ld - wake forest university€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1...

16
\ I .} l t ,• LD Volume 74 No.2 Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem North Carolina Friday, September 7, 1990. -- ' ' 0 ,' o ' : .: \ ' o " - / A --- ' •', - ,- .-- ' ' ' ' ' o : Seniors Should Find Job Search Easy in Future, Difficult Now, Currin Says: :... . By Mike McKinley · Editor in Clief Seniors searching for jobs can expect a bright picture in the future, but the short-term outlook does not look as rosy, said William· Currin, the director Of C!lfeer planning and placement Currin made his remarks at a meeting for seniors W edhesday. Currin said that over the long haul, job opportunities will be plentiful as the supply of college gradt:iates decreases and the demand for skilled woikers increases. He said he ex- pects 500,000 fewer graduates over the next 10 years. However, as companies recognize the un- sure i:con.omic conditions, they are becOming more cautious in filling their vacancies with new graduates, Currin said. "The marker began tighteriing last year,"he said. The amount of college recruiting was down by 15 percent overall last year, but Wake Forest recruiting was up 25 percent, he said. Interviewers will begin concentrating their efforts on the better quality schools such as Wake Forest, Currin said. · He said the. typical Wake Forest graduating class sends about 28 percent of its members to graduate or professional school; about 46 percent to busitie$8, of which 40percent of the students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works. "It is a myth·that there are no jobs available for liberal arts majors," Currin said. "They are not here to hire because of what you know, but what you are." Almost 60 percent of the students leave the state, roughly corresponding to the percent- age of out-of-state students. Currin said the average senior earned a starting salary of $24,800 in 1988-89. Al- though final figures are not in, the average starting salary for last year is running $1,500 higher at$26,300. Currin said that the highest salary offered a Wake Forest graduate last year is $34,500. The on-campus interview process has be- come highly competitive, he said. Last year, Wake Forest hosted 200 companies and 3,000 interviews. "We are always concerned with diversity and how to broaden (it)," Currin said. The organizations that 4Jterview at Wake Forest are looking for students who will assume leadership positions in their organizatio1_15. and "not just trying to fill a vacancy," he sa1CL Representatives from the Office of Public Affairs and the Registrar's Office spoke to the seniorS about graduation requirements. Divinity School Raises $1 Million Cortl<lng Working for a .Living _,. ''···- . - ,. '; . . . - ..,, . A contractor Installs the new outdoor furnitUre on · ·- ··· "'-r-- •. Old Gold and Black Staff Report Reportsattheendofthe University's fiscal year indicate the Wake Forest University Divinity School has re- ceived over $1 million in gifts.. and pledges, according to an article in the divinity school's magazine Update. When the university's books for the 1989-90 fiscal year closed June 30, records showed that slightly more than $1.1 million had been pledged from a variety of donors. Nearly one-third of the total amount has been received. The remainder is in the form of pledges for ongoing and future support. "Every gift is important to us," said W. Robert Spinks, director of devel- opment for the divinity school, in Update. "We are very much encour- aged by this strong beginning and believe that momentum forthis project will continue to build." Fund raising for the divinity school is included in the university's current comprehensive campaign. Heritage and Promise: The Campaign for Wake Forest, seeks to raise $150 million between now and 1995 for endowment . and for' all areas of the university. Edwin 0. Wilson, chairman of the Divinity School Implementation Committee, said in the article, "This solid progress toward a new divinity school is in perfect keeping with our commitment to provide the best pro- fessional education and consistent with the best of our history and heri- tage." The university's board of trustees approved,the divinity school in con- cept at its April 1989 meeting, pro- viding that adequate financial support for the school be secured before launching the new venture. The· board's resolution specified that in-. come equivalent to that produced by an unrestricted endowment of $15 million would be necessary. _ A report from the University's Di-. vinity School Feasibility Study Com-: mittee indicated that it would cost· $600,000 to begin the school and: approximately $1 million a year to: operate. Plans for fund raising include· seeking support from individuals m churches. : "There are growing numbers ot: folks who are interested in develop a fine divinity scbo9l iii ,a· historically Baptist, university-relalcd situation," Spinks said in the article. Freshmen, Upperclassmen Find Coed- Dorms 'Welcome Change' By Jennie Vaughn Old Gold and Black Sel1ior Reporter W hen the Office of Residence Life and Housing announced last spring their plans to fill nearly half of Johnson Residence Hall with freshman men and almost an entire floor of Kitchin with about 150 upperclass women, mostly members of Delta Delta Delta sorority, some students and faculty were a little skeptical. Many welcomed the change in the rowdy Kitchin House, but were unsure about placing freshman men on South Campus. Although two weeks is not much time to determine whether a housing situation will be successful, early indications are that RL&H acted correctly in making the two primarily freshmen residence halls coed. In fact, it is difficult to find a resident of either of the dormitories who does not agree with the housing office's decision. "It's great," said freshman Ben Martin, who lives in Johnson. "It's a lot easier to meet girls. You can go out and sit in the lobby and girls are walking by." Johnson resident Randy Strube, also a freshman, said he found living in the same building with freshman women makes his contact with them more natural. "It makes me not have to try as hard," he said. Johnson's women seem to be a little more reserved about the members of the opposite sex that live only a few yards down the hall, but are nonethesless pleased with the situation. Freshman Ashley Phelps, a resident of Johnson, said her dorm "doesn't seem any different than in any other campus donn." · Kristen Holm, another freshman who lives in Johnson, said she enjoys sharing a dorm with men but does not really notice any difference. "We have a humongolis parlor between us, and as far as guys walking down the halls -well, they'd visit anyway, even if they didn't Jive here," Holm said. Although these freshmen may think life in Johnson is business as usual, upperclass students and housing officials know otherwise. They said they are delighted about the positive changes that coed life has brought to Johnson. Senior Michelle Frazier, the assistant hall director of Johnson, said the freshman's first two weeks on campus have gone" much better than expected." · "And we've had no (intentionally pulled) false (fire) alarms," Frazier said. Residents of Johnson and Bostwick Halls have been evacuated once because of a false alarm, when a male resident of Johnson acciden- tally hit the alarm while playing in the hallway one afternoon, said Mo Bayles, the hall director of Bostwick. In years past, Bostwick and Johnson have usually had at least three fire alarms pulled in the first two weeks the freshmen were on See Freshmen, Page 5 Greek GPAs Higher Than Independents Work-Study· Program Places 280 Students Theta Chi Fraternity, Pheonix Society Lead Campus with Highest Marks Old and Black S1aff Report A new student employment service opened this opened this fall to help students who are looking for a job on or off campus. Many students, including those in the college work-study program, al- ready have been assisted. The office, located on the ground floor of Reyno Ida Hall, has placed more than 280 students in work-study jobs. In addition, the service is finding off-campus, part-time employment opportunities for students not involved in work-study. University officials say a new effort is being made this year to place work- study students in jobs that fit their career interests and plans. The university has set about $190,000 of federal and university funds for the work-study program. Students are paid the federal minimum wage, $3.80 per hour. Previously, consideration was not always given to placing work-study students in jobs that took into account their career goals, said Mary Jo Hipple, the university's new student employ- ment coordinator. Attention was given primarily to finding work for students receiving financial aid, she said. Students in financial aid who qualified for the college work-study program were asked this year to pro- vide information on their job skills, previous work experience, major and job preferences. Hipple said the work-study program has already attracted more students this year than last. Shehasplaced283studentsinwork- study jobs. Last year 26 students were placed. Matching students with relevant jobs will provide students with expe- rience for future careers, William C. Currin, director of Career Planning and Placement, said. One of the advantages of work- study programs over other employ- ment is that students can arrange their work schedule around classes. The student employment service also finds opportunities for off-cam- pus work that will be open to any student, whereas campus work-study is open only to students on financial aid. 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 Ul c:: ,e. c '4 < '4 II> < E-- E ::E c:: !:l e: J.. 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 Ill < < e < <I Ul <I a c: \1) :tl ... <I c: < <! e a <I <I "" 0 5 <I < N E-- <I !!?. <I 1M < q g t:l) t:l)

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Page 1: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

\

I .} l

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,•

LD Volume 74 No.2 Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem North Carolina Friday, September 7, 1990. -- ' ' ~ 0 ,' o ' : • .: • \ ' o " - / A --- ' •', - -~~ ,- .-- ' ' ' ' ' o :

Seniors Should Find Job Search Easy in Future, Difficult Now, Currin Says: :... .

By Mike McKinley · Editor in Clief

Seniors searching for jobs can expect a bright picture in the future, but the short-term outlook does not look as rosy, said William· Currin, the director Of C!lfeer planning and placement Currin made his remarks at a meeting for seniors W edhesday.

Currin said that over the long haul, job opportunities will be plentiful as the supply of college gradt:iates decreases and the demand

for skilled woikers increases. He said he ex­pects 500,000 fewer graduates over the next 10 years.

However, as companies recognize the un­sure i:con.omic conditions, they are becOming more cautious in filling their vacancies with new graduates, Currin said.

"The marker began tighteriing last year,"he said. The amount of college recruiting was down by 15 percent overall last year, but Wake Forest recruiting was up 25 percent, he said. Interviewers will begin concentrating

their efforts on the better quality schools such as Wake Forest, Currin said. · He said the. typical Wake Forest graduating

class sends about 28 percent of its members to graduate or professional school; about 46 percent to busitie$8, of which 40percent of the students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works.

"It is a myth·that there are no jobs available for liberal arts majors," Currin said. "They are not here to hire because of what you know, but

what you are." Almost 60 percent of the students leave the

state, roughly corresponding to the percent­age of out-of-state students.

Currin said the average senior earned a starting salary of $24,800 in 1988-89. Al­though final figures are not in, the average starting salary for last year is running $1,500 higher at$26,300. Currin said that the highest salary offered a Wake Forest graduate last year is $34,500.

The on-campus interview process has be-

come highly competitive, he said. Last year, Wake Forest hosted 200 companies and 3,000 interviews.

"We are always concerned with diversity and how to broaden (it)," Currin said.

The organizations that 4Jterview at Wake Forest are looking for students who will assume leadership positions in their organizatio1_15. and "not just trying to fill a vacancy," he sa1CL

Representatives from the Office of Public Affairs and the Registrar's Office spoke to the seniorS about graduation requirements.

~~----------------------------------~--------------------------~

Divinity School Raises $1 Million

Cortl<lng

Working for a .Living ~~·· _,. ''···- . - .· ,. '; .ti~-1 .. • . . . ------~'\-. - ..,, .

A contractor Installs the new outdoor furnitUre on th~fdbdtbrnt'putlo ofthe'Be'r~ori Ur:':ilv~rsl1yCenter. · ·- ··· .~; "'-r-- •.

Old Gold and Black Staff Report

Reportsattheendofthe University's fiscal year indicate the Wake Forest University Divinity School has re­ceived over $1 million in gifts.. and pledges, according to an article in the divinity school's magazine Update.

When the university's books for the 1989-90 fiscal year closed June 30, records showed that slightly more than $1.1 million had been pledged from a variety of donors. Nearly one-third of the total amount has been received. The remainder is in the form of pledges for ongoing and future support.

"Every gift is important to us," said W. Robert Spinks, director of devel­opment for the divinity school, in Update. "We are very much encour­aged by this strong beginning and believe that momentum forthis project will continue to build."

Fund raising for the divinity school is included in the university's current comprehensive campaign. Heritage and Promise: The Campaign for Wake Forest, seeks to raise $150 million between now and 1995 for endowment

. and op~rations for' all areas of the university.

Edwin 0. Wilson, chairman of the

Divinity School Implementation Committee, said in the article, "This solid progress toward a new divinity school is in perfect keeping with our commitment to provide the best pro­fessional education and consistent with the best of our history and heri­tage."

The university's board of trustees approved,the divinity school in con­cept at its April 1989 meeting, pro­viding that adequate financial support for the school be secured before launching the new venture. The· board's resolution specified that in-. come equivalent to that produced by an unrestricted endowment of $15 million would be necessary. _

A report from the University's Di-. vinity School Feasibility Study Com-: mittee indicated that it would cost· $600,000 to begin the school and: approximately $1 million a year to: operate. •

Plans for fund raising include· seeking support from individuals m churches. :

"There are growing numbers ot: folks who are interested in helpingQ~r develop a fine divinity scbo9l iii ,a· historically Baptist, university-relalcd situation," Spinks said in the article.

Freshmen, Upperclassmen Find Coed- Dorms 'Welcome Change' By Jennie Vaughn Old Gold and Black Sel1ior Reporter

When the Office of Residence Life and Housing announced last spring their plans to fill nearly

half of Johnson Residence Hall with freshman men and almost an entire floor of Kitchin with about 150 upperclass women, mostly members of Delta Delta Delta sorority, some students and faculty were a little skeptical.

Many welcomed the change in the rowdy Kitchin House, but were unsure about

placing freshman men on South Campus. Although two weeks is not much time to

determine whether a housing situation will be successful, early indications are that RL&H acted correctly in making the two primarily freshmen residence halls coed.

In fact, it is difficult to find a resident of either of the dormitories who does not agree with the housing office's decision.

"It's great," said freshman Ben Martin, who lives in Johnson. "It's a lot easier to meet girls. You can go out and sit in the lobby and girls are walking by."

Johnson resident Randy Strube, also a

freshman, said he found living in the same building with freshman women makes his contact with them more natural. "It makes me not have to try as hard," he said.

Johnson's women seem to be a little more reserved about the members of the opposite sex that live only a few yards down the hall, but are nonethesless pleased with the situation. Freshman Ashley Phelps, a resident of Johnson, said her dorm "doesn't seem any different than in any other campus donn." ·

Kristen Holm, another freshman who lives in Johnson, said she enjoys sharing a

dorm with men but does not really notice any difference.

"We have a humongolis parlor between us, and as far as guys walking down the halls -well, they'd visit anyway, even if they didn't Jive here," Holm said.

Although these freshmen may think life in Johnson is business as usual, upperclass students and housing officials know otherwise. They said they are delighted about the positive changes that coed life has brought to Johnson.

Senior Michelle Frazier, the assistant hall director of Johnson, said the freshman's

first two weeks on campus have gone" much better than expected." ·

"And we've had no (intentionally pulled) false (fire) alarms," Frazier said. Residents of Johnson and Bostwick Halls have been evacuated once because of a false alarm, when a male resident of Johnson acciden­tally hit the alarm while playing in the hallway one afternoon, said Mo Bayles, the hall director of Bostwick.

In years past, Bostwick and Johnson have usually had at least three fire alarms pulled in the first two weeks the freshmen were on See Freshmen, Page 5

Greek GPAs Higher Than Independents Work-Study· Program Places 280 Students Theta Chi Fraternity, Pheonix Society Lead Campus with Highest Marks Old G~ld and Black S1aff Report

A new student employment service opened this opened this fall to help students who are looking for a job on or off campus.

Many students, including those in the college work-study program, al­ready have been assisted. The office, located on the ground floor of Reyno Ida Hall, has placed more than 280 students in work-study jobs.

In addition, the service is finding off-campus, part-time employment opportunities for students not involved in work-study.

University officials say a new effort is being made this year to place work­study students in jobs that fit their career interests and plans.

The university has set ~ide about $190,000 of federal and university funds for the work-study program. Students are paid the federal minimum wage, $3.80 per hour.

Previously, consideration was not always given to placing work-study students in jobs that took into account their career goals, said Mary Jo Hipple, the university's new student employ-

ment coordinator. Attention was given primarily to finding work for students receiving financial aid, she said.

Students in financial aid who qualified for the college work-study program were asked this year to pro­vide information on their job skills, previous work experience, major and job preferences.

Hipple said the work-study program has already attracted more students this year than last.

Shehasplaced283studentsinwork­study jobs. Last year 26 students were placed.

Matching students with relevant jobs will provide students with expe­rience for future careers, William C. Currin, director of Career Planning and Placement, said.

One of the advantages of work­study programs over other employ­ment is that students can arrange their work schedule around classes.

The student employment service also finds opportunities for off-cam­pus work that will be open to any student, whereas campus work-study is open only to students on financial aid.

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Page 2: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

~ t: ~ Old Gold and Black Friday, September?, 1989 • ';

)r~l{ SRIEFLY~ ·; ,; ~~~ly-Appointed Provost Brown Bnngs New Ideas~~~ . ', ... ~ .... ;-~::.:.~ ~ . ·, . ·.

'

·. •.

.. ' '

..

•.

•. ·-. '

. • ..

• Fulbright Competition Begins

Competition for 1991-92 Fulbright Grants for · Graduate Study Abroad is officially open. The deadline for application is Sept. 28. For further information contact Milorad Margitic, a professor in the department of romance languages.

• Volunteer Corps to Have Meeting

The first meeting of the Volunteer Service Corps will be held 4:30p.m. September 17 in Reynolda Hall's Green Room. All persons interested in vol­unteering are invited to attend. Representatives of several service agencies will be present and the steering committee will outline the variety of ways students can get involved in community service.

Students can choose to participate in a wide range of activities, such as working with children, the elderly, the mentally handicapped, literacy training, and housing and homeless.

· Currently, ~tudents are volunteering at agencies such as Big Brother/Big Sister, Crisis Control, Habitat for Humanity, the Cook Middle SchooV Wake Forest Friends program, and Baptist and Forsyth hospitals.

• Cable Stations Switch Channels

Summit Cable has changed four channels in its line up: Channel 18 is now the Family Channel, Channel25 is now MTV, Channel36 is the Home Shopping Network and Channel38 is the Comedy Network, Ha!

• Cordless Phones Have Problems

Students who use portable phones in their dor­mitory rooms may experience problems with their phones due to the closeness of living quarters and the mass of electrical wiring in the residence balls.

Portable phones are walkie/talkie type instruments and have narrow frequencies. Some students may have theirs seton the same frequency as others. The wiring in the dorms may act as a conductor, causing their signals to be caught by other portable phones or even C.B. radios.

• French House to Host Open House

The depanment of romance languages will host an Open House at 5 p.m. Thursday in the French House, 1102 Polo Rd.

