new lxiv .. wake university, north no.22 ~· . . school of athletics? … · 1982. 4. 16. ·...

6
-Voi .. LXIV ' .. .. Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, Aprill6, 1982 . ' . . . . . . . . ·-. . . No.22 School of athletics? Hottinger plan questioned Three-wheeled mania . Two unidentified tricycllsts race i_n the.first leg of Greek Week's Quad 500. The Sig Eps eventually won the event and the Greek Week competition. 1 Springiest events in full swing Kerry\UJlg Blofl- One of the most popular Wake Forest traditions will be well underway by the time you read this story. Springfest •32 began earlier this week and will con- clude tom9rrow. Seaman praised Ford for his hard work. "He knows how to get people enthusiastic and how ·to handle ·responsibility." One of the additions to Springfest this year was the Special Olympics held Tuesday. Although the olym- .. pies are held at Wake Forest every year, the decision to schedule it during Springfest week was made to focus on those less fortunate. The annual event is sponsored by College Union each year and has become an institution in its seven years of existence. CU director Mike Ford was one of many people who On Wednesday Scott Jones, a vocal, piano and . were eagerly anticipating the start of Springfest. · ·guitar artist, presented a concert in Reynolda Main "I'm ready for it to' start," Ford said several days · Lounge, ago. "I'm hyped up, but I do have some anxiety that ; ThUrsday night, The Amazing Kreskin, one of the something could go wrong." best mentalists in the world, presented a show. Springfest was started by College Union "to fill a Today's events include roller skating on the Quad void of. community participation in the spring. What and activities on Mag Court. Caricatures and tintypes started with a few musical groups has turned into . &re available in Reynolda. . almost a week-long celebration of spring," Ford said. "Students have come to see it as an institution," be Tonight students will perform in the. annual talent said. "Everyone looks . forward to the fun and show in Wait Chapel. Comedienne Judy Carter will be fellowship and excitement." the master of ceremonies. All of the 12 CU committees are involved in the· · Saturday's events start with the Ultimate Frisbee planning for Springfest, which is the largest event of tourney on the field at 9 a.m. its held the year. . - At noon the excitement moves to GraiiYn· The Seaman IS a of spectal T nd th Kelly James Band will perform in the . . ... b!lcause .it."-- tt!oughout: the afterlioon; The· Residence involves a lot of people, she sai.d. It s a to, HouSe Council pig-plekin' will cDnclude the day's relax before exams and to be w1th your friends. activities at 5 p.m. Unity makes 'Pinafore' a success Mitch Cox Aialllant copy odlt« The Wake Forest University Theater production of Gilbert and Sullivan's "H.M.S. Pinafore" excitingly lnvolves cast and audience in the most theatrical and entertaining play of the season. ·Director James Doddlng astounds the audience with another successful performance, which unites actors and theater-goers in a rare experience of community. This feeling of community recurs throughout the play. . Lisa Stephens' performance as Little Buttercup strikes us with excellence from her descent on center stage to her marvelous antics and stares in the rendition of "Things Are Seldom What They Seem. 1 ' Likewise, Mike Carter's por· trayal of Captain Corcoran en· tertains the audience with the essence of genteelism. His man- nerisms convilice us of the stateliness of an English sea captain. Tony Luper's performance as Ralph Rackstraw magnificently exploits the stereotype· of the melancholy lover. To complement his portrayal, Libby Garten develops Josephine with just the proper tension between haughtiness · as a capfain's. daughter and passion as a lover. If these performances were not enough to implant the spirit· of comedy in the production, the respective portrayals of David Gregory, Anne Owens and Patrick Lowder as Sir Joseph Porter, Hebe Tring-Hervey Bogworth and Dick Deadeye would alone express the comic sense of Gilbert and Sullivan. Gregory's character inspires the audience to play with him throughout the musical number of "Never Mind the Wliy and Wherefore." His zany bumbling Is a memorable part of the evening's entertainment. Anne Owens' Hebe projects a regal authority that also makes the production a cast of amusing characters, and Lowder's Dick Deadeye does as much to steal the show as GregDry's Porter. But in this community of characters, the "Pinafore" crew, the sisters, cousins and aunts of Porter and other characters in the play are the actual thieves of the show. Throughout the production, the audience has the feeling it has somehow stumbled on to a family gathering. The sailors and other characters all seem to have a place on board the "Pinafore." Dodding, of course, deserves credit for enriching the play with . this sense of community. He has given each character a name and identity; and thus when we view his production, we see people, not actors moving around the stage. The excellence of the production, however, does not end with the actors and directors. Conductor David Levy seems as much a member of the cast as his musicians. The pageant of the play, moreover, is to be com- mended, for it contributes to the overwhelming beauty of the whole. When the applause fades