donaldson said. Stolt 911010 by Jot Pttrone lazy and black people as mindless, stupid. and easily intimidated," she Korzen said he was very impressed with the arguments presented. said. "Their attitude was not threatening," he said. "They mentioned that they Don't look down Cheryl Purnell, a member of Afro-Am and one of the orga~rs of the would be upset (if the film were shown) and I assume there would have protest, said, "The film was degrading to the blacks on this campus. It been letters to the editor." The crowd's attention was momentarily diverted skyward as this color· has so many ill feelings attached to it ... it bas set-down stereotypes. The Afro-Am delegation also objected to the cover ol. the fUm com· ful parchutist gently floated into Groves Stadium last Saturday. At least "I can see it shown to a film-malting class "or a history class with (the mittee's fall 19!10 program, which carries a picture of Al Jolson in black· there was one fan able to add a little pizzazz to the Deacons' technical aspects) pointed out, but to show it to the WF community was face. season opener. totally irrelevant," Purnell s~id~ (See Afro-Am. page two)

r ~ Work hegins oo music wing ·Policy change demed Victor Hastings development, said. Partial funding The university hoped to begin The building should be com­ John McNair work on the social policy A~ .. rwialt' Editor for the addition was supplied by as construction of the wing last pleted by the fall of 1982. Wake Stiff U ritrr proposal during the summer. SG Construction began Aug. 4 on a yet unnamed donors, whose summer, Charles Allen, professor Forest Road, which was closet~ to !!l its last official m~tin~ president Dave Middleton said music wing addition to the James identities· will be revealed this of biology and longtime supporter allow installation of a retaining May 9, the Faculty Student Life he met with this subcommittee Ralph Scales Fine Arts Center. The winter. Public funding will begin in of the fine arts, said. wall and steel anchors, will remain Committee failed to endorse the and attempted to settle dif· · new wing, which was part of the 1981. However, funds were not barricaded for about seven more latest Student Government ferences between present policy . original design of the center, was The third phase of the One-Fifty available until this summer, and months. intervisitation policy proposal. and faculty objections. delayed several years due to in· Fund, which will be dedicated to the Board of Trustees decided on Cost; of the project will not be · This proposal included two After the Faculty Student Life sufficient funds. improvements of the Reynolda July. 16 to proceed with con· released until November. Allen student options for in· Committee tabled the current The wing is being built as part of campus, will be announced at a struction even though full funding described it only as "inflated." A tervisitation: room in· SG proposal pending further the One-Fifty Fund, a program Nov. 13 convocation. The first two was not yet available. "Otherwise, 1973 estimate placed the cost at $1.5 tervisitation Fridays , from 5 evaluation of present policy, commemorating the sesquicen· phases of the fund were designated we run the risk of having our million and by 1976 it had risen to p.m. ·1 a.m.; Saturdays from 12 Middleton said he discussed the tennial of the university, William for general campus and medical original funds depleted by in· $2.5 million. . p.m. ·1 a.m.; and Sundays from policy with President Scales. Joyner, vice president for school improvements .. flation," Allen said. Highlights of the addition include 12 p.m. • 6 p.m., or equal room "I was flatly told that the The basic concept of a music a recital hall with seating for about intervisitation on weekends with midweek parties were the major stumbling block to. acceptance addition to the center was always a 600· Tqe rQOm can be ~IJiled ac· , added intervisitation Wed· ·part "'Of the j)lans, Allen said, but ·caustically· with fabric panels, .· nesdays front 7 p.m .• 12 p.m. 1 of the proposed intervJsitation ·Alumni gi-ving cited ·revisions in the basic plan were making the hall useful for lectures Under this proposal, each policy," Middleton said. made in 1978. as wen·as musical performances. livin~ unit would choose one of Subsequent meetings with the option~ with freshmen Scales narrowed the scope of Maria Bens111 ineligible for the latter option of midweek party objection to both Sbff~rilt'r midweek intervisitation. class attendance problems on Wake Forest received the second place award for continued alumni Trustee action expected The committee instead passed days following the parties and giving at the annual meeting of the Council for Advancement and Support a motion of intent to "rescind the general problem of alcohol of Education. the present intervisitation policy abuse on campus. Harvard received the top award at the July meeting in Detroit. All upon approval of a policy of "President Scales has gotten finalists, including Dartmouth College, California Institute of on new business school intervisitation and other aspects flak from faculty members who Technology, Northwestern University and the University of Penn· of social nolicv." Lu Leake, didn't want to teach on Thurs­ committee se,cretary, said. day_ mornin~t b.ecause of sylvania, received $1000 each. Margaret Kerfoot the authority to begin looking for a The competition, sponsored by the council and the U.S. Steel Foun· "The committee concluded decreased attendance on. that dean when Q!_ey approved the that other troublesome aspects day," Middleton said. dation, examined sustained giving programs of the nation's 73 major The Board of Trustees is ex· school in principle last May. private universities. · of social policy must be "Over the summer, however, peeled to agree formally on the Consideration of the dean was examined, including the mid· we came to the realization that To become a finalist, a university must show consistent increases in the establishment of a separate un· not confined to WF personnel, other factors probably con· number of alumni donors and in the amount of money given by alumni week parties," she added. dergraduate School of Business Wilson said. The administration Faculty members have ex­ stitute the attendance problem, over a· four-year period. and Accountancy at their fall has chosen a candidate and will including the course and the Robert Mills, director of WF alumni activities, said tlie award was pressed discontent with low meeting today, Provost Edwin G. present its recommendation to the attendance during Thursday attendance policy of the in· especially significant because It was judged over a four-year period. Wilson said. board at today•s meeting. · morning classes. Fraternity dividual professor. "This shows a steady amount of progress and tremendous loyalty on the A dean of the new school should Acting on the university's midweek parties have been "Elimination of midweek part of our alumni," Mills said. be appointed at today's meeting. recommendation, the board suggested by some members of parties will not eliminate the Mills reported that the percentage of alumni donors at Wake Forest is The trustees agreed in principle decided that a School of Business the faculty as a probable cause problem drinker, but will only in the 38·40 percent range as compared to a national average of 17 per· to create the undergraduate School and Accountancy should be of decreased attendance. serve to shift the drinking to off· cent. Mills saiii almost 40 percent of Harvard's alumni and almost 50 of Business and Accountancy at established as a separate unit, The committee is concerned campus or dormitories," percent of Dartmouth's alumni donated money to the schools. their spring meeting, Wilson said. Wilson said. about the problem of alcohol Middleton said. He also said no other schools in the South, including Duke, Vanderbilt, With the creation of a new school There was a consensus of the abuse on campus, Leake said. "Any arbitrary dec;ision Emory and Tulane qualified for the final round of competition. comes the need for a dean, and the. board for this action given the "Present policy must be concerning midweek parties The total amount of money given by WF alumni goes toward operating university prefers to announce alternatives. The formation of a reviewed in light of the growing would certainly brin~ unwanted costs of the university, Mills sa'id. In the 1979-80 fiscal year, which was both simultaneously, Wilson said, separate undergraduate school is problem;" she said. attention to the university. and not judged in the competition, alumni gave $1.4 million. explaining the time lapse between the best choice for the students and The committee also resolved any alcohol abuse on campus," the initial and formal approvals. the general health of the univer· he said. (SeeAlumnl.page two) The board gave the university sity, the Provost said. \.. to appoint a subcommittee to Damage estimated at $2. million: . Arson confirmed in Graylyn, Estate fire Jane Jeffries · · · The: fire, which started in wall said. The number of suspects is didn't have enough fire hydrants," .\.. .. Hc-iult•l-.:dilur . timbers on the third floor and fewer than five, he said . he said. Although it was described less spread to the roofline, was con· The suspects in the fire entered "It was like seeing an old friend than ten years ago as "a com· tained on the third. floor. But, Hill Graylyn through a scaffold that die. You get so attached to a pletely fire-proof building, despite said, water and smoke damage was part of a temnorary fire door, building and !lon 't realize it until many rumors to the contrary," also occurred on the basement, Hill said, at the rear of the house you lose it. I felt like I was losing Wake Forest's Graylyn Estate first, second and third floors. near the ballroom. my own home," Hill said. sustained dam ages of up to $2 The fire "was started," he said. "We have suspects in the case. With the opening of the third million from a fire June 22. "The source of the fire is still We have a fairly clear picture as to floor as a dormitory, Graylyn was The fire broke out about 8 p.m. under investigation as to exactly the sequence of events after our designed to bouse 60 students this during the inaugural Winston· what was used to start it. It did not investigations. fall, Ed Cunnlngs, director of Salem Symphony concert at the occur as any malfunction of "No arrests have been made. housing, said. Of these students, Vernon C.· Rudolph Concert Shell electric a.! equipment." We're waiting for more in· eight males remain in the German on Graylyn property, Alton Hill, Renovations on the third floor formation and working with the House; six males live in an chief of university police, said. were nearly completed at the time arson investigators of the Winston· apartment at the north end of the The fire was reported at 8:20 of the fire. The third floor was to be · Salem Fire Department," he said. house and 10 females live in the p.m., Hill said, about an hour after opened this fall as a dormitory The Winston-Salem Fire Gardeners• House at Graylyn. the concert began. section. Department and Police Depart· Fourteen undergraduate Firefighters arrived from three Construction had progressed to ment responded to the fire, he said. students are living in Granada, the main fire stations within 15 putting numbers on the dormitory Firefighters used the only fire Spanish House, which was to be minutes, he said, and remained room doors, Hill said. hydrant in front of the estate, Hill used as a housing for law students until almost 4 a.m. the next day. The paint used for renovation of said, as well as up to four other . before the fire. Backup units assisted the three the third floor was not the cause of nearby hydrants. Six women have been housed fn main fire units, but were delayed the fire because it was water, not Reynolda Road and Coliseum Taylor dorm, Leake said. Three by the confusion created by con· oil· or turpentine-based, he said. Drive were blocked off to decrease faculty apartments have been used certgoers, Hill said. "The fire was started by confusion and to increase water to house 12 remaining females, The primary fire units were not someone who had gained flow from hydrants onto the estate. Cunnings said. hindered by the crowds, Hill said. unauthorized entry into the house," No sprinkler system exists in Slall~byJotP­ 1fe could not estimate the damage Hill said. . Graylyn, he said. Smoke detectors Next week: Where are the ChimneyS are all that remain of Graylyn's third floor after a fire on June 22 tllat resulted from backup unit The suspects for starting the fire sounded an alarm after smoke was planned Graylyn residents living Despite its "fire·proof" description less than 10 years ago, the university: .