universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. ldand

14
RIJJ"KI A. Nobel Pu1·suit "Universal life energy" offers natural healing process for body, mind, soul. Wake Forest freshman to attend Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm. Wake Forest shocks Clemson in 18-15 upset victory. arts & entertainment/page 9 news/page 2 sports/page 13 LDAND VoLUME 76, No. 11 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1992 Clinton defeats Bush in electoral vote landslide Faircloth defeats incumbent Sanford; Hunt beats Gardner in governor's race BY T0.\1 ZELLEKS OUJ GOLD N•D Bll.CK REPORTLft Bill Clinton, the Democratic governor of Arkansas, was elected presidentofthe United States Tuesday, with 43 percent of the na- tional popular vote. Incumbent President George Bush re- ceived 38 percent of the popular vote, and independent candidate Ross Perot received 17 percent. Projections indicate that Clinton will receive 370 electoral votes and Bush will receive 168. Both College Democrats and College Republicans were active this fall. cam- paigning on campus and working in the community for their presidential candidates, as well as their respective state and local party candidates. Another active political organization was Americans for Democratic Action, a non-partisan grass-roots organiza- tion that supported Clinton. Both the Democrats and ADA were pleased with the Clinton victory. "We were really excited about Bill Clinton's strong showing nationally," said senior Lisa Shan- non, the president of College Democrats. The Republicans were disappointed with Bush's defeat, but junior David Johnson, co-chairman of the campus chapter, said Bush's strong showing in North Carolina and the Senate victory of Republican Lauch Faircloth made the Republican effort worth- while. While both partisan groups attribute much of Clinton's success to the ailing economy. fresh- man Shane Evans, the treasurer of ADA, said support for Clinton also came as a result of "major changes in the Democratic Party, which make it more appealing to the American people." Johnson. however, said he remains doubtful that the Clinton victory signals any major shift in voter opinion. "I do not feel that the election was a specific 'mandate' from the voters," he said. Johnson said the faltering economy was the main factor that pushed independent and undecided voters. as well as the so-called "Reagan Democrats,'' to vote for Clinton. Democrats and Republicans alike believe that the candidacy of Perot affected the political race by drawing votes from both Bush and Clinton. ·'Perot received nearly 20 percent of the popular vote, which is very impressive for an indepen- dent candidate," Shannon said. All three groups agree on the importance of young, first-time voters in the outcome of the election. Evans said II percent of the total vote was cast by voters between the ages of 18 and 25. Evans attributed the large youth vote to "the work nationally by organizations like Rock the Vote and Americans for Democratic Action in rl'!cruiring young voters on and off campuses," a's well as to Clinton's generational appeal. Shannon said Clinton's plans to create new jobs and to establish new college loan programs pulled many young people into the Clinton coalition. Johnson said Bush should have tried See Clinton, Page 5 RLH closes South Campus tunnels for asbestos, security reasons BY JAY LERMAN CONTRIUUTING REf'fJkTER lamination. The situation had been in review during the spring semester, but the decision to close the tunnels was not made until this fall. Aconsultantfrom the Environmental Protection Agency first identified the asbestos problem, which could pose potential health risks. •·r think they may make plans to remove it, but it may be kind of expensive," said senior Jill Erickson, a member of the Student Government Planning Commission. The tunnels between Bostwick and Johnson residence halls and between Luter and Babcock residence halls will remain closed indefinitely, according to Dan Bertsos, the associate director of Residence Life and Housing. Bertsos said this decision is effective immediately. Residents of Bostwick have complained about Johnson males making noise as late as 3 a.m., Bertsos said. While these incidents have been sparse, the potential for a "situation where if a person who didn't just want to have fun got in there" contributed to the closings, he said. Asbestos was a common insulator at the time of con- struction of the tunnels, but was later identified as a carcinogen and removed from the market. While the asbestos insulation around the water pipes has not been tom, the possibility of exposing residents to the carcinogen remains a factor in the decision. Bertos said. The Bostwick entrance to one tunnel was open last Saturday. Bertsos said he that had no knowledge that the tunnel was open but that it was the responsibility of the individual residence halls to enforce the closure. Bertos had no estimate of when or if the asbestos problem would be corrected and has not determined a security policy for the tunnels. Bertsos said there are two problems with the tunnels: security concerns and a recently identified asbestos con- Bertsos said he sees no way of securing the tunnels at present. Project Pumpkin brings 700 children for Halloween fun BY LISA MARTIN CON-nunuTrNG RrPORTI::R Nearly 700 underprivileged children from the Winston-Salem area and 400 Wake Forest stu- dents participated in Project Pumpkin, a program designed to provide children with a safe een celebration, on Oct. 29. The program included face painting, haunted houses in Babcock and Bostwick residence halls and a carnival in Luter residence hall and carni- vals and trick-or-treating in Bostwick, Luter and Johnson residence halls. Students served as escorts to the children, who arrived at three different intervals between 3:30 ters and churches, sponsored the children and either sent them to the campus or had them picked up by bus. Several local businesses donated sup- plies. The main goa! of the project was to allow the children to have a safe Halloween, White said. "Our purpose Wl\S to reach out to underprivi- leged children and provide the kids with a safe environment in which to trick-or-treat," White said. "We wanted to let the children know we care that they have a safe Halloween." Many of the children live in neighborhoods where door-to-door trick-or-treating is danger- ous, White said. Graduate and undergraduate students served as escorts for the children in different shifts. The escorts either dressed up in costumes or wore the Project Pumpkin T -shirts, which were available for sale to all participating in the project. • and 5 p.m.This was Project Pumpkin's fourth year. The program, which is sponsored by the Volunteer Service Corps, is considered to be one of the biggest events put on by the corps, said junior Tonnye White, the publicity chairwoman for Project Pumpkin. "Project Pumpkin is growing by leaps and bounds, and it was a great success this year," White said. A number of agencies, including day carecen- The Volunteer Service Corps plans to continue to host the project in future years to enable as many children as possible to have a safe and happy Halloween. The Student Budget Advisory Council also sponsored the event. Wrt Ch(mchUH'CI;- Sophomore Meghan Larabee watches Raymond Childress during Project Pumpkin Oct. 29 while Ashley Childress looks on. Larabee was a student escort for the Childresses. The project, which is in its fourth year, brought 700 underprivileged children to campus and utilized 400 student volunteers. . . . · .. INSIDE·. ·. 1- -• '' ', ' :Miss Wake · :=student · -. ' ,• .•· \,,'.'<t>,.·.; 'r : pageant objectifies wo!ij'ehf,: . : ._perpetuates { ·. :: · -: · - ' ' ·:· . .,,_ Arts and Entertainment ...... ,: .... ·· · ......... •• Class1fied ................. , ............" ......;.,: .. : •. .1'1·'' · Co_mil"!g ................ ;-;.: .. ·: . Ed1tor.als .......................:..... ; .....: ... '·' Horoscope ............................ :... ;, .... .. 1: Non Sequitur ...................;... ...... ,_., ... ,11 · .·- ·; ·. Perspectives ......................... .... ··;. .., Pressbox .................................;,...... :;;;:.tz: . Scoreboard .......................... ............ ;14.·:. · · ·.security Beat ........................... :.- .. •• ,; •• 4;' ·Sports ............. ....... .......... .... ..;... : . Worldwide ................. ,.................. .. .. 4. SG discusses academic calendar, cainpus security Bv BRIAN .J. UzmAK OIIICL M,\N.\tol K The Student Government Legislature remained at an im- passe on the issues of the academic calendar and campus security but lll<ldt: progress on a number of other issues during its meeting Tuesday evening. Senior Lesley Williams, the SG secretary. said the aca- demic calendar is a "touchy issue ... The academic wlendar for next year will include a week-long Thanksgiving break, but no Fall Break in October. After the meeting, Williams said, 'The main point that we 'rc getting from the academic calendar is that students should have had more say," adding that only one student is on the academic calendar subcommittee that writes the calendar. There was no resolution regarding the academic c<llendar proposed before the legislature, but it was suggested that a survey be conducted to detennine student opinion. The kgislalllrc also discussed campus security. Several legislators debated the necessity of checking identification cards of students studying in the all-night lounges in Z. Smith Reynolds Library. Junior Ben Jones, a member of the Academic Committee. discussed this issue with Rhoda Channing. the director of the librarv. Williams said that conscientious confirming of stu- dell! identification is "the best solution we have. It\ better than having someone who is nLlt a part of the Wake Forest communitv in there." Willianis also descri bo.xl the security situat inn on campus as having "reached a point that it is very. wry dangerous." The Physical Planning Committee reported that a campus lighting walk with representatives from Physical Facilities. designed to review the current status of outdoor ligluing on cam[ms in comparison with a master lighting "was conducted. The committee reported that emergency phones are being replaced with newer. more visibk phones that connect directly with University Security. The Academic Committee reported that students will be permitted to pre-register for the spring semester only for classes in their majors. Other than this change. registration will procecd as nonnal, Williams said. The Appropriations and Budget Committee reported on two long-tem1 projects: the "grandfather clause" on tuition and upperclass scholarships. Williams said the grandfather would allow students to pay tuition equal to the tuition when they arrived as fresh- men. Students would in effect ignore all subsequent tuition increases. Tuition increases would only affect incoming fresh- men each year. The Campus Life Committee announced that sophomore Kristen Kingsley had talked to Connie Carson. the associate director of Residence Life and Housing, about students living in substance-free housing against their will. King,lcy said that, See SG. Page 5 -

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Page 1: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

RIJJ"KI IJI~~.1ll~ING A. Nobel Pu1·suit "Universal life energy" offers natural healing

process for body, mind, soul.

Wake Forest freshman to attend Nobel Prize

ceremony in Stockholm.

Wake Forest shocks Clemson in 18-15

upset victory. arts & entertainment/page 9 news/page 2 sports/page 13

LDAND VoLUME 76, No. 11 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1992

Clinton defeats Bush in electoral vote landslide Faircloth defeats incumbent Sanford; Hunt beats Gardner in governor's race

BY T0.\1 ZELLEKS

OUJ GOLD N•D Bll.CK REPORTLft

Bill Clinton, the Democratic governor of Arkansas, was elected presidentofthe United States Tuesday, with 43 percent of the na­tional popular vote.

Incumbent President George Bush re­ceived 38 percent of the popular vote, and independent candidate Ross Perot received 17 percent. Projections indicate that Clinton will receive 370 electoral votes and Bush will receive 168.

Both College Democrats and College Republicans were active this fall. cam­paigning on campus and working in the community for their presidential candidates, as well as their respective state and local party candidates. Another active political organization was Americans for Democratic Action, a non-partisan grass-roots organiza­tion that supported Clinton.

Both the Democrats and ADA were pleased with the Clinton victory. "We were really excited about Bill Clinton's strong showing nationally," said senior Lisa Shan­non, the president of College Democrats.

The Republicans were disappointed with Bush's defeat, but junior David Johnson, co-chairman of the campus chapter, said Bush's strong showing in North Carolina and the Senate victory of Republican Lauch Faircloth made the Republican effort worth­while.

While both partisan groups attribute much of Clinton's success to the ailing economy. fresh­man Shane Evans, the treasurer of ADA, said support for Clinton also came as a result of "major changes in the Democratic Party, which make it more appealing to the American people."

Johnson. however, said he remains doubtful that the Clinton victory signals any major shift in voter opinion. "I do not feel that the election was a specific 'mandate' from the voters," he said. Johnson said the faltering economy was the main factor that pushed independent and undecided voters. as well as the so-called "Reagan Democrats,'' to vote for Clinton.

Democrats and Republicans alike believe that the candidacy of Perot affected the political race by drawing votes from both Bush and Clinton. ·'Perot received nearly 20 percent of the popular vote, which is very impressive for an indepen­dent candidate," Shannon said.

All three groups agree on the importance of young, first-time voters in the outcome of the election. Evans said II percent of the total vote was cast by voters between the ages of 18 and 25. Evans attributed the large youth vote to "the work nationally by organizations like Rock the Vote and Americans for Democratic Action in rl'!cruiring young voters on and off campuses," a's well as to Clinton's generational appeal.

Shannon said Clinton's plans to create new jobs and to establish new college loan programs pulled many young people into the Clinton coalition. Johnson said Bush should have tried See Clinton, Page 5

RLH closes South Campus tunnels for asbestos, security reasons BY JAY LERMAN

CONTRIUUTING REf'fJkTER

lamination. The situation had been in review during the spring semester, but the decision to close the tunnels was not made until this fall.

Aconsultantfrom the Environmental Protection Agency first identified the asbestos problem, which could pose potential health risks.

•·r think they may make plans to remove it, but it may be kind of expensive," said senior Jill Erickson, a member of the Student Government Planning Commission.

The tunnels between Bostwick and Johnson residence halls and between Luter and Babcock residence halls will remain closed indefinitely, according to Dan Bertsos, the associate director of Residence Life and Housing. Bertsos said this decision is effective immediately.

Residents of Bostwick have complained about Johnson males making noise as late as 3 a.m., Bertsos said. While these incidents have been sparse, the potential for a "situation where if a person who didn't just want to have fun got in there" contributed to the closings, he said.

Asbestos was a common insulator at the time of con­struction of the tunnels, but was later identified as a carcinogen and removed from the market.

While the asbestos insulation around the water pipes has not been tom, the possibility of exposing residents to the carcinogen remains a factor in the decision. Bertos said.

The Bostwick entrance to one tunnel was open last Saturday. Bertsos said he that had no knowledge that the tunnel was open but that it was the responsibility of the individual residence halls to enforce the closure.

Bertos had no estimate of when or if the asbestos problem would be corrected and has not determined a security policy for the tunnels.

Bertsos said there are two problems with the tunnels: security concerns and a recently identified asbestos con-

Bertsos said he sees no way of securing the tunnels at present.

Project Pumpkin brings 700 children for Halloween fun

BY LISA MARTIN

CON-nunuTrNG RrPORTI::R

Nearly 700 underprivileged children from the Winston-Salem area and 400 Wake Forest stu­dents participated in Project Pumpkin, a program designed to provide children with a safe H;~llow-een celebration, on Oct. 29. ~'

The program included face painting, haunted houses in Babcock and Bostwick residence halls and a carnival in Luter residence hall and carni­vals and trick-or-treating in Bostwick, Luter and Johnson residence halls.

Students served as escorts to the children, who arrived at three different intervals between 3:30

ters and churches, sponsored the children and either sent them to the campus or had them picked up by bus. Several local businesses donated sup­plies.

The main goa! of the project was to allow the children to have a safe Halloween, White said.

"Our purpose Wl\S to reach out to underprivi­leged children and provide the kids with a safe environment in which to trick-or-treat," White said. "We wanted to let the children know we care that they have a safe Halloween."

Many of the children live in neighborhoods where door-to-door trick-or-treating is danger­ous, White said.

Graduate and undergraduate students served as escorts for the children in different shifts. The escorts either dressed up in costumes or wore the Project Pumpkin T -shirts, which were available for sale to all participating in the project.

• and 5 p.m.This was Project Pumpkin's fourth year. The program, which is sponsored by the Volunteer Service Corps, is considered to be one of the biggest events put on by the corps, said junior Tonnye White, the publicity chairwoman for Project Pumpkin.

"Project Pumpkin is growing by leaps and bounds, and it was a great success this year," White said.

A number of agencies, including day carecen-

The Volunteer Service Corps plans to continue to host the project in future years to enable as many children as possible to have a safe and happy Halloween.

The Student Budget Advisory Council also sponsored the event.

Wrt Ch(mchUH'CI;­

Sophomore Meghan Larabee watches Raymond Childress during Project Pumpkin Oct. 29 while Ashley Childress looks on. Larabee was a student escort for the Childresses. The project, which is in its fourth year, brought 700 underprivileged children to campus and utilized 400 student volunteers.

. . . · .. INSIDE·. ·. 1- • -• '' ', .:::-c·~· ,!;~~:,••J,~·~..;.:;';l..I;, '

:Miss Wake Foresfuriiv~f$it¥.~i::c' · :=student columnisvcJiflfds"~ · -. ' ,• .•· \,,'.'<t>,.·.; 'r

: pageant objectifies wo!ij'ehf,: . : ._perpetuates stereotype~:. { ·. :: · -: · - cdi~~rial;;/,)a)lc-'1: ' '

·:· . .,,_

Arts and Entertainment ...... ,: .... :_,:.;~;:.::9:; ·· · Brieft~y ......... ~···························:-:: •• ~·f··~:'-~··~~-:iJ·:: --~.· Class1fied ................. , ............ " ...... ;.,: .. : •. .1'1·'' · Co_mil"!g Attr;;ction~ ................ ;-;.: .. ~:'··;:~1 ~--: ·: . Ed1tor.als ....................... : ..... ; ... ..: ... :.;;;:,.~· '·' Horoscope ............................ : ... ;, .... ~ .. \-~ 1: Non Sequitur ................... ; ... ~·.-...... ,_., ... ,11 · .·- ·; ·. Perspectives ......................... ~-.•~·~·.-.... ~.~~-~-r 8;,~ ··;. .., Pressbox ................................. ;, ...... :;;;:.tz: . Scoreboard .......................... ~~ ............ ;14.·:. · ·

·.security Beat ........................... :.-.. ~;.; •• ,; •• 4;' ·Sports ............. ,.~ ....... ~ .......... ~.~ .... ~ .. ; ... ~.'12·: : . Worldwide ................. , .................. ~',; .. ~ .. 4.