after ·the performance, we therefore feel more like leaving family than · actors. Performances are 8 p.m. tonight and. tomorrow evening and 3 p.m. Sunday. Geoffrey Shorter 8tollwrflw A proposal at Monday's faculty meeting by physical education department chairman William Hottinger to "resolve the academic · ·athletic dilemma" has been largely misunderstood, Hottinger said. Hottinger's proposal calls for the creation of a School of Athletics at colleges and universities nation- wide: Students who enroll in this school would not be degree can- didates but would receive a cer- tificate of attendance after four years .. "My number one intention in putting forth the proposal was to get an open discussion to provide new insights into the problem of athletics" at major universities, Hottinger said. The proposal has already started discussion of the issue by faculty ·members. Professor of English John Carter is concerned as a citizen about the integrity of higher education. "Nationwide, colleges with big·time athletics are clinging to some unrealistic premises," he said. Associate professor of politics Jon Reinhardt believes athletics should be an adjunct to academic institutions. Associate professor of politics Donald Schoonmaker questioned the contribution of major sports to the goals of today's colleges and universities. Hottinger meant for his proposal James Q. Wilson Dennis Hearne Edll«<ol_odH .. The question of the American political order's reponsibllity in dealing . with the problem of crime will be the focus of this semester's concluding Tocqueville Forum. James Q. Wilson, Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Govern- ment at Harvard University, will deliver a lecture at 4 p.m. Monday in Scales Fine Arts Center. He will be followed by Harvard Law School professor Lloyd Weinreb at 8 p.m. in the FAC. to initiate discussion of a national problem, not specifically a·thletics at Wake Forest. "I think we have a better staff in WF athletics than we have ever had," he said. "I cer- tainly don't intend for Wake Forest to do this in any unilateral sense - ·that would be foolish." There are many positive at· tributes exchanged between athletics and academics, HottiDger said. However, it might be time to reconsider the place of athletics in colleges nationwide, including Wake Forest, he added. He said his proposal is best characterized as a realistic ap- proach to the problem. Many of the athletes at Wake Forest are not academically qualified to enter, yet they are expected to perform well, he said. . . Hottinger quoted figures from an NBC television report that 98 percent of all NBA basketball ·players went to college, but 50 percent of those did not graduate. In the NFL, the report said, 90 percent of the professional football players went to college, and 75 perce.nt of them did nDt graduate.. Most of these people probably did not deserve ·the degree either, Hottinger said. The dilemma is that many of the athletes in college nationwide should not be in college, he said. In reality, "they are already entered in a non-degree program. I think that's unfair," he said. Hottinger wants to resolve the problem in the best interests of Tocqueville series ends with Wilson, Weinreb He contends the best method a government can use in com- bating crime is to press for swift apprehension, prosecution and punishment of criminals. Wilson received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and has taught at Harvard since 1963. He was chairman of the · White House Task Force on Crime and chairman of the Vice President's Task Force on. Order and Justice during the __ Johnson administration. Wilson will argue that government is limited in its ability to identify and improve upon those social, economic and personal factors that contribute- Wilson was also chairman of Harvard's much-discussed committee on the evaluation of a core curriculum. Wilson's best known book is "Thinking About Crime" (1975). to criminal both athletics and academics. He believes faculty meetings are an appropriate forum for the issue. "Everyone should have the chance to pursue the dream of making it big in professional sports," Hottinger said, no matter how small the chance. A School of Athletics or similar concept would give athletes that chance without forcing them to major in a subject they are not interested in, he said. Hottinger likened four years in a School of Athletics to enlisting in the army. "It would still be a good experience for the athletes" even if they don't •make a career out of athletics, he said. "It's not lost time. It's an opportunity for athletes who can't make it academically at college." "The constant struggle to keep athletes eligible to play by juggling academic courses" at colleges across the nation is a major part of the problem he is trying to address, he said. "Athletics is big business now," Hottinger said; "Let's be realistic. Big-time athletics is no longer a part of the academic process" as · intramural sports are, he said. "I can see bow some people are upset by the proposal," Hottinger said. "I think these people will have to readjust their thinking about big-time sports."' A decision about the proposal should not be made until everybody understands the issues, Hottinger said. "Nobody knows for sure how this should be handled," he said. Lloyd Weinreb Government's responsibility .in fighting crime should extend to