King's Singers Field Hockey Gets ; :, ::P8gcf4 ·· Appear Tuesday First Deep South Win . ,,·PagE) 7 ~ge.9 Page 7 Page 9 Friday, November 7, Volume 70 No. 11 Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. Foundation Pledges $1 Million for University Center Committee Plans Library Annex Benson to Present Gift to Trustees By CRISTINE M. VARHOLY The new university center will be By SCOTT PRETORIUS News Editor named for Benson's father. Clifton Assistant News Ed1tor L. Benson, Sr., a prominent President Hearn announced that Raleigh bu:;inessman. Provost Edwin G. Wilson has announced the forma­ The Palin Foundation of Raleigh G. William Joyner,the vice presi­ tion of the new Library Annex Committee, which will has pledged a $1 million leadership dent for university relations, said study the feasability of expanding the library. gift toward the construction of a that, in January, the Board of Wilson said of the committee, "They will look at university center, last Friday at a Trustees will "receive a full-scale things such as how much more stack space and how luncheon attended by members of planning report" about the propos­ much more reading space we will need." Study rooms · the Parents' Council, the Board of ed center, which will be presented for graduate students, professors, and emeriti will also Trustees and the Alumni Council from the capital, building and pro­ be considered. and their children as well as ad­ grammatic standpoints. The library annex has not yet been approved. ministration and student leaders. At that time, the board will The purpose of this committee is to determine what John P. Anderson, the vice presi­ decide whether or not to accept the the needs of the library are and to assess plans to fulfil dent for administration and plann­ administration's recommendation to those needs, Wilson said. ing, said that proposed plans place build the university center. Joyner Funding for the project will be considered after the the university center adjacent to said. -The Board of Trustees will committee makes its recommendations to the ad­ Diagram by Ed Boudlin, AlA Reynolda Hall, across from Trib­ have to decide when and if the cam­ ministration in May, he said. ble Hall and near the Z. Smith pus plan is correct and when and Merril G. Berthrong, director oflibraries, will serve Artists' drawings show the placement of the University Center (above) next to Z. Smith Reynolds Library and the new building's patio (below), which will open out on Reynolds Library. if the building will be built." as the chairman for the committee. Other library of­ Joyner emphasized that all or ficials on the committee include Richard Murdoch, rare Magnolia Court. Hearn said, "This location will make the center the crossroads of nearly all of the funds for the pro­ books librarian, John Via, head of acquisitions, and ject will need to be secured before ' .... _.~• ~~~'" Do• the campus and the hub of campus Anne Nicholson,.catalog librarian. Librarian Elen - , .. 11•1""'1C6 1-itlt life. With approximately 80 to the proposal will be accepted. The Knott is the secretary for the committee. cost of the new building will cost 90,000 square feet, the proposed Representing the faculty are Deborah Best, associate from $7-10 million. Construction is center will provide space for stu­ prof~ssor of psychology, James McDonald, professor expected to take approximately two of btology, Don Frey, professor of economics and dent meetings, health and fitness activities and individual entertain­ years. Timothy Sellner, professor of German ' "l do think this i, a project that Wilson and John Anderson, vice-president for ad­ ment and enrichment.'' l Clifton L. Benson, Jr. wi1l pre­ we can do as a university before ministration and planning, will represent the '· 1990," Joyner said. Both he and sent the gift to the Wake Forest administration. Anderson agreed that, in the best Board of Trustees at their Student Government President Steve LaMastra will f of all possible scenarios. construc­ !_. November meeting. Benson, the recommend a student representative to the committee. - tion could begin after one year of This student will be a full, voting committee member. president of Carolina Builders Cor­ poration, is a member of the Board fundraising. An early priority for the committee will be to develop r At this time. funds may not be a questionnaire to determine the library needs of of Trustees and an alumnus of Wake ·--- Forest. His son, Clifton Ill, and solicited from corporate sources students and faculty, Wilson said. because Wal(e Forest is irwolv<:d m "We are particularly interested in how students daughter. Peggy, are currently enrolled at Wake Forest. See Benson, Page 6 perceive their study needs;· Diagram by Ed Boudlin, AlA Prof. Sullivan Freshmen Face Criminal Charges for Campus Vandalism By JABIN D. WHITE manses, but no bonds