SG discusses academic calendar, cainpus security Bv BRIAN .J. UzmAK

------------------~ OIIICL M,\N.\tol K

The Student Government Legislature remained at an im­passe on the issues of the academic calendar and campus security but lll<ldt: progress on a number of other issues during its meeting Tuesday evening.

Senior Lesley Williams, the SG secretary. said the aca­demic calendar is a "touchy issue ... The academic wlendar for next year will include a week-long Thanksgiving break, but no Fall Break in October.

After the meeting, Williams said, 'The main point that we 'rc getting from the academic calendar is that students should have had more say," adding that only one student is on the academic calendar subcommittee that writes the calendar.

There was no resolution regarding the academic c<llendar proposed before the legislature, but it was suggested that a survey be conducted to detennine student opinion.

The kgislalllrc also discussed campus security. Several legislators debated the necessity of checking identification cards of students studying in the all-night lounges in Z. Smith Reynolds Library.

Junior Ben Jones, a member of the Academic Committee. discussed this issue with Rhoda Channing. the director of the librarv. Williams said that conscientious confirming of stu­dell! identification is "the best solution we have. It\ better than having someone who is nLlt a part of the Wake Forest communitv in there."

Willianis also descri bo.xl the security situat inn on campus as having "reached a point that it is very. wry dangerous."

The Physical Planning Committee reported that a campus lighting walk with representatives from Physical Facilities. designed to review the current status of outdoor ligluing on cam[ms in comparison with a master lighting r~1ap. "was conducted. The committee reported that emergency phones are being replaced with newer. more visibk phones that

connect directly with University Security. The Academic Committee reported that students will be

permitted to pre-register for the spring semester only for classes in their majors. Other than this change. registration will procecd as nonnal, Williams said.

The Appropriations and Budget Committee reported on two long-tem1 projects: the "grandfather clause" on tuition and upperclass scholarships.

Williams said the grandfather clau~e would allow students to pay tuition equal to the tuition when they arrived as fresh­men. Students would in effect ignore all subsequent tuition increases. Tuition increases would only affect incoming fresh­men each year.

The Campus Life Committee announced that sophomore Kristen Kingsley had talked to Connie Carson. the associate director of Residence Life and Housing, about students living in substance-free housing against their will. King,lcy said that, See SG. Page 5 -

Page 2: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

2 OwCotoANDBLACK THURSDAY,NOVEMBER5,1992 _.. ...... ....._.iiiiiiiil .. iiiiliii_.iiiiir.ii ... _______________ NEws--------------~ .. !!111-~-----~~-

j

• Early registration to be held

Early registration for the spring semester will begin at 4 p.m. Nov. 16 and last until Nov. 19.

Seniors will pre-register Nov. 16 while freshmen will pre-register Nov. 17. Sophomores and juniors will register Nov. 18 and 19.

Registration adjustments may be made from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 5 in the Registration Office in Reynolda 110.

Undergraduate advising for spring 1993 will be­gin Monday and run through Nov. 13. Course schedule books will be available Monday at the Registrar's Office.

a Underclass grants available

The James S. Kemper Foundation has recently designated Wake Forest as a participating institu­tion in the Kemper Scholars Grant Program.

The foundation will select one Kemper Scholar from among the freshman class each year. The student may renew the scholarship grant for subse­quent years if certain academic and other perfor­mance levels are maintained.

The grants range from a maximum of $5,000 a year to a minimum of $1,500 a year, based on the degree of financial need. Scholars are assigned a summer work experience within the Kemper Com­panies for each of their three undergraduate sum­mers.

Nomineesmustexhibitahighdegreeofmaturity, astuteness and motivation, must maintain an excel­lent academic record and perform intelligently dur­ing the summer work experience. Scholars must also major in an area relevant to business.

Interested freshmen should contact the School of Business and Accountancy office in Babcock 215. Applications are due by Nov. 18.

Completed Truman Scholarship applications are due by 5 p.m. Friday in Reynolda 207. Applicants for the Luce Scholarship should return applications to the same place by Monday.

• LEAD takes applications

Leadership, Excellence, Application and Devel­opment is now taking applications from interested freshmen and sophomores. The program will be offered on eight consecutive Wednesday or Thurs­day afternoons from 3:30p.m. to 5 p.m., beginning in January.

LEAD is intended to teach leadership skills and stress personal development. Applications are avail­able in Benson 311 and Benson 335. Applications are due Friday.

• Study tours, grants available

Rising juniors and sophomores may now apply for study through the Institute of European Studies in Freiburg, Berlin, Moscow, Vienna or Kiev.

All programs will include studies in language, literature and the arts of the nation. Each program will also feature a specific concentration in such fields as politics, history, the European Common Market, international business, psychology and economics.

Full credit for courses taken through IES will be given to Wake Forest students. For more informa­tion on this and scholarships for study abroad, contact Larry West, a professor of German and Russian, at Ext. 5361.

Available scholarships include the Berlin Ex­change Program and the W.D. Sanders Scholar­ships for study in Germany or Austria. The scholar­ships are open to rising juniors who have com­pleted German 153. Completed application forms are due Nov. 30.

• Departments to host colloquium

The departments ofEnglish, history and psychol­ogy and the Office ofMinority Affairs will spon&Or a colloquium on "The Africa Diaspora."

Professor Richard A. Long of Emory University will speak at 4:30p.m. today in Winston C.

Long will also hold a student forum concerning "An American Ethnic Studies Program" tonight at 8 p.m. in Room 223 Winston Hall.

• GALA to host forum

The Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Issues Aware­ness Group will present a forum concerning "New Directions in Gay and Lesbian Studies" at 7 p.m. Monday in the Balcony Room of Wait Chapel.

Mary DeShazer, an associate professor of women's studies, and Gary Ljungquist will lead the discussion, which is open to the Wake Forest com­munity. For more information, call 744-7096.

• Philosophers to hold meeting

The Philosophy Club will hold its first meeting at 5 p.m. on Nov. 17 in the philosophy library, Tribble B316. The meeting is open to all students. For more information, call Scott Dove at 896-0586.

• Dancers to present gala

The dance program will present a Fall Gala at 8 p.m. on Nov. 20 and 2 in Brendle Recital Hall.

The gala will feature a new work by artist-in­residence Linda Kent set to the music of composer­in-residence Dan Locklair. Admission will be charged. For more information, call Ext. 5393.

• OG&B reports incorrectly

The Old Gold and Black incorrectly reported in an Oct. 22 news article that Wait Chapel has not been painted in 40 years. The chapel has been painted in that time, but the accumulated paint has not been removed in that period of time.

Also, the total cost of the painting will come to $8.000 to $9,000, rather than $89,000, as reported.

• YWCA to offer yoga courses

The YWCA is accepting registration for a Yoga class, which will teach traditional postures to de­velop muscle tone, flexibility and balance.

The fee for the course will be $35 for members and $50 for non-members. For more information, cal! Heather Maricle athe YMCA at 722-5138.

Students, administrators discuss/security problems~ BY MARK HILPERT CmnRIBUTINO REPORll!R

University administrators and students met in an open forum to discuss security problems and proposals for improvements Oct. 28.

The small size of the group allowed presentations by several students of their proposals to solve the current campus crime problem.

Ken Zick, the vice president for student life and instruc­tional resources, Bill Fleming, the assistant director of University Security, and Dennis Gregory, the director of Residence Life and Housing, were present at the meeting. The three listened to each proposal, presented their views on campus security and generally agreed with the students that some kind of change must be made.

Junior David Starmer, a member of the Student Gov­ernment Security Advisory Committee, outlined his plan, which calls for a transformation of the current security force into a unit more closely resembling regular police officers. Starmer said this plan would improve the effec­tiveness of security officers and increase respect for au­thority. He stressed the need for more officers and "pre­ventive security" of students, who he said should be largely responsible for their own safety.

Starmer's proposal was presented as an alternative to the plan submitted by fellow Security Advisory Commit­tee member junior Rusty DeMent, who advocates the installation of guardhouses at each campus entrance. These guardhouses would restrict access to campus from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. nightly in an effort to deter crime that originated from off-campus sources. One critic said that DeMent's proposal would make the campus "seem like a jail" to outsiders and that it would discourage students' responsi­bility for their own safety.

ADen Slnllll

University administrators and students discuss security problems and proposals for improvements, wbicb may ' help to solve the current campus crime problem. The open forum was held Oct. 28. '

and security should be the goal of whatever solution is adopted." ·

In response to arguments against his proposal, DeMent asked what degree of violence it would take before action would be taken. DeMent submitted his proposal to the SG Legislature, which informally voted it down, although junior Jill Weiskopf, the Speaker of the House, said there was "l 00 percent agreement that something needed to be done" to imorove camous securitv.

Another idea was also discussed, which proposed mount-

Heming said that much of security's activity on week­ends is devoted to dealing with student-related incidents, most of which are alcohol-related, and to expelling non­residents from residence halls.

He suggested the wearing of identification cards by all students and university employees, similar to the practice at medical schools.

Zick discussed the rash of incidents leading to the current controversy. He said, "If students could resolve their disputes amicably, security resources could be de­''Ott~tl tn rleterrina serious off-camDUl! crime.

Gregory said most incidents of campus crime are ·~­get of opportunity crimes"-when a criminal spots and exploits a target. With the completion of the Wottell Professional Center for Law and Management and a new residence hall, such crime is likely to increase because these buildings are situated on the fringes of campus, he sairl. · ·

Weiskopf said:"Solutions will haye to go both ways; ing security officers on bikes or horses as a way of increasing their visibility and improving their mobility. "Finding the balance between individual student liberty

.campus security must change and students muSt change to solve the campus crime problem," she said. 1 ·

Campus groups plan benefit for world famine re~ef BY NATALIE CoFFER

OLD GoLD AND BLACK REPoRTER

An Oxfam Hunger Banquet is being organized by student volunteers to raise money for world famine relief and to "in­crease awareness of the (hunger) prob­lem," said sophomore Brent Watkins, the publicity chairman for the event.

The banquet, which is being sponsored by Campus Ministry, the American Res­taurantAssociation and the Global Aware­ness Group, will benefit the Oxford Com­mittee for Famine Relief.

Participants will pay $5 to attend the banquet and each person will be served one of three different meals determined by lottery. ~e three types of meals represent · the income levels in the world's high, middle and low-income countries.

Fifteen percent of the participants will be served a full three-course meal, repre­senting the 15 percent of the world's popu­lation which enjoys relative affluence. Twenty-five percent of the participants will be fed a simple meal of rice and beans

or broth, a common meal in middle-in­come countries. The remaining 60 percent of the banquet participants will be fed a small bowl of rice and maybe a few swal­lows of water, representing the 60 percent of the world's population which lives in low-income countries.

Ginny Britt, the director of Crisis Con­trol Ministries, will deliver a speech at the banquet titled "Hunger for Justice." This title comes from a Latin American table grace which reads, "Lord, for those who are hungry give them food and for those who have food, give them hunger for jus­tice."

Britt will address the main causes of hunger and malnutrition in undeveloped countries: David Fouche, the campus Bap­tist minister, will open the program. "

According to Oxfam literature, the causes of world hunger and famine are not neces­sarily overpopulation or natural disaster. The world produces enough grain to suffi­ciently feed every man, woman and child every day. However, because of poverty, war, unequal distribution of resources, dis-

crimination, government policies and aid such as Ethiopia, Sudan, Mozambique, programs that increase dependency, 60per- Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Cambodia and cent of the world's population remains Haiti. , malnourished. The citizens are malnourished and .fre-

The high-income countries such as the quentlyhungry. Themajorityworkonlarge United States, Canada, England, Japan, plantations or haciendas whose crops ;are mostofWestern Europe, Kuwait and Saudi exported to high- and middle-incomeco).m'­Arabia consume 70 percent of the worldl s tries. The large foreign debt of these third­grain. Many of the citizens of these coun- world countries contributes to the huriger tries suffer from various health problems problem. One in every four person~ is resulting from consuming far more than without safe drinking water and 60,000 the minimum daily requirement of food people die daily of hunger and rel~ted consumption. diseases, according to Oxfam literature.

Themiddle-incomegroupincludescoun- Oxfam is an international organizat,on, tries whose average per capita income is founded in England in 1942 with the P,Ur­from $545 to $6,000 a year, such as Thai- pose of organizing self-help development land, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal and projects and providing aid for natural di­Mexiso.T!7;~iljfantporta1ityr~eis6_t\mes .,sas.~ers .§.L undeveloE .'?.,~!,lions. A!f the that of. 6tgh-mc9me countn\l,S' ana)hf";.mqney ~~ Jr~ the banquet will ·go economy _is crippled by foreyjgn qeb~'. directly to. Oxflinia"ad its "projects to help Themiddle class is so small in these co1 poor people gain access to basic resources triesthatmostpeopleareeitherveryrich like land, water, seeds, tools, credit and very poor. training," according to Oxfam literature.

The majority of the world's population Thebanquetwillbeginat 6p.m. Wednes-inhabit underdeveloped nations with an day. Tickets are on sale now for $5 in the annual percapitainco~e ofless than $545, Benson University Food Court.

Freshman to attend 1992 Nobel Prize ceremony BY JOHN RINKER

Ow Gow AND BucK Rmnl1ER

Freshman Amy Shaw will spend Dec. 3 through 11 in Stockholm, Sweden observing and acting in the Nobel Prize ceremony. The Lawrence Hall of Science at the University of California at Berkeley is sponsoring Shaw and three other American students to attend the ceremo- _ nies.

Last year, the Westinghouse Science Talent Search recognized Shaw as one of the top 40 high school science students in the country. After the Westinghouse award, the Lawrence Hall invited Shaw to compete for the trip.

The competition process took Shaw first to Los Angeles. Her selection there earned her a flight to San Francisco where she was committee-selected by a Lawrence Hall of

Queen for a day

. - . Science to take the trip. Shaw was notified in the spring that she would participate in the Nobel ceremonies.

tions open to any course which proves interesting to her. Shaw will depart Dec. 3 for Stockholm. She will stay in

Stockholm's Grand Hotel, host to all Nobel partiCipants. -The formal award presentations will take place Dec. l 0. Shaw will travel with Alfred McWarren, director of the Science Service, who is handling the ticketing and itiner­ary for Shaw and the other students making the trip. : •

"I'm still shocked by it .... It's not real," Shaw said of her selection for the Stockholm trip. _ .

Shaw has conducted research on iron deficiency in oak trees at her home in Solvang, Calif. Her work · was inspired by concern for her family's nursery business.

Shaw worked with the National Institutes of Health· researching the effects of cocaine abuse in rats. Her work on that subject resulted in the publication of an NIH paper.

Shaw believes her trip to Sweden will be very valuable for "meeting people who are at the top of what they're doing." Shaw is still unsure of her career plans; but she said she has a "definite interest in science." Shaw said she may major in biology or medicine, but is now taking a broad variety of courses because she is leaving her op-

, TheN obei prizes are awarded annually for outstandi~g -work in the sciences, literature and economics. This year's Nobel prizes will be awarded to: Guatemalan ~igobeita Mencu for peace; West Indies poet Derek Walcott for literature;, Frenchman Georges Charpak for physics; Rudolph 1\ Marcus of the California Institute ofTechnol­ogy for c¥mistry; Gary Becker of the University :of

Pete Kazimierczak

· Chicago f().AfConomics; and Americans Edmond H. Fisc~er and Edwin U. Krebs in medicine or physiology. . ·

1: • ' ... • • ·, 4

English honor societY= to publish new jouma~-)

BY CARLA FACHTMANN

OlD GOLD AND BLACK REPDR1CR

The campus chapter of Sigma Tau Delta, the national English honor soci­ety, announced the initiation of a new interdisciplinary journal for outstanding essays, said Claudia Thomas, an associ-ate professor of English. .

The journal, which is planned to be 100 pages long, will recruit the best analytical essays· from undergraduates in every department and combine them into a published manuscript recognizing the talents of student authors. · _

Papers must be submitted to Thomas before Spring Break of 1993. The jour­nal will publish only critical essays, Tho­mas said.

students who write brilliant essays a chance to show them off. We thought it would be really important to have a place where work of this nature c~uld be honored. ·

"This offers undergraduates the :Op­portunity to be published, as well as: the opportunity for members of Sigma 'rau Delta to publish and edit." ·

Senior Kara McMahon, the president of the chapter, said: "We thouglit it sounded interesting and that there w:as a need for it. Not only is this a really ~ thing, but we're in on the gtound floor. We hope to get a lot of contributions of diverse natures and subject matter&."

Senior Laurie Turnage, the vice presi· dent of the chapter, said she was equall:y excited about the upcoming publlca· tion. ;

''This enables students to show eact other their creativity. It's going to be; lot of work, but I think it will be a grea benefitto W alee Forest. Hopefully stncc this is a very good university in the are; of academics, people will be intereStet in contributing," Turnage said. •

Senior Camille Wilkerson, escorted by senior Nate French, enjoys her new title as 1992 Homecoming Queen at Saturday's game.

Originally inspired by the Psi Sigma Journal of James Madison University, this publication was first proposed by graduate student Edward Sheeran at the fall meeting of Sigma Tau Delta in 1991. The journal will be funded by a Spires of Excellence grant awarded to Thomas. This magazine will be the firstofits kind at Wake Forest.