improving repressive social conditions that are conducive to criminal behavior, Weinreb will argue. Weinreb holds degrees from Dartmouth College, Oxford University, and Harvard Law School. He has been a professor at Harvard since 1965. Weinreb has been a law clerk for United States Supreme Court Justice John Harlan, an at· torney with the U.S. Department of Justice, and a consultant to various government agencies. His books include "Denial of Justice" (1977) and "Criminal Law" (1969). Maya Angelou: courageous,· lovely, loving Catherine Frier and Amy Meharg Footu1111 odllar Maya Angelou, autobiographer, actress, playwright, poet and Wake Forest Reynolds professor, believes with Aristotle that courage is the most important virtue. Courage is the keystone of Angelou's life, writing and teaching. _ · . Angelou is currently teaching an eight-session course at Wake Forest titled "Race in the Southern. Experience before Emancipation: Four Voices." The "four voices" ·are David Walker, William Lloyd Garrison, Douglass and Harriet Beecher Stowe. Angelou chose them because they were all extremely courageous. "They at once had the courage to delve into their society and see what was wrong, what they disagreed about, then had the courage to speak out and risk everything," she said. In tbe four volumes of·her autobiography, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" "Gather Together in my Name 1 " "Singin' and Swingbt' and · Merry Like Christmas" and "The Heart of a Woman," Angelou herself speaks out bravely. Angelou unsparingly describes her experiences as a young black . growing up in the segregated South, including being raped at· age eight l' and becoming an unwed mother at 17. · Starting as a cook in a Creole restaurant, Angelou has since managed a brothel, waitressed and sung and danced in night clubs. Her singing and dancing talent helped lift her from a seedy nightclub to one where she was spotted by members of the· company of ''Porgy and Bess." She danced in "Porgy and Bess" during the show's European tour. Later>she became a member of the Harlem Writers' Guild, worked as the northern coordinator for Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference and became the first female editor of an English language magazine in Cairo. Angelou ·wrote the screenplay and score for the film "Georgia, Georgia," and wrote and co-produced "Sisters," which will be a June NBC movie of the week. She left California last year to "give it a rest," and moved to Winston- Salem because of its beauty and because "there is a challenge in Winston ... there are people at extremes," she ·said. Angelou has chosen to express herself through autobiography because "Ilike tl,te autoblographicalform very much, or rather, Ilike what can be done with it. "I have a great ambition to increase the value of the form. As a literary form it has been hitherto not much appreciated. Hitherto, it bas been really used to gather and distribute facts as opposed to truth," she said. "I wanted to see if I could write history from one person's point of view, to see how .•. large public would influence one person, and maybe how.that person subsequently goes on tb influence public events," she said. Angelou hopes that in 50 or 75 years autobiography will be a great literary form. "I don't think the ambition is oubJized because the novel as a form is only '8 ·couple of hundred years old," she said. One of the problems with young people growing up is that they fall under their age's influence and the influence of people who believe art_ should be separate from life. "At its best, art is life," said. "I think every person is born with talent. We all come from the Creator .creative," Angelousaid. Schools, including universities', must foster this· creativity rather than squelch it, she added. · "The teachers -must be convinced, the boards of trustees and ad- ministr.ation must be convinced that art is life and life 1s important," Angelou said. The courageous force that drives Angelou's creativity seems to have been inherited from her mother, Vivian Baxter. "She's a stunner," Angelou said. Baxter retired three years ago from the merchant marine, - which she had joined in _1959. · .. . Angelou was extremely surprised when her mother 'who had pursued a variety of careers, decided to go to sea. Angelou her mother's explanation for her decision. "'They told me they couldn't let black women in their union, she said. 'You know what I told them, baby? I told them, "You want to bet? I'll put my foot in that door up to my hip, Women of every color will walk over my foot, get aboard of ship and go to sea,'" Angelou's mother said. Black, white, Asian and Hispanic women now ship out of San Francisco, and 50 of them along with their spice (Angelou's plural for spouse) feted her mother when she retired, Angelou said. Her position as the first Wake Forest Reynolds professor will not stop Angelou's traveling. She plans to take a number of black and white Southern students to Ghana in the fall of 1983 to study African culture and its impact on the West. plans for an African study program in 1982 were disturbed by a coup in Ghana. Thus this fall she will teach "Race Politics and Literature"at Wake Forest.' ' · Angelou would like to be remembered "as a good human being ... courageous\ cheerful; lovely,loving human being, that wDuld be the best, and then, as a writer," &he said.

