lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity...

6
Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NorthCarolina, 'Friday, February No. IS 81811 phola by .lin niter Binder Administrators criticized the "tavern·like appearance" of fraternity lounges in a meeting Tuesday. Possible solutions they proposed included removing beer signs and moving bars to less conspicuous locations. · 'Tavern•·like appearance' Lounge ·decor·biasted Jeff Taylor StaHWfilor Coordinator of student services David Hills pr:oposed a "line of sight" guideline as a possible solution to the "tavern-like" appearance of the fraternity lounges. At a Tuesday meeting of administrators and fraternity representatives, Hills ex- pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in the front door;" Hills said. He suggested moving them to back- rooms ·or -building partitions- so that· visitors, parents and the board of trustees do not see them in a ·casual walk through a ' fraternity lQunge. Another possibility, Hills said, might be rolling bars that could be stored out of _sight · except when they are in use. _ As a second general guideline,. he proposed an overall de-emphasis of the bar so thatit is not the centerpiece of parties .. "The bar doesn't have to be the cen· terpiece in someone's mind ... Physically, it's the centerpiece for Pika president Will Reynolds said. Reynolds asked who was offended by the presence.of the bars, but Hills was unable to give a specific .answer. "You could make positive arguments for the tavern-like appearance. but I. don't know who you'd take it to ... The landlord is 'this nebulous sort of group;''. Hills said. "We are the agents of the landlord. We don't make policy, we just implement it. "The President, for one, commented that he wanted these things_chailged. (Dean of Men) Mark Reece and I would also like to see these changes," Hills said. Interfraternity Council adVisor Bob Mills said bars have been ln. WF fraternity houses for years without prior complaints, but· Hills said they were usually in back rooms and looked like ordinary counters rather·.tb,an bars::;:·''· ... _ .. :·" .-:... __ c _ --- "Thntnivei'slWdoes·oelieve·that alcohol is not a major part of' the college ex- perience," Hills said. Hills' personal preference "ould be to remove fraternities from campus, but "no one else (in. tbe administration) is talking that way," he said. · The housing department's concern with the issue stems from _ maintenance and clean-up problems, Cunnings said. "I personally don't care about· the line of sight," be said. · Hills compared the situation to a zoning problem. Cunnings agreed and said fraternity lounges were not designed for the large-scale parties now held regularly. "You have adapted your lounges, but not the means of cleaning up," Cunnings said. Wolin advocates return· to grass-roots politics LoqlseWood SIIIHwrllor "The ground of the American political order is no longer the people," chairman . of the Princeton . gradui!te program· in political philosophy Wolin said last ·week, charging the Reagan ad- ministration with the transformation of America into . a national security .state.· · By placing the responsibility of welfare programs on the shoulders of the individual states, Reagan will not weaken the federa\ government but only make it less cumbersome, Wolin said in a lecture in the Scales Fine Arts Center on Feb. 4. "It will be leaner and meaner." "This type of state doesn't want partipants but loyal subjects," Wolin said. "A military economy is the true basis of the political society in this state." Ronald Reagan won tbe 1980 Presidential election not because the people approved of his proposed policies but because of the widespread dismay with the Carter administration, Wolin said. The low voter turnout in the 1980 election reflected the people's dissatisfaction with both choices, he said. Wolin said possibilities for revitalizing democracy lie in grass-roots politics. Such an approach allows ordinary people to take initiative and "workers to realize that they might be able to run plants by themselves," Wolin said. - il'bis new beginning is reflected in the anti-nuclear movement, Wolin said. "It challenges the monopoly of the eiperts oyer the question of the survival of the human race." Claremont graduate school political theorist Harry Jaffa characterized Wolin's theory as romanticism in his lengthy response to the latter's speech. · ' Faculty demands, gets seating change Walter Sherrill Aaolt_lilni ' After written pleas, failed to convince students to remain seated during basketball games, the athletic depart- ment -acceded to faculty wishes and created a i50-space· buffer zone for Greensboro contests. Because many faculty members were disturbed when students obstructed their view to the court, a letter from the athletic department, the Student ·Athletic Committee and the Faculty Athletic Committee was circulated to spectators, at the ·Jan. 27 game againSt Virginia. The letter thanked everyone for their support but also read in part "We must however ask, that duriilg the course of the game_ you remember your respon- sibility to keep the sight lines to the court open to those around you ...... Later, the athletic departtnent created a two-row buffer zone between tbe students and faculty by leaving 150 seats empty. Athletic director Gene Hooks said . some faculty .members were outraged when they couldn't sit and watch the ballgame. "We worked hard to get school spirit. People are free to stand and support the team. We want to give all the support we_ can," Hooks said. "We thought the buffer zone would help. Two rows is not the answer but I have to show concern for the faculty. If someone can come up with a better idea we'd be willing to consider it;'' Hooks said. Head basketball coach Carl Tacy feels caught in the middle; "I appreciate greatly the support of students and fans at the Greensboro coliseum . .As a coach I want as much noise and enthusiasm as we can possibly put together. People who go to the game and support their team should do it in that way. Sure, people have different ideas ·about how to do that," Tacy said. Tacy said he wants and appreciates fan support. He also wants freedom as long as it doesn't take the game . away from other people. "I don't want to get caught in the middle. There are considerations on both sides that have to be dealt with," be said. Tacy's ball players are most sup- portive of fans. "If you're cheering it helps us a lot. That's what makes the team go," sophomore Scott Davis said. "It is very helpful to have an en· thusiastic crowd," senior Guy Morgan said. "When fans get behind us it rattles the other .team." · President James Ralph Scales heard of some bitter exchanges between students and other spectators and was very disturbed at the report. "I don't want to condone rudeness nor do I want to quench the true spirit of enthusiasm which makes a difference in the intensity of the play. My greatest concern is for the language that was used," Scales said. Because he only received second-hand reports, Scales said he was not actually conscious of the problem. . "Good sense will prevail and will get this problem solved, too. I want Wake Forest to furnish the model of good conduct," Scales said. Rev. Warren Carr said it is more important for the students to be into the game. "I have no beef about students. (see no legitimacy, no logic in expecting en- thusiastic students to cheer from a seated position," he said. "I'm not going to get that torn up about it." Carr said there is another side to the coin, though. "There has to be realism. You can't find· athletics on student en- tbusiasm," he said. As for the buffer zone, Carr thinks it won't work. "Let's not kid ourselves ... come the Carolina game those seats won't be empty," Carr said. Lecturer in journalism Bynum Shaw sees jumping up at ballgames a natural thing to do. "You just have to realize you're going to jump up sometimes," he said. "It is an act of disrespect and thoughtlessness to stand up all the time. We have to temper our exuberances with some thought for people behind." Student response is basically one- sided.· "I'm tired of people saying we're apathetic. When we finally do show_some spirit we get reprimanded," senior Mark Myers said. "Being in the ACC, most schools are· very enthusiastic about their teams. By' . writing this letter, they're saying 'be boring'," senior Craig Waters said. "I think if anyone wants to cheer, that's their right to cheer. How can you expect anyone to be in control when you get excited?" junior Lucy Edelmann said. Senior Jeff Cyr called the situation "sacrilegious." One student responded by saying, "I think the whole issue is so idiotic I'm not even going to comment on it." Football plnyer held in RA assault Scott Fitzgerald. StaH...ttor ' Brian Sciera, _a sophomore football . - player, 'is "facing charges ot·assault after a resident advisor was injured in a dispute over a keg -of beer. _ Sciera was served a warrant Saturday by the Forsyth Sheriff's Department as the result of an incident that occurred at 2:30 a.m. that saine morning in front of the Wake Forest post office. Sciera allegedly pushed RA David Andreasen into one of the brick pillars in front of the post office, causing Andreasan to be knocked unconscious. He required treatment at Forsyth Memorial Hospital and received 60 stitches. Andreasen and Scott Reid, both RAs . for Poteat dorm, were following up on a report of a stolen beer· Their search led them to Huffman, where the dispute with Sciera .began. · Area director of residence life Joe McGill was notified of tbe incident at 8 a.m. Saturday. He filed a report that started campus judicial steps im- mediately. Sciera, who is from Cortland, N.Y., was released Sa_turday on an unsecured bond of $2500. His · court dates are unknown, but the WF Hearing Board met this week to determine if Sciera should appear before the Student Judicial Council. The Hearing Board is composed of Dean of Women Leake, professor of Greek Carl Harris and anotber student member. The hearing was scheduled yesterday in Reynolda. "This situation warrants serious at- tention due to its serious nature and it -- will get it. The administration wants to insure this delicate situation is handled properly," McGill said. "It has clearly become a matter of public concern and controversy, and- because of that, its outcome will be a defmite effect on this campus," he ad- Athletic director Gene Hooks and- football coach Al Groh declined to comment since the- incident is under Reports of tbe. incident were made by the department of public safety and the Sheriff's Department. Andreasen filed charges at Forsyth County Courthouse the m'ornfng he was released from the hospital. litigation. . Andreasen, who had the stitches removed Wednesday, returned to classes on Thursday. Jaffa: re-embrace ' o( equal rights under law Dennis Hearne Edlloltal-o<lllor The contemporary controversy over human rights serves to illuminate problems In the understanding of the natural rights of man on which the American policy was built, political theorist Harry Jaffa told an audience in Scales Fine Arts Center Feb. 4. "All Americans are human beings, but not all human beings are Americans," Jaffa, a professor at Claremont Graduate School, said. "To demand that foreign governments respect the rights of human beings ... implies that there Is a common human nature, in virtue of which there are rights shared by all men everywhere." This concept of human rights, predicated on a universal human nature with corresponding rights and duties, has its roots in the venerable ideal of natural law, Jaffa said. "Marxist-Leninists denounce ·the idea of natural rights and naturallaw in the name of history," Jaffa- said. Marxists claim western doctrine "confounds the nature of bourgeois man with the nature of man simply." The Marxist-Leninist view of natural rights is part of the ideology's claim to being a comprehensive account of the entirety of human experience, Jaffa said. The western world currently has no doctrine that can strongly challenge the communist interpretation _of events, he said. American intellectuals of both the right and left see the nation's philosophy as bankrupt and therefore cannot compete with the zealous commitment of the communists, Jaffa said. "That's why western leaders always insist that communist leaders don't really believe what they're saying," he said. Jaffa accused Wolin of attacking capitalism. "We pay a price for a rich society, but his system of change has provided great upward mobility. On whole capitalism has been a good thing," Jaffa sa1d. "The poor would be poorer and most blacks would still be in a caste system, living in an agrarian past which was only broken up by capitalism," Jaffa said. Stall plloto by Jonnlfor Btndor Princeton political theorist Sheldon Wolin accused the Reagan administration of trying to create a national security state in his Tocqueville foruin _lecture last- week. Slofl photo by Jonnll• Ben!lor Western political philosophy must return to the con· cept of natural rights as espoused by St. Thomas Aquinas and the writers of the Declaration of In- dependence, theorist Harry Jaffa said laSt week. Jaffa claimed intellectuals of the right believe in philosopher Edmund Burke's "wisdom of the species," a doctrine Jaffa said denigrated in- dividualism, and, by extension, capitalist democracy. Jaffa said the West needs tore-embrace the ideal of natural law as articulated by Thomas Aquinas and the authors of the. Declaration of Independence.