Anyone with an interest in French is invited to attend. Admission is free, but reservations are re­quired.

Winston-Salem Mayor Martha Wood, a Wake Forest alumna, will be featured guest. For infor­mation or reservations, call724-1085.

• Wake Forest Picks Imamura

Wake Forest has named Dr. Hideki S. Imamura of Winston-Salem to assist the strengthening of its educational ties to Japan.

As special assistant to for Japanese relations to Wake Forest president Thomas K. Hearn Jr., Imamura is part of an administrative team seeking opportunities for educational cooperation, such as faculty and student exchanges, cultural visits and joint ventures.

"This appointment formalizes what Dr. Imamura has been doing as an alumnus and friend of Wake Forest for several years," Hearn said. "It also rein­forces the university's interest in the Pacific Rim for programs and research."

Imamura earned a bachelor of science degree from Wake Forest in 1961. He graduated from the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in 1965. He now practices internal medicine at Forsyth Medical Park in Winston· Salem.

•· Alumni President Re-elected

A. Doyle Early Jr. of High Point has been re­elected pre~ident of the Wake Forest University Alumni Council.

Early has served three terms on the Alumni Council and is a member of the Wake Forest President's Club. He earned a B.A. degree from Wake Forest in 1965 and a J.D. degree from Wake Forest School of Law in 1967.

Early is a partner in the law firm of Wyatt, Early, Harris, Wheeler and Hausser in High Point. He is chairman of the board for the High Point Economic Development Commission, and is former chairman of the board for the High Point Chamber of Com­merce.

• Lutheran Pastor to Speak

Rev. James Capers, director of outreach for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, will speak at II a.m. Thursday in Davis Chapel.

He also will present a program of church music from the Afro-American tradition at 6:45 p.m. Wednesday at the Lutheran Church of the Epiphany, 5220 Silas Creek Parkway.

Capers holds a B.A. from Manhattan School of Music. He graduated from Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago in 1976, was ordained by the Lutheran Church in America and became pastor of Epiphany Lutheran Church, New York, N.Y.

In 1981, he became the first pastor of Holy Spirit Lutheran Church in Savannah, Ga.

• Hearn To Receive Award

President Thomas K. Hearn Jr., will receive the Jewish National Fund Tree of Life Award at a testimonial dinner Oct. 16. The Tree of Life is a humanitarian award given in recognition of out­standingcommunity involvement, dedication to the cause of American-Israeli friendship and devotion to peace and the security of human life. In Hearn's honor, the Thomas K. Hearn Jr. AfforestationProj~t will be established in the American Independence Park in Isrc~el.

• Cooks Wanted for March of Dimes

The Greater Triad March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation is seeking cooks to participate in the 8th Annual Chili Championship to beheld on Saturday, September 22 at Tanglewood Park. Anyone 18 years old and older is eligible to be a cook.

Managing Editor

New Provost David G. Brown is listening. In an interview Sept. 29, Brown said he has been

walking around campus to meet people, visit departments and explore buildings so that he can become better ac­quainted with the personality and needs of Wake Forest.

Brown said it is strange for him to be in a period of collecting information, because he has a reputation as an "action type of person." However, he said that he wants to gain as much insight into Wake Forest as possible to avoid the use of preconceptions.

Brown said he will be able to begin making suggestions after he comes to some conclusions about the university between January and June.

Until that time, Brown will meet with advisory com­mittees made up of students, deans and "Old Wake For­ester" faculty members; visit every academic department and program; and eat box lunches with facu1ty members while discussing issues from the Chronicle of Higher Education.

He is also working with former Provost Edwin G. Wilson, whom Brown calls the "Master Gardener."

Brown said Wilson has "nurtured every bloom in the garden."

Although he will not always make the same decisions that Wilson would, Brown said he wants to understand "what causes him to make the decisions he makes."

Brown said one of the greatest aspects of the university is the respect for everyone in the community, from cus­todians to Reynolds professors to students. The commu­nity is seeking what is best for each individual student and for each individual faculty member, he said.

"We are here to help each other grow," he said. "I think that is the real strength of Wake Forest."

Brown said he is impressed that the faculty members know students by name, and that they treat the students as individuals without much reference to policy. He said even students see the opportunity to help faculty members

.,

Brod~

Brown, the former chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Asheville, officially began his job as provost Aug. 1. He replaced. Edwin G. Wilson who was named a vice president.

grow. of Miami University ofOhio (1970-82). Brown's most recent posts were as the chancellor of the Brown said he is still surprised to be at Wake Forest. He

University of North Carolina at Asheville (1984-90), the said he pursued the provost position only after being president of Transylvania University (1982-83) and the contacted by the search committee and because of his executive vice president for academic affairs and provost See Provost Page 4

Ford Chairman to Deliver Broyhill Executive Lecture Tod~y . Old Gold and Black Staff Report record earnings, making Europe a major profit center for

Ford. Harold A. "Red" Poling, the chairman and chief ex~utiv~

officer of Ford Motor Co., will speak. at 1:30 p.m. m Walt Chapel as the Babcock Graduate School of Management's

Detroit he enrolled at Monmouth College in lllinois with the int~ntion of transferring to Wake Forest. He played football an Monmouth to improve his knee so he would be eligible for a football scholarship to Wake Forest.

A knee injury in his first game at Monmouth, however, blocked those plans, so Poling decided to give up football

In his next assignment as executive vice president of Ford's North American operations, Poling restructured the troubled automotive division. The realignment in the early 1980s turned this failure-ridden division: w~ose losses rivaled the budgets of some small countries, mto one of Ford's best showings in 1984.

1990 Broyhill Executive Lecturer. . . and study full time. . , . Poling, 64, helped guide Ford to prospe?ty ~unng t~e

early 1980s, and will discuss challenges facmg mdustry m the 1990s.

"All businesses have an interest in the future of the nation," Poling said in Business Horizons , a publi~ation of the Indiana University Graduate School of Busmess. "We face a turbulent sea of international competition and the course we chart will determine whether America remains strong and prosperous in the years ahead.

"That was the smartest decisiOn I ever made, Pohng said.

He received a bachelor's degree from Monmouth and joined Ford in 1951 after earning an JyiBA from I~diana University. He started as a college tramee at Fords steel division.

The next five years were the most profitable in Ford's history.

Poling said a clear objective ofbuilding the best cars and trucks in the world, and having the world know it, will guarantee continued success for the company.

"It's not a complex goal, but it's ex~mely impo~t,:: he said. "At Ford there is a total commitment to quality.

"The challenge of the 1990s, regardless of the industry, will be more complicated than ever before.''

Coincidentally, Poling's visit to Wake Forest o~curs about 40 years later than he originally planned. A native of

"What impressed me the most duri~g m1 first. su~mer at Ford was the quality of the people, Polmg srud. That was the biggest plus in coming to work for Ford. I al~o liked the direction in which the company was headed.'

As president and, later, chairman of Ford o~ ~urope from 1975 to 1980, Poling helped guide the subsidiary to

Poling became interested in cars at a young age. "I spent quite a bit of time working with my father, who

was an auto mechanic,'' he said. "We'd grind valves, See Business Page 4

":"..,rt King

Take a Look!

SG Officers .. ~' Plari~M.'.lllY

Projects By Kristen Deal Old Gold and Black Reporter

t

While Student Government has onJ,y f recently officially moved into their new f office in Benson University Center, the officers started planning for the 1990-1991 academic year months ago. .

Elections for SG Legislature and ~e · StudentBudgetAdvisory Committee will

be held on September 18. : SG will also be involved in t~e

President's Leadership Conferen¢e September 14-16. The conference i~ a seminar designed to allow student lea.d­ers and faculty to meet and set goals ~o

. improve campus life. , · Other projects in planning include a faculty-student review of the social and atconol po11c1es on campus, and an in­creased role in environmental and cop­servation concerns, beginning with the recycling project, SO President Elaine Massey said.

Individually, the SG members have set goals for the year. Massey said the emphasis of these goals is to improye relations throughout the campus, i',n­cluding an increased understanding tie­tween students, student leaders and fac­ulty.

Senior stacey Butler talks with students last Friday at the Student Activities Fair on the Quad. Massey said she would particulaily

like to see an improvement in race rela- 1 tions on campus.

College Students Are Worried About Being Called for DutY College Press Service

As many as I 87,000 college students across the country had their fall term plans cast into doubt Aug. 22, when President George Bush said he would soon call up military reservists to support and replace troops already sent to the Middle East.

If and when the call comes, the students would have to leave school abruptly, sometimes unsure if they will have a place when they return or if the tuition money they paid will be wasted.

"Idon'tknow whatframeofmindl'll be in for my studies," said Junior Waldron, an Army reservist who is a sophomore engi­neering major at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York .

No one knows exactly how many of the reservists subject to being called to active military duty are college students.

JoeHanley,spokesmanfortheU.S.Army Reserves, estimated that 60 percent of his group's579,000members are full-or part­time college students.

The other branches of the military do not keep figures on how manyoftheirreservists are students.

Colleges themselves typically do not

know how many of their students are sub­ject to the military call-up.

To find out, Drexel University in Penn­sylvania set up a hotline Aug. 23 for any students or staff who would be affected by the Middle East crisis, but received just four calls - only one from a student re­servist-during its first week of operation, reported Vice President for Student Affairs Richard Woodring.

When Iraq invaded Kuwait, its small but oil-rich neighbor, Aug. 2, life became un­certain for both students and their schools.

Soon after, President Bush sent 40,000 U.S. troops to Saudi Arabia to defend against a possible Iraqi invasion of that country.

Originally Pentagon officials thought only 100,000soldierswouldbeneeded,but raised the figure to 250,000 a week later.

Bush announced Aug. 22 that he would activate 40,000 reservists to support and replace the troops he had already sent to the Persian Gulf region.

It was the first time reservists had been called to active duty since the Tet Offen­sive in Vietnam in 1968.

Suddenly campuses were forced to pon­der a significant number of students and staffers leaving mid-semester to serve.

Course sections could lose their instruc­tors. School finances could be disrupted if fewer students were paying tuition and dorm fees.

Students themselves could have their studies interrupted, without a guarantee of being able to resume when they return to civilian life.

Although there is a federal law that protects the jobs of workers who are called to duty, there is no law protecting students, Hanley said.

To ease uncertainty among student re­servists, Purdue University published a detailedletterassuring students they would get their fees refunded and earn a certain amount of credit, depending on when they withdrew.

"The department of personnel services was getting a lot of calls, and student services was getting calls as well/' said Tim Newton, an editor for Purdue's news service.

Newton said the school did not know how many of Its students are reservists.

Whatever the number, the. financial im­pact on campuses probably would be minimal, added John Huie, Purdue's vice president for state relations. If students

were missing from school when the state surveys the campus to determine its appro­priation, Huie said, "it could potentililly have a modest impact" on state funding.

However, he said, "any change in en­rollment doesn't show up (in terms' of funding) for two years. We're not talking : about a sufficient number of students'~ to cause funding problems.

Smaller schools said they will deal with the situation on a case-by-case basis. ·

"If any (students) were called up, :we would do all we could to make their :re. entry after serving their country as easy as possible," said Edward Macias, the provost at Washington University in Missouri,

Meanwhile the student reservists and their families try to prepare for what may lie.ahead. ·

Andy Wilson, a senior political science major at Purdue and· a student reservist, said he "wouldn't hesitate at all if a call went out."

However, while Wilson would have' no regrets about leaving school, headmittedit would be hard to leave Kathleen, his wife of a month and a half. ·

Being married "doesn't make it any, . easier," Wilson said. ·•

d ..... M :~·

To

Page 3: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

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To Raise Money in ' Trek for Health ' Old Gold and Black Staff Report

Students at Bowman Gray School of Medicine will stage a 60-mile bicycle "Trek for Health" tomorrow, from the Reynoldi campus of Wake Forest to Hanging Rock State Park.

The trek, open to anyone 16 and older, will benefit the Triad HC!llth Project, an AIDS service organization based in Greensboro, according to Jacob A. Neufield, a second-year student who is chairing the pilot project.

However, Neufield said increasing public awareness of AIDS is as important as raising money.

In addition to a$15 entty fee, all participants are required to raise $100 in pledges, Neufield said. All participants will receive a.t-shirt and llijlch from Michael's in the park.

Those raising at least $250 will become eligible for a graduated series of gift certificates to Ken's Bike Shop in Reynoldi Village, from a$20 gift certificate for raising $250 to $100 (or raising $1000. .

The Alnerican Medical Student Association chapter of Bowman Gray organized the event with the North Carolina Medical Society Medical Student Association. According to Neufield, AMSA chapters at Duke, UNC-Cbapel Hill and . East Carolina University are asking their studenfS to par­ticipate.

The students have long recognized the need to educate the public about AIDS and the mv virus that causes it, Neufield said. ·

"October is AIDS awareness month and an appropriate time for the Trek for Health," Neufieldsaid. "It is crucial that the public becomes more aware of AIDS."

For instance, he said, highschool students who use steroids often share needles, dramatically increasing their risk for AIDS.

Furthermore, AIDS affects everyone, not just male ho­mosexu~s, "so people need to practice safer sex," he said.

"We see the suffering of the individuals diagnosed with · AIDS/lllV infection and their families, friends and partners. By donating our proceeds to Triad Health Project, we can assist this organization in providing services," Neufield said. Pete Kc:zfmlerczok

Looking Up

B Crime Increases 25 Percent

Reports of campus crimes increased 25 percent during the two weeks since students reported for the fall semester, according to Robert Prince, di­rector of University Security.

Prince said experience shows perpetrators gen­erally come from off campus and take advantage of unwary students. Vandalism and theft were the biggest problems.

Sometime between 12 p.m. Aug. 22 and 10 a.m. Aug. 23, a resident of Poteat House reported a wallet stolen from his unlocked room. The wallet contained $20.

Around4:30p.m.Aug.22,someoneforcedopen a locker in the faculty locker room of Reynolds Gymnasium. However, no contents were missing.

Campus Ministry reported that between May 20 and July 31 someone entered its lounge in the basement of South Hall, broke into a cabinet and stole a television set.

Between 8 a.m. July 25 and 8 a.m. Aug. 5, ·a : stereo and amplifier worth $1,000 from the Delta Sigma Phi fraternity lounge in Taylor House was , stolen.

Vandals damaged a grading tractor equipped · with an on-board computer parked in the gravel lot , near the student apartments Aug. 22. The tractor belongs to a contractor working on campus.

Between 9 p.m. Aug. 31 and 12 p.m. Sunday, three parked cars were vandalized in lots S, Q and U. All four tires on the car in lotS were punctured. In each of the other two cases, a tire was punctured and the paint scratched.

University Security officers observed two people

The organization cited statistics from the North Carolina Division, of Health Services showing that 1,461 cases of AIDS/HIV infection have been reported in North Carolina, including 201 in the Triad.

Workers are puffing the final touches on the three-story atrlumin the Benson University Center.

. breaking into a disabled car parked near Pa)nler and Piccolo Halls around 2 a.m. Saturday. The two allegedly ransacked the vehicle and broke out : windows and damaged the body of the car. Both : ran into nearby woods when the officers approached, · but one suspect, a Wake Forest student, was al>'" : prehended. He was questioned and released to the : director of his residence hall, pending further in- : vestigation. :First Wachovia President to Speak at Opening Convocation

Two people reportedly broke the glass out of a : door Saturday at the student apartments and fled. :

Old Gold and Black Staff Report

John G. Medlin Jr., chairman, president and chief executive officer of First

·· Wachovia Corp., will address Wake For­est University's opening convocation Sept. 11.

Medlin's speech on "The Importance of Studies in the Humanities to Prepare for a World Undergoing Fundamental Change" will be held in Wait Chapel at 11 a.m.

Also during convocation. David G. .. . ·-.

Brown will be installed as Wake Forest's new provost, the Jon Reinhardt Award for Distinguished Teaching will be presented and the Honor Council and Student Judicial Board will be inducted.

Medlin, who will receive an honorary doctor of laws degree at convocation, graduated from the_ University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1956. He joined Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. as a man­agement trainee in 1959, following a tour of duty as. a U.S. Navy officer .

110Rt.-,·8MfCKJRTII0~JIJI~Y A tnee ~lory oi~JanottDce loll and C01JC28e bmd.

Friday,·september 7th at 7, 9:45, and 12:30 Saturday, September 8th at 7, 9:45, and 12:30

Sunday, September.9th at 7 and 9:45 $1.50

Along with Arnold Palmer and Pepsico chairman Wayne Calloway, Medlin is co­chairman of Wake Forest's upcoming capital campaign. A university trustee, he is also on the boards of UNC~CH, the National Urban League and the Kenan Institute for Private Enterprise.

Medlin is on the boards of directors of BellSouth Corporation, National Service lndustrieslnc.,RJRNabiscolnc. and US Air Group Inc., as well as First Wachovia and its principle subsidi~es.

. ~-· -::

Medlin will also take part in groundbreaking for Wake Forest's Pro­fessional Centerfor Law and Management, representing First Wachovia. The company is a major corporate contributor to the project.

He will be joined by university officials, architect Cesar Pelli and guests' ·at the construction site, situated near the Uni­versity Parkway entrance to the campus. The groundbreakingceremonies take place at 1:45 p.m.

An unidentified man allegedly exposed himself: to a female student at 11:36 a.m. Aug. 31 as she; walked along the path from campus to Reynolda : Village.

A security officer assisted Winston-Salem police ; when they stopped and searched a vehicle near the:

. water tower on Wake Forest Road around 2 p.m., Saturday. Police found crack cocaine and a large; sum of money in the car and arrested the driver.

• • Jlf.: :11.

' I -

s.

Wednesday, September 12th at 7 and 9:30 $1.50

Burger King, Wake Forest, ·and YOU!!

' I

Botth Films Will Be Shown In IPUGIHI AUDITORIUM In BENSON.

(

Save 20o/o on any purchase Just show us your WFU ID

for 20°/o off anything. Stop by for a late-night snack.

We are open unti12 am on weekdays, and 3 am on weekends!