• delays of up to 15 minutes due to could be charged with breaking detected.· now, and are they satisfied? Also. a owned estate bumed tor almost eight hours and sustained damages of up to '· the crowds. and entering as well as arson, he "For a fire of this proportion we look at Graylyn then and now. $2 million. Yt~ IIORESr lUNIVEI!Sill ' .BJBRAiY. PAGE TWO Friday, Seplllllber 12, 1980, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Committees meet to examine Alumni funds Graylyn renovation options less·en hikes Jane Jeffries AModatl" 1-Aiilor The GAC has set no rigid date for completion, Jane Carmichael, development associate for the university (continued from page higher than standard fi~L J I(Ni/41 Two advisory committees have been formed to said. "They decided they would attempt to have some one) inflation due to utilities,. J 1-IVEC> IN 2.1:2. study renovation plans for Graylyn Estate after it was ideas (concerning renovation plans) by Nov. 1. But, printing, mailing and to/iCK RND 11'( RO<>Hlf damaged in a fire June 22. WAS I'!A fi'M>lil generally, there is no deadline." Tuition continues to periodicals, which ac· An ad hoc committee of the Board of Trustees met count for high operating Chairing the board's ad hoc committee is Weston P. increase, although with the Graylyn Advisory Committee (GAC) for the alumni giving . increases costs, he said. first time Tuesday, Sept. 8, to begin discussing Hatfield, a Winston-Salem attorney. The other two as well, Mills said. alternative plans for Graylyn's renovation, President board members are E. Lee Cain of High Point, and However, the alumni Gifts and grants are James Ralph Scales said. The GAC includes members Charles W. Cheek of Greensboro. giving makes the tuition used toward almost 10 of the Natalie Gray family (the original owners) and Members of the GAC include Thomas A. Gray, increases lower. percent of the total WF other Graylyn specialists. author of a master's thesis on Graylyn, Connie Gray, operating budget, Mills "Tuition increases are said. If alumni giving "Ultimate responsibility for approval of ( GAC's) Aurelia Eller, Bernard Gray, Pat Williard, Betty Scales, J.E. Broyhill II and G. William Joyner, vice generally less than the decreases, the logical recommendations will rest with the board," Scales inflation rate, and place to make up that 10 said. Restoration work, he said, is "subject to a president for development. (current) giving is a bit. percent would be in satisfactory insurance adjustment and the ahead of the inflation tuition increases, Mills availability of funds to proceed." Two plans have been presented to Scales since the fire, she said. One plan ouUines the use of Graylyn as a rate," he said. ·-said. He would not say, The estate was fully insured for its condition before general conference center; the second plans deals however, how much the fire, Scales said. Any additional costs to restore The inflation rate in · tuition could conceivably with the use of Graylyn as a conference center for the education tends to be· increase. the estate would have to be volunteered. Babcock School of Management. He estimated the damage at $1.5 to 2 million after the insurance adjustment. An additional $372,000 has Use of the estate in its capacity before the fire is still .. . been donated privately· for air conditioning of the very much a consideration, she said. Scales w main house. Graylyn was formerly used as a dormitory for· The renovation figure covers repairing the slate roof women and as a center for the Winston-Salem and SIIH pl!oto by Joe Potr011o and damage to the third floor, plus smoke and water Wake Forest communities and for special university ' ADDENDA damage on the first and second floors. functions, such as a reception area for dignitaries. Plans for the renovation of parts of Graylyn Estate staff p1 Calling the renovation a "major, major recon· destroyed by fire this summer, such as this turret struction job," Scales said he hopes the task will be At the committees' original meeting, two sub­ housing an elaborate spiral staircase, are being dis· Changes in the WF · completed by September 1981. Elections for the "Joy Explosion," a committees were formed within the GAC. cussed by two advisory committees. promotions to full p1 Student Government gathering of young people • I• Legislature, freshman from churches· promotions as announcE Student Budget Advisory throughout the Pilot Mt. Scales. Afro-Am Society calls Committee and fresh­ Baptist Association, will Promoted from asso( man Honor Council will be held tomorrow from 9 were Richard D. Carmi ·Trafficking alterations aHect be held on Tuesday, a.m. to 9 p.m. at Wait William Graham May September 16, from 9 Chapel. Seminars, a Hegstrom, chemistry; W a.m. • 6 p.m. Ballot boxes talent show and a M. Ribisl, physical edu' CU movie 'demeaning' will be located in each speaker, Fenton dorm, and each student Moorhead, will be economics; Wilmer D. S Richman, psychology; (continued from page one} but...by putting pressure calendar; it only said that designation of parking spaces will vote in the dorm in featured. For in- on Korzen, they deprived 'silent movies' would be which he-she resides. Off· formation call Ted York communication and thea1 50 people of the right to biology.· "They thought (the shown. Who, in that first campus and Townhouse at 725-8767. picture} a slap in the see it. short week of classes, students will vote .in Carmichael and Weig "We shouldn't bow notices the film calen­ Reynolda Main Lounge. from Duke University, H face," Korzen said, since down to everyone who is Cindy Sechler that the change would be taking ef· dar? We acted as soon as ~tarr 'i ritrr For more information University of Illinois, an' the cover said only offended (by a film). feet. concerning elections and Interviewing and "Wake Forest University we knew it was being Resident students are losing 62 The traffic change will be in effect resume writing seminars from the University of They (Afro-Am) did not shown." candidates, contact the doctorate from Harvard Film Series," without have to go see it. This is parking spaces because of an altered as long as the roadblock near Taylor Student Government are being held Tuesday at mention of the historical "I was not there (at the campus traffic pattern and an in· House exists. The university received 3 and 4 p.m., Friday at 2 holds one from Northwe: ridiculous. We should not meeting Monday)," office in 230A Reynolda, theme of this semester's be subjected to hassles crease in spaces for day students. permission from the city in August to 761·5293. and 3 p.m., and Wed· Promoted from assis1 film offerings. Afro-Am Owens said, but added he Twenty-nine spaces will be lost close the road for eight months. nesday, Sept. 24 at 3 and 4 professor were James I like this," Perry said. understood that Afro-Am felt this hinted that Wake Perry also claims that when the section of Wake Forest Road The remaining 33 spaces on Faculty p.m. Sign up in the Office Kulonda of the Babe Forest tacitly approves of made no threats, but between Winston and Salem Halls Drive between Wake Forest Road and of Educational Planning Afro·Am put undue merely said showing the Management; Herman E racism, Korzen said. pressue on Korzen and becomes a two;way street. The traffic the footpath to Reynolda Gardens A meeting for seniors & Placement or the Hazen, speech commUI After hearing Afro­ film could cause some which formerly went past the James have been changed from resident to Psychological Services Reese. interested in graduate Willie L. Hinze, chemi! Am's objections to the problems. "If that's Ralph Scales Fine Arts Center and day-student parking. This change will studies will be in Center. Classes will be "In light of recent pressure, that is all they Romance languages, Bla1 film, Korzen and Reese events in Miami and Taylor House will not be routed past accoiumodate graduate students DeTamble Auditorium conducted in 118 decided to can eel the exerted," Owens said. the women's dorms. working in Winston and Salem Halls, Tuesday at 11 a.m: Reynolda. Alan J. Williams, histor: screening. Greensboro, (Afro-Am "I wish we had more Babcock school was prom said), it (the film) was ill­ Faculty and motorcycle spaces Hill said. Men in Davis House who A senior placement "I don't see it as cen­ timed and they could time to involve the CU near the library will remain, Alton previously parked there can park in seminar will . be con­ professor to associate pr sorship," Korzen said. I make it ill-timed," Perry film committe.e and Afro­ Hill, chief of university police, said. lot one (behind Wait Chapel), he ducted by the Office for An open poetry reading Louis R. Goldstein of see (the black students) Am," Reese said. "There WF administrators decid£d in mid· added. Educational Planning will be held Wednesday at promQted from instr~ct01 said. was not enough time to as part of our viewing As for the cover of the August to erect the roadblock and Another result of the roadblock is and Placement Wed­ 5 p.m. in ·Reynold a 102. Promoted from instrt public. Their needs really sit down and deal immediately initiate temporary two· the installation of a fire lane next to nesday at 4 p.m. in Wait professor. were Ruth M' should be heard and their program, Perry said, "It with it completely." way traffic. was not there as an ob· Taylor House between the fence and Chapel. Topics covered Newton of the Romance desires fulfilled if He did not see any issue The change should have been high curb. No parking is permitted there at will include establishing possible. If so large a vious racist slur." of censorship, Reese said. priority and already completed John "I'm very upset with any time and violators will be towed. a resume file and signing Any students interested number of people become He explained the film G. Williard, vice president and Hill said Winston-Salem and WF up for interviews with upset about the showing the way Afro-Am handled in traveling to Rome and this," Mark Owens, should be shown in a treasurer, said. fire and emergency units have been recruiters. of a film it becomes a apolitical context as a "I'm surprised it wasn't done with told how to gain access to Taylor and Pompeii with the case of customer needs." another film committee piece of film history. the roadblock, and the sooner the Efird. January course CLA 275 member, said. "The The scheduling of better," he said. (Ancient and Modern Several members of the schedules have been out The parking lost in front of the Information concern· Rome) are urged to CU film committee "Birth of a Nation" was Hill does not endorse the change construction site has been nearly since summer." not so much intentionally ing training sessions in contact Dr. Ulery in the MCAT-DATJ raised objections because The group could and and expressed great concern. "There offset by temporary head-in spaces becoming an educator for next two weeks. An Korzen had not consulted racist as it was in· is too great a pedestrian flow during near the traffic light behind Taylor. Take the course in, should have made their sensitive, Donaldson class time, and a danger due to the the Museum of Man estimate of cost will soon them and because they• protest earlier, Owens Students should note that the curbs school programs is be available; 10 students 3 to 5 days. P. 0. Be saw the cancellation as a said. blind curve," he said. As of Tuesday of day-student spaces are now painted said. "The committee Assisting in the story no warning or notice had been given available by contacting are needed by Oct. 1 if 30309 phone case of censorship. should have assembled. brown instead of. blue, Hill said. Elizabeth James at 761· this course is to be of­ "They should have were Dennis Hearne and We should have some say Sara Johe. 5282. fered. brought (the matter) to in the decision." the committee," Kim Perry, one of the Donaldson explained re~·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·1 dissenting film com­ the lateness of the protest. "We weren't mittee members, said. "I maliciously timing it tnat f YOU CAN FIND... i Hr11ss feel that (Afro-Am) had way. The film was not Ketn the right to protest, listed in the main j Boys Polo: Sport coats • Knits • Dress Shirts • ! Mens Polo: Sport Coats · Suits • Sweaters · I j Shirts · Accessories • ! ~~ t for A Braemar Sweaters, Rugby Wear i ! at ,. l ~! 