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  • -Voi .. LXIV ' .. ~·

    .. Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, Friday, Aprill6, 1982 . ' . . . . . . . . ·-. . . No.22

    School of athletics?

    Hottinger plan questioned

    Three-wheeled mania . Two unidentified tricycllsts race i_n the.first leg of Greek Week's Quad 500. The Sig Eps eventually won the event and the Greek Week competition. 1

    Springiest events in full swing Kerry\UJlg

    Blofl-

    One of the most popular Wake Forest traditions will be well underway by the time you read this story. Springfest •32 began earlier this week and will con-clude tom9rrow.

    Seaman praised Ford for his hard work. "He knows how to get people enthusiastic and how ·to handle

    ·responsibility."

    One of the additions to Springfest this year was the Special Olympics held Tuesday. Although the olym-.. pies are held at Wake Forest every year, the decision to schedule it during Springfest week was made to focus on those less fortunate.

    The annual event is sponsored by College Union each year and has become an institution in its seven years of existence.

    CU director Mike Ford was one of many people who On Wednesday Scott Jones, a vocal, piano and . were eagerly anticipating the start of Springfest. · ·guitar artist, presented a concert in Reynolda Main

    "I'm ready for it to' start," Ford said several days · Lounge, ago. "I'm hyped up, but I do have some anxiety that ; ThUrsday night, The Amazing Kreskin, one of the something could go wrong." best mentalists in the world, presented a show.

    Springfest was started by College Union "to fill a Today's events include roller skating on the Quad void of. community participation in the spring. What and activities on Mag Court. Caricatures and tintypes started with a few musical groups has turned into . &re available in Reynolda. . almost a week-long celebration of spring," Ford said.

    "Students have come to see it as an institution," be Tonight students will perform in the. annual talent said. "Everyone looks . forward to the fun and show in Wait Chapel. Comedienne Judy Carter will be fellowship and excitement." the master of ceremonies.

    All of the 12 CU committees are involved in the· · Saturday's events start with the Ultimate Frisbee planning for Springfest, which is the largest event of tourney on the Potea~ field at 9 a.m. its kin~ held durin~ the year. . - At noon the excitement moves to GraiiYn· The Jen~er Seaman IS a ~ember of ~e spectal even~ T nd th Kelly James Band will perform in the

    . . co~1!1I~ ... :'UiJI:~ \V()r~g wltb.SP11?~~sJ b!lcause .it."-- b:~s s~en tt!oughout: the afterlioon; The· Residence involves a lot of people, she sai.d. It s a chanc~. to, HouSe Council pig-plekin' will cDnclude the day's relax before exams and to be w1th your friends. activities at 5 p.m.

    Unity makes 'Pinafore' a success Mitch Cox

    Aialllant copy odlt«

    The Wake Forest University Theater production of Gilbert and Sullivan's "H.M.S. Pinafore" excitingly lnvolves cast and audience in the most theatrical and entertaining play of the season. ·Director James Doddlng

    astounds the audience with another successful performance, which unites actors and theater-goers in a rare experience of community. This feeling of community recurs throughout the play. .

    Lisa Stephens' performance as Little Buttercup strikes us with excellence from her descent on center stage to her marvelous antics and stares in the rendition of "Things Are Seldom What They Seem.1'

    Likewise, Mike Carter's por· trayal of Captain Corcoran en· tertains the audience with the essence of genteelism. His man-nerisms convilice us of the stateliness of an English sea captain.

    Tony Luper's performance as Ralph Rackstraw magnificently exploits the stereotype· of the

    melancholy lover. To complement his portrayal, Libby Garten develops Josephine with just the proper tension between haughtiness · as a capfain's. daughter and passion as a lover.

    If these performances were not enough to implant the spirit· of comedy in the production, the respective portrayals of David Gregory, Anne Owens and Patrick Lowder as Sir Joseph Porter, Hebe Tring-Hervey Bogworth and Dick Deadeye would alone express the comic sense of Gilbert and Sullivan.

    Gregory's character inspires the audience to play with him throughout the musical number of "Never Mind the Wliy and Wherefore." His zany bumbling Is a memorable part of the evening's entertainment.

    Anne Owens' Hebe projects a regal authority that also makes the production a cast of amusing characters, and Lowder's Dick Deadeye does as much to steal the show as GregDry's Porter.

    But in this community of characters, the "Pinafore" crew, the sisters, cousins and aunts of

    Porter and other characters in the play are the actual thieves of the show. Throughout the production, the audience has the feeling it has somehow stumbled on to a family gathering. The sailors and other characters all seem to have a place on board the "Pinafore."

    Dodding, of course, deserves credit for enriching the play with . this sense of community. He has given each character a name and identity; and thus when we view his production, we see people, not actors moving around the stage.

    The excellence of the production, however, does not end with the actors and directors. Conductor David Levy seems as much a member of the cast as his musicians. The pageant of the play, moreover, is to be com-mended, for it contributes to the overwhelming beauty of the whole.

    When the applause fades after ·the performance, we therefore feel more like leaving family than · actors.