Thomas said, "Most of the writing done here is critical, so this gives the

The society has also asked fac:uit: members to submit pieces that theyfee are exceptional. · ~

- .

Page 3: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

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~: ;Student H~alth Service hires ~fiTstfull-time pharmacist tit .:' ·:. : Bv KARLA LoWERV . Eckerd to get his prescription fl:oi-: ' ·1. . i OLD GOLD AND BLACK REPORTER filled," Price said. f1!·' · ~ · ' . · · Although an on-campus t..(:::with the addition of a full~time pharmacist, the pharmacy may not be as coin-~iitudent Health Service can now· provide expanded petitively priced as some of the .. .ij:Prescription medicine service to s~dents. Theresa local drugstores, Price expects .. it Jackson has been hired as the the first pharmacist in · that students will not mind pay~· · · r the history of hewth services. . ing more for the convenience . . l Dr. Ceeil Price, director of health services, said and expertise of an on-campu,s · ~ that Jackson will broaden the capabilities of the on~ pharmacist. · · !- s:ampus pharmacy. "Before we were working on a Theresa Jackson Afterspendingthepasteight ::· ~"{formula. We were able only· to stock medi- years as the phannacist for a local nursing home, .· . ~es)J~at would be used by a lot such as Jackson said she finds the Wake Forest environment":· .

·: .~:~ntt'Olandantibiotics,"~e "refreshing." -- · · ··.s··ay·.··.c.:.h.e:1'e"'.·se· •····1)"';·· •• ·· •. • · • .. -· "··· · ·. :P_riC,~saidthatwithJackson,the "Itistotallydifferentthan working in geriatrics," •, · ,:· i1 • 1

hastbe·resourcestoobtaiilotherkinds · she said. "Studentsoverallseemtobeveryhealthy." · k 0 · J h for st4iten~, as well as The addition of a full-time pharmacist is expected . . . Sop~!?!TI<?~eSha~~.S.ettle participates as a g~oul a(~~~~haunted_ house for Pr~ject Pump in ct. 29 m o nson onspeeific:medicines. sick,the·toeasetheworkloadofthenurseswho,inadditionto. ResidenceHaii.Se~;story,pagel., .· ·. , .... ,.-,; : 1,:·,·. .1·, ~ ~th~~w~~~~-~a ~~~ ~&~-~~&~~medici~~~~··L-.---~~~~~------~~~~~~~~~------~---------~

,... t . . - ···.. . . ,· .. >~ •-;' .;:- .. .-;. l, :, ~ •• i.. '. • .· '. ·;',.·:~·.<,·, ~ : .. <: q: .f . t3SG begins pilot glass recycling progtam. in cfo-q:r,: tesid¢J1Ce halls ~-..f-1 ; .. ' . I, ' ,: •• •• ' • ! '' .;S·;' ~ i:d .. : Bv LISA MARTIN pus prompted the implementation of the glass recycling · drop offal] glass. These bins. will be.emptiedonc~.~ w~k.'

·h ; ·'.

aren:t.sure, the glass. i~ considered green." -, ,, cmmusiJ11NG Rl!Po~tlER. project. The glass recycling will augment the aluminum, One b~ w.ill .. be ,marked for clear .glass, one fQr brown:

1,

1 . : white paper and newspaper recycling programs already in . glass,·one for green glass and one for newspa~rs. .), ;

. J3.urgo~ encpuraged students from residence halls that ar.e-,nQt_participating i11 the pilot prog~am wil1 be encour­aged to drop off their glass in the Davis and Taylor bins so that the bins wi!J.be full for the scheduled pick-up .

" · ·· The Student Government Recycling Committee will place. It is very importantthat the colors of glass are separ~ted 1

introduce a pilot program for glass recycling in Babcock . In Babcock and Luter, each hall will have three curbside properly, Burgos said, because any glass of the wrong ·. ;and Luter residence halls and Davis and Taylor houses in bins for glass and newspaper that will be picked up each color will make an entire bin not rec)!clable. ;

early November, sllid junior Tanya Burgos, the co-chair- Monday. Residents of the halls will take turns putting out "One of the biggest things we are worried about is-that . :rherecyclingproject started last year, with blue bins for

aluminum cans located in the residence halls, and boxes for white paper am! newspaper in the academic and residence halls. Anoth.e:t: new part of the project this year is-the.addition o,f wooden stands rather than boxes for the collection. of newspapers in some halls.

"-:woman of the committee. and retrieving the bins each week. people won't. put the right colored gla~s into the right ;:!:. ·If successful, the program will be expanded to include Because Taylor and Davis houses are constructed in the container," Burgos said. '-: . . . . : bthe ~ntire campus at a later date. suite fonnat, they will have four large roll~away bins "Many people don't realize that blue tinted glass is,not, '! _ 1 Student requests for a glass recycling program on cam- located by the laundry faci~ities in which residents can considered clear. The general rule to go by is tl:l!it if you •

;.i." .-.,,-. -...,.-----------------------------. Baha'i forum-addresses 'unaware,' racism . .

HollyTacken

;•~·: -:·Four years for change ··.Supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Gov. Bill Clinton

" •' celebrate on the Quad Tuesday after Clinton's victory. See story, page 1. ~ J,.

~~------------------------------------------~ t : ~~ ;

BY STACEV REWINKEL

OLD GOLD AND BLACK REPORTER

In order to combat racism, people must recognize and combat unknown racism, said Gretchen Hames, the facilitator of a diillogue titled, "Unaware Racism- We've All Been Infected."

Tuesday's dialogue was the third of a five­part series sponsored by the Winston-Salem Baha'i Community.

According to Barnes, the purpose of the forum was to narrow the separation between people that arises from alack of mutual under­standing by providing a safe and respectful environment conducive to interchange.

Unaware racism, as defined by the Triangle Area Institute for the Healing of Racism, occurs because "all of us have been exposed to misinformation and conditioned to racist notions, along with being kept separated from other groups of people and the opportunity to

obtain first-hand knowJedg~. Through un- The privilege of being white manifests it­aware racism, people of good will hang onto self in subtle ways such as the use of conde­and perpetuate ideas that are false and damag- scending tones ·when speaking with persons ing " !· of another race, the avoidance of contact with

According to Barnes, thef.recognition ~f another race, the use of offensive terms, the unaware racism is essential to an understand-· attributing of stereotypical behavior to mi­ing of the problem because people cannot norities that would be overlooked in whites, combat racism until they are fully aware of i!. and an overall suspicion and fear of other Unaware of even their own lack of aw·areness, races, Barnes said. whites often overlook the blatant reality of Each individual can make a commitment to white privilege, she said. . combat racism by educating roommates and

Barnes said the importance of addressing·, close friends, ra~sing issues in the residence racial issues is the fundamental concern oft he hall, providing information services, acting as Baha'i Faith. · a "race" model, questioning the white power

The statement of mission of the Baha'i structure, establishing discussion groups and Faith says: "Racism is the most challenging ·becoming aware of unaware racism, accord­issueconfrontingAmerica.Anation ... cannot ing to Baha'i guidelines. continue to .harbor prejuruce against any ra- The next dialogue, addressing institutional­cia! or ethnic group without betraying itself. izedracismasitaffectsthepublicdailythrough Racismisanaffronttohumandignity,acause the m~dia, justice system, educational sys­of hatred and division, a disease that devas- tern, health care and economics will be held tates society." from 7 to 9 p.m., Tuesday in Wingate Hall.

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Page 4: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

4 OLOGo!.oANDBLACK THURSDAY,NOVEMBER5,1992 ____ _..__.._._._ ______________________________ ~m---------------------------------------------

• Nuns shot to death in Liberia

MONROVIA, Liberia-Monrovian Archbishop Michael Francis announced Saturday that five American nuns had been shot behind rebel lines in Liberia. The five nuns from Illinois have worked as missionaries since civil war broke out in 1989.

A spokesman for Charles Taylor's rebel troops denied responsibility for the nuns' deaths, even though the nuns were found in rebel-held terri­tory. The United States holds Taylor responsible for the safety of foreign nationals in the territory he holds.

Taylor has been trying to gain control of the capital, Monrovia, for more than two weeks. Thursday his troops shelled the city center, hit­ting the headquarters of the interim government and terrifying city residents and refugees from outlying areas. Civilians are reported to be hiding in the swamps, afraid to come out for food for fear of being caught in the crossfire between rebel and peacekeeping troops. ·

•Yeltsin delays pulloutoftroops

MOSCOW- Russian President BOris Yeltsin last week ordered Red Army soldiers to stay in the former Soviet states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia until the rights ofRussians living in those states are ensured. Ethnic Russians living in the Baltic states are mioorities. The following day, Yeltsin reversed his decision but warned that any pullout was unlikely to begin before 1994.

Yeltsin ordered the drafting of an appeal to the United Nations calling on the world at large to protect the human rights of ethnic Russians. Aid to the former Soviet Union from the U.S. is contingent upon Russian troop withdrawal from the Baltic states.

Russian officials cited housing shortages in Russia as the reason for delayed troop with­drawal. Representatives oftheBalticstates vowed to present demands for withdrawal to the U.N. Security Council.

The Red Army has been in the Baltic States since 1940 when Stalin annexed them. The states view the 90,000 soldiers as threats to their sover­eignty.

•u.N.findsU.S. weapons in Iraq

WASIDNGTON- David Kay, the leader of three U.N. inspection teams to Iraq after the Gulf War, announced he found U.S.-produced equip­ment and technology in Iraq's nuclear weapons program. Between 1985 and 1990, an estimated $1.5 million in artillery was sold legally to Iraq.

President George Bush previously insisted he did not try to improve relations with Iraq by selling weapons. U.S. intelligence agencies had information about financial dealings between Iraq and an Atlanta bank before a criminal inves­tigation in 1989. TheSenateSelectCommitteeon Intelligence is investigating the affair.

Teacher corps begins recruitment BY JENNY SCHUH

OLD Got.D AND BLACK REPOR.fER

Teach For America, a national teacher corps, is beginning its recruitment sea­son at more than 160 colleges and uni­versities across the country. TFA is a non-profit organization that sends tal­ented and dedicated students to teach kindergarten through high school at ru­ral and urban schools with insufficient resources.

TFA w~ created by Wendy Kopp, a graduate of Princeton University. She developed the idea of a teacher corps as her senior ,thesis in 1989. The corps began three y~ais ago with 500 charter membe~, who just completed their two­year commitments last year. Of the 500 original participants, 60 percent have decided to continue teaching. Others have left to attend graduate school, or to work in different areas of education or in ·different fields entirely.

Tina Schuh/'a 1990 charter corps member, is teaching for her third year in the New Orleans public school system.

· "Teaching has afforded me some of the most challenging and rewarding experi­ences of my life. I have learned as much from my kids as they have from me," she said.

Trick or treat

Persons interested in participating in TFA must have a bachelor's degree, a grade point average of at least 2.5 and must submit a satisfactory writing sample. TFA makes an attempt to re­cruit math, science and foreign lan­guage majors, bilingual speakers and people of color.

"The six characteristics TFA looks for is flexibility, a high level of commit­ment, leadership, professional matu­rity; communication skills and a re­spect for all students," said Christine Thelmo, the director of public relations forTFA.

The program trains those students in a summer pre-service institute. Here, corps members gain experience through practice teaching in Los Angeles' year­round schools. They also work with mentor teachers to develop certain teaching techniques and theor,ies.

TFA has received more than 8,600 applications and has trained and placed 1 ,800 participants in 12 communities in nine states.

TFA places teachers in urban areas in Baltimore, Houston, Los Angeles, New York City, Oakland and Washington, in rural areas in Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina and the Rio Grande Valley in Texas, and in urban and rural

areas in the state of Louisiana. Corps members earn starting sala- ·

ries comparable to the cost of living in their assigned areas.

TFA is setting up local chapters around the nation to create opportuni­ties for college students and other col­lege organizations to become active in their local community. The campus chapters ofTFA are designed to match the resources of the college with the needs of the public schools.

Each organization will try to estab­lish contact with at least one elemen­tary, middle or high school in the vicin­ity of the college. College students will be providing services such as tutoring children and working with the clubs and/or or~anizations at the school, Thelma sa1d.

"The main focus of the campus chap­ter is to inspire more college students to beactiveingradesK-12,"Thelmosaid.

To date, TFA has initiated college chapters at Vanderbilt University, the University of Virginia, William and Mary College and the University of Co1orado.

"The hard part is not what you teach, but how you teach it," Schuh said. However, she said, "I'll never have another job where I'll feel so needed."

Gift Chowchuvech

Sophomore Kevin Hamilton offers ja Lessa Witherspoon candy during Project Pumpkin Oct. 29.

KilintJton Ski Trip Janurary 3-8, 1993

. '

• Student attacked on Gully Drive

ATIACK- Two unidentified men attacked a male student Oct. 27 while he was walking along Gulley· Drive, said Regina Lawson, director of University Security. The student, who was struck · in the face, was jumped while walking at 3:30a.m. from Bostwick Residence Hall to Luter Residence Hall. Lawson said the student was not seriously hurt. . . .

The student told investig!ltors that he encoun­tered the men while they were standing outsidethe South Campus residence halls. Before the men hit him, he reported, they shouted several remarks from a distance. THEFI'S -A radar detector was stolen from a student~s ~hicle parked on Jasper Memory Lane between .m. Oct. 24 and 11 :30 a.m. Oct. 25. A vehicle · ow was broken in the incident.

A pu as stolen from an unlocked office in Tribble Oct. 26. The purse and its contents were valued at $25.

A student's watch and meal card were stolen from an unlocked room in Kitchin House Oct. 29. The watch was valued at $50.

A student's wallet was stolen from a study area in Z. Smith Reynolds Library Oct. 30. The wallet and its contents were valued at $20:

Two-way radios valued at $1 ,200 were stolen from the music wing of the Scales Fine Arts Center between Oct. 5 and 28.

Two microphones valued at $212 were stolen between Oct. 25 and 28 from a closet in Wait Chapel.

A VCR valued at $350 was stolen between Oct. 22 and 24 from a locked room in Benson Univer­sity Center. VANDALISM -A student's vehicle parked in Lot J, behind South Hall, was damaged between 7:30 p.m. Oct. 23 and 10 a.m. Oct. 24 when someone broke its antenna and let the air out of two tires. . MISCELLANEOUS -Students in several resi­dence halls reported receiving annoying telephone calls between Oct. 23 and 26. A Davidson County · man was arrested Oct. 27 and charged with mak- • ing similar calls during the month.

Two m~es, a student and a non-student, were · seen runmng nude on the Quad at 1 :50 a.m. Oct. 25. A trespass warning was issued to the non­student. The incident has been referred to Harold ' Holmes, the dean of student services.

A trespass warning was issued to a man found ~ attempting to sell perfume in Kitchin House Oct. · 25.

A woman who appeared to be mentally dis- -turbed was removed from Wait Chapel Oct. 24 after :.he was reciting prayers from the pulpit. She left the chapel with a friend who was called to ~ assist security.

Security handled 84 calls between Oct. 24 and 30, including 32 incidents and investigations and 52 service requests. Twenty-one of the service : requests were for escorts.

$279 for 5 nights lodging and 5 days of lift tickets Condos ate .on the slopes

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Sign up at 11:00 am on Nov 12 in Benson 342 cost is $395 per person

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' . -

Page 5: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

,,

.Speakerto. discuss environmental preservation f ' Kohm has spenttime with the.Inuit tribe in Alaska

and has lobbied before Congress. John Litcher, a professor of education who teaches an environmen­tal studies class, said: "The best description of (Kohm) is a full-time environmentalist. In wanting to help the native people an~ nature, he spends all his time raising money to that end. He has given up all worldly goods but is extremely rich in the.spirit." Kohm is speaking at the invitation ofLitcher.

ronmental studies) in the study of the atmosphere and the solutions it offers. The class itself teaches solutions to problems in the world - and the lecture is another example of a program geared to raise consciousness on campus. Most Americans are optimistic enough to change problems; instead of seeing concern for the world as a short-term process, it should be seen as a long-term goal."

·Learn· -publishing from the inside. At the Rice UniverSitY Publishing

\•

OLD Oot.b AND BLACK R~RTER' )~ : '

The importance of preserving Alaska;}ecosys­tem, as well as the importance of the environment in the modem world, will be disc~c~ssed bY environ­mentalist Lenny Kohm at 7 p.m. Wednesday in· DeTamble Auditorium. The lecture is sponsored by the department of education. . . · , ,, · · Kohm will address the destmctton of.t~e porcu­pine caribou by the oil drill~ng .industryan9.wil1 . exhibit his photographs of Ala~k.~n scenery, , · ·.

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.· Who ya' gonna call?

Senior Carter Kersh, a student in Litcher's class, who has been active in the field of earth preserva­tion, said: ... This relates directly to the class (envi-

Litcher said: "This shows that students are taking · their knowledge out of the classroom and applying

it in real life. I like to feel that the environmental studies class is sponsorlng him."

SG From Page 1

although these residents signed agreements binding them to the regulations of a substance-free residence hall, they would not lose their housing for substance­related infringements.