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PRIVATE PARTIES Planned Parenthood 761~1052 129 Fayette St. ~between Burke and 1st St.) 333 Pol 723-3998 Winston-Salem, PROUD TO SERVE THE DEACONS Construction, · PAGE THREE Frldaly, September 12, 1880, OLD GOLD AND BLACK seeding started Candy Hatcher Rlchard Whisnant, Sla!IWri~cr assistant director of Sidewalk construction, University Stores', ·said. seeding of the quad, and a "It will be a marked huge "Proud to be a improvement a Deacon" billboard in welcome change." front of the athletic center greeted WF The other change on students this fall. campus which many The construction and students view as a school seeding were to have spirit promotion is the been completed by the installation of the "Proud beginning of school, but to be a Deacon" billboard relocation. of Graylyn in front of the athletic residents took priority, center. thus delaying uprooting The sign, one of 36 in trees and sidewalks, Winston-Salem, is part of Harold "Pete" Moore, the preseason director of the physical promotional campaign, plant, said. Pat Gainey, director of Exodus The sidewalks bad sports information and broken in some areas. In promotion, said. Freshman J.ohn Chung, U.S. 1980 form grand champion in karate, dramatized Tuesday the confrontation between good and evil in his martial ballet, "Exodus." addition, locust trees had The idea for the signs died. · came from the bumper . Rather than pouring sticker slogan which was concrete as before, started three years ago John Hunter Scales announces Moore decided to ' by the athletic depart­ separate the trees and ment. After Gainey concrete with redwood. contacted a sign com­ Although construction pany about the idea, area Macabre mystery combines staff promotions is under way in front of businesses bought the the book store and the billboards, and two were Changes in the WF faculty this fall include 11 bank, similar changes for given to the WF athletic promotions to full professorship and 24 other the other two quad areas department for promotions as announced by President James Ralph will not begin until next promotional purposes. casual sex, graphic violence Scales. year, Moore said. The · billboards will "The sidewalks were a Promoted from associate professor to professor remain on campus and in Sex ·and death, especially violent death, are at the actress who combines a shy, tentative nature with a hazardous area before Winston-Salem through were Richard D. Carmichael, J. ·Gaylord May and hear~ of many of man's fantasies, and Brian De (the construction),", September. large quantity of suppressed sexual promise. William Graham May, mathematics; Roger A. Palma, the self-styled "Master of the Macabre," has If the acting will not win any awards, the directing Hegstrom, chemistry; William L. Hottinger and Paul carefully fashioned a movie which gives us plenty of just might. De Palma, long a student of Hitchcock, bas M. Ribisl, physical education; John C. Moorhouse, both. "Dressed To Kill," starring Angie Dickinson and succeeded in creating a thriller which is a showcase of economics; Wilmer D. Sanders, German; Charles L. .Business tops list Michael Caine, alternates between the sensuousness his directorial ability. Richman, psychology; Harold C. Tedford, speech of a soft-core skin flick and the sudden, violent horror communication and theatre arts; and Peter D. We~l, of a "Psycho-like" thriller. Every shot is heavily stylized and the camera biology.· angles are carefully calculated to draw the viewer into Carmichael and Weigl received their doctorates of major choices The movie centers around the search for Angie the film. At the appropriate moments, De Palma lets from Duke University, Hottinger and Ribisl from the 1979, the number of Dickinson's murderer, a psychotic killer who slashes the lens slowly follolf a hand down the curve of a thigh, Lucy Edelmann majors more than her to death with a straight razor in an elevator. or alternately, zoom back and forth wit!J every slash of University of Illinois, and Gaylord· and Graham May Staff" ritt:r from the University of Virginia. Hegstrom holds a doubled in 1980. Physical The murder is graphically portrayed and the bloody the razor. The business major education majors have heap which the next passenger finds on the elevator doctorate from Harvard University, and Moorhouse The director is so in control of his art that at one holds one from Northwestern University. remains the most popular also been in greater floor is out of our worst nightmares. · selection among WF demand, though not as point, early in the movie, there is complete silence for Promoted from assistant professor to associate students despite a much as physics majors. However, juxtaposed agaiost this scene is a long almost ten minutes as Angie Dickinson plays a game professor were James M. Clapper, and Dennis J. decrease in the total Anthropology suffered passage in which the director builds a beautiful fan­ of grown-up hide and seek in an art museum. Kulonda of the Babcock Graduate School of number of declarations the largest decline in tasy of casual sex. It is a powerful contrast and one of To this extent the movie is technically brilliant, and Management; Herman E. Eure, biology; Michael D. from 1978 to 1980, records declarations, decreasing the many ups and downs which crea~e the to the extent that De Palma intentionally manipulates Hazen, speech communication and theatre arts; assistant Hallie by more than 50 percent. predominant mood of dramatic fantasy in this movie. the fantasies of sex and death it is intriguing. But it is Willie L. Hinze, chemistry; Milorad R. Margitic, Arrington said .. Classics was the least The acting in "Dressed to Kill" is competent, but Romance languages, Blanche C. Speer, English; and Biology majors ranked 1980 in no sense an intellectually or truly emotionally second. Other popular popular major in • none of the roles call for brilliance. Michael Caine, as engaging film. Alan J. Williams, history. William L. Berry of the suffering a 50 percent the psychiatrist who holds the key to the whole Babcock school was promoted from visiting associate majors were economics decline. The director simply wants to excite and frighten us; and psychology. The figures for all three mystery, turns in one of hi.s incre~singly. dull per· professor to associate professor. he is not out to examine the mind of any character or . Physics and physical years included both joint f?rmances. An~ie Di~_kin~o~ IS able to sust~m he~ ro~e Louis R. Goldstein of the music department was education have become majors and dual majors, · s1mply because 's_ll_e look,s like an attractive middle­ to explore the relationship or importance of sex and promoted from instr~ctor to .a~sistant professo~:. · increasingly popular over making· the total number · · aged housewife- who could do With sOttfe' carefl'ee ~ex death in our minds. Promoted from instructor to visiting assistant the last two years. of declarations slightly with a stranger in the back seat of a taxi. The film therefore becomes a bit mechanical and is, professor. were Ruth Mesivage and Candelas M. Although physics was the larger than the Nancy Allen is the surprise of the film. Playing the Newton of the Romance languages department. in fact, a very predictable movie. But none of this least chosen major in enrollment. high-priced call girl with the heart of gold, she is a new detracts from its effectiveness as a good thriller. EVERGREEN Smokey and MCA T-DA T Review Course The Bandit II PG Take the course individually in Atlanta in Mon.-Fri. 5, 7, 9 ~~--. Sat. & Sun. 3, 5, 7, 9 3 to 5 days. P.O. Box 77034, Atlanta, GA 30309 phone (404) 874-2454 The Fiendish · Revenge of The Plot of Dr. '1-.~~ Pink Panther FuManchu PG Rated PG Mon. ·Fri. 4:30· 7 ·9:30 Mon.-Fri. 5-7-9 Sat. &Sun. 2·4:30·7·9:30 llrass Ke/1/e /(.esllllltllHI Sat. & Sun. 3-5-7-9

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,PAGE FOUR Friday, September 12, 1880, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Annette KaVB.naugh by Nix Campus Cult folds Tenor'

MIKE RILEY LYNNE CONRAD Editor JEAN MITCHELL The Exalted Cult of Obscurity Hovno's spirits seemed to rise a When a vocal talent of Business Managers and Darkness held an open house bit as Ariel Nutt signed her name national renown comes to STACYLUKS on the plaza between Tribble Hall (in blood, of course) ln. the mem· Winston-Salem, he js Managing Editor and the library Wednesday night, bersbip register. certain to receive a "So few people on this campus SUSAN BRAY under a full moon which Helen cordial welcome from the Hovno, high priestess, had ordered seem to want a true escape from JANE JEFFRIES SARAJOHE audience. When the same for the occasion. reality," she said to me. "It's kind singer completes his VICTOR HASTINGS SUSAN DARNELL Hovno took a few minutes from of sad, actually." performance with an MARGARET KERFOOT ANNETI'E KAVANAUGH stirring the burnt offerings atop the No sooner had she spoken than a encore of "Nothin' could AB&ociate Edlton Assialant Editors sundial and granted the Old Gold freshman girl in full Izodian be fln·ah than to be In and Black an interview. regalia tugged on my sleeve to ask CaroHna,'' he is more "We in the Exalted Cult think life if this were a fraternity party. . certain to have the Wake Forest Uoiver&ity, WinstoP·Salem, North Carolina at Wake Forestneedsatouch of the "No," I told her, "it's audience in the palm of bizarre. Of course, we're not your thataway," and I gestured his hand. average pseudo-Hindu cult. We like quadward. Hovno shrugged and to think of ourselves as part of the sighed. Western liberal arts tradition." This must have been the coup de Accordingly, Hovno said, the cult grace, for that was the last I heard Difficult choices had some trouble choosing its of Wake's sole and short-lived cult. · sacred books. Hovno finally Helen Hovno and Ariel Nutt gave a Accusations of censorship and university should be to coun· decided to use an introductory press conference the next day to termajoritarianism, essentially accounting book and a calculus announce the cult's deactivation. the abridging of freedom of "We haven't had much response speech filled the air Tuesday th e maJOfl· 't Y ' s . 