This offer good only at the Burger King located on

North Point Blvd.

Discount valid year -round

Page 4: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

,.,,.,...,ru.,J\.JJ. Iraq - One hundred seventy-five N-if:ste:m hostages, including 25 U.S. citizens, were

to freedom Tuesday. Two other flights i~ontainirlg 135 West Gennans and 170 mainly

nationals were also released. U.S. officials for these to be the first of many other

;~omeward flights for hostages. 1:; Food shortages continue to plague the Asian ltefugees in Jordan. A jet containing Western na­ihonals brought 30 tons of food and other supplies ·~ those stranded in the Jordan camps. The U.S. ~~avy impounded an Iraqi freighter carrying Sri ; Lankan tea before it entered the gulf. This was the :T.rst seizure under the U.N. blockade. . ;I

!~Arthritis Breakthrough Discoverd ! •1

: lJETHESDA, MD.- On Tuesday, researchers at :1'bomas Jefferson University and Case Western \~eserve University found a defective gene that ; ihey suspect to cause arthritis. The studies were • ~one on 19 family members of 3 generations. The i;Eene defect was found in all of those with the :~isease of osteoarthritis, but was not found in the :)emaining healthy family members. The gene 1 )lormally produces a protein, collagen II, that :l'ltrengthens the protective cartilage in joints be­: tween bones. With osteoarthritis, the cartilage :aeteriorates and causes inflammation in the joint :}lnd severe pain. Researchers hope that gene therapy ; 'or a drug could be developed to prevent cartilage 'lrom breaking down.

;R!Bush Prepares for Summit

:KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine- On Monday, ; President Bush left his home in Kennebunkport to :.tetum to Washington in order to prepare for his :·third summit with Soviet President Mikhail :Gorbachev. Bush and Gorbachev will meet on ::Sunday in Helsinki to discuss current events such •·.~S the Persian Gulf crisis and the re-unification of : ~qermany, scheduled to take place in October. This : meeting will mark the first time the two superpowers ':have directly discussed the crisis in the Persian :.pu!f. 1-.1 I• :J! Space Shuttle Delayed Again l•i !.:{::APE CANAVERAL, Fla.- On Wednesday, :;;tlASA officials cancelled the scheduled launch of :~~he space shuttle Columbia just eight hours before l~iftoff. This is the third time since May that the lo.l ··~huttle has been unable to fly. '' The launch was postponed when NASA crews • "'v•~uu an unacceptably high concentration of hy­~;aroge:n in the shuttle's rear compartment. The ;1Jrc>ble:m occurred when liquid hydrogen, which

being loaded into the external fuel tank,leaked into the compartment. Officials say that the appears to be related to the leak which delayed

shuttle back in May.

Provost FromPage2

"immense respect for Wake Forest." Even during com­mencement at UNC-Asheville, Brown had no doubts that he would remain at the school, he said.

Although there are many differences between working at large public schools and small private ones, Brown said he is able to make the transition because of his ability to listen and learn. He also said he will be able to offer Wake Forest an extensive knowledge of national trends in higher education, the energy to get things done, and a concern for "enabling the university to become the best in the nation at what it wants to become."

Brown said while he was at Miami, Transylvania and UNC-Asheville, those universities were moved into a "national spotlight." .

He said the move for Wake Forest needs to be done carefully.

The university can gain national stature based on its strong heritage of developing leaders for the South, Brown said. A respect for this heritage needs to be maintained, he said, while moving it into an international context to create leaders for the world as well as the South.

Brown said creative thinking is needed to retain the sense of community and individualization, "a precious thing that once lost is difficult to regain."

He said there is "no secret master plan" for national stature, but that he expects the campus will be defining its aspirations.

Brown said the academic future of the next five years will involve consideration of the proposed divinity school, doc­toral programs, the development of more world c~nters similar to those in Venice and London, the strengthemng of academic requirements, individual research projects in order to graduate and the assimilation of new technologies-into course study.

The university is building adequate physical facilities to implement these changes, which "liberates us to decide who we want to become," he said.

Brown said he does not see any great weaknesses in the university, although there are problems with transition. He noted difficulties with construction, such as in the library and chemistry laboratories.

He said challenges lie in the academic computerization of the campus and the extension of international opportunities for students.

He also said the issue of salaries is important to the recruitment and retention of faculty members in years ahead.

Wilson left his post as provost to take on a leadership role in the university's upcoming capital campaign, which will include the goal of improving faculty salaries.

Business FromPage2

change piston rings and clutches and do lots of other jobs. It was serious work, but to me it was very interesting."

Poling's favorite caris the 1932 Ford Model A, the first car he owned.

"I bought it used, but it was in great shape and it had a rumble seat. It was a terrific car."

Poling is a director of NCR Corp. and a member of the BHP-Utah Minerals Council. He is director of the Monmouth

HIS,TORY I:N TH:E MAKING! Starting September 11

and every Tuesday following,

• is now opening its doors to 18, 19, and 20 year olds. The hottest dance club in the Triad is now inviting you to discover what everyone else has known for years.

We jam from 8 p.m. - 2 a.m. T-shirts and visors given away to those who really shake it.

You've all been wanting it. .. the time has come ...

DON'T MISS OUT! Sh-13oom is located at the corner of Peacehaven

Rd. and Country Club Rd. Phone: 760-2222

Come and Get It!

::_~

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Sophomores Jason Botts. Greg Carmichael. and Jason Holton have a cookout on the roof ~ of Luter Residence Hall. :

~--------------------------------------------------------~·;

College Senate, a member of the Dean's Advisory Coun­cil for the Indiana University School of Business and past chairman of Indiana University's annual giving program.

Poling also serves on the board of directors of the Motor Vehicle Manufactures Association, the board of visitors of both the School of Economics and Manage­ment at Oakland University and the Graduate School of Business at the University of Pittsburgh. He is also a member of the National 4-H Council, the Conference Board, the Business-Higher Education Forum, the U.S. Korea Business Council and vice president of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Southeastern Michigan.

:: ~

Poling received the Automotive Hall of Fame's 1986 ~ Distinguished Service Citation award presented to indi- ~ viduals who "have contributed significantly to the success ~ of the automotive industry and to the communities in •:; which they live." He is a past recipient of the Leadership ~ Award from the Engineering Society of Detroit and was ~ named "Man of the Year" in 1988 by Automotive Indus- :..

• • 1 j

tnes magazme. ;. He has honorary doctorate of humane ]etters degrees ~

from Monmouth, Hofstra University, the University of ~ Detroit and Indiana University. ~

Poling is also a graduate of the Bob Bondurant School ;­of High Performance Driving.