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Page 1: Lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in

Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NorthCarolina, 'Friday, February ~,_1982 No. IS

81811 phola by .lin niter Binder

Administrators criticized the "tavern·like appearance" of fraternity lounges in a meeting Tuesday. Possible solutions they proposed included removing beer signs and moving bars to less conspicuous locations. ·

'Tavern•·like appearance'

Lounge ·decor·biasted Jeff Taylor

StaHWfilor

Coordinator of student services David Hills pr:oposed a "line of sight" guideline as a possible solution to the "tavern-like" appearance of the fraternity lounges.

At a Tuesday meeting of administrators and fraternity representatives, Hills ex­pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus.

"In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in the front door;" Hills said. He suggested moving them to back- rooms ·or -building partitions- so that· visitors, parents and the board of trustees do not see them in a ·casual walk through a ' fraternity lQunge.

Another possibility, Hills said, might be rolling bars that could be stored out of _sight · except when they are in use. _

As a second general guideline,. he proposed an overall de-emphasis of the bar so thatit is not the centerpiece of parties ..

"The bar doesn't have to be the cen· terpiece in someone's mind ... Physically, it's the centerpiece for ~onvenience," Pika president Will Reynolds said.

Reynolds asked who was offended by the presence.of the bars, but Hills was unable to give a specific .answer.

"You could make positive arguments for the tavern-like appearance. but I. don't

know who you'd take it to ... The landlord is 'this nebulous sort of group;''. Hills said. "We are the agents of the landlord. We don't make policy, we just implement it.

"The President, for one, commented that he wanted these things_chailged. (Dean of Men) Mark Reece and I would also like to see these changes," Hills said.

Interfraternity Council adVisor Bob Mills said bars have been ln. WF fraternity houses for years without prior complaints, but· Hills said they were usually in back rooms and looked like ordinary counters rather·.tb,an bars::;:·''· ... :· _ .. :·" .-:... __ c _

--- "Thntnivei'slWdoes·oelieve·that alcohol is not a major part of' the college ex­perience," Hills said. Hills' personal preference "ould be to remove fraternities from campus, but "no one else (in. tbe administration) is talking that way," he said. ·

The housing department's concern with the issue stems from _ maintenance and clean-up problems, Cunnings said. "I personally don't care about· the line of sight," be said. ·

Hills compared the situation to a zoning problem. Cunnings agreed and said fraternity lounges were not designed for the large-scale parties now held regularly. "You have adapted your lounges, but not the means of cleaning up," Cunnings said.

Wolin advocates return·

to grass-roots politics LoqlseWood

SIIIHwrllor

"The ground of the American political order is no longer the people," chairman . of the Princeton . gradui!te program· in political philosophy S~eldon Wolin said last ·week, charging the Reagan ad­ministration with the transformation of America into . a national security .state.· · By placing the responsibility of welfare programs on the shoulders of the individual states, Reagan will not weaken the federa\ government but only make it less cumbersome, Wolin said in a lecture in the Scales Fine Arts Center on Feb. 4. "It will be leaner and meaner."

"This type of state doesn't want partipants but loyal subjects," Wolin said. "A military economy is the true basis of the political society in this state."

Ronald Reagan won tbe 1980 Presidential election not because the people approved of his proposed policies but because of the widespread dismay with the Carter administration, Wolin said. The low voter turnout in the 1980 election reflected the people's dissatisfaction with both choices, he said.

Wolin said possibilities for revitalizing democracy lie in grass-roots politics. Such an approach allows ordinary people to take initiative and "workers to realize that they might be able to run plants by themselves," Wolin said. - il'bis new beginning is reflected in the anti-nuclear movement, Wolin said. "It challenges the monopoly of the eiperts oyer the question of the survival of the human race."

Claremont graduate school political theorist Harry Jaffa characterized Wolin's theory as romanticism in his lengthy response to the latter's speech. · '

Faculty demands, gets seating change Walter Sherrill

Aaolt_lilni ~· ' After written pleas, failed to convince

students to remain seated during basketball games, the athletic depart­ment -acceded to faculty wishes and created a i50-space· buffer zone for Greensboro contests.

Because many faculty members were disturbed when students obstructed their view to the court, a letter from the athletic department, the Student ·Athletic Committee and the Faculty Athletic Committee was circulated to spectators, at the ·Jan. 27 game againSt Virginia.

The letter thanked everyone for their support but also read in part "We must however ask, that duriilg the course of the game_ you remember your respon­sibility to keep the sight lines to the court open to those around you ......

Later, the athletic departtnent created a two-row buffer zone between tbe students and faculty by leaving 150 seats empty.

Athletic director Gene Hooks said . some faculty .members were outraged when they couldn't sit and watch the ballgame.

"We worked hard to get school spirit. People are free to stand and support the team. We want to give all the support we_ can," Hooks said.

"We thought the buffer zone would help. Two rows is not the answer but I have to show concern for the faculty. If someone can come up with a better idea we'd be willing to consider it;'' Hooks said.

Head basketball coach Carl Tacy feels caught in the middle; "I appreciate greatly the support of students and fans at the Greensboro coliseum . .As a coach I want as much noise and enthusiasm as we can possibly put together. People who

go to the game and support their team should do it in that way. Sure, people have different ideas ·about how to do that," Tacy said.

Tacy said he wants and appreciates fan support. He also wants freedom as long as it doesn't take the game . away from other people.

"I don't want to get caught in the middle. There are considerations on both sides that have to be dealt with," be said.

Tacy's ball players are most sup­portive of fans.

"If you're cheering it helps us a lot. That's what makes the team go," sophomore Scott Davis said.

"It is very helpful to have an en· thusiastic crowd," senior Guy Morgan said. "When fans get behind us it rattles the other .team." · President James Ralph Scales heard of

some bitter exchanges between students and other spectators and was very disturbed at the report.