0 bl'lga t'Ion t ° text"Medieval Latin would really from the student body," Hovno night after the CU film com· protect the nghts of the havebeenmoreinkeepingwiththe said. "We can only conclude that mittee chairman and the CU minority. Until you have ex· spirit of the thing," she said. Wake Forest does not need our director jointly canceled "Birth perienced the position of the "Unfortunately, it isn't very widely services." ~ minority it is inconceivable that used here. Calculus and accounting · "Yes," Ariel Nutt added. "We of a Nation" due to objections are superfluous. The student body £ J)ON'I kNCW WI-/A( ::L'.D DO /.Vt7I-IOUT YA raised by the Afro-American you can' understand the subtle seemed good second c~oices. They is already doing a fine job of . . . ' _have an aura of fiendishness that !1YRON I OL I BCADDY society. and to the maJority, noneXIstent, you simply can't beat." escaping from reality." ! /-' The nature of the film raises impact of prejudice. As for costume, cult members an important question: Can the The cry of censorship was made themselves Druidic robes out artistic merits of a film outweigh · Th f'l not of old sheets and Wake Forest I ' un f a1r. e 1 m was blankets. the implications of its sub­ repressed or banned, it was "This has caused some con· John Konen stance? merely canceled. fusion," Hovno said. "People have CU had offered the film for its been coming in all night and asking value to the history of the· CU accepted the concerns of if we're having a toga party." development of Afro-Am as valid and they halted A freshman in a pinstriped suit Presence within the woods cinematography; Afro·Am the showing with a decision politely interposed himself bet- • f1 d b thr ts f . ween us objected to the film for its umn uence y ea o lD· "Ar · . h fth' 1 b?" s · 11y · 1 "Of course, Edward, my foot was a finger for themselves. The boys, 'urious consequences. e you m c arge o IS c u . ome seasons are rea speeta . well-bred and proud, bicker over demeaning racial commentary. l he said to Hovno. This past summer I worked as a cold." Invariably, however, the boys the silliest things. Both sides offered persuasive Freedom of speech implies a "It's a cult," she said, "and yes, camp counselor, for the first time, As the summer continues, I necessary responsibility to the I am in charge." at a boy's camp near Hen· get the upper hand. "Tell us a ghost arguments, and the inevitable story," says Robbie, and seven b~come more determined to help tension between aesthetics and concerns of all those who hear. "Okay, I have one question," the dersonville. I learned a lot about boys shrill in unison, "Tell us .a the kids live together in kindness. Certain questions of timing on all young man said. "If I join, will it kids. A few of the kids learned a lot, Gleams of hope sometimes appear. social substance yielded no easy help me get into an Ivy League law too. ghost story, you promise~." I would swear they had rehearsed. Edward, of Mercedes-Benz fame, choice. Yet CU chose to cancel sides remain, yet open com· school?" The main consideration at camp .really gets on everybody's nerves. 'munication between the three "This is a secret society," Hovno is patiently staying on top of every At this point, ignorant of such the film, displaying a sensitivity tales, I stall for time. I usually poke and understanding of the parties will alleviate some replied. "No one should know you situation. Otherwise, the little at the fire and tell the boys to After he leaves for three days to tension. belong." monsters will drive you crazy. minority rights which the "Well, in that ease .... " he said, We live in tb.e woods, my cabin gather some more wood. Then, if attend a wedding, the other boys majority often forgets. "There are no simple and stalked off in the direction of and I, at a scenic shelter called they promise to go right to sleep cheer. Upon returning, however, afterwards, I whisper eerily that Edward brings all of them A basic commitment of this solutions, only difficult choices." Bostwick. Ridgetop. After a spectacular Hovno rolled her eyes heaven· sunset, the motmtain air begins to yes, I do know one ghost story, a presents. The others are touched, ward and sighed, "We've been cool. Seven anxious boys peer at true tragic record of some cam· and they feel guilty. getting characters like that all me. ,.. pers, not very far from here, who On the final night of the camp, night. Some sophomore even I busy myself with the fire, were attacked by Big Foot... there is a campfire for the entire thought we were the economics placing a match here or twig there. Camp life is fun, but there is also camp. It is a candldight service. a deeper, spiritual side to our . . -. From the ashes department. I had to explain to her Finally, after 16 matches, a no­ camp. "The only religion most of To sym_bohze g1viDg, each that it was E.C.O.D., not ECON." nonsense flame appears. The boys thesl) boys have had is counselor l~ghts a candle from ~he .. Just then, a short person with applaud with relief, while inwiU'dlY materialism," I can still hear•our , ,.CI)Jl1.111¥nal fir,e and passes the fire,.... ~ev~raJ ~~~e. ~~~(in }J~I.:. ar.Il!.~· .,.!.~JWUvens. ; ~.· JOgged down· the "steps •Of ~ •.,...... , d boy, are !lery director's voice ring .out, as he"· on to hi~ boy~- candles. Then we a!~_:: After the flames died on June The roofless hulk now library and into the center of-the cimpressionabfe. Angus, car~fully encouraged us to provide Christian slowly rp:J.g_~rpwtd the ne~rby lake,'" 23, the skeleton of· Graylyn demands our pledge of com· gathering. roasting a marshmallow now that teaching to our boys. spaced evenly ~part, to display the Estate stood smoldering, a mitment if it is to rise like a Hovno snagged the potential our fire is going, asks me if I've Here again, I feel inadequate. spread of the light. victim of unjustifiable arson. phoenix from the ashes. recruit and introduced herself. lived in the mountains long. "All I'm not even Christian, 1 reflect. Many of the boys fidget. They "I'm Helen Hovno, high priestess my life," I reply, choking on a When other counselors speak of the play with the dripping wax, Built in the Depression with The preservation of Graylyn's of the Exalted Cult of Obscurity marshmallow. presence they feel in the woods, I look around for copperheads. molding figures, scalding their magnificent Italian marble and historical legacy undeniably and Darkness." "And you can't start a ·fire And the boys at our camp are flesh and screaming. Hidden ornate wood paneling, the commits the university, morally_ "Oh really?" the girl said. "I've without 16 matches?" he slyly bullfrogs bellow. Suddenly, and d f · 11 G heard of you guys. I'm Ariel Nutt. counters. certainly familiar with the good mansion recalled an era of ex­ life. Edward's father is a vice· somehow properly, we begin to an mancla y. raylyn after I'm a philosophy major. By the "Damp wood," I shrug. sing hymns. pensive tastes and quality work· the fire must be viewed as an way, can you justify the existence A counselor has to appear president of Chrysler. His family Slowly and solemnly, we build up manship. opportunity, not as the disaster it of this outfit?" competent in the boys' eyes. has four maids and two Mercedes· until our voices echo throughout could have been. "We exist," Hovno replied with A little while later Edward ex· Benz, and he is quite fond of telling anyone these details. the area. The boys no longer fidget, Yet Graylyn embodies more dignity, "chiefly for the hell of it." claims, "John, your tennis shoe is and 1 hope that maybe the service than the grandeur of wealth. Its Carefut' consideration must be "Great!" Nutt exclaimed. on fire!" . . Angus's father is somebody very is not over their heads. Yes, maybe "That's the best reason I've heard I had just noticed this myself. important in Chase Manhattan. My simply stated elegance and solid given to the commitment of our , campers have literally never lifted not. stonework reflect an enduring limited resources, yet Graylyn all day. Where do I sign up?" Benignly arching my brow, I reply, historical tradition of silent should neither be 'slighted nor strength and graceful beauty •• excessively blessed. Graylyn undeniable values which the joins many other projects on the David Marshall community must feel compelled list of priorities, yet it demands to preserve. special consideration as a showplace of history and tradition. Worldly· wisdom need not Seriously damaged by the . irresponsible torch of an ar· The future of Graylyn sonist, Graylyn could lie at our demands wisdom, foresight and feet in ashes. Instead, the commitment from the entire WF mansion still remains, a community if a bird more destroy pleasure of learning testimony to its strength and beautiful than the first is to be endurance. created. As a senior who remembers his the "freshman state." I am not recommending that a Juniors have not been prejudiced first year of college I cannot But I mean no insult by ideo· Wake student should continaully or blinded by practicality and still criticize present freshmen. tifying these attitudes as being change his major and perpetuate find learning pleasurable. The However, if I could create a ghost particularly held by freshman. In his junior year, frozen between real world need not keep seniors story for their class it would be that some ways, freshman attitudes are being the naive, enthusiastic fresh­ from doing the same. 3001 the freshman spirit is doomed to superior to those of upperclasmen. man and the realistic, apathetic Where to now? eternally wander through Tribble, Generally, the enthusiasm and senior. However a similar state is Pleasure unable to locate room ClA. optimism of freshmen die too soon· possible. learning becomes a game of grade~ Seniors frequently make the Freshmen are an easily iden· The point is not that Wally arts requirements of the college. tifiable species; they are the lost and politics, artificiality of Wake mistake of seeing the abstraction Pragmatic reality often in· ones. But, to be fair to them, being Forest society becomes clear, and of college-level thinking as being Cleaver would never pre-judge a trudes upon the ideal, leaving No doubt they will. lost is natural and only part of the the value of knowledge is forgotten. inconsistent with the real job course. The point is when seniors one with only distasteful This autonomy, however, "freshman state." world. I would not go so far as to were freshmen and were not so alternatives. The Board of raises serious questions of future If freshmen are confused, at Waning idealism say that most major executives world-wise going to class was a leas~ they are enthusiastically know "Moby Dick" inside and out. greater pleasure. Trustees seems destined to responsibility. The new school I will not try to speak for all my But, regardless of profession, choose one of these unpalatable should unconditionally commit confused. I generalize, but it seems Worid·wisdom need not kill that as though freshmen have an en· classmates, but there does appear abstract thinking is required. If the pleasure. An example might be alternatives today. itself to the protection of the to be one major cause of waning · · 1 't' t 1 thusiasm which eludes up· idealism. While some seniors will materia 1 IS not egi 1ma e y taken from the freshmen, for The board must decide liberal arts tradition, guarding perclassmen. go on to graduate schools and thus valuable, the process of gaining it freshman enthusiasm is not so bad, against any encroachment which As a freshman I was en­ even if giving them directions is. whether to approve the proposed avoid "the real world" for two or is.I do not believe that material is creation of a separate un· their autonomy makes possible. thusiastic. I remember believing . - three more years, others begin to f h dergraduate school for business almost every word oi the liberal see college as only a transition worthless. The pleasure o t e arts idealism and getting ready to period designed as preparation for previously unseen or unknown is a Letters policy and accountancy, a step which In a dilemma, no choice is learn as if I was getting ready for pleasure that freshmen un- should result in accreditation satisfactory. P.erhaps ac· combat. true society. - derstand, but that is just as and increase the marketability creditation is essential to the There is nothing unhealthy in available to the senior, were he All letters submitted must be Newness being realistic about the univer· open to it. - typed double spaced on a 50 space of both the business program and business graduate and all other sity's purpose. Mter all, this is the line and turned into the Old Gold .- s" the business graduate. arguments must yield tQ senior's advantage over the naive Potential and Black Office Room 226 pragmatic reality. The newness of college im· freshman. Yet, for some seniors th 7 However, possible threats to pressed me most then. Struck by ·even if the desire to learn con: Reynolda Hall, no later an p.m. ..., G9r~ the liberal arts exist. Yet the power of autonomy the idea that there was another While I have never believed that on the Tuesday of the week in If approved, the proposal demands responsibilities which society outside the one I had known tinues, investing large amounts of telling someone to be enthusiastic which the letter is to appear· energy in what is a "holding pat· ha.s ever made him so, con· Letters should be concise and no grants autonomy to the pusiness will transcend the first dean and· in high school, I thought that ,., Sa..ndvit tern" seems futile. scious ness of a course •s po t en ti a1 longer than 300 words m· length. school faculty, meaning the his faculty. college must be society and that Realistic demands may limit, acc~mplishm~nt at college was This loss of enthusiasm becomes should at least keep a student from The editors reserve the right to edit business school guidelines no . t ta'n rea, accomplishment. the "senior state" - a feeling that pre-judging a class. for reasons of length and taste. ~Biscuits longer necessarily fall under the bu t .s.h ou ld no t eli mma e, cer 1 1 was not so naive as to think my your father has given enough auspices of Wake Forest College. leg1tima te and necessary ideal should be the Wally Cleaver, tuition to Wake Forest to have , . . ~ commitments to the balanced "Leave it to Beaver" type ·- a purchased Wait Chapel, and done Founded Janualy 15. 1916, as the s!Udeot ne.._ ot Wake Forest UOtvorsity, Old Gold 8l1d Black IS published A tentative proposal, which so for no purpose. each Ft!day dulfng the school year e•eopt during exam!nB!IOn, summer and holiday pellods as· directed by will certainly be codified after education of the liberal arts. hulking crew-cut mass with his tile Wake Forest Publications lloard. Mailed each week. Members ot the Associated Collegiate Press. ReP