    Performances are 8 p.m. tonight and. tomorrow evening and 3 p.m. Sunday.

    Geoffrey Shorter 8tollwrflw

    A proposal at Monday's faculty meeting by physical education department chairman William Hottinger to "resolve the academic · ·athletic dilemma" has been largely misunderstood, Hottinger said.

    Hottinger's proposal calls for the creation of a School of Athletics at colleges and universities nation-wide: Students who enroll in this school would not be degree can-didates but would receive a cer-tificate of attendance after four years ..

    "My number one intention in putting forth the proposal was to get an open discussion to provide new insights into the problem of athletics" at major universities, Hottinger said.

    The proposal has already started discussion of the issue by faculty ·members. Professor of English John Carter is concerned as a citizen about the integrity of higher education. "Nationwide, colleges with big·time athletics are clinging to some unrealistic premises," he said.

    Associate professor of politics Jon Reinhardt believes athletics should be an adjunct to academic institutions. Associate professor of politics Donald Schoonmaker questioned the contribution of major sports to the goals of today's colleges and universities.

    Hottinger meant for his proposal

    James Q. Wilson

    Dennis Hearne Edll«

  • PAGE TWO Friday, Aprll16, 1882, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

    Off-campus living allows privacy Louise Wood

    11oft-

    Six hundred students enrolled at Wake Forest do not live on campus for reasons of personal choice or administrative policy.

    Of those 600, 300 are day students who live in the Winston-Salem area and commute to school. The other half have chosen to move off campus, were never allowed on, or have lost their housing privileges • the majority falling into the first category.

    "Living off campus is an entirely different· experience. It includes a degree of responsibility

    that anows a student privacy and more room," director of housing Ed Cunnings said. "It's a good bridge between college life and post-college life. You learn to deal with landlords and non-student neighbors," he said.

    The loss of touch with campus activities, greater expense and scarcity of parking spaces for commuting students are all factors which should be con-sidered if a student is comtemplating a move off campus, Cunnings said.

    The decision is also a relatively permane11t

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    one. "Though there is a waiting list, it's very difficult to get back on," Cunnings added.

    There's more room and no rules," he said.

    "I like the privacy and the better study at· mosphere," senior Scott Magruder said. "But it's

    this coming fall semester but couldn't get my status changed from day student to local," she said. "For most studenb,

    hall living is an ex· t.remely important part of the transition from home to the real world," Cunnings said. "In terms of friendship and academic experience, dorm living allows for a different kind of relationship between peers and men and women," be added.

    not like a dorm where if a "I'm going to keep on couple of people go off, trying, though, because you've still got six or I'd like the experience of seven to do :Something living on campus," with." he added. _ Sherrill added.

    Many students grow tired of communal living, though, and despite the drawbacks, choose to live elsewhere. Senior Stuart Walton said he does not regret his decision to move off campus. "I like the freedom you have in your own apartment.

    Junior Billy Buff cited the expense as one of the main reasons he has chosen to live off campus. "I'm living here, at my grandmother's, to save money," he said.

    "It's a pain going back and forth, and you miss out on some of college life, but it's not too_ bad," Buff said. "If I could af· ford to live on campus, I probably would • but only · in New Dorm or the townhouses," he added.

    ---------,_ "The decision to live off.

    Amity campus was forced upon me since I didn't apply until June for the fall semester," freshman Trisha Sherrill said. "I tried to get on campu_s for

    Winston-Salem resi· dents have a particularly difficult time getting campus housing. "Very few women from Win· ston·Salem get on. The men have a better chance, since more men than women move off campus and open up dorm space," Cunnings said.

    Exeeptfor juniors, if an

    ·, Sfalf photo by Btctly llln11011

    In spite of this sheep's protest, 369 seniors, more than expected, have ordered sheepskin diplomas. ·

    Seniors demand sheepskins area student does get on Cindy Allen registrar Margaret Perry ·Earlier this year; the campus midway through &toHwtlter said. company which had an academic year, his or . The number of There have been 369 supplied the sheepskin her status reverts back to graduating seniors or- requests for . diplomas, diplomas went out of day students at the year's - de ring sheepskin and the department is business. Consequently, end and thus makes him diplomas exceeded accepting no more the university decided to ineligible for the·housing estimates projected by requests because of ·the change to more con· lottery. the registrar's office, shortage of diplomas~ ventional parchment.

    ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Complaints of graduating tMHH_HtN __________ ,_Wit! 11 st~dents · .led the

    SUMMER HOUSING DICTA TYPE TYPING SERVICE ·

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    PRE-SCHOOL: Discussion .readers, lifeguards, kitchen workers, and resource people.are needed for pre· School orientation conference for entering freshmen August 24-27. The conference theme is "Taking Risks to Build Bridges." Interested students should call761-5248 Monday-Friday afternoons. '

    DANCE: The WF Dance Company will present a spring dance concert at 8 p.m. April 23-24 in the scares Fine· Arts Center. The program will feature

    · WF students performing modem, jazz and ballet dances. Tickets are $3 ($2 for students). For information, cal1761-5393.

    CALEMJAR llems most be -10 1l>o Old Gold onclllllt:lo ollicQ, 2:18 Roynd

  • PAGE FOUR F~day, Aprll18, 1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

    . ' . .

    ®lb Oiolb nub iGlatk VICTOR HASTINGS ••....••..• : ••...•.•. Editor MARGARET KERFOOT • · • · · • · ....•....••• Managing Editor MARIA HENSON •••• ~ ..•.••.....••.••••• Copy Editor MITCH COX • • • • • • • • • • • ................. Assistant Copy Editor CATHERINE FRIER ...•.•....••.....••• Features Editor JOHN KORZEN •.•..••.•.•......••..•.•. Assistant Copy Editor AMY MEHARG· · • •..••••.......•••..••.. Assistant Editor DENNIS HEARNE ••.•...••...•.••.•.•..• Editorial Page Editor WALTER SHERRill. ....••.....•••••.•• Assistant Editor · ERIC WILLIAMS .•.••.••.•...•..••...••• Head Photographer KARIN ARMEN . . .......... · · ............. Sports Editor TONY SUSSMAN .......•.•......•...•.•. Sports Editor MIKE GALLO •..•....•.........••.....•• Business Manager PAT ENGEL..... · · Ad rti' • Man

    ••·••••••···•··•····•·• ve smg ager BETH ANDERSON ..••...••....••..•..•. Sales Manager

    Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North carolina

    Punt! A proposal by physical

    education department chair· man WiUiam Hottinger recommending the establish· ment of Schools of Athletics at universities nationwide has created quite a ruckus among faculty members at Wake Forest.

    Under Hottinger's plan, athletes would enter a separate School of Athleti!lS and would · not be required to achieve normal academic progress. Instead, they would receive a four-year certificate of at· tendance after their eligibility is exhausted.

    Hottinger emphasized his plan was not meant to apply unilaterally to Wake Forest but rather was intended to foster discussion of the problem of declining academic standards for athletes.

    The proposal will un· doubtedly spark a great deal of discussion; most preposterous scheme., do. Hottinger com· pared attending the School of Athletics to enlisting in the army. Ridiculous. It would more resemble being sold into athletic slavery.

    The only beneficiary of the plan would be athletic depart· ments, which would finally be able to recruit athletes without having to worry about educating them.

    It's ironic that a university whose football program sports

    one of the poorest records in NCAA history would create a proposal legitimizing football factories, but that would be the case.

    Still, if the proposal stimulates some intelligent discussion around the country of the athletic-academic problem, then it will have served an important function.

    In an age when recruiting scandals · and transcript violations are commonplace, it becomes quite easy to avoid discussion of the problem by claiming that "everybody else does it." And wheri debate ceases, complacency sets in.

    There's no question that the corruption of college athletics has reached crisis proportions. But if measures like this one are required to solve the problem, then it's time to say "punt" and be done with it. . The biggest problem with

    reconciling academics with athletics, of course, is that many football players are·· simply not suited for college. Unfortl,mately, college football is the only avenue available to them.

    The crisis of college athletics is a complex and many-faceted problem. But creating a School of Athletics is a cop-out and a farce and does absolutely nothing to remedy the situation.

    If you used to be disgusted, now just try to be amused.

    Tradition The traditional adherence to

    Christian ideals as espoused by the Baptists is perhaps the most fundamental tradition Wake Forest can claim.

    That tradition has been un-dermined so many times that nowadays it is only invoked to justify an unpopular rule, such as visitation policy.

    And Monday one of the last vestiges of the Christian tradition vanished from Wake Forest as the university chose not to celebrate an Easter Hoiiday.

    It's a shame Wake Forest can spare almost a month's vacation at Christmastime but can't afford a day for Easter. While offices and banks around the state closed down, WF students trooped ignominiously off to classes.

    Easter is, after all; the most significant event in Christianity. It marks the day Jesus overcame the grave and rose from the dead • an event crucial to the Christian faith.

    Incidentally, Wake Forest started the Easter Monday tradition in 1935. That holiday grew out of less inspirational roots: it was held to com· memorate the Wake Forest-N.C. State baseball game.

    Actually, it makes no sense at · all to celebrate Easter Monday. Good Friday should be com-memorated instead. That way, Wake Forest might be able to claim a truer adherence to Christian tradition.