"I don't want to condone rudeness nor do I want to quench the true spirit of enthusiasm which makes a difference in the intensity of the play. My greatest concern is for the language that was used," Scales said.

Because he only received second-hand reports, Scales said he was not actually conscious of the problem. . "Good sense will prevail and will get this problem solved, too. I want Wake Forest to furnish the model of good conduct," Scales said.

Rev. Warren Carr said it is more important for the students to be into the game.

"I have no beef about students. (see no legitimacy, no logic in expecting en­thusiastic students to cheer from a seated position," he said. "I'm not going to get that torn up about it."

Carr said there is another side to the coin, though. "There has to be realism. You can't find· athletics on student en­tbusiasm," he said.

As for the buffer zone, Carr thinks it won't work.

"Let's not kid ourselves ... come the Carolina game those seats won't be empty," Carr said.

Lecturer in journalism Bynum Shaw sees jumping up at ballgames a natural thing to do. "You just have to realize you're going to jump up sometimes," he said. "It is an act of disrespect and thoughtlessness to stand up all the time. We have to temper our exuberances with some thought for people behind."

Student response is basically one­sided.· "I'm tired of people saying we're apathetic. When we finally do show_some spirit we get reprimanded," senior Mark Myers said.

"Being in the ACC, most schools are· very enthusiastic about their teams. By' . writing this letter, they're saying 'be boring'," senior Craig Waters said.

"I think if anyone wants to cheer, that's their right to cheer. How can you expect anyone to be in control when you get excited?" junior Lucy Edelmann said.

Senior Jeff Cyr called the situation "sacrilegious."

One student responded by saying, "I think the whole issue is so idiotic I'm not even going to comment on it."

Football plnyer held in RA assault Scott Fitzgerald.

StaH...ttor '

Brian Sciera, _a sophomore football . - player, 'is "facing charges ot·assault after

a resident advisor was injured in a dispute over a keg -of beer. _

Sciera was served a warrant Saturday by the Forsyth Sheriff's Department as the result of an incident that occurred at 2:30 a.m. that saine morning in front of the Wake Forest post office.

Sciera allegedly pushed RA David Andreasen into one of the brick pillars in front of the post office, causing Andreasan to be knocked unconscious. He required treatment at Forsyth Memorial Hospital and received 60 stitches.

Andreasen and Scott Reid, both RAs

. for Poteat dorm, were following up on a report of a stolen beer· k~g. Their search led them to Huffman, where the dispute with Sciera .began. ·

Area director of residence life Joe McGill was notified of tbe incident at 8 a.m. Saturday. He filed a report that started campus judicial steps im­mediately.

Sciera, who is from Cortland, N.Y., was released Sa_turday on an unsecured bond of $2500. His · court dates are unknown, but the WF Hearing Board met this week to determine if Sciera should appear before the Student Judicial Council. The Hearing Board is composed of Dean of Women Leake, professor of Greek Carl Harris and anotber student member. The hearing was scheduled yesterday in Reynolda.

"This situation warrants serious at­tention due to its serious nature and it -­will get it. The administration wants to insure this delicate situation is handled properly," McGill said.

"It has clearly become a matter of public concern and controversy, and­because of that, its outcome will be a defmite effect on this campus," he ad­d~d.

Athletic director Gene Hooks and­football coach Al Groh declined to comment since the- incident is under

Reports of tbe. incident were made by the department of public safety and the Sheriff's Department. Andreasen filed charges at Forsyth County Courthouse the m'ornfng he was released from the hospital.

litigation. . Andreasen, who had the stitches

removed Wednesday, returned to classes on Thursday.

Jaffa: re-embrace i~eal '

o( equal rights under law Dennis Hearne

Edlloltal-o<lllor

The contemporary controversy over human rights serves to illuminate problems In the understanding of the natural rights of man on which the American policy was built, political theorist Harry Jaffa told an audience in Scales Fine Arts Center Feb. 4.

"All Americans are human beings, but not all human beings are Americans," Jaffa, a professor at Claremont Graduate School, said. "To demand that foreign governments respect the rights of human beings ... implies that there Is a common human nature, in virtue of which there are rights shared by all men everywhere."

This concept of human rights, predicated on a universal human nature with corresponding rights and duties, has its roots in the venerable ideal of natural law, Jaffa said.

"Marxist-Leninists denounce ·the idea of natural rights and naturallaw in the name of history," Jaffa­said. Marxists claim western doctrine "confounds the nature of bourgeois man with the nature of man simply."

The Marxist-Leninist view of natural rights is part of the ideology's claim to being a comprehensive account of the entirety of human experience, Jaffa said. The western world currently has no doctrine that can strongly challenge the communist interpretation _of events, he said.

American intellectuals of both the right and left see the nation's philosophy as bankrupt and therefore cannot compete with the zealous commitment of the communists, Jaffa said. "That's why western leaders always insist that communist leaders don't really believe what they're saying," he said.

Jaffa accused Wolin of attacking capitalism. "We pay a price for h~ving a rich society, but his system of change has provided great upward mobility. On t~e whole capitalism has been a good thing," Jaffa sa1d.

"The poor would be poorer and most blacks would still be in a caste system, living in an agrarian past which was only broken up by capitalism," Jaffa said.

Stall plloto by Jonnlfor Btndor

Princeton political theorist Sheldon Wolin accused the Reagan administration of trying to create a national security state in his Tocqueville foruin _lecture last­week.

Slofl photo by Jonnll• Ben!lor

Western political philosophy must return to the con· cept of natural rights as espoused by St. Thomas Aquinas and the writers of the Declaration of In­dependence, theorist Harry Jaffa said laSt week.

Jaffa claimed intellectuals of the right believe in philosopher Edmund Burke's "wisdom of the species," a doctrine Jaffa said denigrated in­dividualism, and, by extension, capitalist democracy.

Jaffa said the West needs tore-embrace the ideal of natural law as articulated by Thomas Aquinas and the authors of the. Declaration of Independence.

Page 2: Lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in

PAGE TWO Friday, February 12, 1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Rifle range declared· a hazard Ginger Heflin

SIIIIWIIW

ROTC marksmanship courses were cancelled and the Wake Forest rifle team was disbanded this semester when the indoor rifle range was declared unsafe.

Professor of military science Matthew Murray made the initial decision to close the range.

Murray determined last semester there were two potential safety hazards associated with the indoor range: the possibility of lead con­tamination due to a lack of ventilation, and a richochet hazard from the existence of right angles down range.

"For maximum safety there should be no right angles forward of the firing line," Murray said.

"Unfortunately, our indoor range has them. While the probability of an accident was very slight, I chose not to expose my instructors nor my students to that remote danger.

"In addition, the range is not adequately ven­tilated. Again, I chose not to expose my instructors to that potential hazard," Murray said.

Murray requested a safety inspection of the range, and it was con­ducted by Fort Bragg's GI Safety Office.

As a tentative safeguard the office recommended students not be exposed to the fumes in excess of one hour per day, two days per week. The inspectors also requested ROTC instructors to wear an

approved respirator during prolonged ex-. posure.

"It was my instructors, and not the students, who might have been subject to the greatest potential hazard because of their repeated exposure," Murray said.

"I insisted that last semester's marksma­nship instructor:, Master Sargeant Torry, submit to medical tests to see if he had sustained any lead noisoning injury. Tests proved that he had not, II Murray said.

Murray allowed the continuation of marksmanship classes and rifle team par­ticipation during the entire fall semester, after army technicians determined they posed no immediate danger.

Murray does not foresee the return of marksmanship to the WF ROTC training program.

"I want to spend my time on more valuable subjects than marksmanship," Murray siad. "The ROTC program of instruction has been modified so that increasing emphasis is placed on academic pursuits as opposed to purely skill training.

"My responsibility is to develop a program of instruction that not only meets the desires of the students, but that directly contributes to the development of cadets as future officers," Murray said.

The estimated cost of adequate renovation was in excess of $26,000. "Dean (of the College

Thomas)' Mullen and director of the physical plant Harold Moore were both very supportive with regard to performing a cost analysis," Murray said.

"However, I deter­mined that the high cost of renovation in com­parison to the limited instruction that would then be made available would not be cost ef­fective," Murray said.

"Consideration was given . to continuing the rifle team activities at the army reserve center range on Stadium Drive," Murray said.

Due to scheduling conflicts and questions of WF priority on the range, the idea was abandoned and the WF rifle team was disbanded. The team consisted of six members. and placed second in the conference last year.

ROTC scholarships promise benefits Mitch Cox

Anlstant copy editor

Out of the nine different opportunities for Army ROTC scholarships available to Wake Forest students, the three-year

~ and two-year scholarship programs merit at­tention.