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Willism· Madill PAGE FIVE Friday, September 12, 1980, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

. . Tenor's talent fails to entlirall

When a vocal talent of Tenor NeU Rosensbein national renown comes to closed the oj)ening recttal ·winston-Salem, he Js of the 1980·81 Artists certain to receive a Series season in Wait cordial welcome from the Chapel Tuesday evening audience. When the same with this Carolina BWHough singer completes his favorite. Unfortunate))' StalfWrUrr performance with an for Rosenshein, it was Last Tuesda" students participated in encore of "Notbin' could only the end of his per­ the semesterly ritual of registration. In be fin·ah than to be in formance that succeeded The first part of the five hours and 20 minutes, 3144 UD· Carolina," he is more . in thawing a rather cool pr~gram·, Robert dergraduates officially registered for certain to have the and sparse audience. . Schumann's · romantic classes--nearly one every six seconds. audience in the palm of "Dichterliebe " was Even at 3 p.m., when things were more ' . his hand. Despite a technically marred only slightly b~ hectic than usual in Reynolda Hall, tbe average time it took a student to get from entrance to exit was only 17 minutes. Just as the figures would suggest, most students were pleased with the results of registration. However, as usual there were some frustrated students. The most common complaint con-con· MUMS cerned insufficient offering of those courses which satisfy divisional requirements. · . ,For Parents,. Weekend Most students do not complete their requirements in two years, registrar Stoll pholo by Joo Petro no Margaret Per.;ysaid. However, a survey conducted by the registrar's office each Opening Convocation year offers evidence that tlle system Sept,20 ~rks. i According to the survey, the number of Thirty-six new faculty and staff members were introduced at divisional requirements sUII needed by opening C:onvocation Tuesday. The program included an address the average student at each year's end on "The Pursuit of Honor" by R. Kirby Godsey, president of declines at a stable and adequate rate Wake vs. Citadel Mercer University. from year to year. Also, students might be able to add . courses later. Place Your Orders Now · At The Deacon Shop

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Burget K111g-Aeg. US. Pal. &TMOff •c 1980Burger Krng Corporalton PAGE SIX Friday, September 12, 1980, OLD GOLD AND BLACK .John Molesworth Gri delivers PhDBrl' Aaaodota Sjlqt The nultl apocalyptic message questions raist Saturday's A number of recent artists have attempted to opening Virgi shake men's souls by releasing records filled with Wake Forest apocalyptic visions. Groves Sta(lii have shamed The messages on such records as P.F. Sloan's meticulous of "Eve of Destruction" or Dylan's "A Hard Rain's A· in any court ol Gonna Fall" never came out in full force, being land. detracted in a relaxed or melodic serenity. . Of the 24,51 tended, there 1 On his third self-titled album, Peter Gabriel one question · Stan pho!o by Chariu Voughan eliminates all calmness and delivers a powerful Every fan ha~ doomsday message, truly evdting a fear in all those he or she ha Political protest remains willing to listen. about the 198 John Mackov Still standing since last spring's attack, this errant insight presents one vandal's political savvy. · To set the record straight, "Peter Gabriel" is not Deacons. "pretty" music. While most of us have no reser­ probability, e vations about absorbing a shocking narrative or and player 1 film, we tend to shy away from records that fail to question or t1 grant us instant pleasure. out on the fl(l Soccer team robbed of $1000 When it all Clndy Sechler rooms and took the "Someone apparently team's presence in the "Peter Gabriel," nevertheless, conjures up a three hours_ wallets, in many cases knew our schedule and dorm. clow of doom no other record before it can match. Hokiescame Almost 30 wallets, leaving piles of cash and came in while we weJ"e on Hill said he has 16-7 victory. 'l expensive watches which the field," Kennedy said. r e c e i v e d p o r The first song on the album, "The Intruder," is an were still O...f• some jewelry and cash 0 excellent vehicle for Gabriel's entrance. "The valued at over $1000 were next to the wallets. "Nothing has been cooperation from the during the were stolen from the WF The players began recovered and the athletic department and Intruder," having slipped his "clippers through the years. (Asid• soccer team during an arriving Sunday, Aug. 11 players_ are very upset. from athletes who have telephone wires," forces us to confront his reality year's three l afternoon practice on for pre-season training. The police told us this not reported thefts face to face. received Ed Cunnings, director of happens every year." , directly to him. coverage · Aug. 23. The music on "The Intruder" follows much of the Winston-Salem and housing, left keys to the Clemson and university police found no outside suite doors with The university police· When asked about same pattern found on the album's remaining Tangerine B1 were never notified in communication between tunes. Peter Gabriel's percussion section Deacons lost evidence of forced entry the university police photo • • which Kennedy picked up writing that the soccer the athletic department dominates the record. An almost numbing pound· Stolt by Bill Biker in the mud, into the four Davis House team would be living on and the campus police, suites the team was on Sunday. The players ing, at times sounding like a heartbeat, combined There was something for everybody, including this cameras on were not issued room campus, Alton Hill, athletic director Gene box). occupying. with an occasional guitar riff and a throbbing bass unidentified Street Scener, at last week's Carolina Soccer coach George keys. chief of university police, Hooks said, "We have line, gives the album an enormous tension. Instead o Kennedy said the suites The team was following said. Although Kennedy done nothing but report Street Scene in downtown Winston-Salem. some of th• were locked, but police its routine of three signed for the keys at the incidents. We have never The tension is so carefully controlled that Gabriel however, thE believe the suite doors practices a day, including police office and told an thought to tell the never whirls about on his synthesizer and the compoundet were left unlocked. The a session between 2 and 5 officer that some players university police that drummer never breaks into any type of roll. Two traveling exhibits them. PeoplE burglar or burglars p.m. when the burglary would have cars, Hill had rooms would be occupied to know, "If entered the players' occurred. no knowledge of the by our athletes." On a strong lead side, we view Gabriel as a why did thai neurotic in "No Self Control" and as a prowling There we assassin in "Family Snapshot." "Family Snap­ open· at science center people out shot" portrays an individual who, while drowning were lookinl in obscurity, burns to establish his existence The Nature Science Center of Winston-Salem has. answers I NC artists expand WF series multitude < through some a~tion, in this case an evil oM. opened its new wing with two traveling exhibits Was this great music produced by Center during the spring Violin Competition· iii displaying "Twentieth Century Dinosaurs" and an Deacon sq1 William Madill North Carolina on the semester to round out the Moscow, who will per· · ·Although not as striking as the first side, the flip exploration of the immortality principle. year? The c surr ~ ritt-r professional stage," Will . series. The Frank Holder form October 23; and side contains the popular "Games Without Fron· "Contiituum ... the immortality principle" proposes 8-3 in regula After 25 years of Ray, director of the Dance Theater of pianist Leonard Pen· tiers," and the album's most focused lyrics. and was aw; bringing nationally and Artists Series, said. Greensboro will appear nario, who will appear Galriel's character in "Not One of Us" realizes some provocative ideas as it examines man's search internationally known The North Carolina January 14, and a concert November ~8. that no matter how hard man tries to play the role .for the meaning of life and death. The producers of performers to North Symphony will open the . by the Howard Hanger of an innocent observer, he ultimately finds himself "Continuum" investigate the fields ()f art, religion, Carolina, the WF Artists special series September Jazz Fantasy group of The inclusion of this parapsychology and technology as they trace man:s Asheville will be held four-event experimental tangled in a web of social corruption. Finally, over Series is expanding its 23 in Wait Chapel with a a native beat in "Biko," Gabriel tells us what he's evolving concepts about his own immortality. 1980-81 season by spon· performance featuring April 22. series along with the soring a four-program pianist John Browning. university's outstanding been driving at all along. In contrast, Jim Gary, artist and sculptor, presents Coming artists on the regular season offerings his whimsical animals and realistic dinosaur miniseries of North On October 15 the North Perhaps by giving us no hope, Gabriel places us Carolina artists. Carolina Dance Theater regular Artists Series\ will allow local audiences skeletons created entirely from scrapped car parts. The experimental will perform in the James which opened Tuesday to get a taste not only of in a reactionary position to work against mankind's His works have gained nationwide recog[lition since Ralph Scales Fine Arts evening with tenor Neil renowned international demise. Gabriel leaves the record in much the North Carolina Dance­ performers but of some of his appearance on NBC's "Real People." _ North Carolina Music Center. Rosenshein, include same echo from which he entered, reminding us ,•' ...... ' ...... : ::~ series is being brought to Two more per· violinist Elmar Oliveira, North Carolina's finest that the message shall reappear once more. Bo,lh exhibits will 'remain in Winston1Salem through Wake Forest in "an at· formances will be held in the gold medal winner of upcoming artists and October with free admission. The Nature Science tempt to promote the the Scales Fine Arts the 1978 Tchaikovsky musical groups. Center is located on Museum Drive. Be informed. K<~P up WlfM 111E '~TEST CAMPIIS NEws! RE~o ,... Forest C)u ~D It fllACI.