Williams said she felt this de­cision is "kind of dumb, because' the reason why people requested it (substance-free housing) is to know that other people around you are not doing it." However, she said that with this year's housing shortage, the assign­ments were a necessity and that this should not happen in future years. . In other business, the legisla­ture approved the charter re­quests of the Civitan Club, the Volleyball Club and the Cricket Club. .

Junior Doug Stockenberg and sophomore Beth Crawford, members of the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, distribute 1992-93 Student Directories Friday outside Kitchin House.

Appropriations requests of the Economics Society, Chi Rho arid Golden Key National Honor Society were approved.

:Clinton :From Page 1

:to make more of a positive impression on young ·voters. : On the issue of the economy, Clinton supporters :generally feel confidence in the Democratic plan. :"Bill Clinton can do a better job because he is more ·open to new ideas than Bush is," Evans said. : Johnson said he does not share this optimism. :"Many of Clinton's figures simply do not add up." : Shannon said, "The economy will be Bill -Clinton's biggest challenge while in office." · In other races, Democ~at Jim Hunt defeated

Republican Jim Gardner to become governor and Faircloth defeated incumbent Democrat Terry Sanford to become North Carolina's second Repub­lican U.S. Senator. Democrat incumbent Steve Neal beat Richard Burr to retain his U.S. House seat.

Although Evans was displeased with the outcome of the Senatorial election, he said he does not feel it reflects on Clinton's mandate. "I think that the two are not related. Clinton's mandate is a vote for change While Faircloth's victory is a vote against incumbents."

Johnson said he agreed with this view of the Senatorial election.

"People were voting against Terry Sanford rather than in favor of Faircloth," he said.

However, Johnson said he was "very happy" with · the outcome of that race. "Sanford was the only

incumbent Democrat in the country to. lose arid we're glad to have been a part of that,'' Johnson said. ·

Johnson said he was also pleased with the presi­dential vote in North Carolina. He said, '~North Carolina was one of the key states to go to Bush. It was very, very close and we're glad to have been a part of that." ·

Shannon said she also feels that the statli results do not detract from Clinton's mandate. "I feel that Terry Sanford's loss to Faircloth does not reflect anything upon the mandate for change that the Clinton election speaks of,'~ she said. .

Shannon attributed Sanfdrd's loss to his health problems during the camp~gn and "his decision not to counter (Faircloth's) negative advertise-ments." !

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•.

•.

You took the LSAT on Saturday,

October3.

Tr:ue. you expected there'd be

no ''Roman Numerals" or Triple/

True False" question type on this exam. You knew what

kinds of question types were likely to appear. You used every

minute and dollar against the LS,t\T as it turned out to be.

Briliiant. ·.-f·

·An\!!rue again, .thosP who studied others' materials -·,:-;.::

-inCluding the "Princeton" Review, the I SAT Intensive

Review, and TesLMasters- sat scratching their

furrowed brows.

They asked themst->lves: "Where is that question type I

dri1led and drilled and drilled for'?''

For their sakes. \ve ask you: Be kin d. You aced the test.

Let that be victory enough.

Fur.inforrnat.ion ot'tthe i.SAT ('OUrs!:' that provPs aceurate

yc"ar after year -tiot only on Homan Numerals but also on

all types of Logie Games and

Faulty Logic. questions- <"all:

KAPLA.N The answer to the test question.

759-9987

STRATEGIES"F(JR·ATOUGH JOB MARKET

~esented by Ms. Beth Dixon of Fox Morris Career Transition Services

~ For fres~en sophomore·s~ juniprs, and seniors Presentation on,N"ovember 11,

repeat~d on November012 4:30-6:00 p.m. Sign up in Career Services Office

·.SENIORS: Drop resumes and cover letters for Career '93 by November 18.

Please indicate career int~re~ts and geographic pr~ferences. Careeer.'93 uicludes job fairs in

Atlanta, Chicago, New York, Dallas and Washington. More information in.Career Services Office.

. ,. . . .·, • -~·.: ;_ -' , ... ·".,r.., ., ,,. . . .

.J •• - • l .... ".: .•.• '~~···rs\·' ;..~-~-·~k· ·-7 }il ..

INTERNATIONAL<~ODP.ORTUNITIES: • ' ' ' I : \ ' ~ .' •' ~~ ;, "'i~·;. • o ~ ' ,• • ·, • .,

Study and voltinteerpr<i~~c_ljl~ing: · ' . \. _, :"; ... :.·. . ·.... . . ~ . ·""'. \. .

World:j'ejc]j: --~~- ··~· ... · · ~ .. •. · · ·. ~' .. . . ·""- ~ ~ . Chazen Fellowship for tiit~~io~al-:Busuj:e~s . ' . '. . ..

Partnership (or $eiv'~ce.s.Ldmring ': Global Education - Institute:fbr.·Intema#oiiai ... c~6peration

. ..., . :!,. .... k '

and Deve~pirt~nt ·' · ' ' ..

Brochures are available),n Career Services .. ~. . .

,. "':.: ', .·

Institute of Government summer internship progia~ information session: Tuesday, November 10, 12:00 noon in Benson 407

•',

For information about internships in local government during spring semester, see Susan Brooks in Career Services. Academic credit can be arranged

Page 6: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

OLD GOLD AND BLACK The Student Newspaper of Wake Forest University

Founded in 1916

EDITORIALS

Dear Mr. President: An open Jetter to President- good to have hopes of com-

elect Bill Clinton: pletely redirecting the eco-Although it is difficultto find no my, but you should realize

just the right words to say to that is a long-term dream. Be someone who has been handed practical, and the first 1 OOdays the reins of the most powerful of the Clinton-Gore era can and influential country in the provide a strong foundation· world, we suppose congratula- for the next four years. tions are in order. While the people listed the

The nation spoke Tuesday, economy as their number one and it unifonnly chose change. concern, realize that, in this

And, although we do not want age of technology and the ser­to dim the light of victory and vice-oriented economy, it is the euphoria that comes with it, impossible to make any sort of we fear that you will find, as 41 long-term advances without a . men have before you, that it is . substantial well-educated nearly impossible to anticipate ·populace. the myriad facets of the presi- 1apan and Germany realized _ dency. the consequences of such

Yes, you won a nearly five- shortsightedness 50 years ago to-one majority in the electoral after the end of World War II. college. And, yes, you won a We hope it will not require a majority in nearly every cat- comparably dire situation for egory possible, including men, the United States to make such women, blacks, suburbanites, a similar dedication. youth and veterans. But do not Above all, remember that assume that such an apparent you are the president oriiy by mandatewillmakethenextfour the grace of the people. More years the political equivalent of than 200 years of democratic, wine and roses. constitutional rule testifies that

If ever there was a thankless, we are, all of us, endowed an mind-crushing job, you've got equal stake in the governing of it. our country. We can afford to

As George Bush found out, forsake no one in addressing just because the public lauds the problems of suffering and you with an 88 percent approval deprivation, in both a quantifi-rating one month, it does not able economic sense and a mean that they will love you spiritual sense. forever, or even tomorrow. This was perhaps Bush's

As college students, a group greatest flaw: the division of that overwhelmingly graced Americaalongracial,classand you with its support, we feel moral lines. It is not possible that the next 77 days until your to forge a "kinder, gentler" inauguration should be a time America if we are willing to to reflect on and consider the bash any segment of our soci-reality of our country's situa- ety, be it the media, the cul-tion. tural elite of Hollywood, athe-

Like William Howard Taft, ists or homosexuals. Herbert Hoover and Jimmy As a nation, we have strug-Carter, Bush found out that the gled with the question of intol-economy plays a crucial role in erance from our earliest, na-either shattering or kindling scent stages. In your zeal to hopes of reelection. More than remedy the unequal access to 66 percent of the people ques- opportunity~ do not ma\:e·the "·'· tioned in a CNN exit poll said , ·mistake ·of,neglecting··th,lse"'"!l the state of the economy was who compose the sa-called• either "poor" or "not so good." majority. It is impossible to gain the ap- If the comfort of one group pro val of the public with such a is purchased at the expense of perception. any other, the price is exces-

Perhaps you should take heed sive. Toni Morrison, perhaps of the grass-roots movement the greatest writer living in thatgaveH.RossPerotthemost America today, once wrote, successful campaign showing "If one lost, all lost." Remem­by a third party candidate since her that. 1924. His no-holds-barred, By all means, you should open approach to the economy bask in the light of your win. is what gave Perot- a man Youfoughtthegoodfight,and who has had no direct political the blows you endured were experience - a viable cam- not always above the belt. All paign. we ask, is a little consideration

We appreciate an honest ap- of the gravity of your task. proach to economic issues. Take Never forget that the people the momentum provided by have given you the privilege Tuesday's election and chan- of governing us. Remember nel it into fulfilling a short list that, and you will be the better of clearly defined goals. It is for it.

OLD GoLD AND BLACK Jay Woodruff Editor in Chief

StephMohl Managing Editor

Associate Managing Editor: Brad Dixon.

Chris Wickland Business Ma!Ulger .

News: Michael Peil, editor; Lori Donath and Terese Mack, assistant editors; Cherry Chevy, Worldwide editor; Julie Dunlop, production assistant.

Editorials: Nicola Dawkins and Matthews Grant, editors. Perspectives: Eddie Sou them, editor. Arts and Entertainment: Sara Harrington and Jason Holton, editors; Erica

Paddock, production assistant. Sports: Mike Fitzgerald, editor; Jay Reddick, associate editor; Brett Queen

production assistant. ' Copy Editing: Eric Williams, head copy editor; Carrie Raydon, Richard Wright

and Stephanie Spellers, copy editor. Photography: Tip Gentry, editor. Advertising: Jon Bobalik, sales manager; Jenny Yee, production manager; Karen

Nunley and ~lrck Hershberger, production assistants. Graphics: Jay Womack, editor; Gift Chowchuvech, staff artist. Offic~ Manager: Brian Uzwiak.

The Old Gold and Black encournges members of the Wake Forest Cllnununity to address current issues through letlers to the editor. We do not accept public thank·you notes.

All letters must include the author's name and phone number. although anonymity in print may be reQIJested. Submissions should be typewritten and double-spaced.

We greatly appreciate contributions submitted on Macintosh-compatible disks or the university's Macintosh network. Letters should be delivered to Benson SIS or mailed to P.O. Box 7569 Reynolda Station. Winston-Salem, NC 27109.

The Old Gold and Black reser'ies the right to edi~ without prior notice. all copy for gr:urunatical or typographical errors, and also to cutleuers as needed to meet layout requirements.

The deadline for the Thursday issue is 5 p.m. the previous Monday.

The Old Gold and Black is publlsbed each Thursday during the school year, ex<epl duringe>caminations, summer and holiday periods by Newspaper Printers Inc. of Winston·Salem, N.C.

Opinions expressed In this newspaper aN those of the edllorW sr.ff or contn1ntlomlo 1M pape: and donotneces!lari!yreflecttheopinlonsofthestudenlbody,bcully,otalforadm!nlslra6onofWakeForat'

Across miles; sibling love can {ing clear

M. · ysiste~Beth,calledrnefrOmConnecti- .BRiAN UZWIAK in which peopj~1-Jn families mistreat those they cut Sunda_y. · . · - . love. My· being away from home, and my parents_

sruoENT CoLUMNIST . . . SJ:ie .is. 16 and busy Jiving out ~e arguing over yet another item in the list of seem~ heady 'days of~ne of the most exciting peiiods of ingly insipid things that can set'them off; was that youth. . . . . · : It seems that the incident upset her because it which truly upset her.

She· just eamed her driver's lieence·. and 'is· crystalized the realization that some of these "Why do we treat each other this way if we love enjoying the expandedfteedoms tbaiitilffords.lt · people that had been her "friends" for years were each other? We only have so long to be here after

. sounds to-me;that'she is having some of the· superficial and could not understand the depth of all, so we may:as well just all try to get along," I greateSt success that she ·. · would guess that she hasever&chieved, with do-.· . ' . ' . ' . . . ' . . \ thought. ing ':"ell. in school, ~ing ... How does one express to someone over the phone that they undersfaJ.]d This was a frustrating nomlnatedtotheNational · · e~perienceformeb_ ecause Honor S<lciet)i, ~d being · .· · their.' probleJJis 1i~d.; c~n sympathize because t~ey have been there be~· \.,.. ·:· · unlike ever before, 1 just elected president ·or. the fore? How does oqefeel remotely able to fulfill his or her obligations as1 ·wanted to reach out and school's chapter of Am· · . · · · · · · · ·· '- · · · . \ hug her, to let her know neilty· International .. And ,' · . brother; or~sister?' I did not know how to do it, and I felt guilty that alH. , that I was there for her to all of this' as Just ~junior! ' co~ld do was talk. ~uti guess having someone to talk to- even if iHs · '[lay her burdens down

~:~;~.!::.:f.~~~: ; onli:log~t'.tli~t-~~fg~t off your chest- is something we all need. 'l!~~~ we were merely tellfromherfirsthellothat . ; ,, , 1 • co~t,1ected by an 800mile something, \V~n't quite. " ·~ '. )j '~ umbilical cord of twisted right. It seemed that she. . . wire,fiberopticsandcom-was upset a~ut something, and after the second, her personality. puter relays. \ "What'samatter?"shereleasedagushing tQrrent I asked her why she was even concerned about The only emotion I can possibl)!. compare this to of penfup emotions. : these people, because she had long realized that i_s the one I felt w~en I readJ .D. SatiN!_ r~y, c_ archer . Her chun:h youth group bad been one ~f her she ,couldn't really talk to tliem, and she had m the Rye and \..-anted to reach into e book and favorite activities last year; and V.:hen she to!d me newer; better friends who understood her. help the poor character Holden Caufi d~'.-. that she hadn't enjoyed it that night I was, sur- At this point, the crux of her unhappines~ was How does one express 'to sameoJte over the prised. The group had .discused:a pep rally that re,V¥J.¥J: It seems that ~he felt that she cou~d not phone that they understand ~id>roblelms and can was held at 'the high school on .Friday, so ~ the talk.ro.bne of her best friends because she dtd not sympathize because they have been th~fe.._ before? context of the discussion, she. expressed her dis- want to bother him. . How does one feel remotely able to fufillhiS. or her

·. taste for pep rallies saying'tbai the school spirit She wanted to be there to support him because obligations as brother or sister? I didn~tkno~~how ', that they purport to evoke is not real or las~ng. his mother had just been diagnosed as having lung to do it, and Ifelt guilty that alii could do was k.

After the meeting, oneofthe_othermembers of cancer, and she now faced a tenacious battle Butl guess having someone to talk to-even i it 'thegroup,a"friend,"toltlherthecommentdeni- beginningwiththehorrificexperienceofchemo- is only to get that weight off your chest-. i"lr

grating the pep rally was "uncalled for," .,Yhich · therapy. · something we all need. upset Beth. · _ . ,.. . . . . J · The misfortune of her friend made her realize I can only hope that I helped Beth through this in

She did not feel that itwas W9I:th gettmg mto a th~ transience of life- the relative ease by which some way, and pray that she comes to recognize the fight with this girl, but She di(stillbelieve that someone could seem healthy and vivacious one great things that are a part of her life now, rath~(-she had a right to expJ;CSS her opinion. · minute, and be facing cancer the next. than be forced down by the weight of those that ..

She turned and Y(,alked away. · She'came to realize the misfortune in the way could be better. ' '

Excuse our noise As the season changes~ so do the

leaves. However, with the beautiful fall colors comes the reality that land­scape IJlaintenance must~ increased to keep up with the seemingly never-

enriches our soil and saves money on dumping fees and maintenance cost.

I welcome your suggestions so that the Grounds Departmentmightbetter serve you. I cari be reached by phone at Ext. 4622. I do-have voice mail, so please leave a message.

ending fall of leaves. _ David Davis Consequently, increas.ea ·use Of Assistant superintendent for

blowers imd other noisy 'equipment is Physical Facilities necessary to maintain the campus; · · . , · WeintheGroundSDepartmentre"· Tr th b t B h

gret any inconvenience due :to. the u a -ou us increased noise levels. However, we must continue to do our jobs as the· The editorial staff of the Old Gold leaves continue to fall. . andBlackisatitagain. With its shoddy ,Safety, as well as cos,~erl,cs, is~ style ofjoumalis10 and highly polar­

issue in the leaf reinovai:,Leaves on-- 'ized editorials; it continues to try to walks-can be slippe!')' and can cause mislead the Wake Forest community. fal~s. and piling leaves in parking ar- . However, as Michael Peil put it in eas can be ignited by b~tautomobile 'liiS Oct 22 column, "I seek only to set e:ldlaust. · : '· the record·straight" on the issues he

·_.With· weather restraims. shortened . tries to mislead us on. daylight hours and the b~y Wake · ThefirstexampleofPeil'sbrandof Fore!jtcalendartocontendwitb,sched- ·~oumalism" is his accusing the vice uli!' our work can be ·a chilll. eng_e.· .. presiden~ oflying at a nationaiJy tele­. e .grounds. crew here at Wak_e vised debate. He then conscientiously Po t is also responsible for mari9'>· checks Vice President Dan Quayle's

·taskS not related.to normal grounds ' 1referencetopage304ofSen.AlGore's maintenance. Here are just a few ex- book. · amples: moving furniture and equip- I can only believe that Peil was not inent, garbage pick-up and recycling, countipg on someone calling his bluff. litter pick-up, buildingoutdoorstages I invite e.veryone else to find (not buy, and doing various other work orders becauseiwouldnotwantanyofyouto requested by students and facl!1ty. . waste your money) a copy of Gore's

Considering that our grou!lds crew book and see for yourself the lies Gore of only 22 · 01en mainiilins approxi- and Peil propagate. mately 250 acreS of lawn, woodland . At least Peil is correct in describing and parking lots aQd 14.1. miles· of what is mentioned on page 304 when stieets and walks, it is understandable he alludes to the quote, "Carles Maier that we cannot schedule our work pointsoutthattheannual United States around class schedules or sleeping expenditures for the Marshall Plan habits. . between 1948 and '1951 were close to

The Grounds Depanment worki[lg two percent of our GNP. A similar hours are from 7;30 a:m. unti14 p.m., percentage today would be almost Monday thrOugh'Friday. . $100 billion a year ... " However~ parking lots must be But Peil becomes- quite provincial

cleaned when empty; usually very whenherefusestotumthepage.Right early in the morning. So please ex- there, on page 305, Gore says "the cuse the noise during this busy 1~ original Marshall Plan" should "serve season. . . . . as both a model and an inspiration" for

dna more pasi~ive note, we are . whatt!teUnitedStatesmustdotohelp ,·.n6w~clitigaU~I~~a¢~;j:~!:V.iilie the world's environmental

And because Quayle said that Gore had "suggested" (Quayle's exact word) $100 billion in aid in his book, it seems the facts are quite obvious. It appears that Gore has in fact pulled another "Clinton," and so has Peil.