'• ..... .: ··.•-·- .::.

~~~----------------~------~(

Deac Fans $3.75 Long Island

Teas $1.00 Draft

After All Home Games

when you bring in Wake

souvenir cups 725 Bonhurst Dr.

727-1909

----~------------~------------

** Check out our fun and easy Priced Menu

*Every Nite Bar Specials

Mon: Pitchers $2.95 Long Island Teas

$3.75

Tues: Low Balls $1.50

Wed: All Domestic Beer $1.25 Komi Kazi $2.00

). '

Thurs: Pitchers $2.95 Fuzzy Navels $2.00

Fri: "Big Beers $2.50 Hi -Balls $1.75

Sat: Pitchers $2.95 Mind Erasers $2.25 "Woo-Wooll $2.00

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Page 5: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

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{~Freshmen ~'

"Of course, it's still too early to tell, but I can say that the number of incident reports in the freshmen areas of campus has gone down dramatically. And I think that's because fo~Jreshmen, living in a coed situation and with upperclass­men is a leavening kind of experi­ence that keeps problems from occuring as quickly or as frequently as they otherwise would.

with her roommate, a resident advisor, to Kitchin this year- and she was not originally with the arrangement.

:. From Page 1

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.,

campus. · Frazier said she has heard no

major complaints from any of her reside!lts and has received only a few from their parents. Hall directors and resident advisers were expecting to receive numerous complaints from parents about the coed situation when they brought the freshmen to campus late last month, she said.

Freshmen were not told specifi­cally that they would be living in singl~>sex or coed donns, Frazier said. . '

Den'nis Gregory, the director of RL&H; a1s9 said he was pleased with the ·new coed residence halls.

.,

' ' .

"In fact, I haven't heard of any (housing) system where coed living has created a problem," Gregory said.

Reputed to be a noisy donnitory where freshmen did more partying than studying, Kitchin House now has also become coed, and the 150 upperclass women said living there is not as bad as they thought it would be.

Sophomore Kacey Hickey, who lived in Bostwick last year, moved

"I thought at first that all these little freshmen running around would drive me crazy. But I love it. They're like my little brothers," she said.

With life in the new coed donns going so smoothly, will Wake Forest move toward making all of its dorms coed? Probably not, Gregory said.

"We want to maintain at least one freshman and one upperclass donn for botll males and females, so that anyone who wants to live in a single-sex dorm has that option available," he said.

Gregory said Wake Forest is one of the few colleges he knows about with so many different living arrangements available to students.

8 days only, Sept 17-26 in the room next to the SU office

(use the entrance near the library)

Appointments are neccessary, so schedule your appointment at the Information· Desk

in Reynolda Hall

Old Gold and Black Friday, September 7, 1990 5

WELCOME STUDENTS

OPEN .HOUSE IN REYNOLDA VILLAGE

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1990 1 0:00 AM - 5:00 PM

FOLLOW the BALLOONS to REGISTER for PRIZES in PARTICIPATING SHOPS •

Sponsored by the REYNOLDA VILLAGE MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

· .R E s· E R V E 0 F F J· C E R S ' T R A I N I N G C 0 R P S

'I

~ ' ' ·'

Gay/Lesbian Support Group meets weekly for gay,

lesbian, and bisexual students. For information; contact

Alan Cameron, University Counseling Center, 759-5273.

Confidential.

SALE of SUPER SOUNDS

CD'S I CASSETTES

MAJOR LABELS ~ TOP ARTISTS A Sound Investment Save Big Bucks

Pop, Rock, Folk, Jazz and Classical Limited Time. Come Early for Best Selection.

College Bookstore

Wake Forest University

(• I' ~

- - ---

CASHIN ON GOOD GRADES.

If you're a freshman or sophomore with good grades, apply now for an Army ROTC scholarship. It pays off during college. And afterwards. '

ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIPS Contact CPT Williamson

Reynolda Gym X5546

Page 6: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

6 Old Gold and Black Friday, September 7, 1990

OLD GOLD AND BLACK The Student Newspaper ofWake Forest University

Founded in 1916

EDITORIALS Ode to the Miracle Adhesive

A Sticky Situation T he new university parking

stickers caught many stu­dents off guard this year.

Where were the old-style decals which adhered to the bumper? They had been replaced with a hi-tech, suction-cupped, laminated, card­board wonder that could be placed on the inside of the window and transferred readily to another ve­hicle:

The new stickers, for lack of a better term, were the brainchild of an ad hoc committee fonned last fall at the request of John Ander­son, vice president for administra­tion and planning.

According to Anne Knox, the supeiVisorofparkingmanagement, the committee was studying ways to better se!Ve the student parking situation and to computerize the security office's system. Knox said ''the main objective ... was not to register a car, but to register a per­son." The idea was that the trans­ferrable sticker would spare stu­dents the complications that could arise if they changed vehicles during the year.

As occurs often with the best laid plans of administration and ad hoc committees, however, reality intrudes. And so, apparently, does money.

In this case, reality set in on campus about a day later-roughly the same amount of time it took the first stickers to drop off the cars.

Before long, the campus was rife with concerns about the stickers. Because the stickers fall off so readily, they seem easier to steal. All it takes is the know-how to open a car door, reach in and grab the sticker(probably from the floor board, where it had just fallen, all the time ignoring the warning on the windshield from the security officer, who did not see it down there) andsaveyourselfaneat $60.

According to the security office, however, the new stickers are actu­ally more secure.

"The other ones were more per­manent, but they could be removed from the exterior of the vehicle much easier than someone could break out a window and go into the vehicle and take one out," Anne Knox said.

Perhaps the editorial board of theOldGoldandBlackhasmissed out on something in the college experience, or perhaps none of us ( oranyotherstudents that we know of) has broken the rumored record of five hours spent scraping and blow-torching to get the miracle adhesive of the old stickers to re­lease its death grip on the bumpers.

Lawson went on to clarify that she was speaking, generally, of all student vehicles, most of which can be locked and secured. Owners of vehicles that are not secureable, like Jeeps, can follow special di­rections. The office suggests you either lock your sticker in the glove compartment or take the sticker with you.

But something is wrong witb. this picture. How do security of­ficers know your car is registered if the verification is in out of sight?

According to security, if you remo\fe the suction cup, the decal will adhere to the car bumper in the same place as the old stickers.

The office also offers a reflec­tive sticker that can be placed on the car and then entered in the vehicle registration log showing this person does have a parking decal.

Which could lead a cynical per­son to wonder, why bother with the change?

According to Brian Eckert, di- · rectorofMediaRelations, most of the cars on campus can be se­cured, so the university is taking care of the exceptions without secureablecars while offering the convenience of a transferrable sticker to students with secureable cars.

Granted, many students have wished for a transferrable sticker.

But if stickers continue to fall, earning their owners more warn­ings, more anxiety, and more trips to University Security to explain that they really are registered and they really do have a sticker, and the security office spends more time and effort sorting through these misunderstandings, students may opt for the adhesive option once again and the suction cups will go the way of the Dick Tracy doll.

All of which leads us to wonder, once again, why we even bother, especially considering the eco­nomics of the situation.

In 1988, the5,300 stickers were ordered at the price of $1 ,841. A mere two years later, the same amount of new stickers were or­deredforthepriceof$3,999,more than twice the original amount.

There is also the matter of a replacement fee - another $60 - if you do not have either a policereportoran insurance claim to show that your sticker is gone because of some uncontrollable action, like a break in.

The economic question finally points the finger in exact! y the right direction: to the administra­tion.

The Traffic Commission, chaired for at least the last two years by Carlos Holder, the con­troller and assistant treasurer, set the replacement fee of $60. Ac­cording to Knox, this fee was set to "encourage students to take care of their decals."

The security department itself will gain no money from the $60 replacement fee. All funds will go to the general university budget to be used for various projects around campus.

The good news is that it is only a pilot project. In fall 1991, we hopefully (and ironically) will celebrate the return ofthe miracle adhesive and the blowtorch.

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Mike McKinley

Editor in Chief

Rocky Lantz Managing Editor

News: Stephen Dillingham, editor; Clarissa Wong, assistant editor; Lori Woods, Worldwide editor; Brian Brach, Steph Mohland Eric Williams, production assistants.

Editorials: Amanda Eller, editor; Elliot Berke, assistant editor; Marne Arthaud, production assistant.

Perspectives: Kelly Greene, editor.

Sports: Russ Blake, editor; Pat Auld and jay Beddow, assistant editors; Rob Daniel and Scntt Sullivan, production assistants.

Arts and Entertainment: Jay Woodruff, editor; Brad Dixon, assistant editor. C,opy Editing: Stephanie Spellers, head copy editor.

Production: Michelle Carr, production manager; Alison Preston, office manager; Jay Otervenak, graphics editor.

Photography: Carl King and Eric Rice, editors.

Business: David Stradley, business manager; Steve Combs, advertising manager;

TheOidColdllllllBlacl:c:nCOWigesmanbon of the WueFO!al commllDilytoaddtea cwrentiasues tluooah Jeuen 10 the editor. We do not CIICOU!ISe public thank· you nate.. AU!ellelllltllll include the aulhor'a nome and phone number, allhouah anmymity in print may be

• requcsud. Submisaioos should be tyPOwrillell and doublo-spoccd. We gmlly opprociatc contributions ~ttal ~ ~cinlolb:=nP~tiblo diska. The Old Gold alld BI<JCI: n:sc:m:o the riJbtto cdil, wilhout pnor nollCc, all copy for grunmaticol or

typoppbicol e:mm, and olJo to eutlc:llell u needed to meet layout :requiremen~s. The deodlino for the Friday issue ill the pte\'i0111 Tuesday ot S p.m.

The OW Go/Jlllltd 1J/A.ck !o pubU.hed taeh Frldoy during the ochool y•ar, excrpt during el<lmlnatlon, · oummer, and hoUday periods by Newap.oper Publlsbors Inc. ofWIIISion-Solo~r~. NC.

"'"'·lonl~lnthlsnowspaperarothlllfoftheodtm!allllafforamtrlbutontothep.operanddonot ~y ftf!ect the opinioN of tilt otu.d<llt body, facully, llllff or odmlnlstrat!an of WU. Forest u..ver.~~y.

It Is a Matter of Politics

Public Education Needs Some Competition I n the most recent edition of the Old Gold and

Black, a writer stated we at Wake Forest lack sufficient appreciation of the true value of a

college education.

Richard Gantt Student Columnist

All American children, notjustthoselucky enough to be born into great wealth, deserve the most desirable educational opportunities.

Though that may be trueto some small degree, please give us credit It is our society in general, and our increasingly removed politicians in par­ticular, that fails to give education a fair shake.

All of us are aware of that decreasing, yet ever present, segment of our society who fmd it ex­tremely difficult to break the cycle of joblessness, homelessness, crime- i.e., poverty.

One would not leave a terrible rock concert saying, "Well, if we had only paid twic~ as much for the tickets ... " What is needed today m educa­tion is competition for our public schools.

I am not saying the bill's critics are opposed to helping poor children. I am saying that critics are deathly afraid of losing political power when un­productive public school "educators" lose their jobs or receive pay cuts due to a mass departure of lower-income children opting instead for private schools. After all, how could teachers contribute to the teachers' unions with no income?

We Americans are continually born barded with the assertion that increased funding of federal welfare programs is the best way of assisting these unfortunate citizens. The intentions of these pro­grams are noble, but the result is often a class of people dependent upon the welfare state and the liberal politicians who sustain it

A breakthrough bill is being considered by the Wisconsin state legislature that, if passed, would create such competition.

Polly Williams, a state representative from Mil­waukee, has introduced a measure that would provide up to $2500each in educational aid for the schooling of very needy children. Sounds good so far, right?

The catch is that the money may be used to send these children to any public or non-sectarian pri­vate school- parents' choice.

1990 has arrived. The "Iron Curtain" has fallen, and Eastern Europe is correcting its economic failures with movement toward a free market economy. Maybe the American educational estab­lishment should take note and move into the 20th century-before it is over -by allowing a more productive, fair, free market system of educational choice like the one Polly Williams advocates.

Many of us, in contrast, adhere to the adage: "If you give a man a fish, he can eat for a day; but, if you teach a man to fish, he can eat for a lifetime." Countless failed programs have been initiated in the name of equalization. Yet, education is the only program with legitimate potential for becom­ing the "great equalizer."

Though the economic growth of the past de­cade has helped many poverty-stricken people find jobs,jobs cannot often be passed on or shared with children.:.._ only education can.

This educational voucher plan would no doubt benefit kids who are at high risk of dropping out and requiring federal assistance. Not only is Wil­liams' proposal moral and innovative, but it is a good investment and should be enacted nation­wide.

Since education is the best means of progress, those who are not benefitting from the public school bureaucracy deserve a choice.

Manyofuswereluckyenoughtoescapemedio­cre public schools to attend Wake Forest Others are not lucky enough fmancially to make such a choice. Our influence-peddling politicians should raise their collective consciousness higher than their campaign coffers and give such proposals a chance.

Billions of dollars are spent each year on educa­tion, while those members of the underclass whom we are supposedly helping have yet to move up­ward significantly.

Despite the bill's merits, it is opposed by the teachers unions, the more liberal newspapers in Wisconsin and the State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Herbert Grover.

Grover has denounced the bill as "discrimina­tory," which is strange given the fact that Williams is black and her proposal is enthusiastically sup­ported by her low-income black constituents.

One hint of advice to Williams: if you fail in your battle against the educational establishment, there is still hope.

Simply ditch your clothing the next time you enter the legislative chamber and maybe you will receive a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts substantial enough to fund your voucher program.

The answer is not to increase public spending on Pilnr.ation. Why waste more money on a system that is not producing satisfactory results?

It is time the educational establishment awak­ened and supported such honorable, creative ideas.

. ,•,'

German Genius Fahrvergniigen: Volkswagen's

bold attempt to introduce a bit of a somewhat cryptic and dissonant language into a country whose love of Germany goes little beyond Beck's Dark. What is FahiVergniigen? It is simply the combination of Fahr, driving, and Vergniigen, roughly satisfaction or amusement. This simple bit of advertising genius illus­trates a most interesting temptation presented by the German language, that is, the compulsion to produce compound words from an inordi­nately large number of seemingly unrelated elements. Leaving theFahr to the volks at Volkswagen, since I am sure they know about it than I, I shall concentrate on the Vergniigen.

I say the Vergniigen because I truly believe thatitis a viable concept: The Vergniigen. Trulyamodernidea, The Vergniigen is to be to the '90s what anxiety was to the '80s. It is the state now to which every young American should strive. This is not to suggest that The Vergnugen is a new idea, for I believe that just the opposite is true. The Vergniigen has been around for centuries, but, as fate would have it, such an idea, an idea of this magni­tude, has been repressed and socially taboountilnow.Freefrom the angst­ridden climate of '80s America, The Vergniigen is an idea whose time has come.

Vergniigen can also be translated as enjoyment, and this, coupled with the earlier defmitions, is the essence of The Vergniil!en. I would be rather remiss in my duty as Vergniigensybille if I were not to explain the full implications of this up-and-coming concept. The Vergniigen does not condone a lifestyle that would prove a detriment to either the practitioner or his asso­ciates; e.g., killing a man because he played through your golf game while you were mixing a new batch of martinis is not Vergniigen: it is murder. The Vergniigen condones actions and activities that allow one to reach that perfect state of Vergniigenseligkeit, i.e., vergniigen bliss.

However, one cannot allow oneself to be lost in the catacombs of this monster, The Vergniigen, without frrst realizing one very important component of it. This one, yet es­sential, component is the Licht Auf Principle. The Licht Auf Principle states that one mustlighten up before hecancometoknowThe Vergniigen. Essentially, it is impossible to achieve the benefits of life if it is taken too seriously or with too heavy a heart. Thus it follows that there is a plateau to which one must climb: The Auflichtenvergniigen. I can person­ally assure you that this is not diffi­cult; one need just loosen up and gain satisfaction from doing so. Taking life too seriously, as people did in the '80s, is not only detrimental to your health and well-being, it also directly interferes with your practice of The Vergniigen.

This is not to suggest that it is impossible for the Vergniigenpraktiker to have a bad day or to feel upset. However, the Vergniigenpraktiker can see that this is a temporary condition and get on with his life and Licht Auf. For no one in the history of man has ever

completely succeeded without first experiencing Auflichtenvergniigen. Consider this for a moment: could Margret Thatcher make a few friends in the European community if she were to apply theLichtAufPrinciple? Or could Nietzsche have built a bet­ter iibermensch? The answer is are­sounding yes. This is why The Vergniigen is a bit dangerous. The potential available in each of us is without limit, so while trying to attain Vergniigenseligkeit, be careful. You will find many new outlets and hid­den talents; it may even change the course of your life.

A test for the uninitiated: are you now, after reading this, offended that someone is suggesting that you change your outlook on life? If the answer is an emphatic yes, then you need to Iicht auf; you are taking life withfarmoregravitythannecessary, Making The Auflichtenvergniigen work for you is as simple as letting yourself enjoy whatever is going on around you. It is not making a con­scious effort to lighten up, for if you consciously try to Iicht auf, you cannot. Thus you are not invoking the spirits of The Vergniigen. Just Licht Auf: you'll be glad you did.

Thad Bowman

Sense of Awareness New places to gather, more stairs

to climb, Wake "the snake" Forest strikes again, shedding another layer of skin to reveal a sleeker design. After slithering past the catastrophic overhaulofthelibrary,wecanwriggle into the new "Food Court" to expe­rience the savory edibles therein. At the cheeseburger, my mind inquired "Food Court?"; my tastebuds an­swered "Snack Pit." Nonetheless, I am sure improvement will soon ar­rive. and I rather like the reference to a "court," because given the options, I believe I would play tennis with this food.

One flaw remains, the abundance of Pepsi products: over-sugared, acidic syrups which corrode your esophagus and keep you up real late. There just has to be a better liquid I can pour into the old system.

With this in mind and a cup of semi-toxic Dr. Pepper in hand, I strolled the Quad during the Activi­ties Fair last Friday. I glimpsed. I blinked. I glimpsed again. Yes! Safe Rides was soliciting membership. "Oh bonus," cried I, "a chance to serve the greater community." However, I later decided that Safe Rides institutes improper placement of responsibility within the Wake Forest community. Let me explain.

Wake Forest security provides a late-night on-campus seiVice for the safe arrival of students to their des­tination. A volunteer seiVice should not be used to replace a staff paid by tuition costs, so we should assume Safe Rides is intended for students stranded off campus. It is operated from Thursday to Saturday, 10 p.m. -2am.

Naturally, it is in the interest of the entire community for the members to be able to return from Winston-Salem safely. However, in whose interest is it to have Wake Forest students venture out into Winston-Salem in thefrrst place? Itismy understanding that Greek organizations sponsor

)

particularnightsatvarious bars in the city in return for a cut off the cover charge. In so doing, they become at leastpartiallyresponsibleforthenecd for Safe Rides. It makes sense to me that these organizations should be required to volunteer drivers on the night of their event. It does not make sense that an appeal for drivers should be made to a non-Greek organization who has never sponsored such an event as occurred in the middle oflast semester.

Safe Rides should not only be in place to relieve the burdens of "the pleasures of alcohol," as an early advocate so eloquently put it, but also to impart a sense of awareness and responsibility in the same realm. The mechanics of Safe Rides should be reviewed. Perhaps this request sounds unreasonable, but after three years of watching organizations get off light on what I consider severe demon­strations of irresponsibility, it would just be neat to see the almighty Greek system take responsibility for some­thing besides its bank account.