    But don't make the mistake of thinking that nobody at Wake r

    Forest is interested in main· taining Christian ideals. ·

    Springfest is one of the biggest campus celebrations each year, featuring music, games and beer. It's the closest Wake Forest comes to an all· out party, if you don't count the Carolina football game.

    This year, though, Springfest events were preceded by a different sort of celebration: the Special Olympics, held Tuesday at Wake Forest.

    The Special Olympics provide handicapped children with a chance to meet in an atmosphere of friendly com· petition to participate in track events. The emphasis is on trying, not winning; everybody is a winner ~n the Special Olympics. · Over fifty WF students

    volunteered their time and . energy to the Special Olympics this year, helping make the event a success for the nearly 500 participants.

    While Springfest emphasizes personal gratification, the Special Olympics are a sharing experience. Though it was a coincidence that the two events were scheduled for the same week, that coincidence provides a . neat reminder that we can enjoy, ourselves and help others at the same time.'

    If we cannot celebrate the triumph of the soul at Ea.ster, then at least we can celebrate the triumph of the spirit at the Special Olympics.

    That, after all, is the Christian tradition.

    Founded JllllUSIY 15. 1916. as 1he student newspaper of Wake Forest Unlvarnrty. ·Old Gold and Blacl

    (6) Bjorn Borg • the Golden Rule and some modesty.

    (7) Brook Shields • Mark Dronzek, to be delivered on her

    .. twenty-first birthday. (8) Carl Tacy- a different book of

    cliches and a copy of Dean Smith's "How to Frown and Get That Call, Too!".

    (2) Marg·aret 'nlatcher ·a thrifty (9) Gene Hooks • a copy of the sec~etary of def~nse and an ex· Howler, showing students who per1~nced cao10etmaker for attend Wake Forest who are not Parliament. ·

    (a) Ronald Be , _ 1 varsity teams. . of all the "IWSipaganl .~ deolstaodJ'~. ·' .. (10) Al Gro~- .a publl:!her for hts . . eop e. ep es. · . quotes and btgger amb1tions. < 4) Pro baseb11ll - an UTesistib~~ . (11) College Union • an identify·

    the-performer contest, to be held each time a show is held on cam· pus.

    (12) Graduate students • some humility, so that they understand that premature birth, by itseH, does not beget sophistication and superiority.

    (13) The Tribble Flasher • a pat on the back for his nonconformity, and a straightjacket {full-length).

    {14) Ed Cunnirigs · relocation of his office to a back-room In one of the men's dorms.

    (15) L.A. Kings • congratulations on making the NHL playoffs with a 24-41-15 won·loss-tie record.

    (16) Mark Dronzek - time, and the ability to write a decent column with complete sentences.

    M.ark Dronzek

    -£..·-...

    Avram.out

    The Wake Forest tennis team con~:ludEKi regular season schiMIUl this week with ,.nn,lll!!l'ln· victories over MaJL'Yllm' and N.C. State, finilsbln a disappointing campaign on a note.

    On Sunday, the battled the wind and Easter weather to 7·2 decision over Terps in the last match of ·Dunlop . and · · played exc,eptitonal[y in their matches as maintained his defeated string of victories at the nullllbe:l .four position.

    Th~ Wake Forest rugby up its spring record to 1 p.m.

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  • -1.,•-.., '•· ,r.•'• '-,

    Avmm outforACCtourney . PAGE FIVE Friday, Aprll18,1982, OLD GOLD AND BLACK

    ' . .

    Nette:rs Clos~ with pair of • wms Mlteh.Skrosld many .days, but left for earlier this year, so they

    home .on a sad note. Andy will probably; be the pre-

    I.

    · and even wthout Avram I . weakness left at number still feel that. we can stay . one) have a, good chance up there and contend for at winning. This year second," Leighton said. things just didn't gel for

    "Any one . of the five us. Mayb~ they will this players (excluding the weekend."

    The Wake Forest men's . Avram, who has 'played tournament favorites. tennis team concluded its· in the number · one · Carolina : and Virginia regular season schedule position all year, suffered also. po~sess strong in- · this week with convincing a badly sprained ankle dividual players who· victories over Maryland and will not be available. could jeopardize the and N.C. State, finishing for the upcoming ACC favorites' expectations a disappointing spring tournament. for victory. G If f h campaign on a bright' 0 e~ o· m1 te Coach Jim Leighton Key performers for. ·.1. o · no · .could . not hide his Wake Forest will be Phil