Peil then dares to say the rich have not "shoulder(ed) their fair share of the· tax burden." However, even a cursory glance at the IRS statistics on the 1990 federal individual income tax returns wouldhaveconvincedhim otherwise.

in just under a week, this qualified president will be given the vote of confidence.

He will be entrusted with the heim of the country for four more years despite the media's (includ­ing Peil's) attempt to deceive the public in order to achieve its goal of helping the Democratic party attain the White House.

Wayne Tarrant

Those taxpayers with adjusted gross incomes above $100,000 filed 2.8 percent of all returns and paid 36 percent of all income taxes. In con­trast, those whose adjusted gross in­comes were under $30,000 filed 66 percent of all returns and paid only 15 percent ofall taxes. Is this not soak­ing enough for you, Peil?

-Lovely Lexington

To argue character would be ri­diculous, because Peil bases his com­plete argument on opinions and state­ments from unnamed aides.

This tactic is used so that no one can discredit his sources on a factual basis, and also to ensure that he is not caught once again in his and Clinton's lies.

Finally, I want to touch on the "wa­tered-down Clean Air Act" that Peil mentions. I, too, would like to criti­cize President George Bush for the passage of this act. By writing it into law, he went too far trying to appease the environmentalists.

The Clean Air Act was passed de­spite a 10-year federal study that. proved that acid rain does very little hann to lakes and forests and has not been found to endanger human life. Furthennore, the CFC phaseout and reduction of greenhouse gases is based on unproven theories still disputed by many scientists.

Yet Gore wants to spend more on this speculative agenda, even with jobs on the line and with Clinton's assertion that he wants to put people first.

_ J I was happy to see a story about »:exington barbecue in the Old

Gold, •·d Black, until I read the story.

Not only did Mike Fitzgerald get some of his facts wrong -our mayor's name is Price, not Wells, for example -but his character­ization of Lexington as good for nothing besides barbecue is un­fair.

Lexington is full of good people, many of whom went to Wake For­est. They remain very supportive of the students who attend the university today.

To say that "there is little worth mentioning in Lexington" is in­sulting to them and to all the citi­zens here.

Neill Caldwell News editor, The Dispatch

Lexington, NC

f

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University.

Obviously, Bush has been address­ing the issues for the past four years and his record stands for itself. And, ·. · ~tippihg~ Ss'~ii1c1F6fc01ili)o'scnnr ''.ciiSUi.:

.............................................................. ~ .......... ~ ............................................................................ ~~ -~~~

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pageant

Page 7: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

those they my parents

of seem~ was that

if we love here after along,'' I that she

,,

1,1

NeW br~ed of p~liticiafl: R,a1]1boW:sbitn~to our rescue · · ~- · · -· ' · · · - · · · · · ,.~ · · · · ~.....,;.,:;, · f ' :· viduai voting districts, the (fill in

CARLA FACHTMANN. to govern .properly; efficiently; and most ?f. iheclassrixf~·~~-~a·s ne~ uu;•• ... (l, su~r-all,fairt'. . . . . · ... · __ .· ... ll!en~dsu~~omen_co~ldfulf!ll.the~c1~nt racialgrouph~re)voteorcertainfinancia~

y ' · . ·: · • · '·' · • :•,.· 1 ·•. ' '·. 'fo"becieS of .a WOrld truly embl'aCJDg . Jts · backers (who In tum WOUld demand cer

plethora of political comriten~. awareness and astuteness ao'but . ---:-'--"----------'­A what exactly this country needs

have marked this election. In an era where the masses aie~uddenly'

changed into non-WASP, Brooks-Broth­ers wearing, conventionality-embracing constituents, politicians seem to feeJ they have their hands on the pulse of American emotional response to that most sacred of forms of governance by "democratic" means. .

Ever since the notorious Dewey-Truman' rat race, the shepherds of sanctity h'ave begun to realize that the voting public may not necessarily be white-collared and mus­tached.

Therefore, this country obviously needs a new fonn of supreme leader: one w~o ·

,.1'

· Known as Rambow Shuns, ~~ depar~ .P P ·. · -· .. · · · · · · .. · • · tain favors) American candidates could turesfr0mnatu~woul4irtt~irltteall.fa~t8of ·. varied_cult\1tesand~nc~a~ts· Thesepfropin· combine th~ ingenuity of Europe in its

: · · bo.th · al. t· • th tru 1 ·. h · ·-- ~:..1· · · and.. b' • '"-'· _ ators woUld be ste ... "'-'~.m,the lore o .. every· . . . canrepresent sexesequ ym es gge urnanexpen~!JCC,n•~.~ng_ .to~o~'i"":~ .. _·· . ~ ..... "r- .· .b. centunesofpolltJcalprogressandpower ~ · · . all! ··1 · · ·· · · · : o· rac1 A ·b ·dl ·r .. ~di · aenerataon . groun. and gender •. thus com m- . . _ . .orJUSticeat eves.. titJesmtoone_. .. e-_ un e.O .. UUJ• ng ~ •;:··.'"_ .- s:· .. - .. · .. 1. :.,he .. withtbenanvesenseoffwrplaymd1gent

This need has been addre~sed by women with all h~ankind; : .' ·' -. . : · . . · _ . mg ~~~ ~ye.f.~~res of ~unt es~ mJ- to our soils. running for o(fic¢, but has it ever been met in · Not only would these creattons be able to sph~~. soc1al Stra~ andleamm~ P~~erns. . . f all its requirem_ ents by·_any one p. erson? · · · · '·til '&ndro · ·• · "f ··· ---atlt · By thils 'enbancmg the Amencan demo- The Rainbow Shims hold the future 0

re~nt e... gyny_ 0.; n_ue.~~~- ~~. rati .• ·. ·stem'''·. f.g. ·o·v· em~ent countless~hil~ ·the world in their multi-limbed append-. The closest anyone has come to this para- mmds they could also empattuze-at.levels of · c c sy o · . • . . H h h 11 •

gon has been the originator of the Emancipa~ . ~ducatlon. ,~c h .... ~lml.un.-1. ;;~ t.olitl~ . dreil ~riithis rit~~ei:it forward could reap t~e ahges.. 1~w~veder, t e c a 1engfe this not_ on~

· · .·- ... ,. . .-:r~""'''' .. ·.-r cr.~n.~ ,.,< .. be'nefits" o'·f·a 8. Stem tbat·does nor.fulfilJJts t at 1s 1m1t to marve s o e m1cro tion Proclamation, but even then, the infinite s~tru~, ~fJJ!~~~~ Bt~Y~1'D~~~.tltroQ~ . .. , Y. ;· . . • • . • _ . . scope_ it might even be one that you or limits of equality for all were not contained. total understandmg of SltJrlltio~, r~er th~ past h!st~ry Q~da~rumnati~n. . .

1 . I could fulfill.

The solution to this exacerbating problem by politiw hrialystsl ;grasps ;elf; mauers for- . Spnn~~g direc_tly from b10mes of. earmng . , . .. . . lies not with theprolc~tiniat,theSocial bond or ·. ......... . 1 .· r mak ' tb 1. andadaptation'(insteadofmerelybemg edu- After all, lSD t the tdea of hfe,ltberty,

eJgn~u.A,_Uitt_~W! .•. P,O-'cy, ,_,,,er;;;,,:~Y ttmate ated. arti .. ul. ar· mother's womb' these andthepursuitofhappiness"onlyonethat contractamongme~aridwomen,northeidea freedomofthemmd(thatof''reachmgoutand c map. c ._ "· . · h · 1 fall Of an Oll'garph·y·run by those best educated to • h.·, · ;,i·· ,)tli»;:.< L '!;,.,J;o!.?.ii.l ... .ii.\ri~• ·: ·'· ·wonderi;Ofmodemtec:bilologycouldserveas can be realized wJtht e mvo vemento

.ouc mg WI conex..., wJU ~--c:: • .-u.;uums ID- . . . . · . • . Rainbow Shims at Wake Forest and in the rule.Rather,itlieswithaQewbreedof"peoP.le" steadof~JI;s)..;.S:~~~~~~: . . ,i.; ~:_~c~~ed0b.f ~urdtuneb -'~-

1 · .• di- world?

WhO could easily be scientifically. engineered . Educated On the Street, at the home and 10 l~~ longerJmut . Y lD e tc;uueSS· 0 m

SUDEI'IT .CowMI'IIST

Scandirta~ians des-erve note~ in our/academic curriculurrl..

' ·~ . . . ' .

W ell, IAi~ve fi.nally had all that I c~ take. I RUSSELL PA~ON .· __ , .. caq{e to Wake Forest as a young man ready -SnJDENT ___ c_o_LUMN~-,s-r--...,..-----.;._-'-. ""' .. .:....~,-.

. . t9f1eam about the world around me and its . . .. history. )J:6w, it has come to my attention that .the ___ _,_...., _ _, __ .._ ____ ..__..,

uni)l~'ity seems to be neglecting an area of study I in Moorhead;Minn.; just a few blocks down rroin the ··~m necessary in any individual's education. · Heritage Hjemkomst Center;.,which' is a museimi/

Where is a department, or at least a class, that conference· center featuring a life-size Viking ship ~at concerns itself with the study of Scandinavia? sailed across the Atlantic n~t'too long ago:) I kid you

I could choose to study other cultures, such as those not! People from these and otJ!er areas will not bC of the English, German, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, pleased if they are stuck with Slavic lit. Japanese or Russian peoples, but my heritage says I Many students choose to study abroad during their should not pay them any attention, for I am of Scandi- Wake Forest career, and that is· great, but I maintain . navian descent and proud of it. that the only reason you hear so many great :things

I could even take_ctasses detailing the history of aboutthehousesinLondonorVeniceisthatwe_donot those countries mentioned above plus India, Africa; the haveahousein StoCkholm, Helsinki, oSlo, COpeilh~n MiddleEast,MexicoandLatinAmerica. You can even or Reyjkavik to which we might., compare th~. . . .···1-'-'-.:._---------~--'--=--~...,....,--.,....::.---------------------J take a class in Slavic literature. Where does Sweden fit ·. I do not write this for myself; for I have a firm gi:8Sp .- ' · · ···.: · ' · '- · · · intothisequation?Nowhere-.Itook"HistoryofWorld onmySwedishheritagetluirikstogroWingupwitliina ·In .. _· d ... · .. ·_-.·~:·'_·_ :Ce· n.s'_e· o'· f.··. c. 'amp· u·s· Ml.nl· stry Civilizations Since 1500" my freshman year, and I do 90-minute drive of my great great grandfather's origi-. · . _ .L ~ noteverrememberlearning·anythingaboutScandinavia. nal homestead.lwrite this cohimn fq~the lost Scan~i- . . , . ,- ·.·'· · , .- . · . . · .

Switzerland was not the only neutral country in naviansouttherewho'Ciuelesslyseareh'fortheiriden- -·s-· e~i9~ .¥ic~~I.Bam~eU i~; a:·~. ScoTT KYLES Europe during World War ll; Sweden was as well. And tities. The closest a person outside the upper Midwest · ·.friend ofnune, and I mean him :-. -.-~.-.:..._--'-------did you know that, after the Soviet Union signed its gets to studying Scandinavia is a forced reading of .. ' no'~~ whilt-1 am about to STUDENT COUJMI'IJST

Small group Bible study does oc­cur in BSU, as well as in Intervarsity and other campus groups. The recent publication of nonaggression pact with Germany in 1939, those dam Beowulf; a casual mention of Eric the Red and Lief ~write .. _ -> -----------~

Ruskies warred with Finland. and that tittle country Erickson or an old Thor cartoon. . held the Russianjuggemaut in check for almost three Itistimeforouradministrationtotakeactionandfill months, inflicting casualty ratios estimated frOm 8-to- this void that is Scandinavian studies. From the volea-1 to as high as 20-to-1 on inferior Russian troops? n~ ~d geysers oflceland, tQ ihe l:jrlros·ofNorway. to

. ~:.Howev~r,hesaidsomethingsinan from the group ~th which he has TheWitness,areligiouspamphlet · artiCle for-~ month's Wake Forest" . been involved; namely BSU. distributed on campus, gives evi­. Ciiiic,)it)eq~~·Religion on Cainp.iis: - , whereBSUisconcemed,Icansee dencethatevangelismdoesholda

As Wake Forest becomes a more diverse campus, the rollingfarms and naturafresource8 of Sweden, to how will it cater to the Scandinavian students of Min- the 60,000 lakes· of Firlland. to the three mam and nesota, North and South Dakota and other states where, hundreds of small islilnds that co~prise Denmaik, if someone finds out you are not Scandinavian, you there is much to be taught and learned about havetofleeforyourlife?ThisisaplacewhereGarrison Scandinavia. . _ . . . . . _ . Keilor~$.1';l'ra},:ie,I{Q.tpe,Co.tppaniqn" ~cljo show, fea- Wake Forest had better develop this area ofstudy, Or turing~~!qgy~~~.,fn ~\V~~op,:.Js irtore I am transferring to GustavUs Adolphus Qlllege in . real than you wol.i.wiver imagine. (An in~eresting fact: Northfield, Minn., for a real education. Or I just might

SOciaJ~per~t~i¢. "which~erv~ · bow some of the material discussed in place in Campus Ministry as wen. . someeonliliehf:':: .: ·' ·''· · our Tuesday nigbt,i:lorizons Meet- Barnwellsaysmuchoftheprob-

Since .the .a.rtlcie came out iri the ings.could cOme .acrosS-as radical to lemstemsfrOm "thefactthatmany Critic, theresp0~ would ideally run · somoone of a conservative back- participating in such groups (or at in the same publication; however, I grotint:L least in my group) do not regard Can respond more p~mpily here, and . . Butnoteverymeetingisaboutworld theBibleasGod'slnfallible Word -bCcause I ain an · to mankind." · , · · . . . oolintullst, I .. "'My response is that; if we ·did, .. means .. sctvi~ Wbere we' even use portions not hold the Bible to be vitally

Prairie Home is a cemetery five miles from my house take that Slavic lit class. In case you missed his article; oftheJ3ib1ethatdonotrefertoJesus' authoritative, we would not seek Barnwell holds that the trend in Cam- views on soeial ministty! to address passages such as Mat­pus Ministry is toward a "social gos- When we do diScuss issues inHori- thew 25, in which Jesus commands pel/' the relie\1rig of social ills in zons Meeting!;, the intent is meant to us to care- for the needs of our

· Cbiist'sname,aildthisistotheexclu- be.educational;Someofthethingswe brothers and sisters . . sionof"other.aspectS of Christianity; discus$ are not popular traditional CampusMinistryiscertainlynot such a8 evangelism and Bible study." Sunday School or sermon topics, but above reproach. One of Paul's

AsafonnerpresidentoftheBaptist they lite nonetheleSs quite Biblical major emphases in his epistles is Student 1.{~~!1· ~y attention was im- · and quite Christian in their repercus- that the church should constantly mediatelyarouscil. Thisseemsarather sions. be held accountable to the teach­

. s'weepinggeneralization,considering . _ . BSU (and Campus Ministry, for ings of Jesus, of Scripture and of the natures. of groups like Fellowship , ·that matter) is not meant to be a re- tradition. of .Christian-.Athl.etes, lntervarsity.r placement for church, but a supple- But Barnwell's criticism is not

· ebristiah Fellowship and·the Gospel• nient particularly constructive, and, if Choir. 1

' · .. , '· • Some ofBamwell•s criticisms are we are to maintain Christ's high Anyo~e\\fitb!)..JVdimentaryknowl-. well taken; perhaps we could have a calling as the church (and in this

edgeofCampu8;Ministryknowsthat moi:ebalancedinclusionofBiblestudy case, as a Campus Ministry), we these !iQup~ dQPQtibelong under the and evangelism in our endeavors. are going to have to work together

, . . ·~social gospel'! labcil. ·However, this is not to say that these to see what Jesus means and should ' : :: · . J ;.. Barnwell- has drawn his inferences elements are, altogether forgotten. mean for our lives as Christians.