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:s::::: :::::s c: ::a c ::I J: Grid answers still pending••• PAOE SEVEN Friday, September 12, 1980, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

PhDHrlchak the Tangerine Bowl? means new or even "should" have caught ~ S!>olti Edllar more than a mile and a (Obviously not, a quick elaborate. It's only five neither. Had he caught ;half in ·passing yardage The number of glance at the roster would and Qne-half words, but it one, or both, of the questions raised prior to . was 100 percent natural suffice.)- Was Venuto's throws a monkey­ passes, fans would have with no essential Saturday's . season arm as good as it bad wrench, of sorts, into all opening Virginia Tech· been treated to a couple elements extracted. been before the surgery the questions. Sweetly, of spectacular catches. In That is not to say that Wake Forest game at to remove bOne chips? and simply, it puts the . fact, those could have Groves Stadium would Was James McDougald the arm is not as good it brakes on many of the been the big plays, or once was, but only to have shamed the most replaceable? The list doubts. breaks, which the Deacs meticulous of trial juries remind the curious that goes on. · The questions "You have to make the sorely lacked. there are a few missing in any court of law in the become more abstract, big plays (to win)," bead land. Quarterback Venuto pieces • pieces that were more irrelevant. coach John Mackovic seems to be the prime meant to be there. . Of the 24,500 who at· In asking the said, "and we didn't do target for a lot of the tended, there was at least "I have to work on my ·questions though, it." inquisitors. It seems as if timing with the one question from e!lch. especially after the Certain plays could people are forgetting that Every fan had something game, many forgot a receivers," Venuto have made all the dif· this is the second con· commented. "Guys move he or she had to know most important aspect of · ference for Wake. Those secutive season in which faster in a game than in Wake's failure to make the big play Is evidenced here as wide receiver Wayne about the 1980 edition of inquiry. Perspective. most memorable would Mackovic has used a John Mackovic's Demon To ask a good question, practice. They have a Baumgardner drops a Jay Venuto pass. have been some very big relatively untested arm tendency to cut down on Deacons. In all you have to look at it in plays, the )dnds of plays at the quarterback probability, every coach the proper perspective. the patterns." against Appalachian ( 40 percent) for 125 game, against a better on which you get a little position. The arm is Lest someone get the and player also bad a On Saturday, many asked break one way or the State (Wake won 3G-23), yards. He threw one team (than we did in the attached to the same idea that Venuto is Venuto completed 14 of 34 touchdown pass and no question or two to throw and . answered their other. · body, that of Venuto, but opener a year ago)" out on the floor. alibiing to cover his passes ( 41.2 percent) for interceptions. Crayton said. "But we questions with little, or no Flanker Kenny Duckett this year it is somewhat performance (advertised When it all ended some. perspective at all .. dropped a pass in the end 118 yards. He threw two didn't play well enough to lacking, structurally by seven sacks) on touchdown passes and three hours_ later, the ·"Well, · they lost the zone, but redeemed speaking. Last year, the Senior defensive tackle win. Hokies came away with a Saturday, there are a few two interceptions. Dwayne Crayton best "Just remember one opener. Venuto's arm is himself with a spec­ arm that ranked as the things which deserve 16-7 victory. The Deacons shot. McDougald can't be tacular 13-yard catch to Against Virginia Tech summed up Saturday's thing though,'' Crayton eleventh best in the consideration. on Saturday, .Venuto performance. were still G-for·television replaced. Last year was cap a seven play, passes nation and threw for added, "We will get during the last nine just a fluke, and op­ only, 57-yard scoring In the 1979 opener completed 12 of 30 passes 'We played a better better." years. (Aside from last · ponents were victims of drive. It was Wake's only year's three losses which surprise as much as they touchdown. received television were victims of well­ Split end Wayne coverage · N.C. State, played football." Baumgardner got fans to Clemson and L.S.U. in the Let's back this up for their feet at least twice, ••• as Deacs shoot for Citadel Tangerine Bowl-the 1971 just a minut(l, folks. You but came up short both Deacons lost to Carolina get three time-outs per times. Both of the plays Looking ahead to the He is, however, poin· We have no one to blame returns with a 25.5 yard For Mackovic and the in the mud, and to the half in this game, so it's were long passes. The Deacons next contest tedly honest about how but ourselves if it return average. cameras on the press Deacons, the upcoming about time to use one of first was tipped by a against The Citadel on the extra week should · doesn't." Last week, Miller and game with The Citadel is box). them. Some people are. Hokie defender; the September 20, Mackovic affect the Deacons. In preparing for the Mitchell combined for Instead of reducing trying to eat up the clock the only game on the second grazed is uncertain as to how a "It (the week off) match-up against The three touchdowns to pace schedule at the moment. some of the questions, a little too soon. Baumgardner's extended two week break between better help us/' Citadel, Mackovic is The Citadel over however, the Deacs only "I'm taking the games Enter Henderson fingertips. games will affect the Mackovic said. "It's not a stressing an im· Presbyterian 21·14. one at a time," Mackovic compounded many of Threatt (rhymes with Theoretically he team. matter of "might" now. provement in individual The Bulldogs are them. People now wanted fleet and feet) with an said. "I don't give a hoot performance. relatively inexperienced about anyone except The to know, "If this ... , then axiom from the back· at the quarterback slot, why did that ... ?" Citadel. That's the most field. Threatt picked up "We have to play better with junior Tracey important game right There were a lot of 33 yards in eight carries individually and we have Shrader expected to lead now." people out there who on Saturday, so he should to play better collec­ the way. Last season, were looking for a lot of know something about tively," Mackovic said. Shrader played in six answers to a vast what's going 'on. After all, "You have to start as an games and threw 20 Looking at The Citadel multitude of questions. anyone can sit in the individual though, before times, completing six g arne from a statistic Was this the same stands and sweat. you can play better as a passes for '/3 yards. viewpoint, the Deacs, in Deacon squad of last "The bubble hasn't group." their second game last year? The one that went burst yet", reminded The Bulldogs, under the Defeo si vely, the season, defeated Georgia 8-3 in regular season play Threatt. direction of head coach Bulldogs employ a "Mad 22·21 and racked up and was awarded a bid to The concept, is by no Art Baker, boast a strong Dog Multiple 50 Defen­ nearly 600 yards in total tailback combination in se," which uses only offense. Venuto con­ the persons of Stump three down linemen, nected on 20 of 34 for 283 Mitchell and Danny instead of the con­ yards and three touch­ Miller. ventional four. downs. c.u. In 1979 Mitchell paced Reputedly, a good crop the Bulldog rushing at­ of linebackers will bolster If that's Mt enough, tack with 925 total yards the Bulldog defense this think about what Dwayne Movie and an average of 5. 7 fall, but three of their key Crayton said about the Fri.-Bat. yards per- carry. Miller men-Mike Ashline, Kelly Deacs getting better. 7,9:30,12 SI.IH photo b~ Brlln And•oon averaged 5.1 yards per Curry and Bill Saley-are Few people would dare Wake quarterback Jay Venuto was sacked seven times Saturday in -the Deacons carry and ranked seventh Sun. 2 P.M. '16-71oss to V.P.I. · all coming off knee­ accuse Crayton of being a in the .. NCAA- ,.m kickoff .. surgery. liar, ALL YOU _ BLAKE EDWARDS' ''DEACON'' .""'-·~- --: --~\~ "10" CAN EAT s1 W/1.0. - .... 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I *1980·1981 WAKE FOREST CALENDAR* I

EXCEPTIONAL JANUARY .... _...... _CATHERINE DARNELL JULY .. -. -. -..... --.... -...... AMY POLAND FEBRUARY . _...... PENNY ORR AUG ...... -...... LEE BEAMER ·MANAGEMENT Vincenzo's MARCH ...... LISA BELL SEPT...... SUSAN COPELAND APRIL ...... KIM HARVIEL OCT .... -...... LESA FOUTS OPPORTUNITIES MAY ...... _...... LAURA HEDRICK NOV .... --.. -...... -.... GINNY LEE WE OFFER CURRENT JUNE ...... AMY LEONARD DEC .... -... -...... -.. CATHY CARTER • starting salary up to OPPORTUNITIES $17,300 increases up to oNuclear Engineering Italian $29,000 in 4 years • Business Management .. • 30 days paid vacation • Aviation * Law * Nursing annually • Medical School Scholar· Knowledgeable • fully financed graduate shlpe r;~ programs • Personnel Administration Restaurant ~ : · Sales people at • superior family health plan • Civil Engineering Present This Coupon • more responsibility and • Shipboard Operations \ ;' \ d-1 ...., SOUTHERN leadership opportunities For 1 FREE Calendar • World·wide travel and ad· Corner Polo and -W'lth PurciUJse ofAny Shoo­ venture Most Uberal Arts (While Supply Lasts) • prestige and personal Majors Are Eligible Robin hood Rd. growth potential Hanes Mall Good Sept.12, 13, 14th THE NAVY OFFICER INFORMATION TEAM will be on Upper level campus: 23, 24, & 25 SEPTEMBER at REVNOLDA HALL. .(£ If you ere.lnterested In arranging an appointment or taking 765·7426 the Navy Officii' Aptitude Test while we are on campus caii1-80H82·7588 toll free. w PAGE EIGHT Friday, September 12,1980, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Title Deacons face ACC champs George Minot I . Sports Editor Tony Sussman In the second half, the Unable to · score a Telzrow scored the first team. In fact, their Sports Writer defense shut down goal of their own, the and Erwin the second as We have seen thl A head coach often starting line-up sounds Catawba's offense, and Deacs helped their op­ the Deacs captured their more like a touring future, and it is controlle« cites the early stages of a David Joseph scored his ponents get on the third straight victory 3-1 .. by the government. sport's program as the .foreign all·star team with second goal of the day to scoreboard as a defensive On Sunday at 2 p.m. the six 'Nigerians, two As collegiate athletic! most difficult and trying make the final margin 6· miscue gave Alabama a Deacs face their toughest move Into a new decade situation his job involves. Englishmen, one Dut· o. Kennedy was pleased 1·0 lead. The goal seemed match of the season, chman, and only two the future is complicate< Filled with follies, to win, but he was to awaken the offense. squaring off against the Americans. by excessive federa miscues, and regular "concerned about the Five minutes later Kenny nation's top-ranked team, regulation, ridiculoul losses, the development When asked about casual style of play in the Bauchle scored on a pass the Clemson Tigers. Sunday's upcoming anti-discrimination laws of a new team must be second half. from Steven Heileman to Clemson has won eight game, Ibrahim replied, and, of course, the in· guided with unmitigated "We got away with it tie the game. consecutive ACC titles "I have a lot of respect famous Title IX. patience and strong today, but a stronger Wake missed several and in those years, the The government wi1 determination by all for Coach Kennedy, and team can sense that opportunities to win the Tigers have never lost a I'm sure Wake Forest not let the colleges alone those involved. casualness and take full game in regulation play and as one Wake Fores1 This year, Wake Forest conference game. Last will make a ·· good advantage of the and the match went into year, Clemson lost to showing. But I feel we Board of Visitor! has initiated a new in· situation," Kenne9Y said .. overtime tied at 1. member said last ·May, tercollegiate program in Southern Illinois 3·2 in the have more talent than Playing its best soccer of national championship Wake Forest and that we "it's outrageous that thE the increasingly popular The Deacs faced a the season during the federal government h sport of soccer. game. should win the game. But much tougher team in first five minutes of Unfortunately, Clem· who knows? On a given trying to get involved ii Although only in its their second game overtime, Wake exploded running schools." embryonic stages, the son is not a typical . day, I guess anybody against Elon. After 25 -for two quick goals. American college soccer could beat anybody." The results of un· Deacon soccer team has minutes of scoreless play, bounded federal in· already shown flashes of Danny Downing took a tervention are strained brilliance that might pass from Steven athletic budgets and the have only been attributed Heileman and beat the abolition of non-revenuE to a solid, time-tested keeper with a 30.yard Holloway wins amateur sports. For the small, program. shot that Downing liberal arts school, witll The birth of Deacon thought "was going to go limited resources and soccer came officially on over the goal when he KarlnArmen that day and I had talked Marjorie Crisp was at the facilities, the athletic September 3, a date