Jay Chervenak

Fresh people The beginning of a new school

year presents an opportune time to discuss an issue that affects all of us here at Wake Forest, especially those who are here for their first year. It has todowiththepopularuseofafamiliar term: freshman.

On high school and college cam­puses all over America, female stu­dents are being referred to, and even calling themselves by this male term.

It seems rather odd and unfortunate to me that our college community, supposedly one of the more enlight­ened groups of society, would con­tinue to use a term as sexist as freshman in this day and age.

Many changes have occurred in our language in the past few years as inclusion of women has increased.

For example, there are now chair­persons and mail carriers, and I hope that no one would be so backward as to refer to a female police officer as a policeman. But for some reason, this tenn - freshman- has been over­looked, and is used commonly to­day.

I know there are probably some who would argue that it does not really matter, that everyone knows the term is referring to both men and women.

If this is indeed the case, then I would encourage those of you who feel this way to try calling all ftrst­year students fresh women. It makes a difference, doesn't it?

The good news is that a simple and effective solution exists. All we need to do is discontinue the use of that narrow and exclusive tenn freshman, and replace it with a more neutral and genderless one, such as frrst-year student

And so, to the women who are here at college for their frrst year of stud­ies, I would encourage you to stop referring to yourselves with a male term. Call yourselves what you really are, first-year students.

And to the rest of the Wake Forest community, let's start referring to these frrst-year students with a term that includes everyone, both male

and female, and bury this archaic term that fails to acknowledge half of the class' population.

Colleen Pierce

Time for Action I hear visitors' comments weekly

on what a beautiful campus we have at Wake Forest.

But campus tours do not pass the over -filled trash receptacles on cam­pus.

I cringe when I look at the mess we leave behind in our haste. "Haste makes waste" applies to our lust for convenience.

There are three villains who are responsible for the stacks and piles of paper waste strewn about the grounds. ARA and Pizza Hut, the abusers of paper products, and the quiet, passive students like me who have waited until now to try to stop such waste are the three villains

I demand thatARA and Pizza Hut put an end to dispensing paper goods.

There is such a thing as washing returnable dishes, folks. For starters, purchase new glasses and plates and utensils and cloth napkins, and have extra employees to wash the neces­sary, returnable dishes and glass and cloth napkins_

ARA and Pizza Hut thrive on stu­dents' inaction and on students' beastly consumption of paper. These two organizations cut their costs by using paper utensils.

Wake Forest pays for garbage re­moval and for extra trash bins. ARA and Pizza Hut will meet the stu­dents' demands, or they will even­tually lose their business.

We students abuse the use of the paper goods of our food services. The overflowing trash bins are un­sightly. Wehavetoquitourwasteful behavior.

To begin, resist the temptation to usethepaperofARAandPizzaHut Bring your own cup, plate and fork. You might look silly and out of vogue, but your individual partici­pation in boycotting the paper excess of our food seiVices will make your fellow studentsawareofthenearness of the pollution problem in our en­vironment

The Wake Forest campus is no longer beautiful when ARA cups and Pizza Hut boxes litter our side­walks.

ARA and Pizza Hut are the first villains, the paper abusers are the second villains. The third, and the most responsible, villains are the students like me.

Certainly, I have wasted paper cups, napkins, etc. The worst part is that I knew it was wrong.

The time is now for participation in putting an end to the use of paper utensils by our food services. ·

Wake Forest has a terrible prob­lem with paper waste. The recycling article in the Old Gold and Black (Aug. 31, 1990, pg. I) promises a start.

The root~ of the problem, though, are our gluttony for convenient pa­per goods and ARA and Pizza Hut Pulling the roots from the ground will keep the tree of waste from growing.

Thomas S. Kester, Jr. Class of 1990

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Page 7: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

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Old Gold and Black Friday, September 9, 1990 7 >

Students Need to Take a More Multi-Cultural Look at Classes F or the first two years of my Wake Forest educa­

tion, I did what everybody else does - I went ·through the motions. I tookthosesameoldclasses,

~ything,just as long as it fulfilled a divisional require­ment. I went to class, took notes, memorized all I heard and read, and then willingly gave it back in a little blue book - simply for a grade.

Butformeagrade is no longer enough, nor is it enough t(l read Shakespeare, Chaucer, Milton and all those other respected and approved classics whileignoringtheother voices that have been silenced for so long. It distresses me that women and black authors are not better repre­sented in the course that surveys American literature.

Dannette McCain Student Columnist

We, as students, must realize the white ~culine viewpoint that has dominated most of our lives and education is not the only view that exists.

We must challenge ourselves and our university to recognize the accomplishments and contributions of those who are often overlooked.

The voices of women have historically been dis­missed. Atone point in history, they were considered the property of their husbapds and could legally be beaten if the instrument was no wider than the thumb.

People of color also had a song to sing, a legacy to leave their grandchildren, and they maintained it even in the face of a white American th~t stole their identity.

I am not suggesting that this challenge to truly educate ourselves will be an easy one, but it is a necessary one. Blacks in American politics, for example, are now a realitythatmustbediscussed,although, when the nation's founders fonned the American political system, blacks._ wereconsideredmereproperties. Theopportunitytoshare in the pain and struggle that is found in wolks by Virginia Woolf or Toni Morrison is an experience that we should all have because it helps us to identify our own struggles.

Wake Forest now has a multi-cultural face and should have multi-cultural studies, for only by experiencing and exanUning all that is of us and around us can we truly be educated. :

'Senate Race Is Almost Pure Fiction .. ~~~~POPPY COMES MARCHING HOM£ AGAIN, HU~RAH! HURRAH! \l\€~~GNE H\N\A H€~RIYWtLCOME THeN, HURRAH! UUR~AHL, P ower. Power and influence. Editorial columnists

possess an unusual amount of both. For example, say this was an election year for,

. oh, the Senate. Enter Candidate A, the incumbent, and Candidate B, the up-and-coming challenger. . Continuing with this scenario, let us say the two

ct!lldidates were of different ~ces, the cballenger a member of a minority group. fu the past, before America .became more enlightened and open, let us assume, for the sake of argument, that the majority candidate ex­pressed opinions that opposed not only the integration and equalization of the second candidate's minority group, but also most other minority groups.

(Of course, this situation is entirely fictional. Any similarities between anypersonslivingordeadismerely a coincidence.)

We all know these are jolly times. Everyone loves everyone else. So, in a display of great understanding and empathy, the first candidate states that if anyone allows race to become a deciding issue in the campaign, "heads will be cracked."The public, not surprisingly, exoects unbiased camoail!nin,g. .

Unfortunately, some of Candidate A's campaign let­ters make reference to a number of persons who, coin­cidentally, happen to be of the same minority as Can­didate B. Candidate B interprets this as introducing a racist element, and so accuses to Candidate A.

Candidate A, feeling abused, responds that Candidate B was totally without substance in his argument; con­sequently, he uses the charge of prejudice to further his own popularity.

Of course, since Candidate A has already pledged iliat "heads would be cracked" if race becomes an issue in the campaign, he proceeds to crack the head of Candi­dateS.

'WE. 1 THE N~LESS FEW WHO RUN 1HIS :CNrST!TU.TION kNOW

.. THAI \JAKE c/W BE A OISTURBWG PlACE .••

Eric Williams Student Columnist

Enter the editorial colunmist The next issue of the newspaper contains a column

regarding the entire "cracked head" incident. Since the letter containing references to minority leaders including the governor of Virginia, the Democratic National Committee Chainnan and a very prominent politician who just returned from talks with Saddam Hussein in the Middle East, in no way related to Candidate B' s campaign and was indeed a sanctioned letter, how else could be references be interpreted? . Of course, it is possible, but not likely, that Candidate A was merely trying to show how worthy persons belonging to Candidate B 's minority can be. It is more likely that Candidate A's intent was really to frighten the majority into voting for him by illustrating the power the minority was achieving.

The columnist, being a true journalist and a believer in the freedom of speech, recognizes Candidate A's right to express his dislike for Candidate B 's minority. If the public desires this sort of personality in the legislature, then they have every right to vote for him. However, what the columnist does not support is hy­pocrisy, which is what Candidate A showed when he made his previous statement and then disregarded.it.

After the column is published, the public suddenly changeS its opinion of Candidate A, and Candidate B is elected in the first unanimous Senate race in history.

Power. Editorial columnists are defmitely among the elite.

s n

Life at WFU May Be Questionable

W elcome back to Wake Forest everyone, or if you are a new student then simply "Wel­come." For those of you who are returning

students, you know that Wake Forest can be confusing place where we are constantly plagued with a.plethora of questions. . . . .

Some of them are a direct result of a questionable system (I do not have a particular one in mind, but you cannot swing a dead cat around here without hitting a questionable system), while others are justa by-product of the conflicting messages that we receive from our teachers, administrators, various corporations and so­ciety in general.

'These questions may be simple ones like, ''Why can Inothearwhatthe teacher is saying in Tribble Hall? Oh yeah, it is the construction." Or it may be a more difficult one like, "Why are we just accepting these tuition increases every year without complaint?"

Surely there are those of you who have managed to plod through Wake Forest life thoroughly unscathed and without one single annoying question on your minds. So, for your benefit, I have composed a list of the questions that plague me the most. For freshmen who do not understand why life at Wake Forest would disturb anybody, do not worry. You have three more glorious years to get armoyed; the questions will in­evitably CO!Jle to you.

1) IfW ake can getthePresidential debate here, build a multi-million dollar recreation center, and house its oresident in a multi-million clnllar mansion, why can they not improve the food?

2. What is Mr. Cash's real name? 3) Who exactly runs this place anyway? 4) What is "skank?" Who came up with the te~? 5) In the age of recycling, why build a brand new

student center instead of remodeling Reynolda? 6) Can you say "hypocrisy?" 7) What exactly is a hook-up anyway? A kiss? Sex? 8) Who exactly designed the layout for Tribble and

Winston Halls? 9) Why do we not make freshmen wear beanie!;'? 1 0) How long will it take before the Quad trees

mature? How long before we do not care anymore?

Beaumont Vance Student Columnist

' ~' .. ,' .. ' .:n,

11) How many licks does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll tootsie pop?

12) How many official fraternities are there at Wake Forest? Go ahead, try and count them.

13) Why does. the faculty get paid so little at such an affluent school?

14) Just exactly how many chucks would a wood­chuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?

15) How many students get elected to the Student Government annually on an anti-ARA platfonn? Has the food improved since you have been here?

16) Why is our school nickname not the Freakin' Deacons?

17) Why are the clocks on Wait Chapel always set at different times? Which one is correct?

· 18) Where do they get the barbers for the University BarberShop? Are they licensed? Are my bangs supposed to look jagged like this?

19) Why does it cost me $200 less, including utilities, to live in an apartment off-campus with my own room than to share a small concrete box on cam­pus? Does the word "shafted" mean anything to you?

20) Who on earth would call the Carolina Date Line?

21) Why is there ARA food in Benson? Is it some kind of cruel joke? Does the neon make it taste any better?

22) Is there any known cure for beer goggles? Is there a prescription? Do they come in contacts?

23) Why does it seem that everyone here is either from New Jersey or Georgia?

24) Is a 700 SAT good enough to get into Wake Forest?

25) Are we ever going to experience a campus free from dirt, mud, jackhammers, bulldozers, and gnarled steel? Are we ever going to get to enjoy the things fuat our tuition increases are paying for?

Student Government Elections!!! Petitions available at Infonnation Desk for:

*Legislature {all classes)-*Honor Council (freshmen)

*Student Budget Advisory Committee *Student Trustee (sophomore)

*Executive Committee Bio Sheets-including Food Service, Race Relations and Housing

Petitions due at an important .meting on Tuesday, September 11 at 5:00pm in Room 102 Fine Arts Center (Lower Building) Questions? Call the SG office at X5293

Page 8: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

GOLD AND BLACK ERSPECTIVES September 7, 1990 8

O{i! Student Studies More than Language in Spain

Forest students could not escape construction in Spain. Scaffolding <>ll••rn~ the Temple of the Sacred Family in Barcelona (above). A bullfighter n<>lrfn,rm• the estacada (kiss of death) before killing the bull (below). The

preoccupy Salamanca townspeople in June and July.

Drew Strickland, Robin Garreox,Fred Hegner, Jennifer Scherer, Andy Aus­tin, Stephanie Pritchard and David Minus (from left) take a break from studying with a short trip to nearby Portugal (right).

By Fred Hegner Old Gold and Black Reporter

Junior Fred Hegner spent last spring in Salamanca, Spain, with 18 classmates from Wake Forest and Candelas Newton, an associate pro­fessor in the department of romance languages. Here is his personal account of the experience.

s the sun beat down on the pale red brick roads of an old university town, the mood picked up in crowded lecture halls. Shouts

filled the cold night air and soon hordes of students filled the streets looking for marcha -a good time.

Spain's oldest university is here, founded some 800 years ago .. As I learned more about the Spanish people, I realized I was standing on a little history of which much of the world is not aware.

The Wake Forest program in Salamanca is not as heavily advertised as some college programs that send students to Madrid, Spain's capital, but it is a close runner-up.

The town resembles a foreign convention year round. hosting a wealth of international students. Many students go home with headaches and regrets, victims of party-burnout. But others get caught up in the slice of pageantry Salamanca offers.

The town is far from the pomp and circumstance of England and its other Western European neighbors, but it does have history. Spain has suffered more wars than any ofits neighbors because of its location on the northem tip of the Iberian peninsula. Arab, Roman, French, German invasions and even a bloody ci vii war have ripped the country apart.

While Salamanca may not be home to many, its people are proud of their. flat, dry province of Castille.

The region is home to the most formal spoken Spanish as well as some of the greatest Spanish writers of all time. Such writers as Miguel de Unamuno, Fray Luis de Leon and even the anonymous author of the world's first novel, Lazaril/o de Tormes, have breathed life into this little town.

Once the heart of Franco country, you can still find evidence that Gen. Francisco Franco, leader of the nationalists and dictator of Spain, reigns in the hearts and minds of some townspeople.

Veterans of the Spanish Civil War mill about with faded berets and chewed cigars. They con­gregate outside gambling halls at midday and later move to the Plaza Mayor, where the whole town meets at sundown. The plaza is the social center of Salamanca as well as the town's most famous attraction. It was originally used as a bullfighting ring by King Alfonso XII, who built it in the 19th centu'ry.

NowthisNeoclassicpieceofarchitecturehouses thriving businesses, including Cervantes, a bar with the best sangria in town.

University Has Version of Fraternities

On spring evenings, the delightful, regal tunes of the university tuna- the Spanish equivalent of a fraternity- entertain the plaza's hordes. The old­est and most distinguished group at the university, the tuna attracts students studying medicine and law.

Its members' black tights and red and yellow

robes light up the streets late at night, and they occasionally pop into a bar or discotheque to dis­tract young, impressionable eyes. The group can be wild and obnoxious, but they are traditional in a deep-rooted sense, toting mandolins and gulping beers as they soften the frenzied clamor of the night.

Far from the crowd, Salamanca offers less ex­hausting fare. The overwhelming beauty of the New Cathedral or the numerous chapels in the monastery of Saint Esteban are enough to convert the most skeptical tourist.

At the university, rooms full of cold, wooden benches may give students the shivers, but these classrooms were once home to Calderon de la Barca, a 16th-century dramatist, and other Spanish celebrities. The university currently enrolls 10,000 students and more than 1,000 foreigners.

The humanities and languages are the most populardisciplines,notunusualataschooldescribed as cons~rvative with liberal appeal. The graffiti­covered halls and buildings of the university evi­dence its students' diverse views.

As a witness to Salamanca's more formal monuments, I found the university facade the best example of the city's stone-engraved craftsmanship called plateresca, or plateresque. The facade is the symbol of the university and a tribute to Spain's most famous nobility. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella decorate its emblem and shield, which represent Spain's unification in 1492. Yetthe most interesting detail of the facade .is a bronze statue of Father Luis de Leon, the university rector and a celebrated Renaissance poet.

A small frog sits atop a skull in the facade, symbolizing good fortune in academic pursuits. Predictably, students flock here before exams.

While Salamanca is a university town, the school has no real campus, no Quad. Cafes, delicatessens, tobacco shops and bakeries blend into the town's halls and buildings to create an unusual microcosm.

Town to Open Doors

Although Salamanca is not a hub of Western Europe, it will have to open its doors to the rest of the world. In 1992, Spain and therestofEurope will become the United States of Europe, a transition that may prove tense. The international spotlight will focus on such cities as Barcelona and Seville, which are preparing for the Olympics and World Expo, respectively, in 1992.

Thro\lghout the semester, our group experienced a country caught in the balance of a colorful past and. a questionable future. The winds of change have only recently swept through Spain after a 40-year dictatorship that left the country in economic shambles.

With the coming of a progressive president, Felipe Gonzalez, Spain has become a democracy. But the government remains in a precarious posi­tion.

The present government, created in the past decade, is a target of small political groups rallying for the favor of its two most powerful parties, the socialists and conservatives. But the parties. are suffering scandals that have prompted some ana­lysts to call the crisis "Spaingate."

Although Salamanca is hardly touched by the problems that rage in Madrid, the university stu­dents actively participate in politics, especially in

he world scene. Without even asking, most Spanish students will

offer their opinion of U.S. foreign policy. It is funny but frightening when they criticize Reagan's acting talent or foreign policy-making.

To some Spaniards, the United States seems too good to be true, so they criticize it in disbelief. Because of the differences in views between . Americans and Spaniards, I think Wake Forest •· students came back with constructive criticisms to : share. '

There is something to be learned from a country that once had the world's largest empire. It was . once said that the sun never set over the Spanish . empire. But in this now small corner of the world. .: people are strolling the Plaza Mayor. As the pla:u ::

. clock strikes 9 p.m., shouts of excitement eeho · through the streets of Salamanca in preparation for · the night's activities.

Bars, Bullfights Abound

La Bibliotheca, Camelot, Cafe Moderno, -Submarino, El Callejon and a string of other bars · pulse with lights and throbbing music. Smooth pick-uplines,exotic drinks and hot, sweaty dancing · are common, but not all the discotheques and bars are meat-markets.

You are sure to find a bar that suits your taste if. you explore all 3,000 in Salamanca. My all-time:­favorite is La Bodeguita, or the "little wine cellar." The hole in the wall is filled with red-clay urns · filled with red and white wine. For 25 pesetas (the equivalent of a quarter) amugofredor white wine splashed with a touch of lemon jui~e is yours. Pictures of famous bullfighters line the wall, and retired bullfightei's are known to hang out there.

As spring turns to summer in Salamanca, the trees do not grow leaves nor does the dry wheat­colored grass tum. green. Not far away in the pastures, the bulls are rounded up for the annual ferias, or summer festivals. In Salamanca, the bullfight, known as thecorrida, takes place in June.

A bullfight is a cruel, unethical, heartless, engag­ing, powerful and truly unique Spanish experience. Images of Hemingway and Picasso pop into mind at a bullfight, and the trails of dripping blood and smell of the slaughterhouse attack the senses.