WF freshmen are eligible for three-year scholarships whether or not they have taken the required number of ROTC courses for entry into the advanced course. These scholarships pay for tuition, books and fees and include a subsistence of $100 per month for the recipient's remaining undergraduate years.

Application for the three-year scholarship is made through the professors of military science.

Scholarships are then

awarded on the basis of academic achievement, institutional nomination

board recommendation (two university officials are on the five-member

board) and ROTC per­formance for the can­didate enrolled in ROTC or the results of a physical aptitude test for the non-enrolled can­didate.

For those non-enrolled students seeking a two­year scholarship for the junior and senior years, qualifications also in­clude academic ac­complishment and out­standing performance at the six·week ROTC summer camp at Fort Bragg.

A student entering this camp has the op­portunities for earning approximately $700 and competing for the two­year scholarship. Each

summer about 250 scholarships are offered at this camp.

These opportunities I furthermore, do not obligate a participant to any military service.

Only in finishing camp and accepting a scholarship does the student have any com-

mitment to the military. All scholarship recipients must serve four Yl!ars as an officer on active duty.

"It has been our ex­perience that the WF student is generally very competitive with students from other institutions when going before ROTC scholarship boards," professor of military

- science Matthew Murray said.

Standards for qualification include a GPA of J.l and SAT score of 1083 for the three-year

Financial Aid

@)Anny ROTC.

How do you spell financial relief?

ROTC

SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE

scholarship and a GPA of 2.8 and SAT score of 1094 for the two-year scholarship.

"Slight preferences are given to biology,· chemistry, mathematics and physics majors applying for scholar­ships," Murray said.

Senior Richard Ball applied for a three-year scholarship his freshman year after taking some ROTC courses. Ball is a psychology major who is interested in the military.

The four year active duty service will be an advantage, as he con­siders graduate school, Ball said. "It gives me the options of four more years to decide what I want to do·or of staying in the army," he said.

Although the three- and two-year scholarships are probably of interest to more WF students,

• Full tuition, books, and fees • Up to $1 ,OOOayear for subsistence allowance • 1, 2, & 3-year scholarships available based solely on merit • Medical School Scholarships • Competition for scholarship applicants Is tough • Selection of winners is based upon the student's SAT or ACT score, demonstrated officer potential, recommendation by the Professor of Military Science, Grade Point Average (GPA), 81ld involvement In extracunicular activitie~ •

CALL US AND DISCUSS THE SPECIFICS • If you want additional Information about Army ROTC ScholarshipS or just want to call and talk about specific details ... call collect at 919-7 61·5308 • Give your parents some financial relief ... check-out the Scholarship •

there are also important one-year and four-year scholarships, Murray said.

One-year scholarships are available only to those already enrolled in the ROTC program.

The four-year scholarship program includes the same financial benefits as the three-year and two-year scholarship programs, and provides those benefits for the four undergraduate years.

Four-year scholarships are awarded to qualified high school seniors who will be attending college

. fulltime.

Qualifications are based on board scores; class rank; ex-tracurricular, athletic and leadership activities and,- for finalists, the results of a personal interview and a physical aptitude test.

:.·-:4i ...... :.~·~ ~ ~ .,_ .

Staff p/loto br Jon Jordan Wall Street Joumal political correspondent AI Hunt exchanges a few words with President James Ralph Scales before his much~discussed speech on Founder's Day last Tuesday.

Figures show high job placement I Cindy Allen

Staff wrlttr

Placement office statistics show 84 percent of the 1981 graduating class as currently employed or registered in graduate programs, the majority . of these in business and indus try or in graduate school.

These figures are impressive, par­ticularly in light of an increasingly specialized job market. Directors of educational planning and placement Toby Hale and Rick Heatley have en­couraging words for the liberal arts student in a technically oriented world.

Employers "need people who can think beyond the confines of technical tasks and duties," Hale said, "but the non­technically· oriented person needs to be more creative." Hale suggested summer

employment, internships and minor programs such as computer science as means of beefing up a more liberally oriented education with entry level skills.

Once on the job, a broader background becomes an advantage. "The tools of communication, interpretation and social skills are found. in the liberally trained person," Heatley said. "Starting salaries for the technically trained may . begin at a higher level," he said, "but those of the liberal arts graduate are catching up and moving, ahead on down the road."

Heatley emphasized two· separate tracks of decision making., the educational choice and the career choice. "Education and career don't have to be linked," he said.

IJ · Au

AI For the· last

alumni and adu together . entl telephone donat College Fund· te

Of all Coil programs, the u Feb. 25, · raise! operating monel Fund Minta Me · A relaxed, all

dominates the from 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and Th down 'Coke arid down to phone · donors, alumni" who will have a

Callers blow \111

donation. This compared to lai

Keeping trac:k McNally helps 1 offering. night!) diilner,s and bo1 businessmen.

Many alumni, help because th uThey're devott it (the telethon) alma m.ater," 1'1

Lev Arti

Catherine Foatur~ odlt

· Many fringE accompany 1 life.· One of beautiful ben1 is provided by Forest Artist The series 1 brings •. ore soloists and v< perform in Wa

This year U Series has um change in man After forme director Willi resigned last . professor of Charles Allen the nrol!ram aid, later

· assistant ·prol music David I

Levy will bE sole director and he has l head the Arti: for three year

In Decemb accompanied , meeting of

What all

one de1

With This~

~ I

Page 3: Lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in

J Di;lihg for dollars I . · A==g 1 McNally, also an alumnus, felt the

For the. last three weeks students, same way. "I just love Wake," she said·. alumni and administration have[worked Student callers, many. of whom .are · together . enthusiastically, taking fraternity pledges. doing· pledge duty, telephone donations at the sixth annual also enjoy calling for th~ telethon. "I was . College Fund ·telethon. real. nervous at first," freshman Noni

Of all College Fund campaign Lynn Dale said. Alter a few calls, though, programs, the telethon, which lasts until she fell more comfortable. "lloved it and Feb. 25, raises th<> majority of. WF I had a good time .. .! would do it again," . operating money, direc .... r of the College she said. ~und Minta McNally said.. . . "Everyone was really nice ... no one

A relaxed, almost festive atmosphere was really pushy or anything," agreed dominates the University Club Room hallmate Elizabeth Cowan, who also from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday,. participated. "People ... are sort of ex· Tuesday and Thursday nights, as C!lllers pecting you to call," she said. down Coke arid cookies before settling · Many annual donors. were waiting to . down to phone their list of· prospective hear from administrative officials, such donors, alumni with a history of giving or as President James Ralph Scales and who will have a fall reunion. . vice president of development Bill

Callers blow whistles to announce each Joyner, on the first night of the telethon, donation. This year!s goal is $200,000, McN~lly said. "Superstars' night" ~ised compared to last year's $185,000 mark. donations of up to ~1,000 and a total of

Keeping traclt of the night's donations, ~ver $55,000, .she s~1d.· .' McNally helps maintain excitement by · F~r followmg mghts, McNally ~atd, offering. nightly prizes such as free · chall'man of tb~ Colleg~ Fund nationaL diilner,S and bonuses donated by local telethon . committee J1m Sutton and businessmen. student co· chairmen Kitsie Wright and

PAGE THREE Friday, Ftbnlary 12, 1882, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

CALENDAR I

CU FLICKS: "Four Seasons" tonl'lht and Saturday at 7, 9 and 11 p.m., and Sunday at 10 p.m. in DeTamble; $1.25 with ID; "Badlands" Sunday at

. 8 p.m.; "The Red Shoes" Monday at 10 p.m.; "Foreign Correspondent" Tuesday at 8 p.m.; and "Belle de Jour" Thursday at 8 p.m.

WORSHIP: Frank Cancrow, pastoral minister at . Bishop McGuinness High School, wHI be the guest speaker at the 11 a.m. service Thursday in Davis Chapel.

JOB DAY: The office for educational planning and placement will sponsor its annual Summer Joti Day Thursday from 1 o a.m. until 3 p.m. in Reynolda Main Lounge.lnterested students may consult repre· sentatives from business, government and camps about summer employment.