Pageant likely to objectify, D()t Ce~(!~rate, Wake Forest 'Woman T he attitude of the student body at

Wake Forest never ceases to amaze me. For the past few weeks we

have read a great deal about sexism, the proper role of women and reproductive freedom. It seems ironic to me then that there has been practically no mention of the Miss Wake Forest University pageant.

Admittedly, a pageant can seem rather harmless on the surface, but I, for one, feel that the true effects of the entire pageant system are greatly underestimated by many.

First, I must state that I do know a little about the pageant system. After all, I grew up in a small Southern town where home­coming queens, prom queens and any other

· random queens generate enough interest to be frOnt-page stories. I also have had a nur.nberoffiiendsbecornecaughtupinthe system.

Contrary to popular belief, a pageant is not entered lightly. The first phase ofprepa­mtion usually involves some kindofhealthy lifestyle, i.e. proper diet and exercise. This is usually followed by trips to the tanning salon and, if the contestant is a novice, lessons in how to walk in heels and look at the judges at the same time.

At home, I can always tell when it is pageant time because my sister, a former

CANAANHUIE

S-ruDENT COLUMNIST

queen, gets numerous calls frOm young women who need to be shown how to walk, tum, smile and 1ook at the judges simultaneously.

The night of the pageands always the most interesting. In addition to her dress and vari­ous accessories, every participant needs her adhesive tape and Vaseline.

First the Vaseline must be smeared on the teeth so the contestant will have a brighter smile. Now the real fun can

sometimesphy~icany. unhealthy. N~~(o~ studies have sho'Wn women scoring much lower on te&ts of self-esteem. Other studieS have shown a rilte of eating. disorders .tna't is much higher for teen-age girls than tSr any· other section ofthe-poplllation._,r·=:·::t' .. ·

I am not trying to say the pag~t system is the sole culpri~ but it is definitely a factor in these problems. · ,, , · .

These social problems~ along with some of the smaller indignities, point to the greater · flaw. The true pi'Qblem is the stereotype of women that it p~tuates. A woman is judged

flimsy basis on which to mlike judgements societies not a factor? If the true purpose is about a ¢cion's character and personality. to celebrate confidence and poise, why not

Now that I have briefly written abOut pag- make campus community involvement a eants in general, I would like to tum to this factor? If the goal is to celebrate the Wake pageant in particular. . Forest woman of today, why have a pag-

Fmt, I .have a problem with. the judging cant at all? system for this pageant. The contestants will The women who have these characteris­be judged on personal interviews (40 per- tics can be found all across campus, in­cent); poise and stage presence (30 percent), volved in a number of different activities amount of money raised (20 percent) and and roles. Unfortunately, what appears to beauty(lOpercent). Thiscriteriaseemsslightly be the true goat of this pageant is a quick skewed frOm the stated goal of the pageant: buck for the BSA treasury. " ... to celebrate the essence of the Wake Forest Next, the organizers of this pageant are

woman of today- intelligent, quick to point out that there will not be a begin. The adhesive tape is placed on the outside of each breast and pulled in to create the illusion of a fuller bustline and more cleavage. The tape is then applied to the but-

The true problem is. the stereotype of women that it perpetuates. A woman is judged as ~ing worthy or not on the basis of her appearance.

confident 8nd poised." swimsuit competition. Unfortunately,ldo BeautyandthCabilicytoraise not believe that this is truly a major con­

money have nothing to do with cern. Whether the woman is in a parka or the three qualities supposedly in the nude, the point is that she is still celebrated by this pageant. being judged as worthy according to her

tocks to help pull them up, makingthemappearsmallerandmore"perky." as being worthy or not on the basis of her .

Obviously, not every contestant will go to appearance. these lengths. However, there is a very small Of course, all reputable pageants will show number of women who will go even farther. that they are not sexist by pointing out how Oneyoungwomaniknow,attheripeoldage much emphasis they place on the personal of 23, has already had several operations in interview. Call me crazy, but interviews that order to correct "flaws" in her appearance. may not last 10 minutes and. that include

Certainly, this obsession with personal ap-·. que'stions such·as;~·Qrijscaie·of11o lObow · pearance c!lfi be very psychologically, and· . wouJdroura~yourseli?"Seeintobeapr:etty

· ......

Using the logic of the pageant physical appearance. · . organizers, the Black Student I will say, in conclusion, something that

Alliance, I suppose th1tt the Office of Admis- · I ani sure will seem a little unusual. I do not sions, whomustcertainlybelookingfo~intel- . believe that the pageant system should be Iigent, confident and poised stUdents, should abolished. All people should have the right consider switching to an admissions process to use their bodies as they see fit. that takes into account the physical appear- However, in a society where eating dis­ance and the amount of money a student is orders and sexual assault are all too com­capable of rais~g. . . . . mol), . an academic institution has abso-

If the trile •pUtpi)se is ti:i'dele~.· intelli~ . · .lutely no business supporting any program gence, wby me GPAorparticipationio ho~or '.i;tiat leads to the objectification of people.

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IN I I:N IIUNAL ~1:.\,.;UNU I:At"U:SU

OLD GOLD AND BLACK 8

The John Hancock Tower rises above the other buildings in this section of Chicago.

"Come and show me· '.U}dt];l~r city withJifted head .singmg sp, pr()p'(f:t~be ·wve··and coarse and . . ' . : ·~ .

stro11g:and '¢ul)]1ing." . · !., .... ;.,. from''ChiCago" ,., ; · ·' .. : ;. :by Carl Sandburg

''!· .• -, .•. , . . .

The train station along Lakeshore Drive sits empty on an autumn m&rnirig.

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TiruRSo;\v,}JovsMBER 5;.1992. •• " • ··.' ••• <',• .,. '

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Mq,:iarle~ Pl'ftyers tecreate.· ' ' ... . { ,,

.. '.. '• . .. . . . Kftai7. The,M~iiJ.rtean Players played pieces from the classical and romantic eras on period instruments last Friday· in . Brendle' Recital Hall. ·

Reiki healing .funky way to soothe body, mind, soul

Bv STEPHANIE SPELLERS If you break _down the word "dis-Corv Eorroa ease", you get "dis" and "ease" orlack

of ease. That's the key to reiki, which It starts with some wann tingling. attempts to heal the body by setting

As the hands settle in another zone, your body and soul back\1t ease. waves begin to fan throughout your Such a philosophy ofhealingmakes body. Then you're just floating, totally sense in the East, where disease is said in touch; totally in hannony. Peace. to star! on the spiritual plane. If you

I• Whatever your ailment, whatever ignore these signs, it moves on to the yourstress(spiritual,emotional, ... none emotional level, causing stress and at all)" everybody could use a little anxiety. lfyou still do not attend to the reiki healing. · problems, the 1ackofeasefinallymani-

Japane8efor"universallifeenergy," fests on the physical plane. By that reiki is a natural healing proce.Ss in time, you're sick. which one person's energy is used to Fitzgerald said that when reiki is setanotherpers,on's energy in balance. used for physical healing, it should be The_:only._instiuments·are the healer's teamed with Western medicine. "Just bands~ pressing in specific zones that using the Western doctor's prescrip-pro<Juce specific reactions. No pain. lion is like going to a fire, turning off No·~tripping. Just cooi:and easy (and the alarm and walking away. Your

·• fuii!);~y~_ti.liedh~'\lil>Je~dl~P '$body .is trying to tell you :sorilet:b,ing}: Jobli''Fitlgerald work his magic. . when you get sick. You have to listen

lfreikisoundSJa~ittl~far-but:foryou; ·.MOd respond to the Whole'probleJ;ll.'~ it really isn't. The Chinese and Japa- But you do not have to besicktoget nese have been doing it for thousands _reiki healing. Especially in college, of years. Fitzgerald started practicing where students run around madly try-reiki healing six months ago- one ing to find a way to let go of stress. year afterbe graduated from the Wake After two hours on Fitzgerald's table, Forest School of Law, four years after set up in the living room of his apart­hegraduatedfrom Wake Forest with a ·ment, I walked away serene and ready double major in hi_stOiy and French. to face life again.

"I used to get sick all the time at Throughout the session, Fitzgerald Wake/' he said. "Whenever I went to gabs with his clients. I came in feeling the infinnary or any Western doctor, it spiritually, emotionally and intellec­wasverydissatisfying. Yougettreated tually out of whack, so during my · like amachitie, and I never really reso- treatment we· talked about the causes nated--with-that." - of my malaise and how I could get

Then he met a Winston-Salem ac!J- back in touch with my center. As I puncturist who helped him redirect his concentrated my closed eyes on the life. ·spot between my eyebrows, he settled

"My first -session was getting-to- his fingers into one spot, perhaps at know-you. We talked about my child- my temples, perhaps on my back over hood, my spirituality, my goals. Then my kidneys, for about five minutes he just looked at me for a while. After each. about three hours, he knew me and Some have chronic head or back knew exactly what was wrong. West- _pain; some call him their emdoctorsdeal with the body. Eastern ~'faith heakr"; some just want to have doctors deal with the psyche and the _.,. un and forget everything for a while. body." · ee Healing, Page 10

------------,

Debbie's Kitchen: disgusting greasy spoon at its best Bv CATHERINE FINCH AND PAXTON HELMs

OLD GOLD AND BLACK REviEWERS .

Rating: 1/2 Hog (maximum of four bogs)

Directions: We hesitate to include directions to this particular joint; but, in keeping. with our usual fonnat, we feel compelled to direct _those hapless souls, who for some unknown reason, want to feed at Debbie's.

Take University Parkway out past Kroger's, way past Kroger's. It's on the left a mile or two past Highway 52. We can't bring ourselves to be any more specific.

Our mamas and editors have advised us that when we critique dining establishments we ought to say something nice.

I L<1ur.l Keeney De ta Stomp Okay, we'll try: the short order cook showed . incredible care and tenderness when she brought

Members of Delta Sigma Theta sorority perform a step dance as C's bacon to the grill in her very own hands; f h I h db I I II spontaneousoutb.:rstsfromtbeothercustomerin

parto t eta ent s ow sponsore y the B ack Stuc ent A iance Debbie's included "best damn toastl ever put in in Brendle Recital Hall last Saturday al 8 p.m. · my mouth" and ·~Debbie, lJI,link you ought to

..._---------------------------' serve Jack Daniels" (at least someone liked

f )

Debbie's);andDebbie'shasthesweetestwaterin Winston-Salem.

Oh yeah, the walls sure were clean. And it slowly dawned on C that this might very well have been a double-wide mobile home in a previ-ous life. · ·

In the food department, P JK••••••lllrJ!i and C were thrilled with get­llf ll ling to eat toast when told =tp & Cs ~ thatfreshbiscuitswerenotin 111 · IC season. That'swhatthewait-.C Soutfiem IC ress said, and although we llf ll didn'tunderstandit, wedon't = Cftrin 1 S = have any reason not to be-llf 11 lieve her. !":.-.. .~ We were also delighted that · ••• • oursecondchoiceofabever­age (the Coke machine was broken) was so good. C, upon tasting her tea, could not help but exclaim "SWEET!"

Truly, it is the mark of an extraordinary culi­nary experience when your meal consists of your second altemativ~ but really isn't all that bad.

P had a hard time deciding what he wanted. Would it be a hamburger? A hamburger with mayo? A hamburger with mustard? Or a barbe­cue sandwich? Dizzied by the awesome selection

. he could only srammer"Barbecue, woman, bring me barbecue!" You know your barbecue is fresh

• I

at Debbie's because she takes it from the bucket in the freezer underneath the grill. And it is this fresh­ness that catapults Debbie's from no-hogger status all the way to half-hogger.

C, too, faced a dining dilemma: bacon and scrambled eggs, bacon and fried eggs, or bacon and eggs over easy. After careful consideration, C se­lected the last option in the hopes of a generically decent meal, but lost confidence as the· short order cook looked slightly uncertain as to what "over easy" meant.

However, C was grateful that her decision was made easier by the absence of a dinner menu (i.e., there's breakfast and lunch; if its after 3 p.m. you must pick which one you want as dinner). The cook even took the time to heat up the grill for C's dinner. You just can't beat that for getting fired up about a restaurant. .

No review of Debbie's would be complete without some mention of The Blister. As P and C were wrapping up their meals, a customer queried their _server about the rather lar:ge protrusion placed on her palm. The server replied (elapsed time: 90 seconds) "Aye dunn gawn an' spilt baw-lin wat-ilh on mab haynd.'' The result? A lovely white blister that was about 3/4 of an inch in height and diameter. NGw, P & C are aware that they are eating in a greasy spoon kind of place, but come on. That's really disgusting •

Bon Appetit.

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II~ I 1:.1~ IIUI'4AL ~l:.l,UNU E:.At"'U~U

10 OLD Gow A~D BLKK THL:RSDAY, NovE\IBER j, 1992

Political, religious play shows tragic_~struggle of El Salvadqr ·· ,.

OLD Gt1Lh A~r.d3t.Xc~o.: Sv.rr RRPQRT ------ perform the roles of 16 difterel)t characters .. Both Gould and Steams come from' a back­

Actors Peter Gotlld'flnd Stephen .Stearns will ground of mime, children's ti)eater and vaude" bringatwo-personplayaddressi'ngEI§alvador's. ville and incorporate elements:ofeach ihto the .. struggle for political and econdinic,freedom ro play. .·.• ' . . '.. . ··c (,. J•': •.' .: ..• · ...

campus. The pair will perfom1''A Peasant ofEI Gould, who plays Jesus, st~died mhi1e.~-aritr1 . Salvador''1ti8 p.m. S'ui1day in Brendle Recital actipg with· Mexican. master ,teacher''$lg(r1C:,t9 :. · Hall. '· "\. 1 · Aguilar .. Gould received a ·\YOOdro~ Wilson:_·

Originally c~iilmissi~ned in J981· by St. Fellowship at Harvard University in'l967~~ ·. · Michael's Churc'h ofBtattleboro, Vt., to com- hal) published-a novel;~Bumr Toast. · ·' ' . .: .· memoratethemurderofSal,vadoranArchbishop Stearns earned· a doctorate degree irl dra_mp. ·· Oscar Romero, ·~A Peasant ofEI Salvador" tells from the UniversityofWashington,. Afte.rteilch- .:· : .. the story ofJesus,aCentral Americim Everyman. ing college theater; he trained as a professional.'· .. : · ·

Through lhe eye!r· of Jesus; the· play is a · actor at the London Academy of Music and . chr~l'l,icle o.f. ~~e. ·vio~ence;'ifha( bas led to: the Drainaiic· Art. ·· .. deaQ!f-?t'more:than 75,000:.S~ildorans since Sin-ce teaming up in 1980, the actors have ·. 197~11 !!' : ,. •. "! · twice won the Vennont Council on the Arts

r¥\a!e i~ a tragic s~~sl!t'~v'eiiis. i~~~~' Annua!FellowshipAward. Theyhayeperforri#(h_;ii',[)~~~fH~ft~J~~~~~~f~lil~~~f~ nesses1he deaths ot teaqh~ st.". nts an · IVIC states and Great Britain.·: . :· 1 · ·· · .. ," ; los~ .. b. o. th h1s Ian~ amf.;,h·,}.~. fi.·_· Ily:. i(:an-~d ~v·I .. L.-. "A Peasant of El Salvador" for audiem;;es in'20 ·

leaders. ~ ~- :: ,, . ;; :;-.. t.;:- The performance is sponsored by Wake' .I". or~,;",J••:,-.. ;•:~:-:.r:.-;;:: ,r:~:Jt:~ Designed to infom1 an(fill$.Q~tbe'p is .. est campus miriistries,-and;.fu.eStudent

balan~d with comedy as 'G6utJ'~~:sfi! rns' . Fine ArtsConiniittee. Adrrii'ssion'is free. (~[~!~:-~~~~]

Surely capable Seniors Joe Tappe and Greg Carmichael warm up for the first performance of c'apabi lity Brown Oct. 2 7 in the Coffeehouse in Benson University Center. Both '-'\(ere founding members of the original version of the band Two Pound Planet before it disbanded last year.

fl~alirlg . Froqt Page 9

. , . Fitzgerald works well with them all, and he always makes '•-sure his clients are at ease.

;;''There is a Chinese saying that, when the student is ready, rpe teacher tinds him," he said. He sees himself as

·· theteae'herwho is available when people are ready to seek 'a new type of healing.

But what was the teaching that brought Fitzgerald from · Wake Forest to reiki? That is another journey in itself.

As an undergraduate, Fitzgerald said he enjoyed the Karate Club. From there, he became fascinated with martial arts and East em philosophy. Although these inter­ests were compelling, he dutifully followed the course from undergraduate to law school in 1987.

Butihefurtherhe went in law school, the more Fitzgerald said he-realized he wanted to help people. He knew there was a way to combine law and healing, but he was not sure how.

Still confused, he went ahead and passed the bar exam in 1990. But he decided to launch his energies in a new direction. While working with a local substance abuse center, Fitzgerald was introduced to reiki by a teacher at the Center for Life Enrichment.