Young male bullfighters perform feats of chiv­alry dating to the Middle Ages. To this day ,they are still rewarded by pretty young women who toss roses or wave white handkerchiefs. ·

Beyondthecheeringofthebullringorthestriking oftheclockin thePlazaMayor, the noisy cafes, the lively beat of a discotheque, the echoing of a sermon in a cathedral, or a drunken tune carried by the night wind, Salamanca for an instant is only a memory made great by the timeless heroes of Spanish literature.

As Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, one of the world's greatest novelists, wrote: "Salamanca que enhechiza Ia voluntad de vover a ella a todos los que de la apacilibidadde su vivienda hangustado."

Loosely translated, that means, "Salamanca kindles the desire to return to her those who have been at peace with her."

As formyself and the other Wake Forest students who went to Spain last spring, Salamanca restored our faith in the Old World and changed how we viewed their new world.

The sun breaks over the Monastery of Saint Esteban in Salamanca, with a monk greeting visitors in tbe foreground.

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Page 9: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

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Old Gold and Black Friday, September 7, 1990 9 • I • ' ' ', ' I • • • ~ • ' ' ', ' ' ' ' •' ' ' " o • ' ' ' '

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Page 10: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

OLD GoLD AND BLACK PORTS Friday, September 7, 1990.

Cobb, Hollas Lead Rice Attack as Owls Beat Wake Forest in Season-Opener By J~oy Beddow Assistant Sports Editor

Last Sunday in Houston, Rice threw the lethal combination of tailback Trevor Cobb and quarterback Donald Hollas at Wake For­est and sent the Demon Deacons home with a 33-17loss.

Rice jumped out to a quick iead by scoring on their first four posses~ions of the game and Wake Forest never ~~riously threatened.

The Owls led 23-3 at halftime and contin­ued their dominance in the second half.

that allowed them to put together drive-after­drive, and offensively we were very incon­sistent, though we did do a few good things there," Wake Forest Head Coach Bill Dooley said.

The Owls, who Southwest Conference ob­servers say may have their first winning sea­son in 26 years, won their first home game since the 1987 season.

Especially damaging to Wake Forest was the running of Cobb.

completions in 24 attempts. Hollas did not pass for a touchdown, but his

pin-point accuracy put the Owls in good po­sition all night long.

Rice was successful from the opening kick­off. They took the fiiSt possession 60 yards in five plays to score after only 2:38 had elapsed. Cobb finished the series by running the last 38 yards.

Wake Forest went to the Rice 32 after the ensuing kickoff, but were stopped after going for it on fourth and one.

Demon Deacon six yard line, but had to settle Anthony Williams picked up 80 yards for a Parsons' field goal. on 14 carries for the Demon Deacons,

Wake Forest scored its first points on Dave while Barnhill completed 15 of29 throws Behrman's field goal from 32 yards out. for210 yards.

Rice scored once mere in the firsthalftorun Defensively, noseguardMike Smith had their lead up to 23-3. nine unassisted stops, and cornerback

Wake Forest opened up second half by George Coghill netted a pass deflection, scoring on a three-play drive which ended nine tackles and an interception. with tight-end John Henry Mills scoring on a In addition, redshirt freshman Diron 22-yard pass fi?m Phillip Barnhill. · Reynolds turned in an outstanding perfor-

Late in the third quarter Barnhill hooked up mance, ringing up17 ta:kles in his debut. with split-end Steve Brown for a 50-yard Despite the Demon Deacons' poor per­completion to set up Wake Forest's second formance, Dooley said he remains opti-

"After the ballgame I said that I was ex­tremely disappointed in our overall perfor­mance, and nothing that we saw in the films on Sundaycllangedmymind. We tackled poorly all evening, gave up far too many big plays

Cobb blitzed Wake Forest's defense for 175 yards rushing on 30 carries and two touchdowns. Last year Cobb saw part-time duty and logged only 545 yards in the whole season.

Rice then drove 68 yards for its second touchdown with Hollas canying the ball in from the one-yard line. Clint Parsons missed the extra-pointwideright, but Rice still had an early 13-0 lead.

touchdown. The reception was the sixth grab mistic. · which covered more~ 40 yards for Brown · "It was not the way that you want to in the past 12 games. begin a season, but we do have 10 contests

I )

Rice's Hollas victimized the young Wake Forest secondary for 201 yards on 15 On their next possession, Rice reached the

Rice scored 10 more points in the second left. Still, wehavetoimprove,andimprove half to close the contest's scoring. in a hurry, if we want to have better results.

Soccer Team Beats ASU, Ties St. Mary's in Classic Demon peacons Open Season at Campus Stadium With Planters Lifesavers Classic, Win Against Stetson

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Sophomore Raimo De Vries fights for control of the ball in a 2-1 victory over Appalachian State last Wednesday.

. By Sara DeiDhns Old Gold and Blaclt Repmter

The Wake Forest soccer team won another close game, edging Appalachian State, 2-1, at Campus Stadium Wednesday evening.

The Demon Deacons, ranked lOth in the nation by Soccer America, took a 1-0 lead in the first half when forward John Stark scored off a cross from John Duguid at the 36:31 mark.

The Mountaineers tied the game in the second half when Andy Salandy came down the right sideline through a stunned Wake Forest defense, knocking a comer shot into the goal.

To their credit, the Demon Deacons continued to pressure the Appalachian State defense, concentrating on ball control and passing skill.

Several Demon Deacon players, including Neil Covone and Kwasi Ankrah, narrowly missed goals that would have put Wake Forest back ahead.

Eventually, the Demon Deacons' strategy paid off, when Stark netted his second goal of the game with less than five minutes remaining. The winning goal came on a header off a comer kick by Covone at the 86:41 mark.

Wake Forest Coac.h Walt Chyzowych said the offense must continue lO improve by converting the opportunities they have had'into goals. . "We've gottoproveon Sunday (the team's next game) thatweareabetterscoringteam,"hesaid. "Weare playing well enough to have again scored have again scored five goals."

The Wake Forest soccer team opened its season and a new stadium by beating Stetson 1-0 in the Planters LifeSavers Soccer Classic.

JohnStarkscoredthe games' only goal on a penalty kick

31 minutes into the game. Stark's goal camP. after his 20-yard shot was blocked by the hand of a Stetson derencter.

The Demon Deacons totally dominated the game op­portunity-wise, outshooting the Hatters 24 to two.

The Hatters were able to rem$ in the game because of many saves by Stetson goalie Kevin Johnson, brother of midflelder Craig Johnson of Wake Forest.

Chyzowych said the team played very well for their first game, but he said the score should have been higher wjJh all their shot opportunities.

"If we keep getting that many [shots] more are bound to go in," Chyzowych said.

In their second match of the Planters Lifesavers Classic, the Demon Deacons scored a 1-1 double-overtime tie with St. Mary's.

St. Mary's took a 1-0 lead when Scott Eitelgeorge stole the ball from Wake Forest defender Jim Hendrix, made his way through the Deacon defense and put a low left-comer shot past goalie Matt Olson.

Wake Forest tied the game with a Craig Conger throw to John Stark, who headed the ball into the upperrighthand corner of the goal.

Despite outshooting the Gaels 12-3 in the overtime periods, the Demon Deaconscouldnotbreak the deadlock, and the game ended in a tie.

Chyzowych said he was satisfied with the game~s outcome .

In other action at the Soccer Classic, North Carolina edged St. Mary's 2-1 in their opener and defeated Stetson 7-0 in their second game.

Wake Forest and UNC did not play each other in this tournament because the ACC rivals will be meeting later in the season.

Wake Forest, now at 2-0-1 on the season, will host Cincinnati at 3 p.m. Sunday.

ACC Expansion Could Be Harmful to Smaller Schools, Student-Athletes When Penn State bolted for the Big Ten Conference last

year, it set off a chain reaction of rumored moves among members of the large and powerful athletic conferences. From the Pressbox

Russ Blake

The addition of more schools would take a serious chunkoftelevisionrevenueoutofthe pocket of each of the conference's current members.

Certain conferences may get a little more than the ACC, but when you are only dividing into eight instead of ten or

Over the summer, the Metro Conference made some noise by trying to woo giants Syracuse, West Virginia, South Carolina, Miami, Florida State and Rutgers into a football superconference. ================= · larger, the ACC schools will always make out better. As it is, the ACC makes a disgustingly high amount of

Currently, the Metro Conference does not compete in football, and hoped to arrange something whereby schools in other conferences for other sports (like Syracuse in the Big East) could play just football in the Metro and remain

of teams for tournament purposes. So expect other programs to be looked at by the ACC,

including Rutgers, Miami, West Virginia, and South Carolina.

money from current television contracts, so why add other members to the conference if each school will suffer a decrease in revenue?

Think of all the times you have turned on a television set 'during the .winter and seen an ACC game on the tube -whether it has been broaacast by Jefferson Pilot region­ally, or by ESPN, CBS, NBC or ABC on a national basis.

. in the old conference for other sports. That plan, which would give the Metro a tight hold on

the Eastern Seaboard from New Jersey to Florida, has been put on hold for now, since several of the kinks in it could not be remedied.

If the Metro ulan had gone throu~h. the ACC would not be faced with a dilemma, but since it has not, the ACC eventually may have to make a choice between several programs that are interested in joining it.

This could be problematic, since the ACC has been a relatively stable conference from its inception in 1953.

Those simple television appearances mean big bucks to the coffers of ACC programs, and that is just during the regular season. Evenmorerecently,Arkansas,astalwartmemberofthe

Southwest Conference, left the probation-plagued all­Texas league to join the Southeastern Conference.

Therefore, it should come as no surprise that the Atlantic Coast Conference has become involved in all this dis­cussion, especially considering the stalled Metro Con­ference plan.

The only change was the departure of South Carolina, a charter member, in 1970, and the subsequent addition of the last member to join, Georgia Tech, in 1979.

Now, the question remains for Commissioner Gene Corrigan and the ACC schools - of what benefit to the league is expansion?

In addition, the ACC's dominance in the NCAA Tournament has meant a windfall of money, and adding teams to the league would probably only dilute the talent base because of the increased competition to recruit -making for a less successful conference in the process.

Apparently, Florida State is currently the only school under serious considemtion from theACC, but it's obvious that the conference would still like to have an even number

To me, that answer seems negative- for the confer­ence and for Wake Forest. First of all, expansion does not make much economic sense.

And a less successful conference means a reduction in NCAA appearances by conference members, whether new or old.

Other feasible concerns of expansion include increased

Deacons Seek Revenge Against Appalachian By Russ Blake Spolt! Editor

Wake Forest's football team will try to end two years of frustration when it meets intrastate rival Appalachian State at 7 p.m. tomorrow evening in Groves Stadium.

The Demon Deacons enter the game at 0-1 attersufferinga 33-17 setback at Rice last weekend. ASU won its frrstgame last week, 34-24 over East Tennessee State.

In last year's game, the Mountaineers with a then-untestedfreshman quarterback, defeated the Demon Deacons 15-10 at Groves Stadium.

Ten months earlier, Appalachian State tied Wake Forest, 34-34, in the Demon Deacons' home season finale The loss knocked the Demon Deacons out of a po­tential Independence Bowl match up against Southern Mississippi.

With half of the starters gone from last year's squad, it would seem to be a chal­lenging year for Head Coach Jerry Moore, who is in his second season at the Moun­taineers' helm.

Appalachian State consistently competes for t.'Je Southern Conference crown, and despite the heavy losses, the team is ranked 17th in The Sporting News' Division I-AA

Week Two: Appalachian State Mountaineers vs. Wake Forest Demon Deacons

Series: Thirteenth game Coaches: ASU, Jerry Moore (second

year), 10-3; Wake Forest, Bill Dooley(fourth year), 15-17-2

Overall Series: Wake Forest leads 8-3-1

Most recent meeting: 1989, ASU wins 15-10

1990 records: ASU, 1-0; Wake Forest, 0-1

pre-season Top 20. Moore compiled a 9-3 record in his first

season, which included a 5-2 second-place fmish in the Southern Conference.

The offense was theheaviesthitby losses, as only four starters return to that unit.

Sophomore quarterback DJ. Campbell,

who started against Wake Forest as a true freshman last year, is back to assume the signal calling duties for the Mountaineers.

Campbell completed 110 of 214 passes last season for a better than 50 percent completion ratio, and was also valuable as a runner.

He rushed for 298 yards on 121 carries and ten touchdowns in 1989. The ten scores marked one of the higher totals among college quarterbacks. Campbell added 10 touchdown tosses.

Last week, Campbell rushed for 79 yards against East Tennessee State.

He is similar to Rice's Donald Hollas in that he presents a double-pronged threat for the Demon Deacons' defense.

Elsewhere in the backfield, Appalachian State lost valuable all-purpose tailback Ritchie Melchor. Melchor ran 67 yards for a touchdown and gained 139 yards rushing against Wake Forest last year.

In all, the Mountaineers victimized the Demon Deacons' defense for 273 yards rushing,butmanagedonly58yardsthrough the air.

Appalachian State has apparently found a replacement for Melchor in sophomore tailbackJ.K. Reaves, who pierced the Buc­See Football, Page 12

travelling time. If a West Virginia or Rutgers were to join the conference, imagine the amount of extra time that an athlete would lose to schoolwork - for all schools in­volved.

The schedule of a Division I athlete is full enough and to expand could do nothing but harm the academic at­mosphere for the student-athlete.

And,foraconferencesuchastheACC, which continually boasts of its academic prowess with such schools as Virginia, Duke, Wake Forest and Georgia Tech as mem­bers, that would not be a prudent move.

Expansion would also eliminate the close relationships .I among current ACC members, fostering rivalries between Atlantic Coast teams that are special to its fans.

It would become much more difficult for a private school like Wake Forest or Duke to compete if large state schoolsunderconsiderationsuchasSouthCarolina,Aorida State or West Virginia gain entrance into the league.

Just by their ability to reach more people with their larger staffs, the state schools could effectively squelch the efforts of smaller, private schools to compete.

And that, of course, could render a program like Wake Forest's obsolete in the conference if it could not keep up with its brethren members.

So, from any standpoint, the hotly discussed ACC 1

expansion is a losing proposition.

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Page 11: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

7,1990

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• Women's Golf Team Opens Fall Slate . The Wake Forest women's golf team will open the 1990 fall

season at 11\e Lady Tar Heel Invitational, which will be played from September 7-9.

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TheDemonDeaconsmustfindawaytoreplacerecentgraduate Laura D' Alessandro, the last season's top golfer.

D' Alessandro was ranked 19th in women's collegiate golf last season.

Experienced returnees include sophomores Kim Tyrer and Kristi Joiner, and two other sophomores who saw limited action last year, Elizabeth Brandenburgh and Jill Sanders.

Two freshmen, Nicole Dorthe and Courtney Cuff, are expected toplay frequendythis season, as they bring outstanding credentials from their prep careers.

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Rocolvilg Leaders Fr.ri< Wyltoad<, ~ami 8Nca MeGanigal, Vrgija Blet Boehly, Mar)iarid Join llonyllilo, WRJ Dllrol flora, WRJ "We're young, but the freshmen who are coming in have had a

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"I think we can do well," she said. "It's a very good field of teams, but all of our golfers have been swinging well this summer, and I think our chances are good."

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Clemson Tigers The Tigers beat UP. on non-confer­

enceopponentLong Beach State, 59-0, last Saturday at Death Valley.

The contest marked two eagerly awaited coaching debuts. Ken Hatfield, who came from Arkansas to replace Head Coach Danny Ford, was an easy winner in his first game at the helm of the Tigers.

· On the other hand, George Allen, a former NFL coach who brought the WashingtonRedskins' "Over the Hill Gang" to a Super Bowl appearance in 1973, suffered one of the most humilliating defeats in his long and distinguished coaching career as the Long Beach State head coach.

Clemson scored early and often in its victory over the 49ers.

Predictably, it was the Tigers' de­fense,expected to be one of the tops in the nation, that scored first.

Cornerback ArlingtonNunn picked off a pass and dashed 55 yards to the end zone to put Clemson up 7-0 with 6:14 remaining in the first quarter.

Clemson took a 28-0 lead into the halftime break, and immediately built on that bulge when Doug Thomas returned the second-half kickoff 98 yards for a score to make it 35-0.

It was the Tigers' most lopsided victory since a 59-0 pasting of the Citadel in 1954.

Duke Blue Devils While Hatfield began on a winning

By Russ Blake Sports Editor

note, Duke University's new Head Coach Barry Wilson began his career at Duke with a 21-10 defeat at South Carolina last Saturday evening.

Duke was down 7-3 with I:I9left in the first quarter, but the deficit grew to 21-3 by the half. The Blue Devils never seriously challenged thereafter.

Duke's offense, which was first in the ACC last season in total offense and points scored per game, sputtered all evening against the Gamecocks.It managed only 177 total yards.

Senior quarterback Billy Ray char­acterized the Blue Devils' offensive woes, as the experienced signal caller completed only 11 of25 for 121 yards and was intercepted twice.

Dukepulled within 21-10 with 3:40 remaining in the third quarter when taiiback Randy Cuthbert ('.apped a nine-play, 64-yard drive with a one· yard touchdown plunge.

Cuthbertfmished with 58 yards on 18 carries. Last year, he averaged 102.3 yards per game.

South Carolina's offensewas able to effectively control the ball, and the defense prohibited the Blue Devils from mounting a serious threat in the

fmal quarter to seal the victory.

Georgia Tech Ramblin' Wreck Georgia Tech opens the season to­

morrow in an important home con­ference tilt against N.C. State.

The Ramblin' Wreck holds a 5-4 advantage in the overall series be­tweenthetwoteams,buthasnotbeaten N.C. State since 1986.

Last season the WolfiJ!lck won an offensive baiiie in Raleigh, 38-28.

Analyzing the past few seasons, it is essential that the Ramblin' Wreck get off to a better start this year than in the past, since the team hasbegun with a 1-3 record in each of Bobby Ross' three seasons.

A poor start last year was the only thing that kept Georgia Tech from goingtoabowlgame,astheRamblin' Wreck rebounded to win seven of its last eight games and finish a respect­able 7-4.

In 1987 and 1988, Georgia Tech could never recover from the dismal starts, and finished well below .500 both seasons.

Maryland Terrapins The Terrapins opened the 1990

season with a last-minute 20-13 vic­tory over Virginia Tech at College Park,Md.

Quarterback. .Scott Zolak had a -record-setting day agli\'W,t ,th(Hokies defense. ·

He completed a school-record 28

~lip 1!4mlil~ WRJ

passes, the last of which was a 51-yard pass completion to Gene Tho­mas with 1:01 remaining in the game that gave the Terps the victory.

The game was a see-saw affair,and was tied at 10 at halftime.

In the second half, Tem placekicker Dan DeArmas nailed a :n-yard field goal to give Maryland a 13-10 edge, but the Hokies tied it up on a 19-yard field goal.

That score set the stage for the combined heroics of Zolak and Tho­mas, whose touchdown strike gave the Terps a 1-0 mark.

Zolak completed 28 of 46 for 303 yards and two touchdowns.

Maryland wide receiver Frank Whycheck had a big day, setting a Terps' record in that category with his 14 receptions.

North Carolina Tar Heels North Carolina will travel to Co­

lumbia, S.C., to face South Carolina tomorrow evening at 7 p.m.

The Tar Heels have lost the last two meetings to the Gamecocks, includ­ing a 27-20 loss in Chapel Hill last year.

Nonetheless, UNC holds a com­manding 33-15-4 advantage in the overall series that dates back to 1903.

The Tar Heels equaled the victory total of each of the last two seasons by beating Miami of Ohio, 34-0, last SaturdayatKeenanStadium in Chapel Hill.

16 15 13 13

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UNC took a 14·0 iead into half­time, and extended the lead to 21-0 when flanker Bucky Brooks caught a 14-yard touchdown pass from junior quarterback Todd Bwnett.

North Carolina's rushing attack was led by junior tailback Blount, who rolled up 74 yards on 22 carries and one touchdown on the afternoon.

Burnett, who won the position over sophomore Chuckie Burnette, com­pleted seven of 14 passes for 46 yards and a touchdown.

Burnett was injured this week, and will not start against South Carolina.

North Carolina State Wolfpack The Wolfpack shellacked hapless

Western Carolina, 67-0, last Saturday afternoon at Carter-Finley Stadium in Raleigh.

N.C. State rolled up almost 600 yards in total offense against the Catamounts, inciudmg 400 yards on the ground alone.

Sophomore tailback Aubrey Shaw, filling in for starter Anthony Barbour, a me.dical redshirt, had a c·areer-hest 130 yards on only 11 carries.

Shaw scored two touchdowns, in­cluding a 50-yard scamper in the third quarter to make it 36-0.