Many alumni, though, merely like to Scott Bradwar try to recruit 15 student help because they cari call old friends. and 15 alumm callers. uThey're devoted to Wake Forest and · yoluntee~s are always welcome, StaHpholot>JCJ•n-£Jcum it (the telethon) 1s a way to help their McNa~y sal~ .. stude~ts may contact the Freshman Diane Hamner, sophomore Stewart Wallace and senior Alvis Rogers

LECTURE: Professor Robert F. Spencer of the Uni· varsity of Minnesota will present "Order and Disorder

.In the House of Islam" Monday at 7:30 p.m. in DeTamble.

a~~~a~m~~~te~r~,··-M~.~~-a-~~s~ru-~-·-~--a-~_.m_n_l_a_c_~_~_~_s_o_m_c_e_a_t_w_1_~_~_3~·---h-e~~-s_o_~_K_d~oo~a~~=n:s~fu~rb~~-e~~.~~~-~$200,000. RELIGION: Wake forest will participate in a Mediter· ranean travel seminar from June 6 · 16, 1982 and an excavation at Caesarea, Israel, from July 4 • Aug. 3, 1982. Interested students should contact ~· W. Hamrick, department of religion.

Levy modifies Artists ··series

Catherine Frier foaluret.edllof.

· Many fringe benefits accompany university life.· One of the most beautiful benefits here is provided by tile Wake Forest Artists Series. The series regularly brings '·orchestras, soloists and vocalists to perform in Wait Chapel.

This year th'e Artists Series has undergone a change in management. After former series director William Ray resigned last semester, professor of biology Charles Allen directed the nrollram with the aid, later on, of

· assistant ·professor of music David Levy.

Levy will become the sole director this fall, and he has agreed to head the Artists Series for three years.

ln December Levy accompanied Allen to a· meeting of the New

York City Association of College and University Com n\unity Arts Administrators. Artists' representatives attend the gathering and arrange future concerts with the various ad· ministrators.

Levy described the atmopshere at the meeting as ·rather unusual. "People are literally grabbing you by the sleeves and saying, 'Are you in·. terested in so and ·so?"'

The Artists Series suffers from poor at· tendance, which Levy blames partly on the number of other events on and off campus.

.. "' ,, •,'• :·.·

Levy is dropping the series' sub-program, North Carolina Dance · North Carolina music, in order to use its budget funds to attract per· formers of the highest quality, he said. · ·-

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Pit employee firing protested. THE STUDENT: The Student, Wake Forest's literary

magazine, is accepting short stories, poetry, photo· graphs, essays and graphics for the spring issue. The deadline is Feb. 19. Submissions may be mailed to Box ·7247 Reynolda Station, or may be left at 224 Reynolds Hall.

Kerry King Staff wrilor

Gladys Farrington is looking for a new job these days, since sbe w;~s fired as a dessert server in the Pit last month.

But a job cannot be found easily in this time of economic hardship, especially for an elderly woman in poor health.

Gladys .was fired when she missed several days of work due to illness and didn't contact her supervisor, violating an ARA requirement that employees report missing work.

Gladys cannot afford a phone and must use a neighbor's. She af:. tempted to call, she said.

"When you're so sick you can't get to a telephone, that's awful," Gladys said. "I thought my firing was uncalled for and . unnecessary." ·· ARA ' director Chuck

Hess considered Gladys' circumstances, but felt he could not break the policy in fairness to other employees.

"She violated the policy, so I didn't have a choice," Hess said. "We tried to help her in every way we could."

Gladys had worked in the Pit for almont twelve years • her only source of ·. income. She also earned some friends over the years, including junior Bill Gallagher from Charlotte.

"I feel that since she had been a faithful em·

· ployee for twelve years, she should not have been dismissed because of circumstances which prevented her from contacting her SUP-er· visor," Gallagher added.

Gladys said she is trying to find another job and .. h~s. appli~d. reluc· tantly for unemployment.

LECTURE: D'Ann campbell, dean for women's affairs and assistant professor of history at Indiana University, will give a public lecture Tuesday at 7:45 p.m. in 102 Scales Fine Arts Center titled "How Women Fought Our Wars," and another Wednesday at 9 a.m. in Tribble 8116 on "Sex Roles and Stereotypes of the 1940s."

JOKES OR CARTOONS? Lyndon Fuller, author of "Did You Hear the One About N.C. State? Jokebook," is now soliciting jokes, stories and cartoons for "Did You Hear the One About the ACC? Jokebook." Funny indiViduals may mail them to him at 131 2 Walker Drive, Kinston, North Carolina 28501.

VENICE: Students interested in· the._ Venice Pi'ogram for spring 1983 should meet with professor ol politics _David Broyles for slides and discussion at his home, 2071 Royall Drive, 4 p.m. March 2. .

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Page 4: Lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in

PAGE FOUR Frldrt, February 12, 1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK Letters to the editor

1

VIC1'()R BAS11NGS ••••••••••.•••.•••••• Editor

Majority values should prevall MARGARET KERFOOT ••••••.•.••••••.• M~ Editor MARIA HENS()N •••••••••••••••••••••••• Copy Editor MITCH COX • • • • • • ••.••••••.•.••..•••••• Assistant Copy Editor CATHERINE FRIER .................... FeaturesEditor · JOHN KORZEN ••••••••••••••••••••••••• Assistant Copy Editor AMY MEHARG .••.•.•....••.•..•••••••.• Assistant Editor DENNIS HEARNE ....................... Editorial Page Editor

Laws in a democracy may in· deed have a morl!l foundation {as ~rooke Reinhardt et al suggested

.m a letter two weeks ago). This · moral foundation,_ however, must be found in the will and values of the majority.

Crossroads America is at the crossroads. We .

are in a political crisis. Our leaders no longer know what to do nor where . to turn. Keynesian economics bas been discredited. Laissez·faire capitalism led to the Great Depression. It didn't work then. It can't' possibly work now. Both of these models are out· moded.

weak, weary; and conflised.; We : neither know where we are going .nor how t_o get there."

In their retreat they forget the . misery and poverty of the "Great Depression". They forget the child labor, the fourteen hour work clays, the starvation wages, and the unsanitary working conditions.

have tb-eii way, huge· trans· national corporations and big business will reign supreme and the unemployed citizen will be free

. to starve . Ken Ivens

WALTER SHERRILL •••••••••••••••••.• Assistant Editor ~ ~ • • .... • .. • • • • ........... Head Photographer

ARMEN • •••••••••• , ••••••••••••• Sporl8 Editor TONY SUSSMAN ••••••.••••••..•.•••..•. Associate Sports Editor MIKE GALLO· • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• Business Manager

In an AP·NBC News poll of three weeks ago, 75 percent of those Americans polled believed that the decision to have an abortion should be left to the woman and her Faced with this r,eality there is a

significant portion of our popUlation who has chosen ·to ))ury its head in the ground lik~ an ostrich when faced with an enemy. These ·people are called neo· conservatives.

. As George Santayana once said "He who forgets the past is eon· demned to repeat it".

The .conservative ar~ment is that you cannot have freedom without a free market. This. glib statement is untrue .. It makes a mockery of freedom. It means that industries are free do dump kepone, PCB's, and radioactive ·materials iri our water. They are free to pollute our skies (is it any wonder there are 5o many cancer

·'

Letters po1icy·

. PAT ENGEL ••••••••••••.••••••.•••.••.• Advertising Manager BETH ANDERSON .••••••••••.••••••••.• Sales Manager

doctor; 77 percent disagreed with the efforts by Senators Helms,

,, ~··

Wake Fornt Unlwrslty, Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Hatch, East, and others to use a constitutional am_endment or a statute to ban all abortion.

All letters submitted must : be typed double spaced on a · 50-space line and submitt~d to the Old Gold and Black office, 226 Reynolda, no later than ·5 p:m. on the !fuesday of the week in which the letter is to appear. : Letters should be . concise, ·no. longer than 300 words i!t· "length. All letters must be· signed; names withheld· only with valid

Fans and farces The Right·to·Life movement

may be sincere in its efforts to oppose legal abortion, but it is

The neo-conservative response to the political crisis is a cry of despair. It represents the· despair of Americans who feel themselves to be hopelessly · alienated from government and powerless to control their lives.

victims?) '· ,

' representative of a small minority of people in the country, and its

There are 25,000 deaths per year at the workplace. But they were free to work elsewhere. Fifty thousand people die every year in automobile accidents. But no one forced them to buy an automobile. · They· were free.

The sports trivia section of the 1992 Guinness Book of World Records will probably contain an entry like this one:

students, but it's incredible that a group of otherwise rational professors would demand such drastic measures to combat a problem that really doesn't exist.

leaders in the Senate are defying· the moral imperatives of their constitutuents. These ·people are now seeking

refuge in a golden, mythic past. They are, in effect, saying "here big business-you take over. We're

· request. The editors reserve · the right to edit for reasons of length and taste.

Carolyn Christman To these people "fieedom" is a "FANS, WORST. The faculty_

of Wake Forest, Inc. (formerly known as Wake Forest University) once pressured the school's athletic department to install seat belts in its basketball coliseum, located in The Meadowlands, N.J.