that first hit the ball." Assistant Sports Editor to him the night before state tournament. situation in the eighties head coach George Golfer Robin Holloway and I was also thinking "I was there and there looks bleak. Kennedy had anxiously With both teams bat· is looking forward to the about him when I was was no one in Robin's awaited for over a year. tling for control of the team's 1980-1981 season. playing," said Holloway. class. She is long off the Leaving behind an im· midfield area, the score With her victory this "He's my mental tee and displays a sure pressive record and a remained 1·0 until Burt summer in the North coach." touch both on and around nationally ranked scored the eventual Carolina State Amateur, Holloway was even at the green. She has great . Stoll pholo by Brian Anderson Belmont Abbey team, game winner with 22 she will certainly be a the turn, having birdied potential," commented Kennedy came to Wake minutes remaining. Two main contributor to the six of the first nine holes Crisp. Wake Forest's Jeff McNeill concentrates on a pass in the Deacon's 3-1 win ovef the Forest at the end of 1978, minutes later, the Deacs team. in the second round. University of Alabama-Birmingham. The Deacs are 3·0 this year. knowing that he would gave up their first goal of The tournament, held "Everything dropped Holloway started have a year to work with the season, but Wake's at Duck Woods Country and I was even hitting the playing golf at the age of the club team and to defense thwarted any Club in Kitty Hawk, was greens. I was trying hard 12 and began playing recruit top flight players Elon attempt to tie the the first major tour­ not to think how far under competitively at 14. After in hopes of getting the game as the Deacons held nament Holloway has I was," Holloway said. playing golf with her program off to a good on to pull out their second won. She compiled scores She ended the round father, she became in­ Thomas coinmands X-C start. victory by a 2·1 margin. of 75-67·79 in three rounds with an excellent score of terested in the sport. Against Catawba for a 221 total, and won 67 which was a new There was no women's College in the season "We weren't prepared the tournament by six course record on the par- golf team at her high opener, it took just eight for such a physical game Scott Sapp door of national caliber of the year in the ACC in strokes over Lee Whit· 73 layout. . school, so Holloway Sports wnter distance running," minutes for Kennedy to but I felt we adjusted well temore of Wilmington. At the start of the third played on the men's 1965. Coincidentally, the see that his efforts had dW'ing the course of the The Men's Cross Coach Ramsay Thomas other co-scholar athlete Holloway was hitting round, Holloway was team. Though she didn't Country team opens the was hired in July to paid off. as Rob Burt game and that is why we the ball well and felt good leading by eight strokes play all the time, she was Wake quarterback headed in a George were able to win," 1980 season against replace retired track and and current head football about her first round. She and she was scared. feels it was a good ex· Appalachian State cross country coach Bill Telzrow corner kick to Kennedy said. ended the day one stroke "I had nightmares the perience. coach, John Mackovic. stake the Deacs to a 1·0 University September 20 Dellastatious. He also Thomas was also the 1965 out of first place. night before. I was four with a new coach and a replaces Dellastatious' lead. Soon after, Mark Playing for 'the third 600 and sao-yard cham· "When I started the over after about five "There is a big dif­ young team. assistant and former Erwin booted in the time in five days, the second round, I was just holes and felt a little bit ference in playing on a pion while at Maryland. second goal, and the Coach Ramsay Wake track team He currently holds the Deacons took the field concentrating on ?.ervous, but then I made school team and playing Thomas' thirteen member Tom Rae as Deacs went on to score Sunday (seeking their eighteen greens. I wasn't a long putt on the sixth in the summer on your American record, age 35, three more times and member roster features cross country coach. in the 800, 1500, 3000 third straight win) even thinking about how hole and I was sure I had own. There is the added six sophomores and four Because Thomas was take a 5-0 lead into the against the University of meters and the mile. everyone else was doing. it," Holloway said. pressure of being freshmen. hired so late_ he was half. Alabama·Birmingha m. It was my dad's birthday Women's golf coach responsible to the team In addition to. ASU, the unable to recruit for this After graduating from because you're not just schedule includes: Duke, year, but he is not con· Maryland with high playing for yourself," N.C. State. the cerned. "We had such a honors in History and Holloway said. Appalachian Invitational, good recruiting year two NORTHERN STYLE PIZZA Pre-Med Studies, "We have a really good the North Carolina State years ago that this year is Thomas spent time in B&MGRILL team this year. This is the Championship, the ACC no problem. We did get medical school at the Junior running back WaynE Championship, and the some good freshmen 209 N. Marshall best I've ever felt about University of California seven quarterback sacks. PIZZA. OW' team." NCAA Reg ion a 1 anyway." at San Francisco, and Championship. Team member Jeff with the Peace Corps in 20c; Discount The conference title is Whitt reinforces Thomas' Ethiopia. -----Home Cooking ----- decided in one !lleet. the_statement, "We have "After two years, I ACC championship, some good freshmen realized I was more GARDEN which will be hosted by prospects." " • .~enoe Breakful Lunrh Book running oriented than Campus Delivery: Packs the Deacons. It will be Thomas was quick to career oriented," Homemade Bioruit• SpecU.li:ing In run here in Winston· add, "Of course Thomas said. "I. was just Sun.· Thur. 6-12 a.m. so I f.re.tm Grat')' sa S a 1e m S at u r d a Y, recruiting will be a high more serious about Thirk Hamburger Ste•k.< Fri.-Sat. 6-la.m. (;riltt and up November 1. priority this year, and I running, and I couldn't do WANTED. PEOPLE WI and Thomas listed avoid~ng am looking forward to the both." BEST IN NEW EYEWE Open for Breakfast Countr-y Ham 8: renderloin Thick Hamburger• & injuries, and challengmg challenge. N.C. State for fourth in Thomas seems to like TION. COMPARE OUI Sat. -Sun. 8-12 Chee•eburger• PADDLING Wake and Winston-Salem the ACC Championship as "Having been at LOOK IN YOUR NEW 724-7600 the team's goal for the so far. "I have been Corner of Cherry St. and 30th Hours·Mon. thru Fri. 6:00-3:00 Sat. 7-2 UNLIMITED Maryland in the mid-' treated wonderfully, the T.V. INSTANT REPLA' Phone 945-3745 year, after last year's sixties when Wake was fifth place finish. · campus is small, but poor in track and cross inviting, and the people He added, "Maryland country, I am very im· and UNC should be very are very· personable. pressed with the im· They have made me and "( tough, but if Clemson's provement over the last THE HAIR DEN foreign runners return my wife feel like a part of fifteen years," Thomas the Wake family already. they should repeat as said. "I am also im­ ~ger FOR MEN AND WOMEN conference champions." In addition to the great pressed with the quality natural beauty of the The team has many of the athletes here, the Travel Service strong runners, but Piedmont region, I am Ask About RD CUT, COLOR, positive attitude they · very impresse~ witq the Thomas is particularly have toward the school Resistant Coatln enthusiastic about cultural attractiOns of the Wake Forest Travel Headquarters PERMS, DESIGNS and running, and the good area. The campits itself We Tint Plastic Le sophomore Bob Petrini. facilities." "Bob Petrini is a good seems to be composed of for 855 W. 4th St. 722·3615 bright, alert, high-quality runner now, and he is Thomas was unof- Between Broad St. & Summit. 723·4565 human beings. It is a-fun ·Professional Travel Counseling going to get better· Right ficially co-scholar athlete place to work." now he is knocking on the Call us at 765-0666 Our services to you are free. Voyager Travel Located at 101 Olive St. • Bill West, Optlclar one block from Stratford Executive Park. Member N.C. American Bo1 -ms Contact lens ExaJ 3 Good Reasons To Trade • In Your Old Ones For Some New Ones ... l. We'll hand you a crisp new $5 bill on your old shoes when you purchase any new Hours Mon., T pair. (That's a great reason!) Wed., Fri. 9 2. We'lllook over your old Other Hours 8 shoes. We'll point out any irregular wear patterns. Why? 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George Minot "The government that's why some schools ' .Spans Edll« kind of commitment we dropped two days before and we wei'e not getting· "If the Department of A day after the regulations are a real have been so reluctant to have made." the last final," Bund­ backbreaker," Athletic, · comply." anybody to attend the Education would exclude women's sports an· This commitment did schuh said. "By that meets." football. (96 scholar­ nouncement, May 14, it We have seen the Director Gene Hooks May 13, two days after future, and it is controlled. not include men's time, it was too late to ships), we could probably was announced the Wake .by the government .. said. "Under ~tl~ IXt for spring finals ended, According to the give porportionately sports . medicine and As collegiate athletics example, If you haye 200 Hooks announced an swimmers, hOwever, the equal amounts of at hie tic training move into a new decade, male athletes and half of expansion of the women's facilities at Wake are not financial aid," Scales programs would fall the future is complicated them are on scholarship, at hie tic pr 0 gram '(... glass of the finest.!J that bad compared to said. "But that would be under the control of the by excessive federal half of the women designed to comply with other ACC schools - too easy. It is so obvious Bowman Gray School of regulation, ridiculous athletes. also have to be the Title IX directive swimming, however. It transfer because all the Virginia, for example - ·and fair that the Medicine and not the anti-discrimination laws, on scholarship. And Wake placing a new emphasis was eliminated in order other swimming and the team has been government will not do school's athletic and, of course, the in· Forest just doesn't have o_n women's sports. to increase the funding programs were set. The competitive in the last it." department. famous Title IX. the scholarship ·money The complex program for women's programs University showed little two years. It is obvious and fair. George Revere will The government will for that many women." called for an increase in and because of regard for 30 athletes by Football has thrown the direct the sports not let the colleges alone, , "We have 'to .comply women's scholarships inadequate facilities, waiting so long to make "Sports is a business idea of proportionate medicine from Bowman and as one Wake Forest with the law," President from 13 to 23, plus in· according to the 'pres.s the decision." now," Bundschuh said. scholarships out the. Gray, and run the Board of Visitors James Ralph Scales said. creased funding for release. The final decision to "Athletics is too big for wiDdow, but the govern· program completely. member said last ·May, "But Title IX was in- facilities, travel, training "The school should drop swimming- was not itself and no one can ment refuses to recognize Long-time trainers Doc "it's outrageous that the stituted in 1972, and we : room services and, have a moral obligation, made until May 9, Hqoks handle it. It is a dollars it. 