Fullback Tyrone Jackson also tal­lied two touchdowns on the day, as did true freshman reserve back Gary Downs.

It was also a banner day for the Wolfpack defense. as ~everal old

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records were broken. New marks include fewest firSt

downs by an opponent (0), and fewest total yards (17) by an opponent.

Virginia Cavaliers · , ~ The Cavaliers play perhaps the most~

important game of the season tomor,; · row when they face Clemson :.in~ Charlottesville at 4 p.m. ,

The game will be televised to a ; national cable audience by ESPN. · :

In the overall series, Virginia has ; yet to beat the Tigers, taking a 34- : game losing skein into tomorrow's -: contest.

Despite a 6-1 conference record . last year and an ACC Championship, : the Cavaliers failed to beat Clemson · again, succumbing 34-20 at Death. Valley.

The Cavaliers had an easy 59-10 : victory over Big Eight opponent : Kansas last week.

In the victory over the Jayhawks, · Moore completed 16 of 27 passes for 254 yards and three touchdowns.

Sophomore tailback Terry Kirby, . who is being counted on to replace . Marcus Wilson, rushed for 80 yards : and a score againsL Kansas.

Hennan Moore led all Cavaliers : with 97 yards receiving on four: catches, and tight end Bruce McGonnigalhadfiverecptionstolead ·

. all of Virginia· s players. · McGonnigal and Moore each :

scored a touchdown.

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'JnqnJf .. serviCe. :_ :' . :. · . {:9l.~brp8,~~e.$3$CO annually and are renewable. Applications ' i:Su ,. ·.ortin 'materials are due October 1 1990. For additional f.J~rnatifin'talf'the Office of Admissions at Extension 6110 or 5173.

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Page 12: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

12 Qld Gold and Black Friday, September 7, 1990

Football should be senior split end John Brown and junior tight end Loren Rice. ·

~rom Page 10 Brown caught two passes for 43

yards, and Price added two grabs in the victory last week.

caneers' defense for 151 yards and three touchdowns on 26 carries last ~eek.

Other possible wideouts include flankers Anthony Smith, Craig Styron, split end Kemal Atkins and tight end Will Barber.

· FullbacksJeffDudan and AI Ellis, used primarily as blockers for Reaves and receivers in short yardage situa­tions, will also see some hand-offs.

The Mountaineers return a large and somewhat experienced offensive line.

SeniorGregBarnette(6-5,2S7)and junior Chris Coats (6-3,273) will man the tackle slots, while senior Tommy Ball (6-3, 258) gets the nod at center.

Dudan rushed for 40 yards on nine carries against E.T.S.U., and Ellis ~~bed three times for 11 yards and otte touchdown.

The guards are juniors John Colbert (6-2, 277) and Kill Hill (6-4, 290).

Campbell's main receiving targets . r •

SophomoreJay Millson handles the

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kicking duties for the Mountaineers. Against the Buccaneers last week,

Millson connected on two 37-yard field goals and all four extra points.

The defense, unlike the offense, returns seven starters, and boasts three Division 1-AA all-Americans as se­lected by The Sporting News.

Two of these selections come from the four-man linebacking corps.

Senior inside linebackers Johnny Jennings and Dwayne Pelham were rated among the top ten linebackers in all of Division 1-AA by the publi­cation.

True to form, both players led the squad in tackles against E. T.S.U.Iast week •

BEST FUNDRAISER ON CAMPUSI Is your Ira· temll)', sororily or club Interested In earning $1,000.00-+foraone-week,on-campus mar1<atlng pro]ecl? You must be well organized and hard working. Call Jenny or Myra et (800) 592·2727.

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Pelham had 12 tackles, and Jennings chipped in with 10.

The outside linebackers are senior Donnie Durham and sophomore Rico Mack.

Mackmadeseveral big plays against the Buccaneers last week, including grabbing an interception and causing a fumble.

Thedefensivelinealso boasts some experience and an all-star performer.

Senior Chuck Phifer (6-4, 273) and sophomore W.C. Murphy (6-5, 229) are the bookends of the line, while nosetacklePatMoore (6-0,264) clogs up the middle of the line.

Mike Frier, who started the game last year against Wake Forest, rotates

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in and out with the younger Murphy. Frier tied for the line lead with four

tackles and a quarterback pressure andPhiferregisteredtheonlysackf0: the Mountaineers.

The last key defensive pJayer is punter Harold Alexander, who punted five times for an averageof38.4 ya1ds perkick. .

The projected top line player is· sophomore tackle Avery Hall (6-2, 242), who was named by The Sport­ing News as the seventh best defensive lineman in Division I·AA football.

Hall tallied four tackles, a pressure and a caused fumble in last week's game..

Thestartingsecondaryiscomprised exclusively of juniors.

Cornerbacks Mark Mayo, Steve Wilks and free safety Brian Hendren each totaled five tackles apiece.

Look for the ACCFootball

Preview in next week's OG&B.

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Page 13: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

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Soccer Team Attempts to Defend ACC Championship::

Sharon Letchworth

Senior midfielder Neil Covone controls the ball in action last season against the University ofNorth Carolina at Charlotte. Covone will be a key player in the Demon Deacons' quest to repeat as ACC champions.

By Chad Hays Old Gold •nd Black Reponer

The 1990 Wake Forest soccer team is hoping to continue the pattern of success it has established during the reign of Head Coach Walt Chyzowych.

The team has improved steadily each year since Chyzowych took over the coaching position four years ago.

The 1989 squad made the best showing in Wake Forest soccer history.

The Demon Deacons went 15-4-2, win­ning theirfi.rstACC championship ever. The team was ranked in the top ten throughout mucboftheseason. In only its secondNCAA tournament bid, the team recorded its first ever tournament victory, and advanced to the sweet sixteen before South Carolina ousted them.

A tough act to follow for the 1990 team? Yes. Impossible? Not according to Chyzowych.

"This year's team can be just as good as last year's, provided we fill in the gaps left by last year's graduating class," including the loss of Todd Renner and Flemming Petersen, he said.

Renner, twice an All-American and All­ACCplayer, performedamajorrole in Wake Forest's prominent defense last year.

Renner, who played in the backfield, also made the All-ACC squad.

Sophomore K wasi Ankrah and freshmen Jim Hendrix will try to fill these defensive holes for the Deacons in 1990.

On the offensive end Wake Forest lost Geraint Davies, "a consistent scorer for us

last year and will be hard to replace," Chyzowych said.

Junior John Stark will attempt to fill Davies' shoes, and Chyzowych feels he can do the job.

"Stark has looked good in camp and is definitely capable of doing for this ballclub what Davies did last year."

The returning starters from last year's team are led by senior midfielder Neil Covone.

Covone earned the honor of being one of only three collegiate players on the U.S. World Cup team in 1990 and is obviously a key to the team's success.

Solidifying the defense will be returning starters Craig Conger and David Mackey. These two werepartofadefensethatallowed just 21 goals in as many games last season and only 16 goals in 1988.

Returning starter Craig Johnson's play at midfielder will be another key, Chyzowych said.

"Craig is our mainstay. He's the most unselfish player I've ever coached. Some­times it seems like he's playing for six guys out there," he said.

Other key players include senior forward Nigel McNamara and sophomore forward John Duguid.

McNamara, who played only five games last year due to a leg injury, injured his other leg in the pre-season this year.

Chyzowych said McNamara is at 90 per­cent strength now and almost ready for action.

Senior goalkeeper Matthew Olson,who allowed 20 goals in 18 games last season

year will provide excellent leadership for~~ club, Chyzowych said.

This year, Wake Forest faces its toughest schedule ever.

"The ACC is such a solid league,"­Chyzowych said. "Virginia is really lOild,ed with talent, but in this league it all depends·on what side of the bed you get up on in the. morning and how you play that day." . .

The non-conference games do not prov1de · -much of a break for the Demon Deacons either. .

"We're taking a West Coast trip which is new for us, and we play two tough teams out there as well as South Carolina and Furman : on the road, who both have good ballclubs," . · Chyzowych said. _ _

Does this year's team feel added pressure to do well because of last year's success? :

"I'd like to say no," Chyzowych said. "Bu~ it is just human nature that these guys are: going to feel some pressure. ~opefully, we'~ be mature enough to handle It and have th~ · kind of season we're capable of." .

Chyzowych does not think the new 4,001J.: seat stadium will have a great effect on the team's play. ,;

''The stadium gives no advantage to either team. It's definitely a different game playing on turf and under the lights, but it's still tw~. teams going out onto the dance floor,;; he s~d. '

Although Wake Forest's team has th~ burden of following the previous year's tre~ mendous success, as well as facing its mo~ difficult schedule ever, Chyzowych seem~ confident that his team has the ability tQ accomplish its goals.

Cross Country Teams Continue to Compete on National Level .. Men's Team Shoots for Consecutive NCAA Championship Berths By Mike Fitzgerald · Old Gold and Black Reponer

Byrd, a two-time state champion from Decatur, Ala., Dennis Hearst from Addison, lll. and Stuart Bemham from Spokane, Wash.

The Wake Forest cross-country team established itself Bemhamfinished seventh in the Kinney national cross-as a major power in the sport by winning the Atlantic country meet to earn high school all-American honors. Coast Conference and District ill championships and Brant Armentrout with a fifteenth-place finish, also gar­finishing third nationally last year. That showing marked nered all-American recognition. the highest finish ever for an ACC school. Goodridge said he was pleciSed with his recruiting. "I

As the 1990 season begins, the Demon Deacons are in think overall from seen they're certainly a ~e position ·of defending c~pio.ns, 2r.te\ ~ead J~~h .. , :group ~~ has a great ~h!t. Go~dge said he f~~~ his fe~ti«S'.the ~:<:"''f'!pOte_ntial and~~ased , . to ~iast')'ear' s performance and even 1mprove on It. the makeup of th1s year s · "We'll continue to take one step at a time with the team some of those fresh­

conference and the, region. We have a good nucleus men will have the opportu-returJ1ing," Goodridge s~d of the 1990 squad. nity to have an impact." : Althpugh 1989's frontnuiners Bill Babcock and Jon The 1990 cross-country

Hume gntduated, four members of the starting seven schedule is rated as a chal­~tum. Senior Ben Schoonover, who placed third in the lenging one.

Women's Team Must Overcome Youth, Losses of Arnold, Letko By Mike Fitzgerald Old Gold and Black Reporter

Wake Forest's 1990 women's cross country season will be a bittersweet one for Head Coach Francie Goodridge.

She has a solid nucleus returning from last year's team, which finished third in the Atlantic Coast Con­ference,butshemustreplaceAII-ArnericansSeanaAmold : . .. . . . . . and Anne Letko.

· The, team was devas-tated by the news that Arnold, a sophomore, would notemoll. She was the ACC champion and finished sixth at the NCAA Championship meet

.:•!• gone extremely well and she'~; very durable," Goodridge! s~d. ~

Goodridgehadanoutstandingyearinrecruiting, bringing: in several nationally recognized freshmen. '

Jennifer Finnegan of Sidney, N.Y., a state cross country! champion and the national indoor mile champion appears; to be the class of the group, and, barring injury, will run in'~ the starting seven. ;

"She's doing extremely well. She's coming in with thC: best conditioning she's ever had, and she works llarlt toward the cross country team. She's really excited about• what she can doJ(l cross country," Goodridge said. :

Other key incoming freshmen include Kelly Ciarlce; from Sanford, North Carolina's state mile champion,± Deborah Bilder, runner-up in Pennsylvania's state eros": country championships, Nicole Chilivis of Atlanta, Ga.­and Noell Howell of Woodruff, S.C. ~

1• COnference ana 25th nationally, headlineS that Jist. The team Opens tomor-. Schoonover, the team's only senior, was one of-the first row in Chapel Hill in a meet

All-Americans from Wilke Forest, along with Hume. · which features North · :_"~en's trying to concentrate on getting fit and using his Carolina, Duke and Navy.

"At this point her run­ning career is on hold and her college career is on hold," Goodridge said.

Goodridge s~d that the incoming group is the largest recruiting class she has had since she came to Wake Forest.•

Both the women's and men's teams run identic~ schedules this season. They open up in Chapel Hill to{ morrow. "'

After a Saturday off they will have back-to-back meer; at home, with the Wake Forest Invitational Sept. 22 and the! Alumni Meet a week later. ~

Despite the team's young age, Goodridge said sh~

·,

sucdess from last year to solidify his confidence for this Since arriving at Wake y.ear in perfo~g at a high level," Goodridge said. Forest in 1984, Goodridge ·: The other three re!UJDing starters are junior John Sence, has built the program to a level of national prominence. He ~.Yho won All-ACC honors with a ninth-place finish at the hopes that the Demon Deacons will continue to progress ~erence· meet, and juniors Eric Lorenz and Chris towards becoming consistent performers on a national Qariiggelis. Those three along with Schoonover should level during the 1990 season. t9mprise the nucleus of this year's team. "We're now recognized in the conference and nation-. Wake Forest's success last year had a major effect on ally as a very strong program. It's up to us now to have the

ri:cru~ting. The team totally dominated recruiting in the same attitude and do the same things that got us to that state and grabbed a share of top national talent. level, and we're confident that our athletes will rise to that . Goodridgel!,igned the top three runners in North Care- occasion," Goodridge said.

!ina, Brant and Kyl~ Armentrout of nearby Mount Tabor "We look forward to defending the conference champi-High School and Patrick Phillips of Boone. onshipandearningourthirdconsecutivetriptotheNCAA : On the national front, Wake Forest brought in Richard championships," he said.

"It's a big loss to the sport and obviously an

unexpected and big loss to us. We're reeling from it." Fourrunners return from last year's top seven. Juniors

Mary Powell and Heather Turnquist and sophomores Carrie Powers and Kim Many will lead the team into the 1990 season •

Powers, from Georgetown, Ontario, had extensive allergy problems due to the climate change, but appears to have overcome them ..

Powell earned all-conference honors in 1989 and finished sixth at the ACC Championships. With Arnold gone, Powell becomes the team's top returning runner.

"Mary's in better shape than ever. Her training has

remains optimistic for the upcoming season. ! "It looks like we're going to have a nice season an~

we'rehoping to stay in the top four(in theACC standingsk We're not expecting a championship from the athletes­here, but we think being in the top four is a realistic goal~ Wehaven'tbeen below that since the first year I was here,'~ Goodridge said. ., Q ~ -

"We have a lot of depth, but we also have a lot ofyoutli\ We are certainly looking forward to getting back in the nationalpicturebynextyear. We'reayearaway,"shesaid; .

j Bradley, Field Hockey Team Seek Fourth Deep South Title in Six Seasons By Paul Blackburn Old Gold-and Black Reponer

Not many of Wake Forest's teams can boast of win­ning three out of the last five conference championships and of being the favorite to win it all again this year, but the field hockey team can make just such a claim.

Headed by Barbara Bradley, the Demon Deacons' field hockey team has an excellent chance to repeat last year's Deep South Conference title.

With only two seniors on the roster the team might appear to be inexperienced, but almost everyone returns from last year's conference championship club.

Bradley has the luxury of retaining nine out of eleven starters from last season. That statistic means trouble for Deep South opponents in the upcoming year.

Bradley said she fully expects the team to contend for the title this year .

- She said the returning starters, a schedule that is not quite as demanding as last year, and freshmen who have been very impressive were reasons for her confidence.

Bradley should take.some of the credit for the team's success. She has been honored for her role in Wake Forest's run to Deep South titles in three of the past five years with recognition such as the 1985 Atlantic Coast Conference coach of the year award.

Headlining this year's team is senior Tracy Stickney of Newbury, Mass.

Stickney has rewritten Wake Forest's record book during her first three years, and this year should be no different. She is Wake Forest's all-time leader for goals in a season with 19, and in a career with 41.

Stickney said she has great confidence in the team's ability to repeat citing the team's exceptional talent. She praised many of the team's junior members for the leadership roles they have taken in the absence of senior members.

She said one of her personal goals for the year is to beat

ACC nemesis Duke. Wake Forest has not beaten the Blue Devils in Stickney's three seasons.

In addition to Stickney, Coach Bradley will count on several other key players. Forwards Nancy Havlick and Daniele Parrella were all-conference performers last year.

Kristen Turk, Carey Borkoski and Karen Liberi, who missed most oflast season with an injury, will also be heavily counted on to perform.

Bradley particularly singled out Borkoski, a .sopho­more goalkeeper, because of her off-season condition­ing program.

Goalkeeper Kim Irvine and all conference player Heidi Meertz, who graduated, will be missed on this year's team.

Not many people realize that every member of the field hQCkey program is a walk-on. Wake Forest fields a championship team in the sport without the benefit of a single scholarship.

However, Bradley s~d she does not see this factor as a hindrance. In fact, she said she favors the idea.

"All the girls are out here because they want to be here.," she said. "Everybody is equal this way."

Coach Bradley foresees Davidson and Catawba as the top competition for the Demon Deacons, buts he said she is confident her team will once again be Deep South champions.

The Demon Deacons' open the defense of the crown against Appalachian State at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday on Polo Field.

Although it is often missed in the shuffle of the university's other sports programs, Wake Forest's field hockey team has been one of the most consistent and successful programs in the entire athletic department.

With Bradley's leadership and a continuing stream of quality players entering the program, the field hockey team seeks to continue its domination of the Deep South Conference well into the 1990s.

11pGal1rJ

Sophomore Kelly McCloskey fights for possession in a game against Radford University last season. .,. 1...-__ .:...._ __________________________________________ .....J 'I

~

\

Page 14: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

LD GOLD AND BLACK Friday, September 7, 1990

\NASA Art Exhibit Reflects Limited Creativity I f

By Kristin Zeier Old Gold and Black Reponer ' ' Because art is an expression, a

communication of an idea through a vi­sual medium, merely duplicating a subject falls short of great art. ' '

edundancy" is hanging on the walls of the Scales Fine Arts Gallery. Aside from being the title of a series of four water colours depicting the

The majority of the works are technical wonders of a photographic nature. It is diffi­cult to discriminate between them, however, since they overlap in subject matter and rely on scientific precision as the prominent theme. While these works should be admired for their scrupulous attention to detail, they should not be taken as models for great art. Because art is an expression, a communication of an idea through a visual medium, merely dupli­cating a subject falls short of great art.

utilizes a mixed medium in his triptych of "Saturn and Beyond,'' 1982. It is a violent work full of confusion. His colors are daJk and highlighted with an eerie E1 Greco shade of greenish-yellow. The aggressive strokes Dodd applies meet and tangle in a world beyond the known, a world which calls on the viewer's imagination.

The second painting worthy of mention is space shuttle by Howard Siskowitz, it is also. a pastoral setting by Robert Stephens. Stephens

uses soft, gentle colors and illumination in his "Landing Discovery," 1987. His painting highlights nature; only in the extreme back­ground is a small space shuttle identifiable. Even though his theme - the inability to 1 overcome nature - is a common one in the ~ exhibit, Stephens' earthly approach distin-

the prevailing theme of the current exhibit, "Visions of Flight." The handful of artists that did venture into

the abstract of interpretation did so hesi­tantly. A few of the artists toyed with the idea of the smallness of man in the face of the universe and his desire to overcome this re­ality. But even when such a theme is applied to the works, the viewer remains uncertain of the actual intent.

The exhibit, which features 33 works, is sponsored by the Wake Forest department of art in conjunction with the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. The collection of the works was initiated by the National Aeronau-

. tic and Space Administration for the purpose of incorporating art into the science field.

guishes his work. · Since the artists displayed in "Visions of

Flight" are· sponsored by NASA, they may have felt restricted in their freedom of ex­pression. Consequently, the art hanging on the walls expresses little more than redun­dancy.

' ' :4;

'. ~ ~: ,~' . ' .

The various artists were invited to the space center where they toured the facilities, talked with astronauts, and took part in simulation exercises. The result is a show of works illustrating the space program.

To say the paintings are essentially am­biguous would be wrong. Two paintings of contrasting themes stood out against the field of redundancy.

The first is a piece by Lamarr Dodd. He

•{

Courtesy of NASA Coal101)' of NASA