Merely to show up and sit quietly at a basketball game is no indication of support. That's why games are played in coliseums, not mausoleums. Get the message, faculty wimps: A QUIET FAN IS NO FAN AT ALL. IF YOU WANT TO SIT AND SEE THE GAME, THEN STAY AT HOME AND WATCH IT ON TV.

Rats-----------.......---'Faculty members had

complained that students were spending too much time on their feet cheering and too little time sitting down quietly.

'Company president Gene Hooks remarked, "'The seat belts may look dumb, but we've got the only stadium in the country that can withstand a 15-mile-per-hour crash.' "

The current flap over fans' conduct at basketball games is a pathetic indication of the sorry state of WF athletics. Wake Forest must be the laughingstock of the ACC; at the Wake-Virginia game, the athletic department actually distributed fliers asking fans to sit politely during play.

Seems the poor downtrodden faculty members couldn't watch the game while sitting on their wallets~

After the fliers failed to produce the desired results, the faculty made it clear something had to be done. So the athletic department created a 150.seat buffer zone to preserve sight lines for the faculty section.

Amazing. utterly amazing. The athletic department maintains the lost seats will cause no ticket shortages for

The most ironic aspect of this whole farce is the way Hooks and company jumped at the faculty demands. Hooks told the faculty to go jump in a lake when he proposed his athletic dorm; he could have done the same in this case. ·

Two more messages are in order. To the students: if shortages do occur, you can't really complain. So far this season, students have picked up only about half their allotted tickets. Which leads to the third message:

To the athletic department: don't call students apathetic simply because they refuse to drive 45 minutes to a "home" basketball game • especially now that you've told them to sit down and shut up.

Ours must be the only university in the United States that tries to bus its students to basketball games they can't even cheer for.

It could only happen at Wake Forest.

Grim fairy tale · Once upon a time in the land

of Wafoo there lived a stern but simplistic giant named Dean. Dean ruled the students of Wafoo from his ivory tower high above the walls of Castle Reynolda, and, though .he sallied forth only occasionally, his visits always created a stii'.

One day a few students were sipping a cold brew in the local pub when Dean strolled in .. "Hmmm," he hummed. "I'm a bit concerned about the tavern· like appearance of this tavern."

"But...it IS a tavern," responded a student, who was taking debate practicum and liked to argue.

The students hooted with laughter. "Ridiculous," one called. "It'll draw just as much attention there as it does here, and besides, it weighs two tons."_

"Wrong, buddy," replied Dean. "If you move the bar in back, then the students will congregate around the Coke machine instead· won't they?"

Again the students hooted derisively. "Why don't you wake up and listen to what you're saying?" asked the debater. "If you don't want us to drink, fine. Just make the rule. But don't ask us to camouflage our drinking. That's hypocritical."

''Fools!'' bellowed Dean, "Hypocritical?" sniffed the smoke rising from his nostrils. giant. "I never thought of it that "I don't care about reality! All . way before." And with that he I care about is appearances! I turfted and walked out of the do a lot of entertaining, and t a v e r n , m u m b 1 i n g , when I bring my big·shot "Drinking? ... Baptists? friends to town, I don't want Social policy? them to get the impression that Hypocritical?" you like to drink beer at social The students were puzzled, functions!" but the oldest one stood and

"Many of us.-·do," countered said, "Don't worry. He gets like the debater. this sometimes. It's not malice,

"Makes no difference," said just ignorance." The student the giant. "Now, I think this bar walked to the bar and got is a little too obvious, so why. . another beer. "Turn on the TV, don't you move it out back'-r OK? lhear there's a basketball where it'll draw less attention." game on somewhere."

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The best students demand social freedom Wake Forest, in its unending

desire to acquire a reputation as one of the nation's top liberal arts colleges, has set up overseas study programs at Worrell House in London and Casa Artom in Venice, to which it sends several dozen students each semester.

world, and the first thing this in· sight showed us was how incredibly provincial the attitudes of Wake Forest really are.

rul@i'to ·a Southern Baptist from ... The extent· of dissatisfaction is Kernersville is just not going to sell alarming. Aside ~from athletics, to the best and brightest of the East there is no school spirit whatsoever Coast, who are going to choose (and the athletic department is between Wake Forest, the Ivy tryiilg to suppress even this fee~le

It hopes to claim, on the basis of these programs, that Wake Forest is truly a cosmopolitan institution -open-minded, tolerant, with a student body of young Renaissance men and women experienced and knowledgable in the affairs of the world.

The overseas programs are in fact like this. There was not a single student with me in the London program who did not grow in some way from his experience -in self-confidence, in self-reliance, in the understanding of foreign cultures and in the ability to give and take in a mature living arrangement with others.

But as some unknown Chinese philosopher should have said, the branches of the tree can bear fruit even though the trunk is rotten. We were sent out by Wake Forest to gain wisdom and insight into_ the

On socinl policy

From our perspective far across . League, Duke, or Vanderbilt. effort). For a school so absolutely the ocean, the incessant squabbles dependent on alumni contributions, over how many dragons to put in. A school is no better than its this is a dangeroUs development. the moat around the women's student body, and this is the type of · dorms seemed beyond ludicrous. It student that can push Wake Forest was incomprehensible that the into the big-time. However, he university could send us over there wouldn't give all of Charles Dar· and trust us to behave like the win's friends in Little Rock for adults we are and not expect us to Wake Forest's hallowed Baptist come back realizing, more than traditions; what will strike his eye ever, what an indefensible farce is the fact that Wake.Forest treats Wake Forest is perpetrating him like a child while other schools against its own students. recognize that he is an adult.

The administration is living in a dream world. They want more than anything for Wake Forest to be considered one of the country's top colleges, and they claim, quite rightly, that our academic stan· dards are as rigorous as any.

The administration does not realize, however, that they cannot build t~e type of diversified liberal institution they desire on a foun· dation of narrow, antiquated social regulations.

What seems like a reasonable

My point is simple. Lu Leake and the Trustees {not a punk rock group) are digging Wake Forest's grave. They are trying to have it both ways at once, by keeping the old rules while recruiting a national student body • .a policy with potentially disastrous long· term effects. What they are doing is producing graduates who leave with no great love for Wake Forest, who see their four years essentially as time served rather than as an opportunity to grow.

The administration seems to ignore the fact that students become alumni, that it is not a good idea to keep shackles on the bands that will one day be writing their paychecks. We could, in fact, already be seeing the beginnings of an "alumni revolt". The more liberal students·of the '60s and '70s are now entering the age and in· come groups that produce the largest alumni contributions, and we can be sure that Albert Hunt ('65) is not alone in recognizing the obsolescence of Wake Furest;s social policies.

· If we lowly students are powerless, alumni certainly are not and the message Hunt has sent echoing through Reynolda Hall is truly ominous: "We have not forgotten."

John Sholar

System prompts_ sexual confusion The present administration's

ineptness in formulating a coherent and educationally productive social policy vexes my thoughts and emotions for this university so severely that I have developed a three-part con· sideration of the problem. This first part investigates the issue of sexuality. ·

I am astonished at the apparent ignorance this administration possesses about student sexuality in particular and in general. The present social policy rules do not

·deter sexual relations. Students break the visitation policy again and again, weekend after weekend, and often enough with the RAs, awareness.

A more restrictive social policy would be equally absurd. Neither the RAs nor the students at the university respect such rules; they have too much sense to.

As one educator put it, "if

housing· administrators are trUly concerned with individual growth, then adolescent sexuality must be given explicit consideration in establishing residential living patterns and programs."

Our present administration should heed those words, for the current rules and living

' arrangements encourage rather than discourage sexual promiscuity.

Males and females have so little contact with each other in-

. tellectually that they are aware of each other only as sexual creatures. Consequently, men gain no adequate understanding of women; women gain no adequate understanding of men. The very real rift between male and female sexual attitudes grows wider, and misunderstanding becomes an accepted fact of their social existences.

The same educator observes, "It

is easier to force the hypocrisy of intervisitation on the sex-oriented public and often avoid the backlash of sexually repressive public · opinion that results from . the discussions of coed living. However; it falls short of ac· ce'ptance of our responsibility to focus on the developmental needs of the late adolescent in the ob· jectives . of an educational in· stitution."

If the administration w"ut awaken to its responsibilities, it will pursue some form· of coeducational living arrangement to encourage sexual and social maturity among students. We cannot foster at­titudes of mutual respect and equality between the sexes with the current social regulations and physical arrangement of living quarters.