At the moment, Fitzgerald works full-time at his reiki healing. He charges $35 for a one-and-a-halfhoursession, though he is ready to negotiate with people if that rate is difticult to manage. Anytime, night or day, clientS come to his apartment (two minutes from campus in Georgetown Apartments off University Parkway). If interested, call him at 724-5973 to set up an appointment.

~=============================~_:T::_he::_:un~i:ve::_rs:_:a::;llife energy is waiting for you .

.. : • ·'.If

It's not an oxymoron. It's a service that WAKE radio offers for campus organizations that want to announce spedal events. To insert announcements, call Travis at Ext. 5129 and leave a message. Your announcement will be broadcasted daily until your event takes place.

WAKE radio is here to serve you!

·ct ~ -·HAIR · Qt ~eu-o-· : · UNLIMITED

. '

t:~ ;,~ !J-i'IWJ F=,Ib r ·.) !~~~Y ~ c !fo: §;,;~u=cQ1 ~»!t's

PRECISION HAIR CUTTING· STYLING • PERMS • CREATIVE HAIR COLOR ·WAXING

• FACIALS 8: COSMETICS MANICURES • PEDICURES • SCULPTED NAILS

DOUGLAS J'. MEIS AITORNEY AT LAW

725-9090

10% DISCOUNT to all WFU students and employees for all traffic and criminal matters. FREE CONSULTATION.

KNOW YOUR RIGHTS BEFORE YOU GO TO COURT.

.\ '.;,

Pub Night C. . .... ,,,," -~ ' . ' ' . : .. _- ·'·· -_,. . . . .

tnema The Residence Halls will be closed for

Thanksgiving Break:

80s Comedy Night

d .;

:· . ,:

7:()0 PM Tuesday, November'.24, 1992 to: .. 12:00 Noon Sunday, November'29, 1992.:

' ' ~-. \

" ..... ti '·

. . ' . . '1 :

All residents are expected to leave the campus. ·This peri6d is,not covered by the housing c'ontract.

; . ' l , _,c . . , .

All .stud~nts needing to remai!'l on can1pus during the break

~ust submit a Holiday Reservation Form to the Hall Director

no later than Friday, November 13, 1992.

.. ,·

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REMAINING ON CAMPUS WITHOUT PERMISSION MAY RESULT IN PERMANENT LOSS OF HOUSING.

Permission is granted by the Hall Director for students who are involved in a University related activity.

Please read individual notices for more details.

Y ave a· -safe and happy Thanksgiving Break! ~ • • . • 1 .

'':·

Airplane! [,November 6

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8:00pm '

.Benson 401 .\

Caddy shack November 6 10:30 pm Benson 401

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-.

COMING ATTRACTIONS 10 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays (10 a.m.-8 p.m. Tues.), 2-5 p.m. Sat., noon­S p.m. Sun., through Nov. 29, SECCA Upstairs Gallery. Retells the mythic nature of the South with sculpture, paintings, prints and ar­chaeological objects. $3 adults, $2 students and senior citizens.

Diving in the Spirit: I 0 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays, l-5p.m. weekends, through Nov. 22, Scales Fine Arts Center Downstairs Gallery. Works by I 3 African-American artists from the Southeast region with a focus on spiritual content. Free. Matthew Myers: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Movies weekdays, 1-5 p.m. weekends, through Nov. 22, Scales Fine Arts The Adventures of Baron Center Upstairs Gallery. Myers' Munchausen: 8 tonight, Pugh Au-mixedmediaworksinterpretGreek ditorium. Monty Python's Terry mythology. Free. ~ Gilliam creates a fantasy world for Lecture: 8 p.m. Fri., Reynolda li this epic comedy about an inge-House. Percy North of Montgom- nious liar and his tales. Free. ery College, Maryland, will give a p Unlawful Entry: 7, 9:30 and mid­lecture titled "Love Song to Alfred • night Fri. and Sat., 7 and 9:30p.m. Stieglitz: The City Paintings of Sun., Pugh Auditorium. Kurt Georgia O'Keefe". $3. Russell stars as a protective hus-New Outsiders: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. band concerned after a robber weekdays (10 a.m.-8 p.m. Tues.), breaks into his home. $2. 2-5 p.m. Sat., noon-5 p.m. Sun., An Officer and a Gentleman: 8 through Dec. 6, SECCA Porch Gal- p.m. Mon., Pugh Auditorium. This lery. Thirteen young, unschooled love story starring Debra Winger "outsider" artists. $3 adults, $2 stu- and Richard Gere is about the rela-dents and senior citizens. tionshipof a working-class girl who Accounts Southeast: Ke Francis: falls in love with a hustler. Free.

Glory: 8 p.m. Tues., Pugh Audito­rium. This tribute to the Civil War's first all-black regiment, stars Mat­thew Broderick and Denzel Wash­ington. Free. M*A*S*H*: 8 p.m. Wed., Pugh Auditorium. In the film that in­spired the long-running TV series, the MASH crew diverts their atten­tion from the Korean War with practical jokes. Free.

Music

Toad The Wet Sprocket: 8 to­night, Wait Chapel. $12.

Theater

A Peasant of El Salvador: 8 p.m. Sun., Brendle Recital Hall. Free. Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill: 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sat.-Sun. through Nov. 8, Stevens Center. Emmy award winning I ackee stars in this musical depict­ing the life of Billie Holiday. $29 adults, $26 students and senior citi­zens.

YoUR REAL HoRoscoPE .. '' . ·. -I ·-·

Scorpio (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Satisfy your curiosity. Throw objects off a 20-story building to the street below. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec.21). A case ot heartburn will result in your chest bursting open, allowing an army of rats to skitter out. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Rela­tions with your mate will improve when you stop playing tunes with your flatulence before lovemaking. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb.l8). To im­prove your lawn mower's perfor­mance, adjust the fork rod of the clutch linkage by rotating the self­locking nut to provide 5/32"freeplay. Pisces (Feb. 19-Mar. 20). A time machine will take you to the days of

RUBY WYNER·IO

ONION FEATIJRES SYNDICATE

your grandparents. Unfortunately, the machine will land on your grandfa­ther, killing him, and thereby causing you to never be born. Aries (Mar. 21-Apr. 19). A white water rafting trip ends in tragedy when your raft is deflated by Sasquatch. Taurus (Apr. 20-May 20). Brighten the day of your fellow workers. Dur­ing lunch, perform an all-nude fan dance on the office copier. Gemini (May 21-June 21). To com­memorate an anniversary, you 'II cook an elaborate dinner for your lover.

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Page 12: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

ll't I l..l't I IVI't~~ ~1..'\IVI'tiL.I 1...1\.rVvU

SPORTS ~ ' ; < .. ._, >·.·

OLD GOLD AND BLACK t'#.~

12 ' . •• :\, '.j • ! '/

THURSDAY, NovEMBER 5, 1992

...

Wake Forest stuns Cl~~sg~.towinfourth straight

!'de Kulralen:zak

Without a doubt, junior Todd Dixon's feet stay in bounds as he makes the miraculous go-ahead touchdown in Saturday's 18-15'win over Clemson. The catch was Dixon's second touchdown catch of the day, the first being only slightly less outstanding than the second. Dixon fi~isbed the day witb five catches for 85 yards.

For Wake Forest fans, win over Clemson 'unbelievable' Unbelievable. That was the word most students used to

describe Wake Forest's stunning upset of Clemson at Groves Stadium on Saturday.

The same word could also serve to depict what happened after the game.

With a vigor usually reserved for basketball wins, students and fans collected behind the Wake Forest bench with two minutes left in the game, then stormed the field after the final gun, racing to collect a piece of history.

As the marching band played "0 Here's to Wake Forest," more than 1,000 people deci­mated Groves Stadium, tearing down both goalposts, the play clocks, even uprooting pieces of turf- any souvenir from one of the greatest wins in Wake Forest sports history.

In Head Coach Bill Dooley's last home game, students were heard endorsing Dooley over another Bill for the highest office in the land.

JAy REDDICK said another exuberant Deacon fan .. After the game, the players were just as

FRoM THE PRESSaox . excited as the fans, collecting at one corner of • , • • • ·~ 1 BI'ffl.!ker.,F;i~1·~ J:foHS,tt, as a group, witp. h~~~"''

the victory to the Dem..~?P-Ppaco~;,~11P.l~J.\Il"Jlort\'ll!llffi'P.!?N!fi\:~ll;~~nd~R~l.~ 'q'~'fR..ffiil.fH port. - semors p1aymg tlieirJast nome garrie,'t'his was

"I haven't seen one like this in 26 years," a sweet ending to their career. Dooley said. "The student body was behind "This senior class is a real tight group,'' the football team, and that really makes it quarte!backKeith West said. "When we came rewarding." in our freshman year, we felt like we had a lot

After students paraded around the field for of good players in our class, and sooner or upwards of 15 minutes, the celebration re- later, weweregoingtotumthingsaroundhere verted to campus. Students brought back most at Wake Forest,.This year, everything is com-of the goalpost, and the customary rolling of ing together for us." · · the Quad was much more enthusiastic than Bef~re the game, many people were guard-usual. edly optimistic about Wake Forest's chances

When students were asked their opinions of of victory. Senior cornerback Ron Lambert the game, the same words kept coming up. was foremost amqng them~ . . .

"What an awesome game! 'I don't believe After the. win over Apny ·on Oct. 24; Lam-we really did it," was a response heard many bert said, "Every year we play them (Clemson), times, usually while throwing. another roll of they run us over~ And ~is)e¥; there's noth­toilet paper over a tree. '· ing more that I want than to beat Clemson at

'-1 J>-

' . •.

First win over:.Tigers since lf!76.· comes in l)oo'ley; s 'greatest w'it?

.BY MricE FrrzGERALD enough to score SPORTS EDITOR · the go-ahead

· touchdown and .Saturday, Oct. 31, was a~y'Wak,e: ~nd the crowd

Forest fans will never forget. · . t _.thto joyous eel.: After 15 years of misery against ebrarion.

mighty Clemson, the. Demon Dea~ Clemson· de­cons shoeked.the :riger& 18-15.to win fensive back' their fourth straight game and ignite James Trapp o~ce-unheard-of discuss!ons of win- protested .. the . 1 • rung seasons_ and h9wl b1ds. . c~ll, stating · . , . . . ·' : . .

The fans m attendance wdl.long DlXon'sfeetwereout-Qf-bounds:Bm reme~ber junior Todd.Dixon's two iepi1(yuhOwedDixontobeciearlyih spectacular~at<ihes, the dramatic goal- bOunds, providiQgfurtherembarrass­line stand by the de.fense, and the wild ment . to a .program already reeling . celebration that followed, but one fact from four ACC losses. · overrides any individual moment in "A defensive end started to beaf the game: Wake Forest wanted to win down on me, and then Ilooked. dowrt more than Clemson. . theri8JitsidelfueancisawTod~\Votk~

After Wake Forest had led the en- ing toward the end zone,'' WeSt saii;t: tire gmrie; Clemson tookthe lead with "Iju8t laid it up; I got hit afterthat:·so just 5:29left on the clock. Typic:ally, · I didn't even see the catch. I kneW. I

· Wake Forestteams would never have put itin the area, and I knew eithei'ne responded with the late drive neces- wouid catch it or nobody would~ M­sary to win, butthis is no typical Wlllce ter I got hit, I didn't know wh:at hap­Forest team. . , pened, then I saw everybody gqing

"I think they felt' they could do it," crazy. I just couldn't believe it."' . Head Coach Bill Dooley said.. "He just. threw itto the back of the "Whereas in years past, they might endz.oneimdithrewmyselfoutthere;" not have felt 'that they cotild get it Dixon said. "We do drills on drag;­done. I think they were confident that ging our feet every day in practice,' so they could do it." I WaS mostly worried about catchilig

The Deacons took the ball on their the ball. I was just on another IeveLl own24;but advanced only one yard in couldn't even think. I was just going two plays. But with third and nine on crazy." . . · · .. · the.25, senior quarterback Keith West While words like ~'sh9eking" and floated a 42-yard pass toward senior "unbelievable" were used to describe tight end John Henry Mills, which the win, this game really was not·an Mills pulled in for a first down to keep upset. The two teams entered ~lie ~e the drive alive. with equal 4-3 records, and Wake

One play later, West fired a pass Forest was ahead for most',of tlie toward the right side of the end zone, game. . and Dixon reached out, grabbed the The Deacons held Clemson on its· ball, and kept his feet down just long See Clemson, Page 14

·,

TipGenlrJ'. "Dooley for President!" several students

chanted. Others chose another ~logan usually reserved for politics, "Four more years!"

Dooley himself gave much of the credit for

"ThisisagreatdayforWakeForestsports," home . .It won~t be a runover, defini~ly. If said one student tea..-ing down the goalpost. there will be any running over, we'll do the "One of the greatest games I've ever seen," See Pressbox, Page 15

Two joyous students parade a piece of the. Groves Stadium gol\lpj)S{ around tbe'Quad, after Saturday's 18-15 win over Clemson.

Zawacki wins flight at Garber InVit3tiOn3.l I ' ! ' ,- ' ' ' • ' ' ' : 1 • .1' , ·, i ~.! 0: ~· '

BY JAY REDDICK AssociATE SPORTS EDITOR

A flight championship forfreshman Terry Ann Zawacki highlighted the women's ten­nis team's performance in the Mary Garber Invitational last weekend at Leighton Ten­nis Stadium.

Zawacki, the number two seed in flight A singles, won four matches while losing only one set. Helen SpencerofFunnan was Zawacki's first victim, falling 6-4, 6-2 in the first round.

Zawacki moved on to defeat South Florida's Kristen Hannah in two tough sets, 7-6,7-5.

This put Zawacki against junior team­mate Liz Barker, who had swept a pair of matches against Natalie Hizja of Virginia Commonwealth, 7-5, 6-2, and N.C. State's Margie Zimmer, 6-1, 7-6.

Zawacki outlasted Barker in the semifi­nal matchup, 7-5, 4-6, 6-2, then beat Alabama's Lori Smith in the finals, 6-4, 6-2.

Barker moved into a third-place match up with top-seeded Lisa Pugliese of Duke, where she lost 6-2, 7-6.

Sophomore Dana Evans was Wake Forest's other entry in flight A. After a straight-set win over Melanie St. Pierre of South Florida, Evans fell to Smith, the eventual finalist, 6-1, 6-4.

"Terry Ann is playing very well," Head Coach Lew Gerrard said of the champion's performance. "Her hard work is paying off, as she's getting a little better each week.

"Liz is playing well again, and to make the semis before Terry Ann beat her was quite an accomplishment," Gerrard said.

"Dana is just going through a typical tennisplayer'sslump,"Gerrardsaid."She's got the talent, she just has to keep going."

Zawacki was not the only Deacon cham­pion to emerge from the Garber touma-

GiftCbowch~•ecb

Sophomore Dana Evans serves during this weekend•s Mary Garber. Invitationa,i. Evans won her first-round match over Melanie St. Pierre of South Florida, but: was . eliminated in the second round when she lost to Lori Smith from Alabama 6-1, 6-4.

ment. In flight B doubles, seniors Diane McKeon and Celine Menain won three matches to capture the title.

McKeon and Menain swept past Furman's Sadie Maynard and Katherine Price, 6-3,6-2, then went on to upend South

Carolina's pair of Heather Coburn and Pauline Rodriguez, 6-2, 7-5, to reach the final.

Amy Mascotti and Lori Smith split sets with the Deacons before McKeon and . See Tennis, Page 13

• !

Page 13: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

·I • z ·L

VEMBER 5, 1992

? 19.76.' stw'ttf·

IMid Dixon r ·

t-qf-boun!ls.:Biit 1n to becltarl~ Iii i1herembari-ass­already ree~ing . :s. started to~

n Ilooked dow\:i saw Todd work:. one," West said; :hit afteith~~·so • catch. I kne~ ~ I knew either' lie ~Y wo~ld~ Af~ know wb·at hilp­{erybody gqing believe it."'

1 the back oftl:i~ lyself out there;" drills on dnig;­

ty in practice, so l about catchilig another leveL I I was just going

:'sh9Cking'' and used to describe :ally was not,an :ntered~eg~e rds, and Wake :>r most',of the

Clemson on its· 14

npGmary

)Und the Quad.