have been three white males were damaging the student, Behrmann, and of Reynolda Hall first, where they Dies of Cancer minutes later Miller and Morrison stopped up one of the sink drains Assistant Sports Editor placed on them. a cement trash can outside of Robert L. Sullivan, who The freshmen were members of Reynolda HalL were apprehended by officers in with paper towels and tum<:d on the water. tlooding the bathroom and joined the Wake Forest Univer­ Three Wake Forest freshman are the football team, but have been Officer Randy Hobson respond­ their dorm rooms. part of the basement. sity biology faculty in 1962, facing criminal charges for a spree suspended from the team by Head ed to the call and investigated the All three men were interviewed died of cancer Tuesday. of vandalism that occured in the Coach AI Groh because of the in­ situation. Though he found no one at the public safety office and con­ "Anything that could have been at the scene, he saw that the trash fessed to the acts of vandalism. done quickly was done." Hill said. Sullivan, 58, lived at 1037 early morning hours of Saturday, cident. Two of the men are scholar­ can had been shattered into pieces, "They all three have confessed to The vandals then left Reynolda Paschal Dr. He was in Largo, Oct. 25. ship players, while Morrison is a non-scholarship player. he said. about 95 percent of the vandalism Hall and went in the direction of Fla. at the time of his death. David Eric Behrmann, Thomas that occurred during the night of the Tribble Hall. On the way, they over­ A memorial service will be Bill Faircloth, assistant athletic At the same time. security officer Albert Morrison and Frederick E. 24th," Hill said. turned a cement trash can, which held Monday at 3 p.m. in Wait director, said that no further action Bobby Allison observed three Miller are scheduled to appear against the ex-players has been was destroyed, and a U.S. Postal ChapeL males in Tribble Hall causing a "They basically went on a ram­ before the Forsyth District Court taken, and refused to speculate on Service mail box. which was not Nov. 17 to answer charges of disturbance. Allison approached page that started near Reynolda Sullivan, whose area of the futures of the three men. Hall and ended in their apprehen­ damaged. Hill ,aid. "malicious injury to property." one of them, and after he resisted research was genetics, had sion," Hill said. In Tribble Hall. the vandals Director of Public Safety Alton At3:03 a.m. Oct. 25, the Public the officer tackled him to the done extensive research on ground. The other two males fled. According to Hill, the vandals visited a majority of the men's wasps and houseflies. Hill said that the three men have all Safety Office received a call from been served with criminal sum- an unnamed female reporting that Backup officers arrived and held visited a bathroom in the basement See Vandalism, Page 8 Educators Will Study U.S. Re-accreditation Committee Constitution at Law School Investigates Eleven Standards These 11 Standards arc: purpose. organiza­ By BO MARTIN By LYNNE TESCIONE John D. Scarlett, dean of the School of Law tion and admini'.tration. educational program­ Old Gold and Black Reporter Old Gold and Black Reporter said the faculty will include constitutional ming. financial resources. faculty. library. stu­ scholars. historians. poets and artists from A seventeen member committee from the dent development services. physical resources, Approximately 750,000 elementary and Wake Forest, fellows from the National Southern Association for Colleges a.1d Schools special activities. ~raduate programs and secondary school students will study the Humanities Center in Raleigh, staff from the spent this week on campus to determine if research. development of the U.S. Constitution through Center for Creative Leadership and law-related Wake Forest meets the criteria for In order to investigate the Standards. Ford a special project sponsored by the Center for eduction leaders and business executives train­ re-accreditation. said that the committee spoke with studenb. Research and Development in Law-Related ed in creative strategies. Associate Provost Laura C. Ford said that facultv. :.~dministmtors and trustees. Education (CRADLE), a national center Following the institute, the teachers will im­ each member of the committee was responsi­ Fo;d said. "(The committee) indicated in located at the Wake Forest University School plement the curriculum in their classrooms. ble for investigating one of 11 Standards which informal comments a favorable impression of of Law. A follow-up training seminar will be held LAURA FORD ... must be met by the institution in order to gain Wake Forest and they spoke highly of the spirit CRADLE's focus, according to its literature, at Hamline University School of Law.
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