Liberal arts involves com· munications · of ideas among people. And sex· by no means

should be excluded from any discussion. But what perhaps is as important as discussion is the mere co-exiStence of males and females within the same dorm.

What I am driving at is a need for an environment in which men and women see each ·other as human beings, as rational creatures with feelings and rights that must be respected. that must be respected.

Our current social policy · and living arrangements cannot possibly do what I am asking because they isolate men and women. Wake Forest needs en· vironment that allows for a candid treatment of human sexuality· and an understanding of human beings, not only in terms of males and' females but also in terms of equal partners striving for the same goal of self·knowle~e.

Mitch Cox

The

ill-fated Fanny Jett's former Runaways, were by an ·obvious musical ability, commercial

Far from tuosos, the manage to and energetic compared to

·AC·DC, the sounds' fresh energetic).

Belinda vocals are Charlotte f"n·"6 ''

1'

hooks are catchy rhythm section Valentine on Gina Schock on produces a fast, beat.

Side one opens overplayed hit

Page 5: Lounge ·decor·biasted · pressed concern about the visibility of the bars in most fraternity houses on campus. "In some houses the bar is the first thing you see when you come in

'l'he Go-Go's got the beat ThnMurpby

: StaH\mtor

With the release of their debut album

. "Beauty and the Beat," the Go~Go's have achieved a unique· niche in the annals of · rock m\)sic: an · all·glrl band that plays well and sells records. ·

Their-predecessors, the ill-fated Fanny and Joan Jett's former group, .the Runaways, were plagued by an ·obvious lack of musical ability, and little commercial scccess.- ·

Far from being vir· tuosos, the Go-Go's do· manage to sound fresh and energetic (although compared to bands like

. AC·DC, the Concorde sounds' fresh and energetic).

Are Sealed," · an "This Town" close out adolescent anthem ad· the firsf side. Both songs dressing upper·class · open strongly . but fade

· lifestyles. Throughout the into o,bscurity after the record we encounter the first chorus. _ . . . theme of adolescence and Side two ope~ with its implications. "We Got the Beat;'' a

These girls are having comment on the ~g too much fun right now; ability of music. Kathy growing up is the last Valentine's five"note bass thing on their minds. run is the highlight of this Responsibility, maturity one. The wordsofferUtUe and the adult world are but the rhythm makes jt distant echoes of the enjoyable. _ fut~e. Unfortunately, im·

"How Much More" is a mense boredom settles in nifty little number about after this tune. The next a young girl who sees the song is "Fading ·Fast" love of her dreams and the album does much walking !>Y with another • of the same. The Go;Go's the crisis of puppy love. are at their best on songs Like "Our Lips Are like "How Much More" Sealed," this song is a and "Tonite." potential hit. Short, . quick and

Melodic guitars, concise, these songs spappy bass and a strong hammer home . their c'horus are noticeable points without straying

Student apathy overrules need

'

for more ·tickets Before you complain· about 150 tickets being

"taken" from ·the stude~t section at Greensboro basketball games, let me tell you a few things.

First, the top· two rows of seats in part of .the student section have been taken out to be left emP. ty, The reason is that the faculty t which sits behind the students, is unable to see over the students who stand at games. The two rows of seats are to be used as a buffer so that the faculty will be able to see the games. Something had to be .done for the faculty and this was the best alternative.

Second, the students have not lost any seats. The ticket office is able to come up with 150 tickets elsewhere for students if needed. All of these tickets are in the lower level of the coliseum. Next year simply because of your loud protests, student-· faculty seating. will be changed.

PAGE FIVE Friday, Februrrv 12, 1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

SIIH photo by Eric Wllllama Belinda Carlisle's vocals are adequate, Charlotte Caffey's guitar hooks are catchy and the rhythm section · Kathy Valentine on bass and Gina Schock on drums • produces a fast, driving beat.

·throughout the cut. It's into no man's land. On the another song WKZL will other hand, "Can't Stop probably ruin with ex·- The World" becomes an cessive airplay. effort in futility. The

"Tonite" showcases lyrics are repetitive and with the philosophy: of the music lacks vitality. living for the moment. Despite the flaws on Worrying about the this album, the quintet .. f,uture is nonsense; does have the potential to tonight is what matters. go places. The band· There's also a hint at. possesses a great amount revolution: "There's ofrawenergy, which was nothing· There's no one· demonstrated -during To stand in our way." their performance Jan. 26

When you pick up a bus coupon, you make a commitment to ride the buses. You felt very strongly about having buses provided for you, but you don't use them. Seven buses were not used for the Duke game, five were not used for the N.C. State game, five were not used for the UVa. game and three buses were not used for Georgia Tech.

Dandy Dick Major Tarver (r, played by Lamont Clegg) considers a comment by Salome (played by Julie Hartzog) while Mr. Parby (I, played by Mike Wilson) exchanges glances with Sheba (played by Becki Meyer) in WF graduate student Pat Toole's presentation of "Dandy Dick" last week in the Ring Theater.

Side one opens with the overplayed hit "Our Lips And students, let me ask you: where is your

support? You complain about 150 tickets being . "taken" from you, but you don't even use all of your tickets. For the Georgia Tech _ and Clemson basketball games on Wednesday, Feb. 6 and Feb. to; only 1400 students bothered to pick up ticket~. Granted, Clemson and Georgia Tech are not the toqghest opponents Wake Forest plays, but if you

'Chariots' captures contrasts

•Yet underlying this at Greensboro Coliseum., • notion of revolt is one of The group was en··

G MAJ · the album's flaws. The tertaining, and the music most important new was filled with much

· wave groups, the Clash . exuberance and power,

J. and the Jam, voice their qualities which are _,..,. • .-,. , dissatisfaction toward somewhat lacking on the r. particular institutions album.

· such as big business, The lyrical short· -·--- . . more dearly known as the comings took a backseat

~·I'IRE~'IEW "burning. sky." , to the poppish, up-tempo In th1s sense the melodies. The sellout .

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is not directed at· any singing and applauding cause; many times the the songs. The key for the lyrics appear vague and band's future is capturing meaningle~s. this live energy in the

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. really were as supportive as you say you are, you'd be there anyway. ,

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. game, but that is not true. You have never used all of the tickets available-to you except once, against Carolina, and then you brought all of your Chapel Hill fans to cheer for their team.

Next you complain about the bus coupons. Gene Hooks made a commitment to provide buses so you wouldn't have to drive to the Greensboro games. But you don't even use the buses you. demand.

So, before you complain about how unfairly you're treated, think about it.

Penny Humphrey Co-chairman of the

Student Athletic Committee·

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If movies were books, "Chariots of Fire" would be an elegant, expensive coffee table tome, so fine that one would be reluctant to put it on the table.

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tells the story of two British runners, Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell, who ran for the British Olympic team in the 1924 Paris games.

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As one of his friends says of his attitude toward running, "His running is a compulsion. He uses. it as a weapon against anti-Semitism." Whatever his motivation, he is very successful at running for Cambridge.

In contrast to Abrahams' elite Cam­bridge surroundings and game as a collegiate hero, Liddel. is an unknown, · the son of a Scottish missionary to China.

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m the highlands of Scotland. His running is not. a weapon, but a witness; he is quite literally a muscular Christian, running for the glory of God.

There are, however, similarities. Both men are fierce competitors. For each of them, the running and the will to

·win represents a com· mitment to principles, to a personal sense of honor. Hudson reveals with quiet clarity the fire that burns in the souls of these men.

The performances m the film are superb. Ian Charles as Liddel and Ben Cross as Abrahams give convincing, moving

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As long as one ap­preciates what the film is, and what it is not, one cannot help but admire it.

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PAGE SIX FridaY. Februarv 12.1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Morgan adds name to the rOOord book Kevin Ryan

.-.sixn wrltlf

In Wake Forest's 53-38 triumph over Georgia Tech Saturday, Guy Morgan secured his place in the Deacon record book with a lS.point performance which pushed his career scoring total over the 1000 point mark.

fail to recognize that Morgan's development as a player bas been only one part of his personal development within his four year college experience.

Morgan relishes his four years of college but he also recognizes the limitations athletics has placed on his relationships with his fellow students.

This noteworthy achievement, com­bined with Morgan's rebounding skills and shot blocking prowess, 'has established him as a mainstay in the changing fortunes of the Deacon basketball team.

"I feel the students don't really know the nature of our situation," Morgan said. "I guess they have as tough a time· relating to us as we have relating to them."

Despite this apparent drawback, Morgan feels that he has been able to meet an interesting cross section of people. ·

In his four year career, Morgan's vacillating scoring average has drawn frowns from segments of Deacon followers, but no one could ever question Morgan's high intensity level when he is on the court.