;"Challenger in White," a pencil drawing by Greg Mort, (left) and "Astronauts John Young and Bob Crippen suit-up," by Hugh Laidma~ (right), are two pieces on. display in "Visions of Flight," an exhibition of art from :the National Air and Space Admininstration's collection.

tCarolina Streetscene Features Prominent Artists, Entertainers ;By Jennie Vaughn :Old Gold and Black Senior Reporter

'· ; A college education cannot provide 'everything, even if you are pay­:ing $14,000 a year for it. Upper­·classmen and even some fresh­;men may have discovered they :need to find something off campus ;to do, even if only for an after­·noon.

For students in the market for :off-campus diversions, Winston-

Salem offers a few events each fall that are worth noting. One is the Dixie Classic Fair, which is coming up later this month. The other is Carolina Streetscene.

Students may join the 200,000 to 300,000 visitors attending Streetscene, an outdoor festival of entertainment, arts, crafts and food, Saturday and Sunday in downtown Winston-Salem.

Presented by the Arts Council of Winston-Salem/Forsyth County,

Streetscene will feature nation­ally-known performers such as country music singer/songwriter Steve W ariner and Broadway singer/ actress Sandra Reaves-Phillips, who will star in the one-woman show, "The Late Great Ladies of Blues and Jazz."

Also slated to fill the six out­door stages are a number ·of top regional entertainers, including the Winston-Salem Symphony, the North Carolina Black Repertory Com-

Drake Presents Rock n' Roll History

. " · · some pizza and sit arou~d and talk. wbatt~~~~talki~gabout.andg~n-\, .. about music. . ·• ·. :.' ~ •erallythey have more intexest}lnhe

• , .- ... ,,.,,:;.:- . . "' . . .. . "OneschocilhadtJte8utstosay;' ,mil$ic:.ofthepast~". : .. :•:';>< .. ,. .• Tfi'e:SW!es, .. . 1ohn'rravo1ta . •Well, why don~t yoti; come. back : . ; ·Jtesai~''Ifyou do it at acomml.t~

~,., .:.~:a.nd~any . . ..~em~.Y not 'next year and-stay an extra day and ''nity'coliege;like.say in the miqdle> · : :;::.bc!;'f!le:,:rab,f()i#f1he)~mg;·~r a · dosome~onsome~rmofmusic . of' Ne,Y.·~~~y. they .. ~~Y' Mn~t ·

::,~·satw:~ Night lfi!Ver ch~b, .. -whatever-you feellike doing.' .. ·. :. necessarilycareaqoutanythingt!iat· · · btthiH!~~~~-~~ab,~t~elll• ··,"And I said, 'Why-don't I do. a happened._even more than tlUJ:e , '.Pf*~:J?r~r~:;~··t:~4ay; , showontheearly.~aysofrockand . q~.ontlls.ago. Theywanttob~v~~e

· , mqt~il~o'ri~:hlstd:ry~of\. roll.' · . . · : ·· > ... :· ·.. latestPawaAbdulrecom:.,. · -;,, : '. rock.an'd. •rolfihisrweel@tfiat%:Wa8' . ·.<~'ThenanothetschoOlhc:ardabOut · . 4<So they:really· don't carej1tWuf ··. ~ . : S}l(>ns(;tidi'~y'th~;'$t\l~~iJ~9n: ; ;. )tandsaid ~Why don:~ytiu co!lle to · · whattbeRollingSton~:eve~~~r, : : ~.': ,.priik~X~ilil:i,l~~~t$9t~~~~~~f: }Jtn:sch'?O~and~ot}lat;.tOQ.' ~oQne, . whafiUly~yet<ei. dicli;~,.~t. · • . , ~ l.~'while.~e,was·tounpg ". tw.n-· ttJustkept snowballing.". careaooutlilwhat'sha~ogr~cow. '·. • : . col!egecampriSeS~amusiciail•H~ · · Drake said that the better a col- ·So generally the more inte~tiitg.a

· · said, "I woUld alwa~s 89- ou~ with ·. lege is, the better a place it is to school is, the niore intereStiilg"lpy: . the students afier;·arid go arid get lecture, "because the 'students get .. show woru." •',' .... :_:~ .

•L-------~~-·~,~'<'~,~-~-~----~-------~----~------------------------~~~~---;·~·-·~·

pany and the Little Theatre of Winston-Salem·.

Winston-Salem offers more than musical entertainment, which Streetscene organizers realized as they planned the weekend events. The talents of Winston-Salem area residents will also be showcased in the festival's Folkscene area, offering traditional folk music and hand-made crafts.

from all across the Southeast, and youngsters can have their faces painted or take a picture with Ro­nald McDonald at Kidscene.

"every kind of art form condu­cive for an outside environment."

Representatives of the Secrest Artists Series from Wake Forest will have a booth, and the university's Dance Company, under the direc­tion ofRebeccaMyers, an instructor and dance series director, will perform 6 p.m. Sunday.

In addition, booths represent­ing arts organizations in the Triad will be set up on the festival grounds.

Artscene brings together the work of a wide representation of artists

Reggie Johnson, the executive director of Urban Arts of the Arts Council, the Council's program­ming arm, described the festival as "a celebration of the arts here in Winston-Salem" which offers

The festival, which is in its fif­teenth year, lasts from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday and 1 to 7 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free.

Musical Censorship Contradicts Philosophy of U.S. Constitution

M any musicians are respected, even idolized by children, even though their songs present racist and sexist views which, regardless of

. the artists' intent, can wrongly encourage children.

Then again, children also encounter racism in school, sexism in their homes, and other negative influences in countless areas of their lives. Is it the fault of the artist that some children have so little guidance that they take on musicians as their mentors? I think not.

If a child commits suicide because of a song, some­thing is wrong with the society that gave the child a suicidal inclination. The Parents Music Resource Center, in keeping with human nature, wants to place the blame for an intrinsically social problem on a small group of artists.

Ideally, children should have a basic sense of values with which to judge any material presented to them. Ideally, listeners would see artists who promote rac­ism and sexism as ridiculous and not worth their attention.

Artists would no longer be making that extra buck per controversial lyric as they do now and might do something positive with their status for a change. Moreover, recording companies would not be inclined to encourage artists to produce obscene or controver­sial material in order to make an extra buck them­selves.

If everyone thought for himself with a rational and well-informed mind, the issue of censorship would not exist.

Unfortunately, they do not. Given the lack of a strong social standard, somebody has to take up some slack. Thus, PMRC gallops to the rescue, right? Wrong. Parental advisories are a joke, for a variety of reasons.

First of all, the kids who will be most affected by lyrical content are the same ones whose parents never hear their children's music,let alone go with them to

Polkacide

Jenni Schlechty

buy the albums. And some recording companies have found that parental advisories actually increase record sales. Case in point: 2 Live Crew.

Censorship is not an acceptable answer, either. We should not forget that the principles by which we deem racism and sexism as bad are the same ones by which we deem liberty good. The entire principle of liberty is put at stake when we allow the government to decide for us as a society what is offensive and what is not.

If we censor music, we take away our own civil rights. Under the Constitution, we are guaranteed the right to form moral standards as a group. With this ! right comes an underlying responsibility to make those standards known. However~ the young people who are most easily influenced do not understand the basic set of values determined by society. To blame and attack musicians with laws and censorship is to put a pacifier in each and every American mouth.

Artists have the right to produce music without outside intervention. Listeners have the right not to buy offensive music and to make their grievance 1 known. The information that children need to become 1

free-thinking adults should pervade society so that children are equipped to address these issues of their own accord. In the meantime, who is responsible for filling this gaping hole in our value system'!

We all are. You and I, the recording companies and every artist from Doug Davis to Axl Rose. Every faction of our society could do more to" .. , form a more perfect union, establish justice ... (and) promote the general welfare."

Se 1. Presu Turow. 1

·2. Clear Tom Ch ·3: The j Tan. (Iv 4. 50 S1 Do to~ Earthwo Press, $· 5.ABriej W.Haw

Sara Sept.9 Muset

. I• Sara I ~ which

Post-I Free. NASi weekc exhibi ArtG an ex drawil shows artists ogy i1 ope nil ?p.m. follov. Phillil Art I weekd two e throu~ Galler menta 20th c Hogar ers. "Obs1 stall at openir

VIRGO Monday~ tionfrom be good response. ships with of society LIBRA(~ relationsh if you ar1 Writehorr general is SCORPII matters,o1 ing, will~ before W outstandil scholarshi SAGITT1 Much in-c signed, ar away. Yo~ becauseo1 On Friday or admini~ ably speci CAPRIO erythingy'

Page 15: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

r7, 1990

'

lty : triptych of is a violent t~rs are dark Greco shade sive strokes in a world

1callsonthe

,f mention is ~ns. Stephens ination in his flis painting :treme back­identifiable. inability to 1

•n one in the • oach distin-

"Visions of !\,they may :dom of ex­hanging on than redun-

:oanesy of NASA

of art from

ers •rm condu­·ironment." the Secrest rake Forest :university's ~r the direc­minstructor will perform

is in its fif­l 10 a.m. to 1 to 7 p.m. ; free.

icts • :ton

1panies have ·rease record

r, either. We tichwedeem 1es by which >le of liberty ,ent to decide what is not.

ur own civil taranteed the tp. With this ity to make oung people 1derstand the ty. To blame 1sorship is to llD mouth. usic without ~ right not to :ir grievance 1 ed to become • ciety so that ;sues of their sponsible for tern? 1mpanies and Rose. Every .forma more , promote the

September College Bestsellers

l'

I. Presumed.lnnocent, by Scott Turow. (Warner, $4.95.) 2. Clear and Present Danger, by Tom Clancy. (Berkley, $5.95.) '3.' The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan. (Ivy, $5.95.) . · 4. 50 Simple Things You Can Do to Save the Earth, by the Earthworks Group. (Earthworks Press, $4.95.) 5.ABriefHistory ojTime, by Stephen W. Hawking. (Bantam, $9.95.)

Sara Lee Collection: Exhibits Sept.9-Dec. 28, Reynolda House, Museum of American Art. Features Sara Lee's corporate collection, which includes Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works of art. Free. NASA Art: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays and 1-5 p.m. weekends, exhibits through Sept. 29, Scales Art Gallery. "Visions of Flight," an exhibition of paintings and drawings from NASA's collection, shows responses of contemporary artists to the events and technol­ogy in the space program. An opening reception will be held at 7 p.m. Sept. 7 in the SFAC lobby followed with a lecture by Dr. Phillip M. Hutchins. Free. Art Exhibits: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays and 1-5p.m. weekends, two exhibits run concurrently through Nov. 18 in the Scales Art Gallery. "Lifelines: Social Com­mentary in Prints from the 18th-20th century" includes prints by Hogarth, Goya, Picasso and oth­ers. "Observatory" is a sculptural in­stallation by Jim Hirschfield. An opening reception will be held

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). On Monday you're singled out for atten­tion from authority figures, which can

.\ be good or bad depending on your response. Mars is activating relation­ships with teachers and older members of society through the end of the year. LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23). Many new relationships are fonning already, even if you are an old-timer on campus. Write home this weekend...:... writing in general is favored, SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) Money matters, or any form of shared budget­ing, will get in the way unless settled before Wednesday. This applies to outstanding balances on loans and scholarships, too. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Much in-depth reading has been as­signed, and you need to begin right away. You might be given special tasks because of your exceptional potential. On Friday, attention from a professor or administrator is almost uncomfort­ably special. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 12). Ev­erything you've heard about the tough

6. All I Really Need to Know I Learned ill Kindergarten, by Robert Fulghum. (Ivy, $5.95.) 7. Weirdos from Another Planet, by Bill Watterson. (Andres & McMeel $7.95.) 8. The Pillars of the Earth, by Ken Follett. (NAI.:/Signet, $5.95.) 9./t'sAlways Something, by Gilda Radner. (Avon, $4.95.) 10. A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving. (Ballantine, $5.95.)

Oct. 6. Free.

Concerts

Selina Carter: 8 p.m. Thurs., Brendle Recital Hall. Music season opens with faculty recital by cellist Carter, accompanied by pianist Louis Goldstein. Free. Streetscene Music: Sat. and Sun., downtown Winston-Salem. Country recording star Steve W ariner, Broadway singer/actress Sandra Reaves-Phillips and Carolina beach band Chairman of the Board will headline the musical entertainment at the 1990 Carolina Streetscene. Free. Saxophone Quartet: 8 p.m. Thurs., Brendle Recital Hall. The Wake Forest department of music will sponsor a concert by the New World Saxophone Quartet, which plays everything from Mozart to 20th century pop.

Miscellaneous

WakeForestPoet: &p.m. Thurs., Scales Fine Arts Center. Allen Mandelbaum, Kenan professor of humanities at Wake Forest and author of five volumes of poetry,

By Joyce Jillson (c) 1990 Tribune Media Services Inc •

classes you're taking this term is starting to come true. Get orga­nized Monday and Tuesday; iden­tify problem areas. AQUARIUS (Jari. 20-Feb. 18). You're restless and have trouble settling down to the tasks at hand early in the week. As the weekend approaches, there's a strong pull from a love interest which you might interpret as a bid to monopolize your time. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). There's much turmoil in your home these days, but a female friend will help you find a quiet place to study. Despite several false starts, you're in good shape to handle the aca­demic load this semester. ARIES (March 21-April 19). Travel is favored, even if you just visit sites near campus. You might be less than pleased with a room-

New & Recommended

The Cat Who Talked to Ghosts, by Lillian Jackson Braun. (Jove, $3.50.) Nice Work, By David Lodge. (Pen­guin, $4.95.) Apollo, by Charles Murray and Catherine Bly Cox. (Touchstone, $12.95.)

-Source, Association of American Publishers/National Asso­ciation of College Stores

will read his work. Free. Docent Discovery: 9:30a.m.- noon Wed., Reynolda House. The mu­seum will sponsor their fall Do­cent Discovery for those inter­ested in becoming a volunteeF at Reynolda House. To register call 725-5325. $15.

Movies Born On The Fourth Of July: 1, 9:45 and 12:30 a.m. Fri. and Sat., 7 arid 9:45p.m. Sun., Pugh Audi­torium. $1.50. Black Rain: 8 p.m. Mon., Pugh Auditorium. Free. My Left Foot: 8 p.m. Tues., Pugh Auditorium. Free. The Little Mermaid: 9:30 p.m. Wed., Pugh Auditorium. $1.50. Casablanca: 8 p.m. Thurs., Pugh Auditorium. Free.

Theater

Harvey: 8 p.m. Sept. 14 and 15, 2 p.m. Sept. 16 and 23, 8 p.m. Sept. 20, 21 and 22, Arts Council The­atre. Reservations, adults $9, stu~ dent/senior citizens $7 .50, chil­dren under 12 $6.

-mate or lover as the Week..begins, so concentrate on work instead. TAURUS(Aprii20-May20).Ajobis available to help with expenses but it's not yourdrean1 situation. Take the job; you won't be as bored as you think. GEMINI (May 21-June 21).Try not to wear out everyone around you with your go-get-em attitude the next few weeks. Unexpectedexpensescouldpop up this week. CANCER (June22-July 22). There's nothing wrong with keeping to your­selffor a couple of days. This is a good time to strike up a new romance, go on a first date and write poetry. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) On Wednes­day you're in a quiet mood, but a classmate insists on drawing you into the action. The moon is in your sign Friday and Saturday, so you '11 have a good attitude when details go awry­and they will.

<>r.g Gallont Comumer Economlaond Hocning eom-11 Unlvtnlty

.... ·~.

"The first time I saw a MacintOsh, I was immediately hooked. It's a work of art. I saw

the student pricing and my next move was obvious: get one.

"Some other computers are cheaper, but they're a pain to learn, and working: on them can be a grueling experience. Last year, a friend bought another. kind of computer against my advtce and has used it for maybe 15 hours. What a waste.

"Macintosh, on the other hand, is a logical extension of the mind. It lets you concentrate on whaes in your paper, not on how to get it on paper. You can create prof~onal-looking

documents in minutes, and you lose the fear ofleaming new programs because they all work in the same way.

"Once youve worked with a Macintosh, there's no turning back~

. ;

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Page 16: LD - Wake Forest University€¦ · 07-09-1990  · students are no9-business majors; 6 percent go1 to the educatiynal fields; and 5 percent enter social·servJCes or government works

Fries .... 1.75 Seasoned and piping hot Bl~dle .... 3.75 Whole chicken wings with a deliciously different taste Peanuts In the Shell .... 1.75 Roasted to perfection Chips and Salsa .... 1.75 Homemade salsa with chips Chill .... 3.75 A Southern blend of beans, beef, and spices served with chips and topped with cheddar and sour cream Nachos .... 4.00 Chips topped with tostada mix, garden veggies, sour cream, and our home· made cheese sauce Veggles ... 3.75 ( A cool alternative } Cucumbers, carrots, celery, and radishes served with Ranch Dressing

Garden Salad .... 2.50 Refreshingly cool Side Salad .... 1.75 Turkey Salad .... 5.25 An array of garden vegetables topped with a generous portion of homemade turkey salad South of the Border Salad .... 3.75 Our tostada mix served on a tortilla shell topped with lettuce, tomatoes, and salsa or sour cream Grilled Chicken Salad .... 5.25 Our marinated chicken breast topped with shreded cheddar cheese served on our manicured greens

Dressings: Thousand Island, Ranch, Light Italian

OLD 1121b. ground beef

served on a toasted bun

(Served with fries ) 1141b. ground beef served on a toasted l>un

Fringe Burger .... 4.25 Lettuce, Tomatoes, and Onions

o Cheddar Burger .... 4.50 Lettuce, Tomatoes, and Onions

OBogey Burger .... 3.50 Lettuce, Tomatoes, and Onions

0Chedder Burger .... 3.75 Lettuce, Tomatoes, and Onions

OMushroom/Provolone Burger .... 4.75 0Mushroom/Provolone Burger .... 4.25 Lettuce, Tomatoes, adn Onions Lettuce, Tomatoes, and Onions

ooeacon Burger .... 5.00 Chili, Cheese, Slaw. and Onions

o Beverages (free Aefils) .... 1.00 Iced Tea, Hot Tea, or Coffee

0 Coke, Diet Coke, Sprite, Ginger Ale Milk

OCaddy Burger .... 4.25 Chili, Cheese, Slaw, and Onions

OBreezy Cheese .... 3.00

IMPflil*:~ ~&IRS Foster's 25 oz ............................... ;: ............ ; ....... Australia .................. 3.25 Moosehead and Molson Golden ....... : ...... : .... -Cariada ..................... 2.25 Glacier Bay .................................... :.: .... ; ...... ! ..... 'Canada ............. ~ ....... 1.50 Fischer 22 oz ............ : ....................... :: ... ;:: .. :: .• · ••• France ...................... 3.50 Beck's and Beck's Dark ................. ; .. : ............ m Germany .. :.............. 2.25 Heineken and Amstel Light .... ; ..... ~ ................. Holland ............. ; ..... 2.25 Red Stripe ................ :-...................................... ~ ... Jamaica .................... 2.25 Sapporo Dry 16 oz ........................... ; ................ Japan ....................... 3.25 Des Equis XX and Sol ........................................ Mexico .................... 2.25

AMERICAN, 8&&RS

Pete's Wicked Ale ............................................... Palo Alto ................ 2.25 Anchor Steam ..................................................... San Francisco ......... 2.50 Samuel Adams Lager .......................................... Boston .................... 2.25 Lightship .......................................................... .:. .. Boston ............... .:. .... · 2.25 Micheiob and Michelob Dry ............................ ~ ..... w ......................... 1.75 Budweiser and Bud Light ..... .:. ...... ; ..................... ~............................... 1.50 Miller Lite and Coors light ................................................................. 1.50

NATIJIALStJ~ Best Health's Root Beer, Lemon-Lime ..................................... .......... 1.00

. WINES Champagne Splits t/4 Boffle

Freixenet Cordon Negro Brut ............................................................. 3.75 Korbel Brut ............................................................ ; ................................ 6.75

By the Glass Glass

August Sebastiani Chardonnay .......................................................... 2.50 Sutter Home White Zinfandel ............................................................. 2.50 August Sebastiani Chablis ................................................................... 1. 75 Glen Ellen Cabernet Sauvignon .......................................................... 2.50

Wine Coolers Bottle ·

Franzia White Zinfandel ........................................ ; ............................ 2.00 California Cooler Citrus ...................................................................... 2.00

TER MINERAL WA .

Quibel Sparkling Natural, Lemon-Lime ........................................... 1.00 Evian Non-Sparkling ........................................................................... 1.00

THE BACK NINE . (Served with fries)

Steak and Cheese .... 6. 75 Sliced ribeye served on toasted French bread, topped with grilled onions, Swiss, peppers, and mushrooms

Marinated Chicken Sandwich .... 5.25 Teriyaki chicken breast served on toasted rye bread topped with lettuce, tomatoes, and Swiss

Pepper Chicken Sandwich .... 5.25 Spicy chicken breast on toasted rye bread topped with lettuce and lomatoes

Members-Only Ribeye 12.50

12oz. of choice ribeye for the big hitter (Served with fries and salad)

Dell Supreme .... 5.50 A unique blend of deli meats and cheeses topped with lettuce, tomatoes, and mayonnaise served with a pickle spear

Reuben .... 5.00 An old-fashioned corned beef and Swiss sandwich topped with grilled onions, sauerkraut and Thousand Island dressing on rye bread

Clubhouse Dog .... 3.00 All-beef frank topped with chili, slaw, and onions

Yankee Dog .... 3.00 Our big frank topped with sauerkraut and mustard

WFU Students & Staff

Visa, MasterCard and cash accepted

Cash In ON THE JPRINGE Benefits ooo$1.00 off all meals with ID 000 $1.00/1.5oz. Drafts oooDaily Lunch Specials 000Tailgate Sp-e-cials oooMonday & Wednesday/.50¢ Draft ooocold Beer & Hot Chicks

2730 University Pkwy Mon-Sat 11:30 AM-2:00 A M

All ABC ·Permits

Across from the Coliseum

723 .. 3966'

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