    On Sunday, the squad frustration over such a Raiford and Greg Yan-batUed the wind and cool · key loss at this critical cey, who have both shown Easter weather to post a point of the season. "With marked improvement 7·2 decision over the · Andy in there, it's a whole over the· last few mat-Terps in the last home new ballgame. His inJury ches. Raiford won an match of the· year. really hurts us." individual title as sixth

    in USC tourney ·Dunlop. and · Yancey· man ·in last year's ACC played exceptionally well Leighton, however • tournament and has a This past weekend the five Deacon golfers with in their individual does not concede the positive attitude entering women golfers placed roundsof76-74-78fora 228 matches as Dunlop . ~ournament by . any , this season's finale, He fourth in the Lady total. Kendra Beard,

    SlaH~byBC

    Deacon Kevin Bunn is congratulated by his teammates after hitting his 12th homer of the season in last Saturday's game against Wofford.

    maintained his un- means. will also team wltb Gamecock Invitational. · another freshman defeated string of ACC Dunlopinoneofthe-three, With this fourth place finished with three D;nmond Deac' s Wl·n 20th victories at the number "Anything can . hap- doubles pairs and could finish the team qualified rounds of 77 for a 231 M..Ci . four position. pen," he said. "Clemson surpriseafewteams.with for the national· AIAW. total. Senior Charlotte ..

    and Duke are both ranked unexpected upsets. , · tournament to-be held in . Grant was· third with a At Raleigh, on Monday, in the top ten in the "I think we. 're the third · Columbus, Ohio 00 June 233 and Robin Holloway

    the team recorded its nation. Duke defeated 16-19 was fourth with a 237. ' second victory in as Clemson 6-3 in a match best team in the league · · · Julie Bowers· was the fifth

    ' The team finished Deacon golfer with a 250 fourth behind the total. University of .South _ · · Carolina (the. home · "We are going into the team), Furman and Duke tournament with Rollins. Wake Forest bad anticipation of winning a total score of 929 while and we · will be very the winners had a team disappointed if we don't total of 880. win," Crisp said.

    "I think the girls .111••••••!1 finished in a good , position," coach Marge . Crisp said. "They played· well, the other three teams just played a little bit better ..

    "Our team showed this team that it is a more solid team than we've .ever had. We were more· consistent this time in the .

    ·three-day tournament."

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    Th~ Wake Forest rugby team picked up a forfeit victory over Duke last Saturday to up its spring record to 6-1. The·ruggers host the NC State Wolfpack tomorrow at

    Wake scored rounds of : 311-307-311.

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    Vol. 'LXIV : · . . ~ ·~ ..

    These students were "'t

    Most a Louise Wood

    One out of every thr< at Wake Forest receiveJ of financial aid, and mo based on need, not me1

    "There has been a tJ last few years to create awards, but historically Is administered to neec and not on a merit ba Bland, assistant direc missions and financial

    The Guy T. Carswell ! is the only Wake Fore ship available to 1 currently enrolled th severely restricted in major interests or resil based ll!rgely on acac forma11ce. A select numl

    · · --i~::r:f~ft:a~=~i · upperclassmen.

    The George •Fostez Scholarship, ·· another scholarship regularly a upperclassmen, is givt residents of North Ca children of alumni. Prt shown to residents of County, but unlike th1 Scholarship, its value based on need.

    The Carswell and scholarships represent significant monetary available to upperclass~ are a host of less rewarding and more scholarships which uppe are invited to compete •

    The Charles A. . Scholarship, for examplE maximum award of $: given to a student · o income who resides out: Carolina.

    The Forrest H. Scholarship, · based on and ·need, is awardet preference given to stuc in Rowan and Rutherfor• and members of the ·chapter of the Sigma < nity.

    The J. Lee Keiger Sr ship, valued at $750 and academic performanc nually awarded with a J

    Honors Cindy Allen

    Omicron Delta KaJ Mortar Board, two natioz leadership societies, initiated new members fleers from the class of l

    The two organization~ joined forces in 1978, emp~ common goals of scholarship, leadership vice. The qualities are e.x1 by the n~w ODK presidt Austin, and ·by the new Board president Bill Bog1

    Austin has served as ·si Epsilon \rice president, a f advisor, Wake Forest r tative to the Internatio1 ference at the Citadel, cut president and helped org1 spring leadership conferE would like to see ODK anc Board work to improve

    , ,, faculty relations and .. :

    1 communications with the t Bogg's activities incluc

    ching, pep and concert Student Government .le!

    . .Judici.al. and Charter. cou · · . and he is .the current pres

    the campus life commit' foresees ODK-Mortar

    ogb_1982-04-16_001ogb_1982-04-16_002ogb_1982-04-16_003ogb_1982-04-16_004ogb_1982-04-16_005ogb_1982-04-16_006