"Being a basketball player, I've 'met many students, as well as alumni who are successful business people. These experiences and relationships should be very helpful to me in my future years," Morgan said.

Many fans still grumble, however, complaining Morgan's play lacks the consistency expected of an estabJished ACC power forward, but these same fans

I Deacs pound Clemson Jeff Dunham out to lead Clemson with Wakl! got another

basket on a Helms' layup and with 16:30 to go, Wake was up 49-34 and Clemson never rallied.

Spolia w•U•r 28 points. He also added In contrast to recent six rebounds.

low scoring "stall ball" Wake trailed early in games, Guy Morgan the ·contest but when sc?red a career hig~ 25 Helms 'hit an inside shot pomts and grabbed etght five minutes into the rebounds to lead Wa~e game, Wake went up 11-Forest to a 94-76 ACC wm , 10 and never trailed over Clemson Wednesday again. night.

Clemson shot a blistering 59 percent from the field in the second half but it was not enough as Wake hit 56 percent in the final period.

Morgan had only eight points in the first half but led a Wake Forest surge in the opening minutes of the second half that buried the Tigers. This was Wake's second consecutive conference win after the Deacs beat Georgia Tech 53-38 Saturday.

The Deacons led by nine at . intermission. Behind their powerful inside game, they soon went up by as many as 16, and in the closing minutes by 18.

In the second half, the Deacs began working the ball into the middle with Morgan and John Toms doing most of the inside work while guards Danny Young and Mike Helms worked from the perimeter.

Young who finished with 16 points, and Helms, who had 17 set up frequent fast breaks, including a game ending dunk by Anthony Teachey.

The Deacs played as a team as Young had seven assists and Scott Davis had five, including a behind-the-head pass to Helms for a layup.

Vincent Hamilton singlehandedly kept Clemson in the game. Hamilton, a sophomore scored from inside and

Six unanswered points by Wake gave the Deacs a seven-point edge · and Clemson never got closer than three despite the play of Hamilton.

The second half opened with Clemson in a man­to-man defense but it failed to stop Morgan. He tipped in a Johnstone miss and after a Tiger basket, hit a jumper off of. a Toms' steal.

Three minutes into the half, Toms tipped in another Johnstone miss, and Helms hit after a Clemson turnover.

The Deacs sealed the win with free throws, hitting 19 of 23 in the second half.

Head coach Carl Tacy was pleased with the team's game and praised both Morgan and Toms. Tacy said he felt this was Morgan's best game.

Tacy credited the win to good offense and strong rebounding as well as the team's patience in waiting for their shots.

Mike Helms suffered a groin pull late in the second half and it is not known whether he will play tomorrow against Duke·

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It is as his status . as a basketball player, however, that Morgan receives the notoriety .accorded to the special niche he occupies in the Wake Forest community.

"I look at my role as a basketball player as being a responsibility," Morgan said .. "A responsibility that requires me td be on the court doing my part to help the team."

Morgan pursues basketball with a workmanlike ethic that not only makes basketball fun. but also a job. It is a job that has demanded dedication, patience and a certain degree of self-discipline.

"I try to play a well-rounded game. I don't like to say that I rebound or shot block better than I score because I'm trying to execute in all areas of my game equally," Morgan said.

demeanor on the playing floor, but ac­cording to Morgan, his on the court nature- certainly doesn't stem from boredom.

"I try to show enthusiasm," Morgan said, "but I'm just not a rah-rab type of person." · .

As the current Deacon campaign reaches it's later phases, Morgan offers some.interesting insights into this year's squad, as compared to other Deacon teams ~e has played on.

"I'm: not sure how we are playing because I feel we can play at a much higher level.· We just haven't been as consistent as we would have liked.

"I think that the games we have lost demonstrate this. I can only attribute our losses thus far to a lack of intensity."

Interestingly, Morgan sees a · significant difference between this year's team and last year's even though both squads have experienced success.

"During a course of a game I try to fit into whatever the game plan requires. I try to perform in tlie area I'm needed most whether it be rebounding, defense or scoring."

Morgan is more than aware of the expectations placed upon him during his seni91' season, yet his game preparation involves little ritual. ·

"I really do nothing special," Morgan said. "I just try to practice hard and relax before the game."

"Last year we would get really fired up when we would win, but this year we seem to be building up towards a peak at the end of the season. You really can't put your finger on it but it is just a ~ feeling." · 1:· ..

Morgan senses that the team has the · ability to play extremely .. strong basketball in the final part of this season which would provide a great finish to Many fans have also been known to

question Morgan's relatively quiet Morgan's fine career. ·

. OGIB flit photo

After grabbing the rebound, Deacon senior (luy Morgan goes b;ack up to slam it home.

·Gleason perseveres at center KarinArmen

Spcwtt editor

Senior Janet Gleason is one of only two members of the 1981-'82 ·women's basketball team that has played for all four years of her college career. · Surprisingly, when she started out as a fresh­man, there were eight other freshmen on the team. However, most of them either quit, tran­sferred; or failed to make the team in.later years; quite an attrition rate.

Gleason has been a starting center for eight years, commencing with her first attempt at organized basketball in ninth grade. She attended school in London at an American Air Force base and became the team's MVP; gaining all­conference honors. The team lost only two games that year. The following

-year the team won the championship title and lost only one game during the Sel!-SOn.

"When I look back at bas.ketball in high school, it seems unbelievabley easy·now," Gleason said.

In eleventh grade, Gleason returned to Maryland. At High Point High School she remained a caliber

player, gaining all­conference honors for the third and fourth . con­secutive years.

Gleason wrote to about twenty-five college coaches her senior year touting her abilities and inviting coaches to Visit. The day that Barbara Warren, then Wake Forest women's basketball coach, visited, Gleason had the best game of her career, scoring 23 points in the first half.

in the world to lose 1oo-48 and know that you're not

_ a bad athlete. Still, I never went into a game expecting to lose."

Sophomore year the Deacs moved to Division II play because they weren't giving out enough scholarship money to be in Ii'ivision I.

"It was a good move for us to move to Division II play in order for our developing program to be competitive," Gleason said.

"I . was accepted at "Things looked up a lot . about half a dozen schools that year. We got a new but Wake Forest had the - coach (Wanda Briley) best academics and who has helped me so athletics. I thought much she knows the playing in the ACC would · game' inside and out."· be a challenge. In fact, it turned out to be a little bit more of a challenge than I expected," Gleason said.

In Gleason's freshman year the Demon Deacons' playing in Division I, acquired a record of 2 wins and uncountable losses.

"It was very hard. We were basically a fresh­man team and none of us were outstanding ballplayers. A lot of the losses were devastating," Gleason said.

"It's hard on you to lose big. It's the worst feeling

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That season the Deacs won seven games and played in the · state Division II tournament. In order to ·qualify for the tournament, the team had to beat Guilford College in a regular season game by fifty points and they did it.

"It was quite an ac­complishment for us," Gleason said.

During her sophomore year, Gleason also played on the volleyball team.

"The team didn't have enough players so I just decided to play because I··

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liked volleyball. We won the state championship and it felt great to win.

"It did me more good mentally than anything. It was a lot of fun and a · great experience."

Gleason played volleyball for only one season because of the time that basketball and studying required.

· Gleason classifies . her junfor year ·as a basketball player as a strange one_

"Only . four of us returned to · the team from the year before and it was quite a transition. We had to adjust to new people and a new kind of basketball.

"We could finally develop a fast break game. There were more people to 'depend on to score and do well in a game, but we blew a lot of games that we shouldn't have.

"This year · has definitely been a year of ups and downs. We have a lot of talent and super players, but no con­sistency. We don't have anyone to take charge as

· the offensive leader like Jane Jackson used to be. We have no one to depend

on to score when we need it."

The Deacons have a 9· 13 record and they have played a difficult schedule. Lack of con· sistency has been the common complaint among team members and coaches.

"We should have done better this year. The high point of the season was before Christmas when we beat Duke by eight or nine points. It's the first time we've beaten them in four years. We were playing. well then, the

guards were shooting well and the inside people were taking it up well.

"Since the first Appalachian State game on Jan. 18·, we lost a lot of confidence. We have more trouble playing against the man to man defense than we do the zone <tnd now everyone is playing us man to man.

"I doubt we'll get into the regionals unless we get a couple of good games; score a couple of upsets.

"The team should be great next year. They are improving so fast and there are the makings of an excellent team there. Hopefully at the end of this season we'll get out of our losing rut. Losing gets kind of contagious."

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