• I

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-.. ;;·

1\ .(

. • . .. . . OLoGowANo BucK THURSDAY, NovEMBERS, 1992 13 . . . .· . .. • . . . ·.· . . . . . . . . . . SPOR'IS ·. 1---------------------------

Ct:OS-s cOuJJ.try tean1s· fitll_sh second,bebind.~tc. State at ACC ChampioJ)sh~ps, . Wo~n·~·team plciteS:tkree Oh all-conf~rence team i~·clos.e runner-up fin~sh · Men's ;(;am edged by two points; three .runners earn all-conferen~·e honors

' .. , ~v E~i.':~ GRA~A~i' ~. . · outs~ding performance.. . · .. !ov.:edcloselybyseniorMary~?well BY EMILY GRAHAM in 1971 by North Carolina over Duke. all-ACC honors: junior~ Pat Phillips, .• QWOo!,~>......,BLI.CK lWoRTER . "In every way it was a ·fantastic "msixteentlJ.Powellhas.beenmjUred OLDGc~-'? ~DBLACK REPORTER "We have established quite a ri- Stuart Burnham and Bnmt

· · . · . · . . competition for.us/;Go&irfdge.said. sine~ \he Indiana Invitational sev- ' valry with N.C. State," Head Coach Anmentrout. T.his ls the second :tli-.Aftert~oyears.ofrebuilding,the· ".w ...... e.·h~tYe .. n_eve_rhada,fiem.t.rru .. nning eral\1\lee, ks_ ago.. . . ·The Wake Forest men's cross John Goodridge said. "We won the conference award for Bumh:tm.

wotnel}~s~ross<;~tinicyteamJlll!l;~e · ·· · S Carri p d country·t~!m was consistent with ACC championships twice, consecu- Phillips finished fourth ov.eraiiAn itsmark"in·the:Acc: .•. · \.; · .. ~;s~:~t:~~Nr~~:n~~~' :Ke:tt:"iuice.pfac~~wf~t ;d~2U:~r · i!Shigb~hJ,:vementpattemofplac- tively, and now N.C. State has taken 25: 13,Burnham took second in.25:22

: Last weeken{tbe .team. finis~ed . 111.1d Jennifer Fihn~gan' were-the best N.C. State scored 38 pomts; while .. ing rltdbvver than second at the the championships two years in a row, and Armentrout finished l'firllh in secon~ at ~e. A.eC cross country: t~p three of any te~ in the competi- Wake Forest scored 41. ACC cham{,ionships for five con- in which Wake Forest has finished as 25:32. · champlOOSbipS ~d set·a·new re,cof4- · .tion," Goqdridge said ... _ , . .. ,.. . 51 . ~l,ltiye,ye~u-s •. The team took the the runner-up. JuniorKyleAlmentr_out placed 13th for· the '.smallei;t margin of. 'victofY,~, , . · Freshmen Moresheaq·. :.~ci · ACC 11Jini~r-tip award this week- "At this meet, N.C. State just wanted in 25:44, while fi·eshman Marc Dav ~ when·the Det\cons lost to N.C:State · St¢v.enson.placed second and third;· , end/being'qcig~ by N.C. State for it a little more than we did. We were finished 15th in 25:45. Sophomo:re by three points; . , ··.: · . :d~spectively ,. while sophomore· · · the.title'by :j~lst two points, 48-46. winningupuntilthefourth mile. They Paul Kinser, st!nior Paul Sklar and

Although Head. Coach· F..rimcie Einnegan placed fifth. An thlee took· Georgia · The two-ptoint margin of victory beat us over the last mile and a half of · sophomore Craig Longhurst fini:;hiH ·. Gqodrid~ s\fi~. s~e ~as crushed ~Y all~confererice honors. Sophomore finisfted ti~s:thereec•lil for the smallest mar- the race." in 20th, 28th a~d 31st plactis, · the loss,· she recognized her ·team s Kate Weber finished fifteenth. fol- speetilely; .· .:~'atthe,t-:j:::C championships, set Three WakeForestrunnersreceived · lively. ·

. Field h04key t~c® loseS; ' ·.· ": to \'irginia ' . . ' . . ·. ·,,, ' ,.. . . ,· ,· '.. '!

.:. <:; BY CAYCE BunER Denise Weniersbach. ' . " ; f~ GOt.~ ~D BLACK REPoRTER

f· 'l . ' ·'l,~~~:;A~~J~1i,eiJ~J l()Cite.fy· Tou~ nament t;3J~'PS)~J,a~~•UJ:JJ9.'",i ·u·· .;e·,.· !University Although t~hnically a loss to Vii7

gupa,Stmday:smatcha,~C,ampusSta" diuin was an emotional4-3 vi<;tocy for the onee~struggli~g field hockey team.· · · · ·· . By· taking the 11th rariked cava­

liers to overtime, the women· of the field hockey team proved' to them­selves and to the rest of the ACC that tf!ey could not .only comP<:te with blit chall,engethebestteams'in the nation.

He3!1 ColiC(! Jennifer Averill saw this goal as a defffiite tiimmg J)oiltt for the Deacons ·idescribing the goal' as ~.'nqt only a' score' btit. a s~l~d gO,al performed with beautiful execution." · · With tlie ne\.V conficlence, the nea: . ·. cons took co~!rol and went. oi{ the

. offl~nsive, ty4jg the gamelQ. rmnutes into the second half off an Ametrano blast and gaining the lead a few min-' utes later froin Freshman. Chiisten Horsey's shot past Weinersbl).ch. ·

· -",)'Nov. 6 -Nov. 8 .. ' ~·' .' ·. .... I .

• • I

.i 'j-

With Wake Forest (3~ ll-3) trajling Virginia, (13-4-1) by a2-0deficit, the game appeared to be unfoiding as Virginia bad expected-an e_asy vic-tory. . . . . •'.

Virginia's ~elly Daddona finished the scoring dQring regulation tying ' the game at 3-3 .• The"matcb continued into overtime, ending with a Virginia victory off ofQaddona's secorid goal of the match. ; ·

Although a l~ss, Averill considers However, by halftime the Demon Deacons proved Virginia's _expecta­tions false and nullified ariy "dqubts they bad themselves when freshman Melissa Wruinowski skillfully.· de­flectedteammateJennifer Ametrano's shot past the Cavalier goal keeper,

the match to be i'tbe best effort of the · ·; season" and ·is\ pleased to end the WedneSday·~~ the 'slrong sho~ing regularseasonohsucbaposjtivenote.. against Virginia to ~e(eat Maryland; Averill and her squad hope to use the their dra~ in· ,the AC~ tournament,

us a boost com­•·r"-'"'' tournament We

to·~:o fc)J,'v,lard with the effort put momentum gained from the victory this week~n<l' '.··: ,; against Appalachian State last <: "Tobe·leadinga·plipoii

:SWl(laiY and possibly get re­·u: •. ,.;:~.:ft "Averill said.

----------------------------------------------~~·-~'~·0~··-·-··~-~-~--~-------------~------------set scores; ;Merui.iri fe .to ·Rodiiguez, · the' finals of flight D singles. After Tennis From Page 12

Menainwon, 6-1,2-6,6-2. "This team (McKeon and Menain)

is a very important team for us," Gerrard said. "Both are fast around the court. They played very well."

Zawacki teamed with freshman Patty Murren to reach the semifinals of thesiimelffiiw: A straight-set win over a pair from Virginia Common-

. wealth placed the Deacons .. 5 ..... ,,.

Mascotti and Smith. After wumu1g

· Murren enjoyed similar success-in singles flight B, as she reached the flight final and was one of three De­mon Deacons in the semifinals.

Two easy, straight-set victories over Margaret Chmela of VCU and Furman'sErinPowell brought Murren to the semifinals, where· she faced senior teammate Tracy Zawacki.

Zawacki bad a similar road to the­semifin-als, winning two matches with­out dropping a set.

The unseeded Murren upset Zawacki, the top- seed in:the-draw, 3-6, 6-2, 6-2, before losing to South Carolina's Pauline Rodriguez in the finals, 6~2, 6-3.

--~-.-------:, Den 1

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tlu'ougb the· ranks,·~ .Gerrard said of Weber of Dulie:, 6-0, 6-0. Weber lost Murren. "She; was disappointed to only three garl)·~ and. won the flight. lose in thiffin3J., buiber improvement Senior Elaitll'~Smithran into Weber i~ very noti~eable." · · in the semifinitls of the same draw,

McKeon lost her first-round and met the sarne plight as Ring, los­matchup. in lligbt 'B. to Alabama's ing o-0, 6-0 .. Sophomore Jennifer Chrissie Carter, 6-2, 7-6, but recov- Webb lostto Hardin in a quarterfinal ered to sweep through two matches in matcbup, 6-4, 6-1. the losers' bracket. In doubles; Barker· and Evans

In the C-fligbt, senior Celine reacbedthefim~tlsoffligbtA, winning Toumant-Loizeau swept one match two straight-set matches before Hizja against Alabama's Kelly McCamey, and Eva Marl~ Pehrsson from VCU 7-5, 6-1, before being upset by upset the top s~:eds, 6-4,6-3. Furman's Katherine Price. Tournant- "Overall, I ' very pleased with

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Press box From Page 12

The Deacons· win, which gave therll a 5-3 record so far this season, even started some fans talking about a pos­sible bowl bid. While this is Rlongshot -Wake Forest must win two of its

running over this year." ! erect-history is ('n the Demnn Dea-i . last three games to even be consid-

Tbequotewaspostedont, ~allof cons' side. Clemson's locker room to1psycb up The last time before this vear that the Tigers, but it was tb6 D'eacons the Dem.->n Dettcons went 4~0 during who received the inspiraJio : ' themunthofOctoberwasalsothelast

"Tbiswinistbebestorie atwe've time Wake Forest was invited to a had here, especially after he week's bowl game, the 1979 Tangerine BowL hypeoversomecommen that brother But whmever the consequences foi Ron made," senior fensive end the rest of the season, on this one Maurice Miller said. -We told Ron Saturday afternoon, on what would that we would goo and play bard have been his 49th birthday, you just and back him up, a we wouldn'tlet know that Brian Piccolo was looking anvthi11!!: happen t 'him if they tried down on Winste>n-Salem .and J;t;t,lil- .

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Page 14: Universal life energy process for body, mind, soul. LDAND

14 OLDGolDANDBLACK THIIR,IlAY,NOVFMBER5,1992

------------------------· SPORTS ' ,

Deacons look to clinch winning season against struggling Duke I ' { '

Bv MIKE FITzG~:RAI.O SI'ORfS E!>IIOR ----

A fact to file in the "I Just Can't Believe This is True" file: Wake Forest is listed as a three~point underdog to Duke when the two ACC teams meet at I :30 p.m. Saturday in Durham.

Never mind that Wake Forest has won four straight games, ·including Saturday's stun­ning win over Clemson, and Duke has lost three straight, the Blue Devils are the favor-

' ite. \ \ LeadingtheDeacons\bid fortheupset will 'be a defensive unit that1improves with each coniest. Wake Forest now leads the ACC in turnover ratio at plus 6, and.ranks 13th in the nation in that category. ·

Against Clemson, the defense spent more than 20 minutes on the field 'ip the second half, allowing the Tiger offense.to move up and down the field, but only once into the end zone. ',

. "Our def~nse would bend and stretch, but it didn't We didn't give up many big

From Page 1

first possession, then when Dixon caught down pass, a 32-yard . where he was practically

Nelson Welch kickeda4~~\lard goal for Clemson, but it was•:nt,ovi from the early moments thalt·~he gers would not move the Freshman Patrick Sapp was start at quarterback after Richard Moncrief and Louis uv••v"'""'· Clemson's top two quarterbacks.

Sapp finished with a res),ecltabl~ 143 yards, completing l passes· but was rushed all day by the Deacon front line. Senior Maurice Miller and sophomore Kevin Giles both recorded a sack. and the team made five tackles for losses.

"I think we did a good job (contain­ing Sapp)," Miller said. "He's not as efficient a passer as some of the other quarterbacks we've faced, but we knew that he would spring out and have the option of either running or passing."

plays, and that was the difference," said Head Coach Bill Dooley.

Despite every ounce of momentum leaning toward Wake Forest. Duke is not a bad team. The Blue Devil offense, while not as potent as in years past, can score a lot of points, as evi-

Bill Dooley

denced by a 45-14 win over East Carolin<l, a 42-37 loss to Vanderbilt and a 27-25 loss to Maryland.

Randy Cuthbe1t, Duke's tailbaL-k, is one of the most versatile players in the league. The often-injured senior has finally put together a heal thy season, and has gained 751 yards on the ground and 211 yards in I he air.

"Randy Cuthbert is one of the outstanding backs in this part of the entire country," Dooley said. "He's an excellent runner. a leading pass receiver, and I have a lot of respect for him. One of these days he· s going to graduate."

I

Blue Devi.l Head Coach Barry Wilson ex­pected problems at quarterback when Dave Rrown elect•~d to enter the NFL. But Wilson has rebounded with a two-quarterback tan­gem of Spence Fischer and Steve Prince, and the duo has •::ombined for 1,836 yards pass­ing. After Prince started Duke's first three games. twt:. losses and a narrow win over Rice, Fisch•: r was given the starting nod. His best game carne in last Saturday's 20-17 loss to Georgia 'l'c!ch, when he completed 19 of31 passes for 2:?.8 yards.

football, and protecting the 'football," Dooley·\ .· ~d . .

One of the team's preseason goals was to have a winning season, and a win over the Blue Devils will assure Wake Forest of ac­complishing thaf'joal. The tDeacons have . posted only f9u'r·winning seas\)ns in the past 20 years, and a fifth would be .4n outstanding accomplishment for a team mo~t often picked to finish in the conference cellar.

An even more amazing possibility for this season is a 12th game- a pos~eason bowL· Only once since 1950 have the Demon Dea­cons gone bowling, in 1979, and a second would be a perfect way for Dooley to end his

''Theirqu.:trterbacks- Fischer and Prince ·- they throw the ball well," Dooley said. "They both complete over 55 percent of their passes, and I:hey have a good receiving corps." career.

But this is a game Wake Forest can-and should - win, simply to maintain its mo­mentum. This team has not lost since the Virginia g11me, and it could be difficult to reestablish its enthusiasm following a loss.

Still, Dooley refuses to entertain .any thoughts of a bowl game, preferring to con­centrate on Duke and clinching a winning season.

"If you have one small let-up, you're not going to be successful. So you've got to keep doino the tl1ings that got you where you are to start ~ff wit h. That's good, hard, intelligent

"Our goal remains the same as it started out: to have a winning season," Dooley said. "That's the number one goal right now and that's the only goal we're focusing on. After that, we'll talk about other things."

Clemson added a field goal in the third quarter, but Wake Forest an­swered with a 33-yard field goal by junior Mike Green to maintain its four-point lead. Early in the fourth quarter the Tigers pulled within one on Welch's third field goal, and took the lead on theirnext possession when Greg Hood scored on a 15-yard run.

After the kickoff, Wake Forest made the drive that ended with Dixon's second touchdown catch.

The win, coming in Dooley's last home game, was described as the big­gest of his career.

"I can't think of one better right now, I really can't. There's no doubt about it," Dooley said.

For Wake Forest's 15 seniors, also playing in their last game, their ca­reers came full circle with the win. After arriving in time for a 6-4-1 season, this group suffered through three miserable seasons. Now, in their last year, their hard work and perse­verance is finally paying off.

•Football Team

ACC Standings Cont. 7-0-0 4-2-0

Aorida State North Carolina N.C. State Virginia Georgia Tech Wake forest Clemson Maryland Duke

•soccer

3-2-0 4-3-0 4-3-0 2·3..() 2-4-0 1-5-0 0-5-0

Team Virginia N.C. State Duke

ACC Standings Cont. 5-1-0 4-1-1

North Carolina Wake Forest Clemson Maryland

3-2-1 2-2-2 2-3-0 1-3-2 0-5-0

Overall 7-1..() 7-2-0 6-2-1 6-3-0 5-3-0 5-3-0 4-4-0 2-7-0 2-6·0

Overall 15-2-1 11-2-3 13-2-2 9-6-3 9-6-1 11-5-3 5-11-0

ACC Tournament Pairings Today

Tip Gentry

--·-·,~·--·· .. heads upfield during Saturday's win OV•~r Clemson. rws~eu:•r•or 55 yards on five carries.

N.C. State vs. Maryland, 3 p.m. Duke vs. Clemson, 6 p.m. , North Carolina vs. Wake Forest,

Sp.m. Friday

Sunday Champiqnship, 2 p.m.

Soccer America Top 15 1.Duke 2. Virginia 3. N.C. State 4. James Madison 5. Portland 6. St. Louis 7. U.C.L.A. B. Southern Methodist 9. Creighton ·:.

1 0. U NC-Charlotte ·' ' ·' 11. Wake Forest 12. St. John's 13. Washington 14. William & Mary 15.Ciemson

• Field Hockey

Team ACC Standings

Conf. 4-0-0 North Carolina

M8l}'land Duke Virginia Wake forest

2-2-0 2-2-Q 2-2-0 0-4-0

•This Week Thursday-sunday

OVerall 12-5.1 12~-1 12-5-0 13:~·1, 3-11;a

Wake Forest's defense shone most brightly in the second quarter, when it made a brilliant goal-line stand. Sapp scampered 35 yards down the right sideline to give Clemson tirst-and­goal on the eight, and Wake Forest's slim 7-3lead was in jeopardy. But the

Tigers moved only five yards in three plays, setting 1p a pivotal fourth-and­goal play fro1l the three. Rodnev Blunt, Clemson-; leading rusher, w<is

given the ball but senior defensive back George Coghill stopped Blunt for a one-yard loss and possession changed hands.

"When I came here, Wake Forest was 7-4 that year and everything looked on the upswing," West said. "I was really excited when I came here, but then we had a couple of bad years, and things were downhill. But this is a great bunch of guys that works hard every week. Even back when we won only one game, we came out hard and wanted to win. But we just kept work­ing as a team, and this is what happens when you never give up."

N.C. State-Maryland winner vs. Duke-Clemson winner, 6 p.m.

North Carolina-Wake Forest winner vs. Virginia, 8 p.m.

Men's Tennis at Rolex ITCA Regional Qualifier, Chapel Hill

Saturday Football at Duke, 1 :30 p.m.

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November 5~. 1 \

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