'Ibe feds are trying to Martin and Jody Puckett federal government is are still' trying to in· general expenses. a commitment, to con­ said The proposal went and cents thing, you can't enforce equality without are now consultants to trying to get involved in terpret it. There still is tinue swimming," Greg first to the Athletic rationalize it." any rational idea of how the program. running schools." confusion. "As recently as five Bundschuh, who was to Council, then to the Board Former head coach to do it. The results of un­ "The guidelines -now years ago our women's be the co-captain of the of Visitors, and finally to Tom Aim, now in the bounded federal in· are most unrealistic," program was funding at team, said. "There are· the Board of Trustees. Babcock School of Perhaps the best news tervention are strained Sc_ales said last May. "I $25,000," Hooks said last now about thirty athletes "I knew the direction Management, also thinks this summer came July athletic budgets and the think it is very likely the May in a prepared who have no varsity swimming was going," the whole thing is unfair. Dr. Hooks and the 16, when Hooks an­ abolition of non-revenue - guidelines will change statement. "In the team, and they came to Hooks said. "And I told Athletic Department likes nounced the signing of· sports. For the small, again, so we're doing this coming year we have Wake with the ex­ Coach Tom Aim. But the "It's almost a case of to keep busy during the Ramsay Thomas as the· liberal arts school, with a year at a time. The budgeted the women's pectation that the school final decision was not reverse discrimination," summer months. Along new track and cross limited resources and - feeling is the guidelines program at m'ore than would provide swimming made until May." Aim said last May. "It's with the Title IX furor, country coach. facilities, the athletic are too rigid. And all of us $450,000, up from just - for their four years." "We met with Dr. certainly unfair to the two other developments Thomas replaced the situation in the eighties fear over-regulation (by__ over $100,000 this past "I found out that Hooks in March," team. But I can see the took place while the ever-popular Bill looks bleak. the federal government); year. This speaks for the swimming would be Bundschuh said. "We . thinking behind all' this, students were resting at Dellastatious, who is now knew that swimming was even though I don't the beach, at home, or teaching physical 'I ·• ' • ' . . - . getting little money and necessarily agree with wherever. education. . . support and we wanted to it." ...... know why. Looking back, . ~ . The culprit behind. the I can see that Hooks told swimming fiasco is not us everything but that Hooks or Scales, Deacs place second swimming was going to however, it is the federal be dropped. We should government. By forcing TrishMiller keeper has a leadership have read the band· colleges to meet unclear Sjlotla Wllt8r role in viewing the entire writing on the wall." regulations regarding Sunday, September 7, field and positioning the Hooks regretted that scholarships and the Wake Forest Field defense; Sandy did an swimming had to be women's sports, the feds Hockey Team met its excellent job." dropped, but he said that are wiping out non­ first competition in a six it was one area where the revenue sports and team scrimmage. ''Betsy Milne, the only athletic department had turning collegiate The Deacon women Deacon scorer in the to make a sacrifice. athletics into a business placed second in their Durham game, played "We have had trouble that cannot handle itself. pool of three teams, tying the link position very . with the swimming pool," the North Carolina club effectively," Brown said. Hooks said, "and it would and losing to the Durham take a sizeable ex­ The critical issue is the club, the latter being the "Scheduling scrim­ penditure to renovate it. scholarships. Wake and overall winner. Wake mages with clubs We have built a new other small private in· Forest was the only provides a good op­ fieldhouse, a track, and stitutions can provide collegiate team par­ portunity to play against we are working on the women's programs and ticipating. an experienced team," baseball field, but a new teams. They can not, The scrimmage left Brown explained. "I have swimming facility would however, handle the Coach Caroline Brown a chance to move players be too costly." federal guidelines Scales said the pool was feeling positive about this around in order to test requiring schools to year's team, despite the which position suits them perfectly adequate, but it provide proportionately was not good enough to loss to Durham. "We best. The Salem equal amounts of played excellent field scrimmage on' Sunday attract competititve financial assistance to swimmers. hockey against Durham will serve the same the women's and men's for 17 minutes; it's just a purpose. "You need a huge programs, based on the question of endurance, Olympic pool to attract number of athletes in good swimmers, and we - since we had only been "Currently,'' Brown each. Under the law, oracticinl! for four daYS. said, "we're atmmg SIIH photo by Brlan Andenon just don't have one," Wake would need to "Goal keeper Sand,y Junior running back Wayne McMillian heads into the line against V.P.I. Wake totaled only three yards rushing due to Scales said. "Swimming towards finding the right .award 50 women's Barbour had a very good lineup for the seven quarterback sacks. · also finished last in a scholarships a year to popularity poll last April ·performance," Brown Appalachian game match its men's ratio. commented. "The goal September 16." 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I Postal service ·.Merits awarded hoUrs reduced over summer The university's trek to League io assist station Reynolda Station has 3:30 p.m. for those the old campus received personnel in program· been converted to a 24· needing assistance with an exceptional mlng, announcing, hour self-service facility postal transactions. achievement award from promotion and script in a U.S. Postal Service After 3:30 p.m. postal the Council for Advance· wriUng .. Four members move to provide better employees are present ment and Support of of the league work 15 av a !lability of services and self-services are fully Education for student hours per week for 10 Vol. LXIV and cut operating col!ts, implemented. .. ·relations proJttams. months a year in the Winston-Salem post­ The changes will The trip, initiated in program. master John Schoolfield 1971 by President James said. provide easier access to postal services for the R. Scales, Is made every The changeover came four years· to the original A $75,000 grant to study as the result of a Postal WF community and operational cost savings . campus in the town of the relationship of Service proposal made · Wake Forest to provide religion and the social last spring. Under the for the Postal Service, Schoolfield said. each generation of un· sciences was awarded to proposal, Reynolda was dergraduate students a the university by the to be converted to a 24- Controller Carlos . chance · to see the old Henry Luce Foundation hour self-service station is MargaretK< Holder said he skep­ campus. of New York City. Atooclato Edl with full-service hours tical about the transition, Last fall about 650 from 8:30 to 10:30 a.m. which he feels is a cut­ The money will finance The WF Board of students, faculty, . staff, a · three-year inter· As the procedure now back in postal services. alumni and others made proved the establi stands, self-service The university did not ask the trip. disciplinary project titled separate undergrad1 equipment is installed for the change, Holder "Religion and the Social business and acco and full service is pro­ said. He said· he thinks­ Sight or oversight? Crisis." appointed Thomas vided from 8:30 a.m. to postal authorities un· The project, which associate professor o Can this billboard located on Interstate 40 be the work of an apathetic Winston·Salemlte or is It a challenge to Reynolda Estate was begins next January, is 12:30 p.m. Caller service derestimate the use of recommended by· .the accountancy, dean is available from 1:30 to Reynolda Station. the Wake Forest pride in being a Demon Deacon? · designed to promote school at their fall . N.C. Professional Review dialogue among students Friday. Committee for listing in and scholars of religion the prestigious National and the social sciences There was no pr Register of Historic ·about · contemporary pro.ving the adrr Places. issues. It will include proposal, Colin Stok If final approval of the public lectures, ·an in· of the.Board of Trus Reynolda National terdlsciplinary course for Taylor said be dOE . Historic District is students, a summer in· any substantial chanj Crowds flood W-S for festival EVENTS granted by the U.S. school. · stitute for· theologians, Department of Interior, social scientists and "We are going ton the estate will become the practitioners in each field alterations and prese1 fourth National· Historic and a faculty conference. what we've had," he De!llse Privette , CONCERT · Mark McCollum will perform District lil Forsyth Slaff \\ rilt-r The new school is nt artistS' work. •. tonight in Wait Chapel at 8 p.m. County, along with Old development calling The September heat failed to keep crowds away The festival began Saturday at 9 a.m. with a GATHERING·· "Joy Explosion," a meeting of Salem, ~ethabara and President Carter's mission,· he said, res from downtown Winston-Salem last weekend for 10,000 meter run and continued with various bands young people from throughout the Pilot Mt. Bethania. communications staff question concerning I the fifth annual Carolina Street Scene. and groups performing until6 p.m. from five stages Baptist Association, will meet tomorrow from 9 The district will include_ used Cas a Artom as objectives of the new "Standing out in the sun, I don't think I'm located downtown. Reynolda House and its headquarters for this a.m. to 9 p.m. in Wait Chapel. 20 acres of grounds; 144 . sum mer 's W or 1 d The school still feels anybody's fan," a Winston-Salem man said while On the corner of Second and Main, an ' liberal arts program, waiting for the Earl Scruggs Revue. "But be sure to LECTURE • Tony DeBalsi, WF visiting artist, acres of ·gardens, Economic Conference in unexhausted road-racing couple readjusted their meadows and woods and Venice. don't want to be seen hear Nee Ningy. They play everything from pace to the beats of Mongo Santamaria, a jazz . will give a public lecture and show slides of his away, as a separatisl Gregorian chants to Irish beer-drinking music and the 13.5-acre Reynolda The house served as congo drummer. Down the str:eet couples danced work Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. in Scales Fine Ar~s Village; . and Reynolda both office space and school," Taylor said they have a harmonica player that's out of his the polka to the music of the Little German Band. Center 102. DeBalsi's work is on display ·in the Presbyterian Church. communications head· school is basically : head!" Children and adults stopped by Wachovia Bank to downstairs gallery 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday change and not a quarters from May 15 to one." Street Scene, co-sponsored by the Winston-Salem watch Sidewalk Sam color his chalk drawing of a through Friday, and 1·5 p.m. Saturday· and June 25. About 100 Arts Council and Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co., was a portrait of Raeburn, a late 19th century British Sunday. · ' , · WFDD·FM, the workers manned the ;.: . "~·:-,:~::~·! . -r· ·. ·:. :.:..~. ~ "! :~ two-day smorgasbord of music, food and events. painter. university radio station, communications equip­ ,, ':-.···· Musical tastes were whetted with bluegrass, Sidewalk Sam (Robert Guilleman), a portraitist CONCERT·· Southside Johnny and the Asbury received the Corporation ment, which was fiown in calypso, symphonic and jazz selections. when not doing sidewalk chalk drawings, worked Jukes will perform Sept. 18 in Wait Chapel. for Public Broadcasting's from Washington for the . Street vendors sold an assortment of food from intermittently between chats to children about his Tickets are $5.50 with I.D. annual public par· summit talks. ticipation and awareness hot dogs to baklava. Thirsts were quenched from a very famous old fashioned painting. CU FLICKS· "10" tonight and Saturday at 7, The house was pur· award for a volunteer chased from the federal lemonade stand or from a trip through the beer "The drawing doesn't last long," he told them, 9: 30 p.m., 12 a.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. in gardens. Sidewalk art galleries displayed regional project which saves the government through a "but it's fun while it lasts." DeTamble; "Caligari" Sunday at 8 p.m. and station an estimated special act of Congress in "The Golem" at 9 p.m.; "The Gold Rush" $3,000 per year. 1970. A clause in the bill of Monday at 8 p.m.; "The General" Tuesday ·at 8 The project was begun sale allows the govern­ two years ago by the . ment to use the house for p.m.; and ~'The Golden Age of Comedy" Wed­ Winston-Salem Junior ' nesday at 8 p.m. special occasions. ,__-COLLEGE UNION---...

Fina , Presents amachine that Southside Johnny .treats you & The·Asbury Juke·s Graylyn, once housing fc awaits renovation and re like a human shingles were carefulll being. . reused as part of the ne~ Accr MargaretKerfo< · AIIOCialo Edllor . Most campus reactic Board of Trustees· establishing an under school of business and ac< was marked by an unce the actual consequencE creditation. Peter D. Weigl, a mem six-member committ studied the accreditation associate professor of bio: he is not unduly concerr the decision. "I don't think it is going dire things for liberal 1 said. "There is a better cl maintaining respect for lit the way it is now with th1 business personnel than ~ jurisdiction of the g school," Weigl said. The culprit is a certain existing in the accre agency, the AACSB; Wakt THURSDAY SEPTEMBER.18 could have gone along q\ pily the way it was; he Sl Calling it a com1 WAIT CHAPEL situation, Weigl said this Now here,justwlren you need it. The new NCNB 24. to your checking. Or vice versa. It even knows tlut was substantially better 1 That let! you withdraw $5 at 2 a.m., when you're des­ you -like everybody -can make mistakes. So it doesn't ·$5.50 w/ID alternatives. perate for a pizza. Or up to $100 when you have to leave take your card away just because you hit the wrong "The people in t1 lor home - or the beach - in a hurry, button. In short, it makes your banking easy and dergraduate business prog: And it will give you almost all the banking service coovenienl. Fm- the details drop into NCNB's Reynolda sensitive and sympathetic you want. When you want it. Tell you your account Road olfice, near campus. So we can ohow how much liberal arts tradition," Wei balance. Advance you money on your Visa, Master Charge, ~e want~ be the best bank r:NP.IaA or NCNB Cash Reserve. Transfer money from your savings m your neighborhood. IID,_n.iiiG.., John A. Carter, profe 2899 Reynold.t Road Member FDIC English, is concerned ab future autonomy of the scb the accreditation age1 powerful enough to reorga1 department, it is powerful to dictate the curricul